From 84eb2bfab940fc9c6962c10ede7f72cee3fb9899 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?=E5=8D=9C=E9=83=A8=E6=98=8C=E5=B9=B3?= Date: Thu, 3 Dec 2020 11:53:56 +0900 Subject: [PATCH] include/ruby/internal/xmalloc.h: add doxygen Thought it was not a bad idea to document these CAPI. [ci skip] --- include/ruby/internal/xmalloc.h | 160 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 160 insertions(+) diff --git a/include/ruby/internal/xmalloc.h b/include/ruby/internal/xmalloc.h index b0fe8631397f18..2de544f7a36cfe 100644 --- a/include/ruby/internal/xmalloc.h +++ b/include/ruby/internal/xmalloc.h @@ -54,6 +54,26 @@ RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RESTRICT() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((1)) +/** + * Allocates an object instance. It is largely the same as system malloc(), + * except: + * + * - It raises Ruby exceptions instead of returning NULL, and + * - In case of `ENOMEM` it tries to GC to make some roon. + * + * @param[in] size Requested amount of memory. + * @throw rb_eMemError No space left for `size` bytes allocation. + * @return A valid pointer to an allocated storage instance; which has at + * least `size` bytes width, with appropriate alignment detected by + * the underlying malloc() routine. + * @note It doesn't return NULL. + * @note Unlike some malloc() implementations, it allocates something and + * returns a meaningful value even when `size` is equl to zero. + * @warning The return value shall be invalidated exactly once by either + * ruby_xfree(), ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). It is a + * failure to pass it to system free(), because the system and Ruby + * might or might not share the same malloc() implementation. + */ void *ruby_xmalloc(size_t size) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(malloc(size)) ; @@ -62,6 +82,29 @@ RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RESTRICT() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((1,2)) +/** + * Identical to ruby_xmalloc(), except it allocates `nelems` * `elemsiz` bytes. + * This is needed because the multiplication could integer overflow. On such + * situations Ruby does not try to allocate at all but raises Ruby level + * exceptions instead. If there is no integer overflow the behaviour is + * exactly the same as `ruby_xmalloc(nelems*elemsiz)`. + * + * @param[in] nelems Number of elements. + * @param[in] elemsiz Size of an element. + * @throw rb_eMemError No space left for allocation. + * @throw rb_eArgError `nelems` * `elemsiz` would overflow. + * @return A valid pointer to an allocated storage instance; which has at + * least `nelems` * `elemsiz` bytes width, with appropriate + * alignment detected by the underlying malloc() routine. + * @note It doesn't return NULL. + * @note Unlike some malloc() implementations, it allocates something and + * returns a meaningful value even when `nelems` or `elemsiz` or + * both are zero. + * @warning The return value shall be invalidated exactly once by either + * ruby_xfree(), ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). It is a + * failure to pass it to system free(), because the system and Ruby + * might or might not share the same malloc() implementation. + */ void *ruby_xmalloc2(size_t nelems, size_t elemsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(malloc(nelems * elemsiz)) ; @@ -70,6 +113,27 @@ RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RESTRICT() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((1,2)) +/** + * Identical to ruby_xmalloc2(), except it zero-fills the region before it + * returns. This could also be seen as a routine identical to ruby_xmalloc(), + * except it calls calloc() instead of malloc() internally. + * + * @param[in] nelems Number of elements. + * @param[in] elemsiz Size of an element. + * @throw rb_eMemError No space left for allocation. + * @throw rb_eArgError `nelems` * `elemsiz` would overflow. + * @return A valid pointer to an allocated storage instance; which has at + * least `nelems` * `elemsiz` bytes width, with appropriate + * alignment detected by the underlying calloc() routine. + * @note It doesn't return NULL. + * @note Unlike some calloc() implementations, it allocates something and + * returns a meaningful value even when `nelems` or `elemsiz` or + * both are zero. + * @warning The return value shall be invalidated exactly once by either + * ruby_xfree(), ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). It is a + * failure to pass it to system free(), because the system and Ruby + * might or might not share the same malloc() implementation. + */ void *ruby_xcalloc(size_t nelems, size_t elemsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(calloc(nelems, elemsiz)) ; @@ -77,6 +141,39 @@ RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(calloc(nelems, elemsiz)) RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((2)) +/** + * Resize the object instance. + * + * @param[in] ptr A valid pointer to an object instance that was + * previously returned from either ruby_xmalloc(), + * ruby_xmalloc2(), ruby_xcalloc(), ruby_xrealloc(), + * or ruby_xrealloc2(). + * @param[in] newsiz Requested new amount of