Memory Management Functions

The memory management functions defined by ANSI are calloc, malloc, realloc, and free. These regular functions allocate and free memory from the default run-time heap. IBM C and C++ Compilers has added another function, _heapmin, to return unused memory to the system. IBM C and C++ Compilers also provides different versions of each of these functions as extensions to the ANSI definition.

Both versions actually work the same way; they differ only in which heap they allocate from, and in whether they save information to help you debug memory problems. The memory allocated by all of these functions is suitably aligned for storing any type of object.

The run-time automatically pools objects from 1 to 512 bytes in size for the default runtime heap (_RUNTIME_HEAP), and aligns them on 8-byte boundaries. With this pooling objects are allocated and freed very quickly, and overhead is reduced. Any heap you create using _ucreate will not have a default pool; you must explicitly call _upool().

The following table summarizes the different versions of memory management functions, using malloc as an example of how the names of the functions change for each version.

  Regular Version Debug Version
Default Heap malloc _debug_malloc
User Heap _umalloc _debug_umalloc
Tiled Heap (/Gt ) _tmalloc _debug_tmalloc

To use these extensions, you must set the language level to extended, either with the /Se compiler option or the #pragma langlvl(extended) directive.



Heap Errors
Heap-Specific Functions
Tiled Memory Management Functions
Tiled Debug Functions


Improve Memory Management
Debug Heap Use


Differentiating Between Memory Management Functions