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authorKenneth Graunke <[email protected]>2011-01-24 10:36:15 -0800
committerKenneth Graunke <[email protected]>2011-01-31 10:17:10 -0800
commit1568b19e3b20275f8e56811ef8073aa2584666b1 (patch)
treef893ca6c713cb3edbb80329e00d5f2c38285b6ca /src
parent8aac5d123c4636fad5e9d70c3a6706aaa6f1f240 (diff)
Remove the talloc sources from the Mesa repository.
Diffstat (limited to 'src')
-rw-r--r--src/talloc/gpl-3.0.txt674
-rw-r--r--src/talloc/lgpl-3.0.txt165
-rw-r--r--src/talloc/talloc.c2034
-rw-r--r--src/talloc/talloc.def63
-rw-r--r--src/talloc/talloc.h202
-rw-r--r--src/talloc/talloc_guide.txt757
6 files changed, 0 insertions, 3895 deletions
diff --git a/src/talloc/gpl-3.0.txt b/src/talloc/gpl-3.0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 94a9ed024d3..00000000000
--- a/src/talloc/gpl-3.0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,674 +0,0 @@
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-OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
-THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
-PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM
-IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF
-ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
-
- 16. Limitation of Liability.
-
- IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
-WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MODIFIES AND/OR CONVEYS
-THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY
-GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE
-USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF
-DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD
-PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS),
-EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
-SUCH DAMAGES.
-
- 17. Interpretation of Sections 15 and 16.
-
- If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided
-above cannot be given local legal effect according to their terms,
-reviewing courts shall apply local law that most closely approximates
-an absolute waiver of all civil liability in connection with the
-Program, unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies a
-copy of the Program in return for a fee.
-
- END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
-
- How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
-
- If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
-possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
-free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
-
- To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
-to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
-state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
-the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
-
- <one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
- Copyright (C) <year> <name of author>
-
- This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
- (at your option) any later version.
-
- This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
- GNU General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
- along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-
-Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
-
- If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short
-notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode:
-
- <program> Copyright (C) <year> <name of author>
- This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
- This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
- under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
-
-The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
-parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands
-might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box".
-
- You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school,
-if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary.
-For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see
-<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-
- The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program
-into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you
-may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with
-the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General
-Public License instead of this License. But first, please read
-<http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>.
diff --git a/src/talloc/lgpl-3.0.txt b/src/talloc/lgpl-3.0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 65c5ca88a67..00000000000
--- a/src/talloc/lgpl-3.0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,165 +0,0 @@
- GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
- Version 3, 29 June 2007
-
- Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/>
- Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
- of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
-
-
- This version of the GNU Lesser General Public License incorporates
-the terms and conditions of version 3 of the GNU General Public
-License, supplemented by the additional permissions listed below.
-
- 0. Additional Definitions.
-
- As used herein, "this License" refers to version 3 of the GNU Lesser
-General Public License, and the "GNU GPL" refers to version 3 of the GNU
-General Public License.
-
- "The Library" refers to a covered work governed by this License,
-other than an Application or a Combined Work as defined below.
-
- An "Application" is any work that makes use of an interface provided
-by the Library, but which is not otherwise based on the Library.
-Defining a subclass of a class defined by the Library is deemed a mode
-of using an interface provided by the Library.
-
- A "Combined Work" is a work produced by combining or linking an
-Application with the Library. The particular version of the Library
-with which the Combined Work was made is also called the "Linked
-Version".
-
- The "Minimal Corresponding Source" for a Combined Work means the
-Corresponding Source for the Combined Work, excluding any source code
-for portions of the Combined Work that, considered in isolation, are
-based on the Application, and not on the Linked Version.
-
- The "Corresponding Application Code" for a Combined Work means the
-object code and/or source code for the Application, including any data
-and utility programs needed for reproducing the Combined Work from the
-Application, but excluding the System Libraries of the Combined Work.
-
- 1. Exception to Section 3 of the GNU GPL.
-
- You may convey a covered work under sections 3 and 4 of this License
-without being bound by section 3 of the GNU GPL.
-
- 2. Conveying Modified Versions.
-
- If you modify a copy of the Library, and, in your modifications, a
-facility refers to a function or data to be supplied by an Application
-that uses the facility (other than as an argument passed when the
-facility is invoked), then you may convey a copy of the modified
-version:
-
- a) under this License, provided that you make a good faith effort to
- ensure that, in the event an Application does not supply the
- function or data, the facility still operates, and performs
- whatever part of its purpose remains meaningful, or
-
- b) under the GNU GPL, with none of the additional permissions of
- this License applicable to that copy.
-
- 3. Object Code Incorporating Material from Library Header Files.
-
- The object code form of an Application may incorporate material from
-a header file that is part of the Library. You may convey such object
-code under terms of your choice, provided that, if the incorporated
-material is not limited to numerical parameters, data structure
-layouts and accessors, or small macros, inline functions and templates
-(ten or fewer lines in length), you do both of the following:
-
- a) Give prominent notice with each copy of the object code that the
- Library is used in it and that the Library and its use are
- covered by this License.
-
- b) Accompany the object code with a copy of the GNU GPL and this license
- document.
-
- 4. Combined Works.
-
- You may convey a Combined Work under terms of your choice that,
-taken together, effectively do not restrict modification of the
-portions of the Library contained in the Combined Work and reverse
-engineering for debugging such modifications, if you also do each of
-the following:
-
- a) Give prominent notice with each copy of the Combined Work that
- the Library is used in it and that the Library and its use are
- covered by this License.
-
- b) Accompany the Combined Work with a copy of the GNU GPL and this license
- document.
-
- c) For a Combined Work that displays copyright notices during
- execution, include the copyright notice for the Library among
- these notices, as well as a reference directing the user to the
- copies of the GNU GPL and this license document.
-
- d) Do one of the following:
-
- 0) Convey the Minimal Corresponding Source under the terms of this
- License, and the Corresponding Application Code in a form
- suitable for, and under terms that permit, the user to
- recombine or relink the Application with a modified version of
- the Linked Version to produce a modified Combined Work, in the
- manner specified by section 6 of the GNU GPL for conveying
- Corresponding Source.
-
- 1) Use a suitable shared library mechanism for linking with the
- Library. A suitable mechanism is one that (a) uses at run time
- a copy of the Library already present on the user's computer
- system, and (b) will operate properly with a modified version
- of the Library that is interface-compatible with the Linked
- Version.
-
- e) Provide Installation Information, but only if you would otherwise
- be required to provide such information under section 6 of the
- GNU GPL, and only to the extent that such information is
- necessary to install and execute a modified version of the
- Combined Work produced by recombining or relinking the
- Application with a modified version of the Linked Version. (If
- you use option 4d0, the Installation Information must accompany
- the Minimal Corresponding Source and Corresponding Application
- Code. If you use option 4d1, you must provide the Installation
- Information in the manner specified by section 6 of the GNU GPL
- for conveying Corresponding Source.)
-
- 5. Combined Libraries.
-
- You may place library facilities that are a work based on the
-Library side by side in a single library together with other library
-facilities that are not Applications and are not covered by this
-License, and convey such a combined library under terms of your
-choice, if you do both of the following:
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- a) Accompany the combined library with a copy of the same work based
- on the Library, uncombined with any other library facilities,
- conveyed under the terms of this License.
-
- b) Give prominent notice with the combined library that part of it
- is a work based on the Library, and explaining where to find the
- accompanying uncombined form of the same work.
-
- 6. Revised Versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License.
-
- The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions
-of the GNU Lesser General Public License from time to time. Such new
-versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may
-differ in detail to address new problems or concerns.
-
- Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the
-Library as you received it specifies that a certain numbered version
-of the GNU Lesser General Public License "or any later version"
-applies to it, you have the option of following the terms and
-conditions either of that published version or of any later version
-published by the Free Software Foundation. If the Library as you
-received it does not specify a version number of the GNU Lesser
-General Public License, you may choose any version of the GNU Lesser
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-
- If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide
-whether future versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall
-apply, that proxy's public statement of acceptance of any version is
-permanent authorization for you to choose that version for the
-Library.
diff --git a/src/talloc/talloc.c b/src/talloc/talloc.c
deleted file mode 100644
index cc01346a7f0..00000000000
--- a/src/talloc/talloc.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2034 +0,0 @@
-/*
- Samba Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
-
- Samba trivial allocation library - new interface
-
- NOTE: Please read talloc_guide.txt for full documentation
-
- Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004
- Copyright (C) Stefan Metzmacher 2006
-
- ** NOTE! The following LGPL license applies to the talloc
- ** library. This does NOT imply that all of Samba is released
- ** under the LGPL
-
- This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
- modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
- version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
- This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
- Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-*/
-
-/*
- inspired by http://swapped.cc/halloc/
-*/
-
-#include "talloc.h"
-#include <string.h>
-
-#define TALLOC_MIN(a,b) ((a)<(b)?(a):(b))
-
-/* Visual C++ 2008 compatibility */
-#if defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(_cplusplus)
-typedef size_t ssize_t;
-#define inline __inline
-#endif
-
-/* Xcode/gcc4.0 compatibility */
-#if defined(__APPLE__) || defined(__MINGW32__)
-static size_t strnlen (const char* s, size_t n)
-{
- size_t i;
- for (i = 0; i < n; ++i)
- {
- if (s[i] == '\0')
- break;
- }
- return i;
-}
-#endif
-
-/* Visual C++ 2008 & Xcode/gcc4.0 compatibility */
-#if !defined(_cplusplus) && (defined(WIN32) || defined(__APPLE__))
-typedef int bool;
-#define false 0
-#define true 1
-#endif
-
-
-#ifdef TALLOC_BUILD_VERSION_MAJOR
-#if (TALLOC_VERSION_MAJOR != TALLOC_BUILD_VERSION_MAJOR)
-#error "TALLOC_VERSION_MAJOR != TALLOC_BUILD_VERSION_MAJOR"
-#endif
-#endif
-
-#ifdef TALLOC_BUILD_VERSION_MINOR
-#if (TALLOC_VERSION_MINOR != TALLOC_BUILD_VERSION_MINOR)
-#error "TALLOC_VERSION_MINOR != TALLOC_BUILD_VERSION_MINOR"
-#endif
-#endif
-
-/* use this to force every realloc to change the pointer, to stress test
- code that might not cope */
-#define ALWAYS_REALLOC 0
-
-
-#define MAX_TALLOC_SIZE 0x10000000
-#define TALLOC_MAGIC_BASE 0xe814ec70
-#define TALLOC_MAGIC ( \
- TALLOC_MAGIC_BASE + \
- (TALLOC_VERSION_MAJOR << 12) + \
- (TALLOC_VERSION_MINOR << 4) \
-)
-
-#define TALLOC_FLAG_FREE 0x01
-#define TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP 0x02
-#define TALLOC_FLAG_POOL 0x04 /* This is a talloc pool */
-#define TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM 0x08 /* This is allocated in a pool */
-#define TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE ((const char *)1)
-
-/* by default we abort when given a bad pointer (such as when talloc_free() is called
- on a pointer that came from malloc() */
-#ifndef TALLOC_ABORT
-#define TALLOC_ABORT(reason) abort()
-#endif
-
-#ifndef discard_const_p
-#if defined(__intptr_t_defined) || defined(HAVE_INTPTR_T)
-# define discard_const_p(type, ptr) ((type *)((intptr_t)(ptr)))
-#else
-# define discard_const_p(type, ptr) ((type *)(ptr))
-#endif
-#endif
-
-/* these macros gain us a few percent of speed on gcc */
-#if (__GNUC__ >= 3)
-/* the strange !! is to ensure that __builtin_expect() takes either 0 or 1
- as its first argument */
-#ifndef likely
-#define likely(x) __builtin_expect(!!(x), 1)
-#endif
-#ifndef unlikely
-#define unlikely(x) __builtin_expect(!!(x), 0)
-#endif
-#else
-#ifndef likely
-#define likely(x) (x)
-#endif
-#ifndef unlikely
-#define unlikely(x) (x)
-#endif
-#endif
-
-/* this null_context is only used if talloc_enable_leak_report() or
- talloc_enable_leak_report_full() is called, otherwise it remains
- NULL
-*/
-static void *null_context;
-static void *autofree_context;
-
-struct talloc_reference_handle {
- struct talloc_reference_handle *next, *prev;
- void *ptr;
- const char *location;
-};
-
-typedef int (*talloc_destructor_t)(void *);
-
-struct talloc_chunk {
- struct talloc_chunk *next, *prev;
- struct talloc_chunk *parent, *child;
- struct talloc_reference_handle *refs;
- talloc_destructor_t destructor;
- const char *name;
- size_t size;
- unsigned flags;
-
- /*
- * "pool" has dual use:
- *
- * For the talloc pool itself (i.e. TALLOC_FLAG_POOL is set), "pool"
- * marks the end of the currently allocated area.