memory. + * @throw rb_eMemError No space left for `newsiz` bytes allocation. + * @retval ptr In case the function returns the passed pointer + * as-is, the object instance that the pointer holds + * is either grown or shrunken to have at least + * `newsiz` bytes. + * @retval otherwise A valid pointer to a newly allocated object + * instance which has at least `newsiz` bytes width, + * and holds previous contents of `ptr`. In this + * case `ptr` is invalidated as if it was passed to + * ruby_xfree(). + * @note It doesn't return NULL. + * @warning Unlike some realloc() implementations, passing zero to `elemsiz` + * is not the same as calling ruby_xfree(), because this function + * never returns NULL. Something meaningful still returns then. + * @warning It is a failure not to check the return value. Do not assume + * anything on it. It could be either identical to, or distinct + * form the passed argument. + * @warning Do not assume anything on the alignment of the return value. + * There is no guarantee that it inherits the passed argument's + * one. + * @warning The return value shall be invalidated exactly once by either + * ruby_xfree(), ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). It is a + * failure to pass it to system free(), because the system and Ruby + * might or might not share the same malloc() implementation. + */ void *ruby_xrealloc(void *ptr, size_t newsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(realloc(ptr, newsiz)) ; @@ -84,10 +181,73 @@ RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(realloc(ptr, newsiz)) RBIMPL_ATTR_NODISCARD() RBIMPL_ATTR_RETURNS_NONNULL() RBIMPL_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE((2,3)) +/** + * Identical to ruby_xrealloc(), except it resizes the given object instance to + * `newelems` * `newsiz` bytes. This is needed because the multiplication + * could integer overflow. On such situations Ruby does not try to touch the + * contents of argument pointer at all but raises Ruby level exceptions + * instead. If there is no integer overflow the behaviour is exactly the same + * as `ruby_xrealloc(ptr,nelems*elemsiz)`. + * + * This is roughly the same as reallocarray() function that OpenBSD + * etc. provides, but also interacts with our GC. + * + * @param[in] ptr A valid pointer to an object instance that was + * previously returned from either ruby_xmalloc(), + * ruby_xmalloc2(), ruby_xcalloc(), ruby_xrealloc(), + * or ruby_xrealloc2(). + * @param[in] newelems Requested new number of elements. + * @param[in] newsiz Requested new size of each element. + * @throw rb_eMemError No space left for allocation. + * @throw rb_eArgError `newelems` * `newsiz` would overflow. + * @retval ptr In case the function returns the passed pointer + * as-is, the object instance that the pointer holds + * is either grown or shrunken to have at least + * `newelems` * `newsiz` bytes. + * @retval otherwise A valid pointer to a newly allocated object + * instance which has at least `newelems` * `newsiz` + * bytes width, and holds previous contents of `ptr`. + * In this case `ptr` is invalidated as if it was + * passed to ruby_xfree(). + * @note It doesn't return NULL. + * @warning Unlike some realloc() implementations, passing zero to either + * `newelems` or `elemsiz` are not the same as calling + * ruby_xfree(), because this function never returns NULL. + * Something meaningful still returns then. + * @warning It is a failure not to check the return value. Do not assume + * anything on it. It could be either identical to, or distinct + * form the passed argument. + * @warning Do not assume anything on the alignment of the return value. + * There is no guarantee that it inherits the passed argument's + * one. + * @warning The return value shall be invalidated exactly once by either + * ruby_xfree(), ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). It is a + * failure to pass it to system free(), because the system and Ruby + * might or might not share the same malloc() implementation. + */ void *ruby_xrealloc2(void *ptr, size_t newelems, size_t newsiz) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(realloc(ptr, newelems * newsiz)) ; +/** + * Deallocates an object instance. + * + * @param[out] ptr Either NULL, or a valid pointer previously returned from + * one of ruby_xmalloc(), ruby_xmalloc2(), ruby_xcalloc(), + * ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2(). + * @warning Every single object instance that was previously allocated by + * either ruby_xmalloc(), ruby_xmalloc2(), ruby_xcalloc(), + * ruby_xrealloc(), or ruby_xrealloc2() shall be invalidated + * exactly once by either passing it to ruby_xfree(), or passing + * it to either ruby_xrealloc(), ruby_xrealloc2() then check the + * return value for invalidation. + * @warning Do not pass anytihng other than pointers described above. For + * instance pointers returned from malloc() or mmap() shall not be + * passed to this function, because the underlying memory + * management mechanism could differ. + * @warning Do not pass any invalid pointers to this function e.g. by + * calling it twice with a same argument. + */ void ruby_xfree(void *ptr) RBIMPL_ATTR_NOEXCEPT(free(ptr)) ;