- *
- * For members of the pool (i.e. TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM is set), "pool"
- * is a pointer to the struct talloc_chunk of the pool that it was
- * allocated from. This way children can quickly find the pool to chew
- * from.
- */
- void *pool;
-};
-
-/* 16 byte alignment seems to keep everyone happy */
-#define TC_HDR_SIZE ((sizeof(struct talloc_chunk)+15)&~15)
-#define TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc) ((void *)(TC_HDR_SIZE + (char*)tc))
-
-int talloc_version_major(void)
-{
- return TALLOC_VERSION_MAJOR;
-}
-
-int talloc_version_minor(void)
-{
- return TALLOC_VERSION_MINOR;
-}
-
-static void (*talloc_log_fn)(const char *message);
-
-void talloc_set_log_fn(void (*log_fn)(const char *message))
-{
- talloc_log_fn = log_fn;
-}
-
-static void talloc_log(const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(1,2);
-static void talloc_log(const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- va_list ap;
- char *message;
-
- if (!talloc_log_fn) {
- return;
- }
-
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- message = talloc_vasprintf(NULL, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
-
- talloc_log_fn(message);
- talloc_free(message);
-}
-
-static void talloc_log_stderr(const char *message)
-{
- fprintf(stderr, "%s", message);
-}
-
-void talloc_set_log_stderr(void)
-{
- talloc_set_log_fn(talloc_log_stderr);
-}
-
-static void (*talloc_abort_fn)(const char *reason);
-
-void talloc_set_abort_fn(void (*abort_fn)(const char *reason))
-{
- talloc_abort_fn = abort_fn;
-}
-
-static void talloc_abort(const char *reason)
-{
- talloc_log("%s\n", reason);
-
- if (!talloc_abort_fn) {
- TALLOC_ABORT(reason);
- }
-
- talloc_abort_fn(reason);
-}
-
-static void talloc_abort_magic(unsigned magic)
-{
- unsigned striped = magic - TALLOC_MAGIC_BASE;
- unsigned major = (striped & 0xFFFFF000) >> 12;
- unsigned minor = (striped & 0x00000FF0) >> 4;
- talloc_log("Bad talloc magic[0x%08X/%u/%u] expected[0x%08X/%u/%u]\n",
- magic, major, minor,
- TALLOC_MAGIC, TALLOC_VERSION_MAJOR, TALLOC_VERSION_MINOR);
- talloc_abort("Bad talloc magic value - wrong talloc version used/mixed");
-}
-
-static void talloc_abort_double_free(void)
-{
- talloc_abort("Bad talloc magic value - double free");
-}
-
-static void talloc_abort_unknown_value(void)
-{
- talloc_abort("Bad talloc magic value - unknown value");
-}
-
-/* panic if we get a bad magic value */
-static inline struct talloc_chunk *talloc_chunk_from_ptr(const void *ptr)
-{
- const char *pp = (const char *)ptr;
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = discard_const_p(struct talloc_chunk, pp - TC_HDR_SIZE);
- if (unlikely((tc->flags & (TALLOC_FLAG_FREE | ~0xF)) != TALLOC_MAGIC)) {
- if ((tc->flags & (~0xFFF)) == TALLOC_MAGIC_BASE) {
- talloc_abort_magic(tc->flags & (~0xF));
- return NULL;
- }
-
- if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_FREE) {
- talloc_log("talloc: double free error - first free may be at %s\n", tc->name);
- talloc_abort_double_free();
- return NULL;
- } else {
- talloc_abort_unknown_value();
- return NULL;
- }
- }
- return tc;
-}
-
-/* hook into the front of the list */
-#define _TLIST_ADD(list, p) \
-do { \
- if (!(list)) { \
- (list) = (p); \
- (p)->next = (p)->prev = NULL; \
- } else { \
- (list)->prev = (p); \
- (p)->next = (list); \
- (p)->prev = NULL; \
- (list) = (p); \
- }\
-} while (0)
-
-/* remove an element from a list - element doesn't have to be in list. */
-#define _TLIST_REMOVE(list, p) \
-do { \
- if ((p) == (list)) { \
- (list) = (p)->next; \
- if (list) (list)->prev = NULL; \
- } else { \
- if ((p)->prev) (p)->prev->next = (p)->next; \
- if ((p)->next) (p)->next->prev = (p)->prev; \
- } \
- if ((p) && ((p) != (list))) (p)->next = (p)->prev = NULL; \
-} while (0)
-
-
-/*
- return the parent chunk of a pointer
-*/
-static inline struct talloc_chunk *talloc_parent_chunk(const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- while (tc->prev) tc=tc->prev;
-
- return tc->parent;
-}
-
-void *talloc_parent(const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr);
- return tc? TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc) : NULL;
-}
-
-/*
- find parents name
-*/
-const char *talloc_parent_name(const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr);
- return tc? tc->name : NULL;
-}
-
-/*
- A pool carries an in-pool object count count in the first 16 bytes.
- bytes. This is done to support talloc_steal() to a parent outside of the
- pool. The count includes the pool itself, so a talloc_free() on a pool will
- only destroy the pool if the count has dropped to zero. A talloc_free() of a
- pool member will reduce the count, and eventually also call free(3) on the
- pool memory.
-
- The object count is not put into "struct talloc_chunk" because it is only
- relevant for talloc pools and the alignment to 16 bytes would increase the
- memory footprint of each talloc chunk by those 16 bytes.
-*/
-
-#define TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE 16
-
-static unsigned int *talloc_pool_objectcount(struct talloc_chunk *tc)
-{
- return (unsigned int *)((char *)tc + sizeof(struct talloc_chunk));
-}
-
-/*
- Allocate from a pool
-*/
-
-static struct talloc_chunk *talloc_alloc_pool(struct talloc_chunk *parent,
- size_t size)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *pool_ctx = NULL;
- size_t space_left;
- struct talloc_chunk *result;
- size_t chunk_size;
-
- if (parent == NULL) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- if (parent->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOL) {
- pool_ctx = parent;
- }
- else if (parent->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM) {
- pool_ctx = (struct talloc_chunk *)parent->pool;
- }
-
- if (pool_ctx == NULL) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- space_left = ((char *)pool_ctx + TC_HDR_SIZE + pool_ctx->size)
- - ((char *)pool_ctx->pool);
-
- /*
- * Align size to 16 bytes
- */
- chunk_size = ((size + 15) & ~15);
-
- if (space_left < chunk_size) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- result = (struct talloc_chunk *)pool_ctx->pool;
-
-#if defined(DEVELOPER) && defined(VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED)
- VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED(result, size);
-#endif
-
- pool_ctx->pool = (void *)((char *)result + chunk_size);
-
- result->flags = TALLOC_MAGIC | TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM;
- result->pool = pool_ctx;
-
- *talloc_pool_objectcount(pool_ctx) += 1;
-
- return result;
-}
-
-/*
- Allocate a bit of memory as a child of an existing pointer
-*/
-static inline void *__talloc(const void *context, size_t size)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = NULL;
-
- if (unlikely(context == NULL)) {
- context = null_context;
- }
-
- if (unlikely(size >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- if (context != NULL) {
- tc = talloc_alloc_pool(talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context),
- TC_HDR_SIZE+size);
- }
-
- if (tc == NULL) {
- tc = (struct talloc_chunk *)malloc(TC_HDR_SIZE+size);
- if (unlikely(tc == NULL)) return NULL;
- tc->flags = TALLOC_MAGIC;
- tc->pool = NULL;
- }
-
- tc->size = size;
- tc->destructor = NULL;
- tc->child = NULL;
- tc->name = NULL;
- tc->refs = NULL;
-
- if (likely(context)) {
- struct talloc_chunk *parent = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context);
-
- if (parent->child) {
- parent->child->parent = NULL;
- tc->next = parent->child;
- tc->next->prev = tc;
- } else {
- tc->next = NULL;
- }
- tc->parent = parent;
- tc->prev = NULL;
- parent->child = tc;
- } else {
- tc->next = tc->prev = tc->parent = NULL;
- }
-
- return TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc);
-}
-
-/*
- * Create a talloc pool
- */
-
-void *talloc_pool(const void *context, size_t size)
-{
- void *result = __talloc(context, size + TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE);
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (unlikely(result == NULL)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(result);
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_POOL;
- tc->pool = (char *)result + TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE;
-
- *talloc_pool_objectcount(tc) = 1;
-
-#if defined(DEVELOPER) && defined(VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS)
- VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS(tc->pool, size);
-#endif
-
- return result;
-}
-
-/*
- setup a destructor to be called on free of a pointer
- the destructor should return 0 on success, or -1 on failure.
- if the destructor fails then the free is failed, and the memory can
- be continued to be used
-*/
-void _talloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, int (*destructor)(void *))
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- tc->destructor = destructor;
-}
-
-/*
- increase the reference count on a piece of memory.
-*/
-int talloc_increase_ref_count(const void *ptr)
-{
- if (unlikely(!talloc_reference(null_context, ptr))) {
- return -1;
- }
- return 0;
-}
-
-/*
- helper for talloc_reference()
-
- this is referenced by a function pointer and should not be inline
-*/
-static int talloc_reference_destructor(struct talloc_reference_handle *handle)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *ptr_tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(handle->ptr);
- _TLIST_REMOVE(ptr_tc->refs, handle);
- return 0;
-}
-
-/*
- more efficient way to add a name to a pointer - the name must point to a
- true string constant
-*/
-static inline void _talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- tc->name = name;
-}
-
-/*
- internal talloc_named_const()
-*/
-static inline void *_talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name)
-{
- void *ptr;
-
- ptr = __talloc(context, size);
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- _talloc_set_name_const(ptr, name);
-
- return ptr;
-}
-
-/*
- make a secondary reference to a pointer, hanging off the given context.
- the pointer remains valid until both the original caller and this given
- context are freed.
-
- the major use for this is when two different structures need to reference the
- same underlying data, and you want to be able to free the two instances separately,
- and in either order
-*/
-void *_talloc_reference_loc(const void *context, const void *ptr, const char *location)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
- struct talloc_reference_handle *handle;
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL;
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- handle = (struct talloc_reference_handle *)_talloc_named_const(context,
- sizeof(struct talloc_reference_handle),
- TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE);
- if (unlikely(handle == NULL)) return NULL;
-
- /* note that we hang the destructor off the handle, not the
- main context as that allows the caller to still setup their
- own destructor on the context if they want to */
- talloc_set_destructor(handle, talloc_reference_destructor);
- handle->ptr = discard_const_p(void, ptr);
- handle->location = location;
- _TLIST_ADD(tc->refs, handle);
- return handle->ptr;
-}
-
-static void *_talloc_steal_internal(const void *new_ctx, const void *ptr);
-
-/*
- internal talloc_free call
-*/
-static inline int _talloc_free_internal(void *ptr, const char *location)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- return -1;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (unlikely(tc->refs)) {
- int is_child;
- /* check this is a reference from a child or grantchild
- * back to it's parent or grantparent
- *
- * in that case we need to remove the reference and
- * call another instance of talloc_free() on the current
- * pointer.
- */
- is_child = talloc_is_parent(tc->refs, ptr);
- _talloc_free_internal(tc->refs, location);
- if (is_child) {
- return _talloc_free_internal(ptr, location);
- }
- return -1;
- }
-
- if (unlikely(tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP)) {
- /* we have a free loop - stop looping */
- return 0;
- }
-
- if (unlikely(tc->destructor)) {
- talloc_destructor_t d = tc->destructor;
- if (d == (talloc_destructor_t)-1) {
- return -1;
- }
- tc->destructor = (talloc_destructor_t)-1;
- if (d(ptr) == -1) {
- tc->destructor = d;
- return -1;
- }
- tc->destructor = NULL;
- }
-
- if (tc->parent) {
- _TLIST_REMOVE(tc->parent->child, tc);
- if (tc->parent->child) {
- tc->parent->child->parent = tc->parent;
- }
- } else {
- if (tc->prev) tc->prev->next = tc->next;
- if (tc->next) tc->next->prev = tc->prev;
- }
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-
- while (tc->child) {
- /* we need to work out who will own an abandoned child
- if it cannot be freed. In priority order, the first
- choice is owner of any remaining reference to this
- pointer, the second choice is our parent, and the
- final choice is the null context. */
- void *child = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc->child);
- const void *new_parent = null_context;
- if (unlikely(tc->child->refs)) {
- struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(tc->child->refs);
- if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p);
- }
- if (unlikely(_talloc_free_internal(child, location) == -1)) {
- if (new_parent == null_context) {
- struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr);
- if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p);
- }
- _talloc_steal_internal(new_parent, child);
- }
- }
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_FREE;
-
- /* we mark the freed memory with where we called the free
- * from. This means on a double free error we can report where
- * the first free came from
- */
- tc->name = location;
-
- if (tc->flags & (TALLOC_FLAG_POOL|TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM)) {
- struct talloc_chunk *pool;
- unsigned int *pool_object_count;
-
- pool = (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOL)
- ? tc : (struct talloc_chunk *)tc->pool;
-
- pool_object_count = talloc_pool_objectcount(pool);
-
- if (*pool_object_count == 0) {
- talloc_abort("Pool object count zero!");
- return 0;
- }
-
- *pool_object_count -= 1;
-
- if (*pool_object_count == 0) {
- free(pool);
- }
- }
- else {
- free(tc);
- }
- return 0;
-}
-
-/*
- move a lump of memory from one talloc context to another return the
- ptr on success, or NULL if it could not be transferred.
- passing NULL as ptr will always return NULL with no side effects.
-*/
-static void *_talloc_steal_internal(const void *new_ctx, const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc, *new_tc;
-
- if (unlikely(!ptr)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- if (unlikely(new_ctx == NULL)) {
- new_ctx = null_context;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (unlikely(new_ctx == NULL)) {
- if (tc->parent) {
- _TLIST_REMOVE(tc->parent->child, tc);
- if (tc->parent->child) {
- tc->parent->child->parent = tc->parent;
- }
- } else {
- if (tc->prev) tc->prev->next = tc->next;
- if (tc->next) tc->next->prev = tc->prev;
- }
-
- tc->parent = tc->next = tc->prev = NULL;
- return discard_const_p(void, ptr);
- }
-
- new_tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(new_ctx);
-
- if (unlikely(tc == new_tc || tc->parent == new_tc)) {
- return discard_const_p(void, ptr);
- }
-
- if (tc->parent) {
- _TLIST_REMOVE(tc->parent->child, tc);
- if (tc->parent->child) {
- tc->parent->child->parent = tc->parent;
- }
- } else {
- if (tc->prev) tc->prev->next = tc->next;
- if (tc->next) tc->next->prev = tc->prev;
- }
-
- tc->parent = new_tc;
- if (new_tc->child) new_tc->child->parent = NULL;
- _TLIST_ADD(new_tc->child, tc);
-
- return discard_const_p(void, ptr);
-}
-
-/*
- move a lump of memory from one talloc context to another return the
- ptr on success, or NULL if it could not be transferred.
- passing NULL as ptr will always return NULL with no side effects.
-*/
-void *_talloc_steal_loc(const void *new_ctx, const void *ptr, const char *location)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (unlikely(tc->refs != NULL) && talloc_parent(ptr) != new_ctx) {
- struct talloc_reference_handle *h;
-
- talloc_log("WARNING: talloc_steal with references at %s\n",
- location);
-
- for (h=tc->refs; h; h=h->next) {
- talloc_log("\treference at %s\n",
- h->location);
- }
- }
-
- return _talloc_steal_internal(new_ctx, ptr);
-}
-
-/*
- this is like a talloc_steal(), but you must supply the old
- parent. This resolves the ambiguity in a talloc_steal() which is
- called on a context that has more than one parent (via references)
-
- The old parent can be either a reference or a parent
-*/
-void *talloc_reparent(const void *old_parent, const void *new_parent, const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
- struct talloc_reference_handle *h;
-
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- if (old_parent == talloc_parent(ptr)) {
- return _talloc_steal_internal(new_parent, ptr);
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- for (h=tc->refs;h;h=h->next) {
- if (talloc_parent(h) == old_parent) {
- if (_talloc_steal_internal(new_parent, h) != h) {
- return NULL;
- }
- return discard_const_p(void, ptr);
- }
- }
-
- /* it wasn't a parent */
- return NULL;
-}
-
-/*
- remove a secondary reference to a pointer. This undo's what
- talloc_reference() has done. The context and pointer arguments
- must match those given to a talloc_reference()
-*/
-static inline int talloc_unreference(const void *context, const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- struct talloc_reference_handle *h;
-
- if (unlikely(context == NULL)) {
- context = null_context;
- }
-
- for (h=tc->refs;h;h=h->next) {
- struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(h);
- if (p == NULL) {
- if (context == NULL) break;
- } else if (TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p) == context) {
- break;
- }
- }
- if (h == NULL) {
- return -1;
- }
-
- return _talloc_free_internal(h, __location__);
-}
-
-/*
- remove a specific parent context from a pointer. This is a more
- controlled varient of talloc_free()
-*/
-int talloc_unlink(const void *context, void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc_p, *new_p;
- void *new_parent;
-
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- return -1;
- }
-
- if (context == NULL) {
- context = null_context;
- }
-
- if (talloc_unreference(context, ptr) == 0) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- if (context == NULL) {
- if (talloc_parent_chunk(ptr) != NULL) {
- return -1;
- }
- } else {
- if (talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context) != talloc_parent_chunk(ptr)) {
- return -1;
- }
- }
-
- tc_p = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (tc_p->refs == NULL) {
- return _talloc_free_internal(ptr, __location__);
- }
-
- new_p = talloc_parent_chunk(tc_p->refs);
- if (new_p) {
- new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(new_p);
- } else {
- new_parent = NULL;
- }
-
- if (talloc_unreference(new_parent, ptr) != 0) {
- return -1;
- }
-
- _talloc_steal_internal(new_parent, ptr);
-
- return 0;
-}
-
-/*
- add a name to an existing pointer - va_list version
-*/
-static inline const char *talloc_set_name_v(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0);
-
-static inline const char *talloc_set_name_v(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- tc->name = talloc_vasprintf(ptr, fmt, ap);
- if (likely(tc->name)) {
- _talloc_set_name_const(tc->name, ".name");
- }
- return tc->name;
-}
-
-/*
- add a name to an existing pointer
-*/
-const char *talloc_set_name(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- const char *name;
- va_list ap;
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- name = talloc_set_name_v(ptr, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
- return name;
-}
-
-
-/*
- create a named talloc pointer. Any talloc pointer can be named, and
- talloc_named() operates just like talloc() except that it allows you
- to name the pointer.
-*/
-void *talloc_named(const void *context, size_t size, const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- va_list ap;
- void *ptr;
- const char *name;
-
- ptr = __talloc(context, size);
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL;
-
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- name = talloc_set_name_v(ptr, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
-
- if (unlikely(name == NULL)) {
- _talloc_free_internal(ptr, __location__);
- return NULL;
- }
-
- return ptr;
-}
-
-/*
- return the name of a talloc ptr, or "UNNAMED"
-*/
-const char *talloc_get_name(const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- if (unlikely(tc->name == TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE)) {
- return ".reference";
- }
- if (likely(tc->name)) {
- return tc->name;
- }
- return "UNNAMED";
-}
-
-
-/*
- check if a pointer has the given name. If it does, return the pointer,
- otherwise return NULL
-*/
-void *talloc_check_name(const void *ptr, const char *name)
-{
- const char *pname;
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL;
- pname = talloc_get_name(ptr);
- if (likely(pname == name || strcmp(pname, name) == 0)) {
- return discard_const_p(void, ptr);
- }
- return NULL;
-}
-
-static void talloc_abort_type_missmatch(const char *location,
- const char *name,
- const char *expected)
-{
- const char *reason;
-
- reason = talloc_asprintf(NULL,
- "%s: Type mismatch: name[%s] expected[%s]",
- location,
- name?name:"NULL",
- expected);
- if (!reason) {
- reason = "Type mismatch";
- }
-
- talloc_abort(reason);
-}
-
-void *_talloc_get_type_abort(const void *ptr, const char *name, const char *location)
-{
- const char *pname;
-
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- talloc_abort_type_missmatch(location, NULL, name);
- return NULL;
- }
-
- pname = talloc_get_name(ptr);
- if (likely(pname == name || strcmp(pname, name) == 0)) {
- return discard_const_p(void, ptr);
- }
-
- talloc_abort_type_missmatch(location, pname, name);
- return NULL;
-}
-
-/*
- this is for compatibility with older versions of talloc
-*/
-void *talloc_init(const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- va_list ap;
- void *ptr;
- const char *name;
-
- /*
- * samba3 expects talloc_report_depth_cb(NULL, ...)
- * reports all talloc'ed memory, so we need to enable
- * null_tracking
- */
- talloc_enable_null_tracking();
-
- ptr = __talloc(NULL, 0);
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL;
-
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- name = talloc_set_name_v(ptr, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
-
- if (unlikely(name == NULL)) {
- _talloc_free_internal(ptr, __location__);
- return NULL;
- }
-
- return ptr;
-}
-
-/*
- this is a replacement for the Samba3 talloc_destroy_pool functionality. It
- should probably not be used in new code. It's in here to keep the talloc
- code consistent across Samba 3 and 4.
-*/
-void talloc_free_children(void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- return;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- while (tc->child) {
- /* we need to work out who will own an abandoned child
- if it cannot be freed. In priority order, the first
- choice is owner of any remaining reference to this
- pointer, the second choice is our parent, and the
- final choice is the null context. */
- void *child = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc->child);
- const void *new_parent = null_context;
- if (unlikely(tc->child->refs)) {
- struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(tc->child->refs);
- if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p);
- }
- if (unlikely(talloc_free(child) == -1)) {
- if (new_parent == null_context) {
- struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr);
- if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p);
- }
- _talloc_steal_internal(new_parent, child);
- }
- }
-
- if ((tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOL)
- && (*talloc_pool_objectcount(tc) == 1)) {
- tc->pool = ((char *)tc + TC_HDR_SIZE + TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE);
-#if defined(DEVELOPER) && defined(VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS)
- VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS(
- tc->pool, tc->size - TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE);
-#endif
- }
-}
-
-/*
- Allocate a bit of memory as a child of an existing pointer
-*/
-void *_talloc(const void *context, size_t size)
-{
- return __talloc(context, size);
-}
-
-/*
- externally callable talloc_set_name_const()
-*/
-void talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name)
-{
- _talloc_set_name_const(ptr, name);
-}
-
-/*
- create a named talloc pointer. Any talloc pointer can be named, and
- talloc_named() operates just like talloc() except that it allows you
- to name the pointer.
-*/
-void *talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name)
-{
- return _talloc_named_const(context, size, name);
-}
-
-/*
- free a talloc pointer. This also frees all child pointers of this
- pointer recursively
-
- return 0 if the memory is actually freed, otherwise -1. The memory
- will not be freed if the ref_count is > 1 or the destructor (if
- any) returns non-zero
-*/
-int _talloc_free(void *ptr, const char *location)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) {
- return -1;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (unlikely(tc->refs != NULL)) {
- struct talloc_reference_handle *h;
-
- talloc_log("ERROR: talloc_free with references at %s\n",
- location);
-
- for (h=tc->refs; h; h=h->next) {
- talloc_log("\treference at %s\n",
- h->location);
- }
- return -1;
- }
-
- return _talloc_free_internal(ptr, location);
-}
-
-
-
-/*
- A talloc version of realloc. The context argument is only used if
- ptr is NULL
-*/
-void *_talloc_realloc(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size, const char *name)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
- void *new_ptr;
- bool malloced = false;
-
- /* size zero is equivalent to free() */
- if (unlikely(size == 0)) {
- talloc_unlink(context, ptr);
- return NULL;
- }
-
- if (unlikely(size >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- /* realloc(NULL) is equivalent to malloc() */
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- return _talloc_named_const(context, size, name);
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- /* don't allow realloc on referenced pointers */
- if (unlikely(tc->refs)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- /* don't let anybody try to realloc a talloc_pool */
- if (unlikely(tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOL)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- /* don't shrink if we have less than 1k to gain */
- if ((size < tc->size) && ((tc->size - size) < 1024)) {
- tc->size = size;
- return ptr;
- }
-
- /* by resetting magic we catch users of the old memory */
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_FREE;
-
-#if ALWAYS_REALLOC
- new_ptr = malloc(size + TC_HDR_SIZE);
- if (new_ptr) {
- memcpy(new_ptr, tc, tc->size + TC_HDR_SIZE);
- free(tc);
- }
-#else
- if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM) {
-
- new_ptr = talloc_alloc_pool(tc, size + TC_HDR_SIZE);
- *talloc_pool_objectcount((struct talloc_chunk *)
- (tc->pool)) -= 1;
-
- if (new_ptr == NULL) {
- new_ptr = malloc(TC_HDR_SIZE+size);
- malloced = true;
- }
-
- if (new_ptr) {
- memcpy(new_ptr, tc, TALLOC_MIN(tc->size,size) + TC_HDR_SIZE);
- }
- }
- else {
- new_ptr = realloc(tc, size + TC_HDR_SIZE);
- }
-#endif
- if (unlikely(!new_ptr)) {
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_FREE;
- return NULL;
- }
-
- tc = (struct talloc_chunk *)new_ptr;
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_FREE;
- if (malloced) {
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM;
- }
- if (tc->parent) {
- tc->parent->child = tc;
- }
- if (tc->child) {
- tc->child->parent = tc;
- }
-
- if (tc->prev) {
- tc->prev->next = tc;
- }
- if (tc->next) {
- tc->next->prev = tc;
- }
-
- tc->size = size;
- _talloc_set_name_const(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc), name);
-
- return TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc);
-}
-
-/*
- a wrapper around talloc_steal() for situations where you are moving a pointer
- between two structures, and want the old pointer to be set to NULL
-*/
-void *_talloc_move(const void *new_ctx, const void *_pptr)
-{
- const void **pptr = discard_const_p(const void *,_pptr);
- void *ret = talloc_steal(new_ctx, discard_const_p(void, *pptr));
- (*pptr) = NULL;
- return ret;
-}
-
-/*
- return the total size of a talloc pool (subtree)
-*/
-size_t talloc_total_size(const void *ptr)
-{
- size_t total = 0;
- struct talloc_chunk *c, *tc;
-
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- ptr = null_context;
- }
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-
- if (likely(tc->name != TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE)) {
- total = tc->size;
- }
- for (c=tc->child;c;c=c->next) {
- total += talloc_total_size(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c));
- }
-
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-
- return total;
-}
-
-/*
- return the total number of blocks in a talloc pool (subtree)
-*/
-size_t talloc_total_blocks(const void *ptr)
-{
- size_t total = 0;
- struct talloc_chunk *c, *tc;
-
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- ptr = null_context;
- }
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-
- total++;
- for (c=tc->child;c;c=c->next) {
- total += talloc_total_blocks(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c));
- }
-
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-
- return total;
-}
-
-/*
- return the number of external references to a pointer
-*/
-size_t talloc_reference_count(const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
- struct talloc_reference_handle *h;
- size_t ret = 0;
-
- for (h=tc->refs;h;h=h->next) {
- ret++;
- }
- return ret;
-}
-
-/*
- report on memory usage by all children of a pointer, giving a full tree view
-*/
-void talloc_report_depth_cb(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth,
- void (*callback)(const void *ptr,
- int depth, int max_depth,
- int is_ref,
- void *private_data),
- void *private_data)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *c, *tc;
-
- if (ptr == NULL) {
- ptr = null_context;
- }
- if (ptr == NULL) return;
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr);
-
- if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP) {
- return;
- }
-
- callback(ptr, depth, max_depth, 0, private_data);
-
- if (max_depth >= 0 && depth >= max_depth) {
- return;
- }
-
- tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
- for (c=tc->child;c;c=c->next) {
- if (c->name == TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE) {
- struct talloc_reference_handle *h = (struct talloc_reference_handle *)TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c);
- callback(h->ptr, depth + 1, max_depth, 1, private_data);
- } else {
- talloc_report_depth_cb(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c), depth + 1, max_depth, callback, private_data);
- }
- }
- tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP;
-}
-
-static void talloc_report_depth_FILE_helper(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, int is_ref, void *_f)
-{
- const char *name = talloc_get_name(ptr);
- FILE *f = (FILE *)_f;
-
- if (is_ref) {
- fprintf(f, "%*sreference to: %s\n", depth*4, "", name);
- return;
- }
-
- if (depth == 0) {
- fprintf(f,"%stalloc report on '%s' (total %6lu bytes in %3lu blocks)\n",
- (max_depth < 0 ? "full " :""), name,
- (unsigned long)talloc_total_size(ptr),
- (unsigned long)talloc_total_blocks(ptr));
- return;
- }
-
- fprintf(f, "%*s%-30s contains %6lu bytes in %3lu blocks (ref %d) %p\n",
- depth*4, "",
- name,
- (unsigned long)talloc_total_size(ptr),
- (unsigned long)talloc_total_blocks(ptr),
- (int)talloc_reference_count(ptr), ptr);
-
-#if 0
- fprintf(f, "content: ");
- if (talloc_total_size(ptr)) {
- int tot = talloc_total_size(ptr);
- int i;
-
- for (i = 0; i < tot; i++) {
- if ((((char *)ptr)[i] > 31) && (((char *)ptr)[i] < 126)) {
- fprintf(f, "%c", ((char *)ptr)[i]);
- } else {
- fprintf(f, "~%02x", ((char *)ptr)[i]);
- }
- }
- }
- fprintf(f, "\n");
-#endif
-}
-
-/*
- report on memory usage by all children of a pointer, giving a full tree view
-*/
-void talloc_report_depth_file(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, FILE *f)
-{
- if (f) {
- talloc_report_depth_cb(ptr, depth, max_depth, talloc_report_depth_FILE_helper, f);
- fflush(f);
- }
-}
-
-/*
- report on memory usage by all children of a pointer, giving a full tree view
-*/
-void talloc_report_full(const void *ptr, FILE *f)
-{
- talloc_report_depth_file(ptr, 0, -1, f);
-}
-
-/*
- report on memory usage by all children of a pointer
-*/
-void talloc_report(const void *ptr, FILE *f)
-{
- talloc_report_depth_file(ptr, 0, 1, f);
-}
-
-/*
- report on any memory hanging off the null context
-*/
-static void talloc_report_null(void)
-{
- if (talloc_total_size(null_context) != 0) {
- talloc_report(null_context, stderr);
- }
-}
-
-/*
- report on any memory hanging off the null context
-*/
-static void talloc_report_null_full(void)
-{
- if (talloc_total_size(null_context) != 0) {
- talloc_report_full(null_context, stderr);
- }
-}
-
-/*
- enable tracking of the NULL context
-*/
-void talloc_enable_null_tracking(void)
-{
- if (null_context == NULL) {
- null_context = _talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "null_context");
- if (autofree_context != NULL) {
- talloc_reparent(NULL, null_context, autofree_context);
- }
- }
-}
-
-/*
- enable tracking of the NULL context, not moving the autofree context
- into the NULL context. This is needed for the talloc testsuite
-*/
-void talloc_enable_null_tracking_no_autofree(void)
-{
- if (null_context == NULL) {
- null_context = _talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "null_context");
- }
-}
-
-/*
- disable tracking of the NULL context
-*/
-void talloc_disable_null_tracking(void)
-{
- if (null_context != NULL) {
- /* we have to move any children onto the real NULL
- context */
- struct talloc_chunk *tc, *tc2;
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(null_context);
- for (tc2 = tc->child; tc2; tc2=tc2->next) {
- if (tc2->parent == tc) tc2->parent = NULL;
- if (tc2->prev == tc) tc2->prev = NULL;
- }
- for (tc2 = tc->next; tc2; tc2=tc2->next) {
- if (tc2->parent == tc) tc2->parent = NULL;
- if (tc2->prev == tc) tc2->prev = NULL;
- }
- tc->child = NULL;
- tc->next = NULL;
- }
- talloc_free(null_context);
- null_context = NULL;
-}
-
-/*
- enable leak reporting on exit
-*/
-void talloc_enable_leak_report(void)
-{
- talloc_enable_null_tracking();
- atexit(talloc_report_null);
-}
-
-/*
- enable full leak reporting on exit
-*/
-void talloc_enable_leak_report_full(void)
-{
- talloc_enable_null_tracking();
- atexit(talloc_report_null_full);
-}
-
-/*
- talloc and zero memory.
-*/
-void *_talloc_zero(const void *ctx, size_t size, const char *name)
-{
- void *p = _talloc_named_const(ctx, size, name);
-
- if (p) {
- memset(p, '\0', size);
- }
-
- return p;
-}
-
-/*
- memdup with a talloc.
-*/
-void *_talloc_memdup(const void *t, const void *p, size_t size, const char *name)
-{
- void *newp = _talloc_named_const(t, size, name);
-
- if (likely(newp)) {
- memcpy(newp, p, size);
- }
-
- return newp;
-}
-
-static inline char *__talloc_strlendup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t len)
-{
- char *ret;
-
- ret = (char *)__talloc(t, len + 1);
- if (unlikely(!ret)) return NULL;
-
- memcpy(ret, p, len);
- ret[len] = 0;
-
- _talloc_set_name_const(ret, ret);
- return ret;
-}
-
-/*
- strdup with a talloc
-*/
-char *talloc_strdup(const void *t, const char *p)
-{
- if (unlikely(!p)) return NULL;
- return __talloc_strlendup(t, p, strlen(p));
-}
-
-/*
- strndup with a talloc
-*/
-char *talloc_strndup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t n)
-{
- if (unlikely(!p)) return NULL;
- return __talloc_strlendup(t, p, strnlen(p, n));
-}
-
-static inline char *__talloc_strlendup_append(char *s, size_t slen,
- const char *a, size_t alen)
-{
- char *ret;
-
- ret = talloc_realloc(NULL, s, char, slen + alen + 1);
- if (unlikely(!ret)) return NULL;
-
- /* append the string and the trailing \0 */
- memcpy(&ret[slen], a, alen);
- ret[slen+alen] = 0;
-
- _talloc_set_name_const(ret, ret);
- return ret;
-}
-
-/*
- * Appends at the end of the string.
- */
-char *talloc_strdup_append(char *s, const char *a)
-{
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_strdup(NULL, a);
- }
-
- if (unlikely(!a)) {
- return s;
- }
-
- return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, strlen(s), a, strlen(a));
-}
-
-/*
- * Appends at the end of the talloc'ed buffer,
- * not the end of the string.
- */
-char *talloc_strdup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a)
-{
- size_t slen;
-
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_strdup(NULL, a);
- }
-
- if (unlikely(!a)) {
- return s;
- }
-
- slen = talloc_get_size(s);
- if (likely(slen > 0)) {
- slen--;
- }
-
- return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, slen, a, strlen(a));
-}
-
-/*
- * Appends at the end of the string.
- */
-char *talloc_strndup_append(char *s, const char *a, size_t n)
-{
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_strdup(NULL, a);
- }
-
- if (unlikely(!a)) {
- return s;
- }
-
- return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, strlen(s), a, strnlen(a, n));
-}
-
-/*
- * Appends at the end of the talloc'ed buffer,
- * not the end of the string.
- */
-char *talloc_strndup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a, size_t n)
-{
- size_t slen;
-
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_strdup(NULL, a);
- }
-
- if (unlikely(!a)) {
- return s;
- }
-
- slen = talloc_get_size(s);
- if (likely(slen > 0)) {
- slen--;
- }
-
- return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, slen, a, strnlen(a, n));
-}
-
-#ifndef va_copy
-#ifdef HAVE___VA_COPY
-#define va_copy(dest, src) __va_copy(dest, src)
-#else
-#define va_copy(dest, src) (dest) = (src)
-#endif
-#endif
-
-char *talloc_vasprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
-{
- int len;
- char *ret;
- va_list ap2;
- char c;
-
- /* this call looks strange, but it makes it work on older solaris boxes */
- va_copy(ap2, ap);
- #ifdef _MSC_VER
- /* MSVC runtime needs to use _vcsprintf to return buffer size; vsnprintf would return -1 */
- len = _vscprintf(fmt, ap2);
- #else
- len = vsnprintf(&c, 1, fmt, ap2);
- #endif
- va_end(ap2);
- if (unlikely(len < 0)) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- ret = (char *)__talloc(t, len+1);
- if (unlikely(!ret)) return NULL;
-
- va_copy(ap2, ap);
- vsnprintf(ret, len+1, fmt, ap2);
- va_end(ap2);
-
- _talloc_set_name_const(ret, ret);
- return ret;
-}
-
-
-/*
- Perform string formatting, and return a pointer to newly allocated
- memory holding the result, inside a memory pool.
- */
-char *talloc_asprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- va_list ap;
- char *ret;
-
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- ret = talloc_vasprintf(t, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
- return ret;
-}
-
-static inline char *__talloc_vaslenprintf_append(char *s, size_t slen,
- const char *fmt, va_list ap)
- PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(3,0);
-
-static inline char *__talloc_vaslenprintf_append(char *s, size_t slen,
- const char *fmt, va_list ap)
-{
- ssize_t alen;
- va_list ap2;
- char c;
-
- va_copy(ap2, ap);
- #ifdef _MSC_VER
- /* MSVC runtime needs to use _vcsprintf to return buffer size; vsnprintf would return -1 */
- alen = _vscprintf(fmt, ap2);
- #else
- alen = vsnprintf(&c, 1, fmt, ap2);
- #endif
- va_end(ap2);
-
- if (alen <= 0) {
- /* Either the vsnprintf failed or the format resulted in
- * no characters being formatted. In the former case, we
- * ought to return NULL, in the latter we ought to return
- * the original string. Most current callers of this
- * function expect it to never return NULL.
- */
- return s;
- }
-
- s = talloc_realloc(NULL, s, char, slen + alen + 1);
- if (!s) return NULL;
-
- va_copy(ap2, ap);
- vsnprintf(s + slen, alen + 1, fmt, ap2);
- va_end(ap2);
-
- _talloc_set_name_const(s, s);
- return s;
-}
-
-/**
- * Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and @p ap,
- * and return @p s, which may have moved. Good for gradually
- * accumulating output into a string buffer. Appends at the end
- * of the string.
- **/
-char *talloc_vasprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
-{
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_vasprintf(NULL, fmt, ap);
- }
-
- return __talloc_vaslenprintf_append(s, strlen(s), fmt, ap);
-}
-
-/**
- * Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and @p ap,
- * and return @p s, which may have moved. Always appends at the
- * end of the talloc'ed buffer, not the end of the string.
- **/
-char *talloc_vasprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
-{
- size_t slen;
-
- if (unlikely(!s)) {
- return talloc_vasprintf(NULL, fmt, ap);
- }
-
- slen = talloc_get_size(s);
- if (likely(slen > 0)) {
- slen--;
- }
-
- return __talloc_vaslenprintf_append(s, slen, fmt, ap);
-}
-
-/*
- Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and return @p
- s, which may have moved. Good for gradually accumulating output
- into a string buffer.
- */
-char *talloc_asprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- va_list ap;
-
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- s = talloc_vasprintf_append(s, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
- return s;
-}
-
-/*
- Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and return @p
- s, which may have moved. Good for gradually accumulating output
- into a buffer.
- */
-char *talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, ...)
-{
- va_list ap;
-
- va_start(ap, fmt);
- s = talloc_vasprintf_append_buffer(s, fmt, ap);
- va_end(ap);
- return s;
-}
-
-/*
- alloc an array, checking for integer overflow in the array size
-*/
-void *_talloc_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name)
-{
- if (count >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE/el_size) {
- return NULL;
- }
- return _talloc_named_const(ctx, el_size * count, name);
-}
-
-/*
- alloc an zero array, checking for integer overflow in the array size
-*/
-void *_talloc_zero_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name)
-{
- if (count >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE/el_size) {
- return NULL;
- }
- return _talloc_zero(ctx, el_size * count, name);
-}
-
-/*
- realloc an array, checking for integer overflow in the array size
-*/
-void *_talloc_realloc_array(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name)
-{
- if (count >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE/el_size) {
- return NULL;
- }
- return _talloc_realloc(ctx, ptr, el_size * count, name);
-}
-
-/*
- a function version of talloc_realloc(), so it can be passed as a function pointer
- to libraries that want a realloc function (a realloc function encapsulates
- all the basic capabilities of an allocation library, which is why this is useful)
-*/
-void *talloc_realloc_fn(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size)
-{
- return _talloc_realloc(context, ptr, size, NULL);
-}
-
-
-static int talloc_autofree_destructor(void *ptr)
-{
- autofree_context = NULL;
- return 0;
-}
-
-static void talloc_autofree(void)
-{
- talloc_free(autofree_context);
-}
-
-/*
- return a context which will be auto-freed on exit
- this is useful for reducing the noise in leak reports
-*/
-void *talloc_autofree_context(void)
-{
- if (autofree_context == NULL) {
- autofree_context = _talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "autofree_context");
- talloc_set_destructor(autofree_context, talloc_autofree_destructor);
- atexit(talloc_autofree);
- }
- return autofree_context;
-}
-
-size_t talloc_get_size(const void *context)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (context == NULL) {
- context = null_context;
- }
- if (context == NULL) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context);
-
- return tc->size;
-}
-
-/*
- find a parent of this context that has the given name, if any
-*/
-void *talloc_find_parent_byname(const void *context, const char *name)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (context == NULL) {
- return NULL;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context);
- while (tc) {
- if (tc->name && strcmp(tc->name, name) == 0) {
- return TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc);
- }
- while (tc && tc->prev) tc = tc->prev;
- if (tc) {
- tc = tc->parent;
- }
- }
- return NULL;
-}
-
-/*
- show the parentage of a context
-*/
-void talloc_show_parents(const void *context, FILE *file)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (context == NULL) {
- fprintf(file, "talloc no parents for NULL\n");
- return;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context);
- fprintf(file, "talloc parents of '%s'\n", talloc_get_name(context));
- while (tc) {
- fprintf(file, "\t'%s'\n", talloc_get_name(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc)));
- while (tc && tc->prev) tc = tc->prev;
- if (tc) {
- tc = tc->parent;
- }
- }
- fflush(file);
-}
-
-/*
- return 1 if ptr is a parent of context
-*/
-int talloc_is_parent(const void *context, const void *ptr)
-{
- struct talloc_chunk *tc;
-
- if (context == NULL) {
- return 0;
- }
-
- tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context);
- while (tc) {
- if (TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc) == ptr) return 1;
- while (tc && tc->prev) tc = tc->prev;
- if (tc) {
- tc = tc->parent;
- }
- }
- return 0;
-}
diff --git a/src/talloc/talloc.def b/src/talloc/talloc.def
deleted file mode 100644
index 13d7a159cef..00000000000
--- a/src/talloc/talloc.def
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,63 +0,0 @@
-EXPORTS
- _talloc
- _talloc_array
- _talloc_free
- _talloc_get_type_abort
- _talloc_memdup
- _talloc_move
- _talloc_realloc
- _talloc_realloc_array
- _talloc_reference_loc
- _talloc_set_destructor
- _talloc_steal_loc
- _talloc_zero
- _talloc_zero_array
- talloc_asprintf
- talloc_asprintf_append
- talloc_asprintf_append_buffer
- talloc_autofree_context
- talloc_check_name
- talloc_disable_null_tracking
- talloc_enable_leak_report
- talloc_enable_leak_report_full
- talloc_enable_null_tracking
- talloc_enable_null_tracking_no_autofree
- talloc_find_parent_byname
- talloc_free_children
- talloc_get_name
- talloc_get_size
- talloc_increase_ref_count
- talloc_init
- talloc_is_parent
- talloc_named
- talloc_named_const
- talloc_parent
- talloc_parent_name
- talloc_pool
- talloc_realloc_fn
- talloc_reference_count
- talloc_reparent
- talloc_report
- talloc_report_depth_cb
- talloc_report_depth_file
- talloc_report_full
- talloc_set_abort_fn
- talloc_set_log_fn
- talloc_set_log_stderr
- talloc_set_name
- talloc_set_name_const
- talloc_show_parents
- talloc_strdup
- talloc_strdup_append
- talloc_strdup_append_buffer
- talloc_strndup
- talloc_strndup_append
- talloc_strndup_append_buffer
- talloc_total_blocks
- talloc_total_size
- talloc_unlink
- talloc_vasprintf
- talloc_vasprintf_append
- talloc_vasprintf_append_buffer
- talloc_version_major
- talloc_version_minor
diff --git a/src/talloc/talloc.h b/src/talloc/talloc.h
deleted file mode 100644
index f549a17fba2..00000000000
--- a/src/talloc/talloc.h
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,202 +0,0 @@
-#ifndef _TALLOC_H_
-#define _TALLOC_H_
-/*
- Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
- Samba temporary memory allocation functions
-
- Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004-2005
- Copyright (C) Stefan Metzmacher 2006
-
- ** NOTE! The following LGPL license applies to the talloc
- ** library. This does NOT imply that all of Samba is released
- ** under the LGPL
-
- This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
- modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
- version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
- This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
- Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
- License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-*/
-
-#include <stdlib.h>
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <stdarg.h>
-
-#define TALLOC_VERSION_MAJOR 2
-#define TALLOC_VERSION_MINOR 0
-
-int talloc_version_major(void);
-int talloc_version_minor(void);
-
-/* this is only needed for compatibility with the old talloc */
-typedef void TALLOC_CTX;
-
-/*
- this uses a little trick to allow __LINE__ to be stringified
-*/
-#ifndef __location__
-#define __TALLOC_STRING_LINE1__(s) #s
-#define __TALLOC_STRING_LINE2__(s) __TALLOC_STRING_LINE1__(s)
-#define __TALLOC_STRING_LINE3__ __TALLOC_STRING_LINE2__(__LINE__)
-#define __location__ __FILE__ ":" __TALLOC_STRING_LINE3__
-#endif
-
-#ifndef TALLOC_DEPRECATED
-#define TALLOC_DEPRECATED 0
-#endif
-
-#ifndef PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE
-#if (__GNUC__ >= 3)
-/** Use gcc attribute to check printf fns. a1 is the 1-based index of
- * the parameter containing the format, and a2 the index of the first
- * argument. Note that some gcc 2.x versions don't handle this
- * properly **/
-#define PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(a1, a2) __attribute__ ((format (__printf__, a1, a2)))
-#else
-#define PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(a1, a2)
-#endif
-#endif
-
-/* try to make talloc_set_destructor() and talloc_steal() type safe,
- if we have a recent gcc */
-#if (__GNUC__ >= 3)
-#define _TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr) __typeof__(ptr)
-#define talloc_set_destructor(ptr, function) \
- do { \
- int (*_talloc_destructor_fn)(_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr)) = (function); \
- _talloc_set_destructor((ptr), (int (*)(void *))_talloc_destructor_fn); \
- } while(0)
-/* this extremely strange macro is to avoid some braindamaged warning
- stupidity in gcc 4.1.x */
-#define talloc_steal(ctx, ptr) ({ _TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr) __talloc_steal_ret = (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))_talloc_steal_loc((ctx),(ptr), __location__); __talloc_steal_ret; })
-#else
-#define talloc_set_destructor(ptr, function) \
- _talloc_set_destructor((ptr), (int (*)(void *))(function))
-#define _TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr) void *
-#define talloc_steal(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))_talloc_steal_loc((ctx),(ptr), __location__)
-#endif
-
-#define talloc_reference(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))_talloc_reference_loc((ctx),(ptr), __location__)
-#define talloc_move(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(*(ptr)))_talloc_move((ctx),(void *)(ptr))
-
-/* useful macros for creating type checked pointers */
-#define talloc(ctx, type) (type *)talloc_named_const(ctx, sizeof(type), #type)
-#define talloc_size(ctx, size) talloc_named_const(ctx, size, __location__)
-#define talloc_ptrtype(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))talloc_size(ctx, sizeof(*(ptr)))
-
-#define talloc_new(ctx) talloc_named_const(ctx, 0, "talloc_new: " __location__)
-
-#define talloc_zero(ctx, type) (type *)_talloc_zero(ctx, sizeof(type), #type)
-#define talloc_zero_size(ctx, size) _talloc_zero(ctx, size, __location__)
-
-#define talloc_zero_array(ctx, type, count) (type *)_talloc_zero_array(ctx, sizeof(type), count, #type)
-#define talloc_array(ctx, type, count) (type *)_talloc_array(ctx, sizeof(type), count, #type)
-#define talloc_array_size(ctx, size, count) _talloc_array(ctx, size, count, __location__)
-#define talloc_array_ptrtype(ctx, ptr, count) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))talloc_array_size(ctx, sizeof(*(ptr)), count)
-#define talloc_array_length(ctx) (talloc_get_size(ctx)/sizeof(*ctx))
-
-#define talloc_realloc(ctx, p, type, count) (type *)_talloc_realloc_array(ctx, p, sizeof(type), count, #type)
-#define talloc_realloc_size(ctx, ptr, size) _talloc_realloc(ctx, ptr, size, __location__)
-
-#define talloc_memdup(t, p, size) _talloc_memdup(t, p, size, __location__)
-
-#define talloc_set_type(ptr, type) talloc_set_name_const(ptr, #type)
-#define talloc_get_type(ptr, type) (type *)talloc_check_name(ptr, #type)
-#define talloc_get_type_abort(ptr, type) (type *)_talloc_get_type_abort(ptr, #type, __location__)
-
-#define talloc_find_parent_bytype(ptr, type) (type *)talloc_find_parent_byname(ptr, #type)
-#define talloc_free(ctx) _talloc_free(ctx, __location__)
-
-
-#if TALLOC_DEPRECATED
-#define talloc_zero_p(ctx, type) talloc_zero(ctx, type)
-#define talloc_p(ctx, type) talloc(ctx, type)
-#define talloc_array_p(ctx, type, count) talloc_array(ctx, type, count)
-#define talloc_realloc_p(ctx, p, type, count) talloc_realloc(ctx, p, type, count)
-#define talloc_destroy(ctx) talloc_free(ctx)
-#define talloc_append_string(c, s, a) (s?talloc_strdup_append(s,a):talloc_strdup(c, a))
-#endif
-
-#define TALLOC_FREE(ctx) do { talloc_free(ctx); ctx=NULL; } while(0)
-
-/* The following definitions come from talloc.c */
-void *_talloc(const void *context, size_t size);
-void *talloc_pool(const void *context, size_t size);
-void _talloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, int (*_destructor)(void *));
-int talloc_increase_ref_count(const void *ptr);
-size_t talloc_reference_count(const void *ptr);
-void *_talloc_reference_loc(const void *context, const void *ptr, const char *location);
-int talloc_unlink(const void *context, void *ptr);
-const char *talloc_set_name(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3);
-void talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name);
-void *talloc_named(const void *context, size_t size,
- const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(3,4);
-void *talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name);
-const char *talloc_get_name(const void *ptr);
-void *talloc_check_name(const void *ptr, const char *name);
-void *_talloc_get_type_abort(const void *ptr, const char *name, const char *location);
-void *talloc_parent(const void *ptr);
-const char *talloc_parent_name(const void *ptr);
-void *talloc_init(const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(1,2);
-int _talloc_free(void *ptr, const char *location);
-void talloc_free_children(void *ptr);
-void *_talloc_realloc(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size, const char *name);
-void *_talloc_steal_loc(const void *new_ctx, const void *ptr, const char *location);
-void *talloc_reparent(const void *old_parent, const void *new_parent, const void *ptr);
-void *_talloc_move(const void *new_ctx, const void *pptr);
-size_t talloc_total_size(const void *ptr);
-size_t talloc_total_blocks(const void *ptr);
-void talloc_report_depth_cb(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth,
- void (*callback)(const void *ptr,
- int depth, int max_depth,
- int is_ref,
- void *private_data),
- void *private_data);
-void talloc_report_depth_file(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, FILE *f);
-void talloc_report_full(const void *ptr, FILE *f);
-void talloc_report(const void *ptr, FILE *f);
-void talloc_enable_null_tracking(void);
-void talloc_enable_null_tracking_no_autofree(void);
-void talloc_disable_null_tracking(void);
-void talloc_enable_leak_report(void);
-void talloc_enable_leak_report_full(void);
-void *_talloc_zero(const void *ctx, size_t size, const char *name);
-void *_talloc_memdup(const void *t, const void *p, size_t size, const char *name);
-void *_talloc_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name);
-void *_talloc_zero_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name);
-void *_talloc_realloc_array(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name);
-void *talloc_realloc_fn(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size);
-void *talloc_autofree_context(void);
-size_t talloc_get_size(const void *ctx);
-void *talloc_find_parent_byname(const void *ctx, const char *name);
-void talloc_show_parents(const void *context, FILE *file);
-int talloc_is_parent(const void *context, const void *ptr);
-
-char *talloc_strdup(const void *t, const char *p);
-char *talloc_strdup_append(char *s, const char *a);
-char *talloc_strdup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a);
-
-char *talloc_strndup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t n);
-char *talloc_strndup_append(char *s, const char *a, size_t n);
-char *talloc_strndup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a, size_t n);
-
-char *talloc_vasprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0);
-char *talloc_vasprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0);
-char *talloc_vasprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0);
-
-char *talloc_asprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3);
-char *talloc_asprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3);
-char *talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3);
-
-void talloc_set_abort_fn(void (*abort_fn)(const char *reason));
-void talloc_set_log_fn(void (*log_fn)(const char *message));
-void talloc_set_log_stderr(void);
-
-#endif
diff --git a/src/talloc/talloc_guide.txt b/src/talloc/talloc_guide.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 01de806662d..00000000000
--- a/src/talloc/talloc_guide.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,757 +0,0 @@
-Using talloc in Samba4
-======================
-
-.. contents::
-
-Andrew Tridgell
-August 2009
-
-The most current version of this document is available at
- http://samba.org/ftp/unpacked/talloc/talloc_guide.txt
-
-If you are used to the "old" talloc from Samba3 before 3.0.20 then please read
-this carefully, as talloc has changed a lot. With 3.0.20 (or 3.0.14?) the
-Samba4 talloc has been ported back to Samba3, so this guide applies to both.
-
-The new talloc is a hierarchical, reference counted memory pool system
-with destructors. Quite a mouthful really, but not too bad once you
-get used to it.
-
-Perhaps the biggest change from Samba3 is that there is no distinction
-between a "talloc context" and a "talloc pointer". Any pointer
-returned from talloc() is itself a valid talloc context. This means
-you can do this::
-
- struct foo *X = talloc(mem_ctx, struct foo);
- X->name = talloc_strdup(X, "foo");
-
-and the pointer X->name would be a "child" of the talloc context "X"
-which is itself a child of mem_ctx. So if you do talloc_free(mem_ctx)
-then it is all destroyed, whereas if you do talloc_free(X) then just X
-and X->name are destroyed, and if you do talloc_free(X->name) then
-just the name element of X is destroyed.
-
-If you think about this, then what this effectively gives you is an
-n-ary tree, where you can free any part of the tree with
-talloc_free().
-
-If you find this confusing, then I suggest you run the testsuite to
-watch talloc in action. You may also like to add your own tests to
-testsuite.c to clarify how some particular situation is handled.
-
-
-Performance
------------
-
-All the additional features of talloc() over malloc() do come at a
-price. We have a simple performance test in Samba4 that measures
-talloc() versus malloc() performance, and it seems that talloc() is
-about 4% slower than malloc() on my x86 Debian Linux box. For Samba,
-the great reduction in code complexity that we get by using talloc
-makes this worthwhile, especially as the total overhead of
-talloc/malloc in Samba is already quite small.
-
-
-talloc API
-----------
-
-The following is a complete guide to the talloc API. Read it all at
-least twice.
-
-Multi-threading
----------------
-
-talloc itself does not deal with threads. It is thread-safe (assuming
-the underlying "malloc" is), as long as each thread uses different
-memory contexts.
-If two threads uses the same context then they need to synchronize in
-order to be safe. In particular:
-- when using talloc_enable_leak_report(), giving directly NULL as a
-parent context implicitly refers to a hidden "null context" global
-variable, so this should not be used in a multi-threaded environment
-without proper synchronization ;
-- the context returned by talloc_autofree_context() is also global so
-shouldn't be used by several threads simultaneously without
-synchronization.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(type *)talloc(const void *context, type);
-
-The talloc() macro is the core of the talloc library. It takes a
-memory context and a type, and returns a pointer to a new area of
-memory of the given type.
-
-The returned pointer is itself a talloc context, so you can use it as
-the context argument to more calls to talloc if you wish.
-
-The returned pointer is a "child" of the supplied context. This means
-that if you talloc_free() the context then the new child disappears as
-well. Alternatively you can free just the child.
-
-The context argument to talloc() can be NULL, in which case a new top
-level context is created.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_size(const void *context, size_t size);
-
-The function talloc_size() should be used when you don't have a
-convenient type to pass to talloc(). Unlike talloc(), it is not type
-safe (as it returns a void *), so you are on your own for type checking.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(typeof(ptr)) talloc_ptrtype(const void *ctx, ptr);
-
-The talloc_ptrtype() macro should be used when you have a pointer and
-want to allocate memory to point at with this pointer. When compiling
-with gcc >= 3 it is typesafe. Note this is a wrapper of talloc_size()
-and talloc_get_name() will return the current location in the source file.
-and not the type.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-int talloc_free(void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_free() function frees a piece of talloc memory, and all its
-children. You can call talloc_free() on any pointer returned by
-talloc().
-
-The return value of talloc_free() indicates success or failure, with 0
-returned for success and -1 for failure. The only possible failure
-condition is if the pointer had a destructor attached to it and the
-destructor returned -1. See talloc_set_destructor() for details on
-destructors.
-
-If this pointer has an additional parent when talloc_free() is called
-then the memory is not actually released, but instead the most
-recently established parent is destroyed. See talloc_reference() for
-details on establishing additional parents.
-
-For more control on which parent is removed, see talloc_unlink()
-
-talloc_free() operates recursively on its children.
-
-From the 2.0 version of talloc, as a special case, talloc_free() is
-refused on pointers that have more than one parent, as talloc would
-have no way of knowing which parent should be removed. To free a
-pointer that has more than one parent please use talloc_unlink().
-
-To help you find problems in your code caused by this behaviour, if
-you do try and free a pointer with more than one parent then the
-talloc logging function will be called to give output like this:
-
- ERROR: talloc_free with references at some_dir/source/foo.c:123
- reference at some_dir/source/other.c:325
- reference at some_dir/source/third.c:121
-
-Please see the documentation for talloc_set_log_fn() and
-talloc_set_log_stderr() for more information on talloc logging
-functions.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-int talloc_free_children(void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_free_children() walks along the list of all children of a
-talloc context and talloc_free()s only the children, not the context
-itself.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_reference(const void *context, const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_reference() function makes "context" an additional parent
-of "ptr".
-
-The return value of talloc_reference() is always the original pointer
-"ptr", unless talloc ran out of memory in creating the reference in
-which case it will return NULL (each additional reference consumes
-around 48 bytes of memory on intel x86 platforms).
-
-If "ptr" is NULL, then the function is a no-op, and simply returns NULL.
-
-After creating a reference you can free it in one of the following
-ways:
-
- - you can talloc_free() any parent of the original pointer. That
- will reduce the number of parents of this pointer by 1, and will
- cause this pointer to be freed if it runs out of parents.
-
- - you can talloc_free() the pointer itself. That will destroy the
- most recently established parent to the pointer and leave the
- pointer as a child of its current parent.
-
-For more control on which parent to remove, see talloc_unlink()
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-int talloc_unlink(const void *context, const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_unlink() function removes a specific parent from ptr. The
-context passed must either be a context used in talloc_reference()
-with this pointer, or must be a direct parent of ptr.
-
-Note that if the parent has already been removed using talloc_free()
-then this function will fail and will return -1. Likewise, if "ptr"
-is NULL, then the function will make no modifications and return -1.
-
-Usually you can just use talloc_free() instead of talloc_unlink(), but
-sometimes it is useful to have the additional control on which parent
-is removed.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, int (*destructor)(void *));
-
-The function talloc_set_destructor() sets the "destructor" for the
-pointer "ptr". A destructor is a function that is called when the
-memory used by a pointer is about to be released. The destructor
-receives the pointer as an argument, and should return 0 for success
-and -1 for failure.
-
-The destructor can do anything it wants to, including freeing other
-pieces of memory. A common use for destructors is to clean up
-operating system resources (such as open file descriptors) contained
-in the structure the destructor is placed on.
-
-You can only place one destructor on a pointer. If you need more than
-one destructor then you can create a zero-length child of the pointer
-and place an additional destructor on that.
-
-To remove a destructor call talloc_set_destructor() with NULL for the
-destructor.
-
-If your destructor attempts to talloc_free() the pointer that it is
-the destructor for then talloc_free() will return -1 and the free will
-be ignored. This would be a pointless operation anyway, as the
-destructor is only called when the memory is just about to go away.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-int talloc_increase_ref_count(const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_increase_ref_count(ptr) function is exactly equivalent to:
-
- talloc_reference(NULL, ptr);
-
-You can use either syntax, depending on which you think is clearer in
-your code.
-
-It returns 0 on success and -1 on failure.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-size_t talloc_reference_count(const void *ptr);
-
-Return the number of references to the pointer.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_set_name(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, ...);
-
-Each talloc pointer has a "name". The name is used principally for
-debugging purposes, although it is also possible to set and get the
-name on a pointer in as a way of "marking" pointers in your code.
-
-The main use for names on pointer is for "talloc reports". See
-talloc_report() and talloc_report_full() for details. Also see
-talloc_enable_leak_report() and talloc_enable_leak_report_full().
-
-The talloc_set_name() function allocates memory as a child of the
-pointer. It is logically equivalent to:
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, talloc_asprintf(ptr, fmt, ...));
-
-Note that multiple calls to talloc_set_name() will allocate more
-memory without releasing the name. All of the memory is released when
-the ptr is freed using talloc_free().
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name);
-
-The function talloc_set_name_const() is just like talloc_set_name(),
-but it takes a string constant, and is much faster. It is extensively
-used by the "auto naming" macros, such as talloc_p().
-
-This function does not allocate any memory. It just copies the
-supplied pointer into the internal representation of the talloc
-ptr. This means you must not pass a name pointer to memory that will
-disappear before the ptr is freed with talloc_free().
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_named(const void *context, size_t size, const char *fmt, ...);
-
-The talloc_named() function creates a named talloc pointer. It is
-equivalent to:
-
- ptr = talloc_size(context, size);
- talloc_set_name(ptr, fmt, ....);
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name);
-
-This is equivalent to::
-
- ptr = talloc_size(context, size);
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, name);
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-const char *talloc_get_name(const void *ptr);
-
-This returns the current name for the given talloc pointer. See
-talloc_set_name() for details.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_init(const char *fmt, ...);
-
-This function creates a zero length named talloc context as a top
-level context. It is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_named(NULL, 0, fmt, ...);
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_new(void *ctx);
-
-This is a utility macro that creates a new memory context hanging
-off an exiting context, automatically naming it "talloc_new: __location__"
-where __location__ is the source line it is called from. It is
-particularly useful for creating a new temporary working context.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(type *)talloc_realloc(const void *context, void *ptr, type, count);
-
-The talloc_realloc() macro changes the size of a talloc
-pointer. The "count" argument is the number of elements of type "type"
-that you want the resulting pointer to hold.
-
-talloc_realloc() has the following equivalences::
-
- talloc_realloc(context, NULL, type, 1) ==> talloc(context, type);
- talloc_realloc(context, NULL, type, N) ==> talloc_array(context, type, N);
- talloc_realloc(context, ptr, type, 0) ==> talloc_free(ptr);
-
-The "context" argument is only used if "ptr" is NULL, otherwise it is
-ignored.
-
-talloc_realloc() returns the new pointer, or NULL on failure. The call
-will fail either due to a lack of memory, or because the pointer has
-more than one parent (see talloc_reference()).
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_realloc_size(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size);
-
-the talloc_realloc_size() function is useful when the type is not
-known so the typesafe talloc_realloc() cannot be used.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_steal(const void *new_ctx, const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_steal() function changes the parent context of a talloc
-pointer. It is typically used when the context that the pointer is
-currently a child of is going to be freed and you wish to keep the
-memory for a longer time.
-
-The talloc_steal() function returns the pointer that you pass it. It
-does not have any failure modes.
-
-NOTE: It is possible to produce loops in the parent/child relationship
-if you are not careful with talloc_steal(). No guarantees are provided
-as to your sanity or the safety of your data if you do this.
-
-talloc_steal (new_ctx, NULL) will return NULL with no sideeffects.
-
-Note that if you try and call talloc_steal() on a pointer that has
-more than one parent then the result is ambiguous. Talloc will choose
-to remove the parent that is currently indicated by talloc_parent()
-and replace it with the chosen parent. You will also get a message
-like this via the talloc logging functions:
-
- WARNING: talloc_steal with references at some_dir/source/foo.c:123
- reference at some_dir/source/other.c:325
- reference at some_dir/source/third.c:121
-
-To unambiguously change the parent of a pointer please see the
-function talloc_reparent(). See the talloc_set_log_fn() documentation
-for more information on talloc logging.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_reparent(const void *old_parent, const void *new_parent, const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_reparent() function changes the parent context of a talloc
-pointer. It is typically used when the context that the pointer is
-currently a child of is going to be freed and you wish to keep the
-memory for a longer time.
-
-The talloc_reparent() function returns the pointer that you pass it. It
-does not have any failure modes.
-
-The difference between talloc_reparent() and talloc_steal() is that
-talloc_reparent() can specify which parent you wish to change. This is
-useful when a pointer has multiple parents via references.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_parent(const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_parent() function returns the current talloc parent. This
-is usually the pointer under which this memory was originally created,
-but it may have changed due to a talloc_steal() or talloc_reparent()
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-size_t talloc_total_size(const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_total_size() function returns the total size in bytes used
-by this pointer and all child pointers. Mostly useful for debugging.
-
-Passing NULL is allowed, but it will only give a meaningful result if
-talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has
-been called.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-size_t talloc_total_blocks(const void *ptr);
-
-The talloc_total_blocks() function returns the total memory block
-count used by this pointer and all child pointers. Mostly useful for
-debugging.
-
-Passing NULL is allowed, but it will only give a meaningful result if
-talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has
-been called.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_report_depth_cb(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth,
- void (*callback)(const void *ptr,
- int depth, int max_depth,
- int is_ref,
- void *priv),
- void *priv);
-
-This provides a more flexible reports than talloc_report(). It
-will recursively call the callback for the entire tree of memory
-referenced by the pointer. References in the tree are passed with
-is_ref = 1 and the pointer that is referenced.
-
-You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is
-printed for the top level memory context, but only if
-talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full()
-has been called.
-
-The recursion is stopped when depth >= max_depth.
-max_depth = -1 means only stop at leaf nodes.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_report_depth_file(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, FILE *f);
-
-This provides a more flexible reports than talloc_report(). It
-will let you specify the depth and max_depth.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_report(const void *ptr, FILE *f);
-
-The talloc_report() function prints a summary report of all memory
-used by ptr. One line of report is printed for each immediate child of
-ptr, showing the total memory and number of blocks used by that child.
-
-You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is printed
-for the top level memory context, but only if
-talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has
-been called.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_report_full(const void *ptr, FILE *f);
-
-This provides a more detailed report than talloc_report(). It will
-recursively print the ensire tree of memory referenced by the
-pointer. References in the tree are shown by giving the name of the
-pointer that is referenced.
-
-You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is printed
-for the top level memory context, but only if
-talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has
-been called.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_enable_leak_report(void);
-
-This enables calling of talloc_report(NULL, stderr) when the program
-exits. In Samba4 this is enabled by using the --leak-report command
-line option.
-
-For it to be useful, this function must be called before any other
-talloc function as it establishes a "null context" that acts as the
-top of the tree. If you don't call this function first then passing
-NULL to talloc_report() or talloc_report_full() won't give you the
-full tree printout.
-
-Here is a typical talloc report:
-
-talloc report on 'null_context' (total 267 bytes in 15 blocks)
- libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks
- libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks
- iconv(UTF8,CP850) contains 42 bytes in 2 blocks
- libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks
- iconv(CP850,UTF8) contains 42 bytes in 2 blocks
- iconv(UTF8,UTF-16LE) contains 45 bytes in 2 blocks
- iconv(UTF-16LE,UTF8) contains 45 bytes in 2 blocks
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_enable_leak_report_full(void);
-
-This enables calling of talloc_report_full(NULL, stderr) when the
-program exits. In Samba4 this is enabled by using the
---leak-report-full command line option.
-
-For it to be useful, this function must be called before any other
-talloc function as it establishes a "null context" that acts as the
-top of the tree. If you don't call this function first then passing
-NULL to talloc_report() or talloc_report_full() won't give you the
-full tree printout.
-
-Here is a typical full report:
-
-full talloc report on 'root' (total 18 bytes in 8 blocks)
- p1 contains 18 bytes in 7 blocks (ref 0)
- r1 contains 13 bytes in 2 blocks (ref 0)
- reference to: p2
- p2 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 1)
- x3 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0)
- x2 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0)
- x1 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_enable_null_tracking(void);
-
-This enables tracking of the NULL memory context without enabling leak
-reporting on exit. Useful for when you want to do your own leak
-reporting call via talloc_report_null_full();
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_disable_null_tracking(void);
-
-This disables tracking of the NULL memory context.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(type *)talloc_zero(const void *ctx, type);
-
-The talloc_zero() macro is equivalent to::
-
- ptr = talloc(ctx, type);
- if (ptr) memset(ptr, 0, sizeof(type));
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_zero_size(const void *ctx, size_t size)
-
-The talloc_zero_size() function is useful when you don't have a known type
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_memdup(const void *ctx, const void *p, size_t size);
-
-The talloc_memdup() function is equivalent to::
-
- ptr = talloc_size(ctx, size);
- if (ptr) memcpy(ptr, p, size);
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_strdup(const void *ctx, const char *p);
-
-The talloc_strdup() function is equivalent to::
-
- ptr = talloc_size(ctx, strlen(p)+1);
- if (ptr) memcpy(ptr, p, strlen(p)+1);
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the passed
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_strndup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t n);
-
-The talloc_strndup() function is the talloc equivalent of the C
-library function strndup()
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the passed
-string. This is equivalent to:
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_append_string(const void *t, char *orig, const char *append);
-
-The talloc_append_string() function appends the given formatted
-string to the given string.
-
-This function sets the name of the new pointer to the new
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_vasprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, va_list ap);
-
-The talloc_vasprintf() function is the talloc equivalent of the C
-library function vasprintf()
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_asprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, ...);
-
-The talloc_asprintf() function is the talloc equivalent of the C
-library function asprintf()
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_asprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, ...);
-
-The talloc_asprintf_append() function appends the given formatted
-string to the given string.
-Use this varient when the string in the current talloc buffer may
-have been truncated in length.
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-char *talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, ...);
-
-The talloc_asprintf_append() function appends the given formatted
-string to the end of the currently allocated talloc buffer.
-Use this varient when the string in the current talloc buffer has
-not been changed.
-
-This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new
-string. This is equivalent to::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-((type *)talloc_array(const void *ctx, type, uint_t count);
-
-The talloc_array() macro is equivalent to::
-
- (type *)talloc_size(ctx, sizeof(type) * count);
-
-except that it provides integer overflow protection for the multiply,
-returning NULL if the multiply overflows.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_array_size(const void *ctx, size_t size, uint_t count);
-
-The talloc_array_size() function is useful when the type is not
-known. It operates in the same way as talloc_array(), but takes a size
-instead of a type.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(typeof(ptr)) talloc_array_ptrtype(const void *ctx, ptr, uint_t count);
-
-The talloc_ptrtype() macro should be used when you have a pointer to an array
-and want to allocate memory of an array to point at with this pointer. When compiling
-with gcc >= 3 it is typesafe. Note this is a wrapper of talloc_array_size()
-and talloc_get_name() will return the current location in the source file.
-and not the type.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_realloc_fn(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t size);
-
-This is a non-macro version of talloc_realloc(), which is useful
-as libraries sometimes want a ralloc function pointer. A realloc()
-implementation encapsulates the functionality of malloc(), free() and
-realloc() in one call, which is why it is useful to be able to pass
-around a single function pointer.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_autofree_context(void);
-
-This is a handy utility function that returns a talloc context
-which will be automatically freed on program exit. This can be used
-to reduce the noise in memory leak reports.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_check_name(const void *ptr, const char *name);
-
-This function checks if a pointer has the specified name. If it does
-then the pointer is returned. It it doesn't then NULL is returned.
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(type *)talloc_get_type(const void *ptr, type);
-
-This macro allows you to do type checking on talloc pointers. It is
-particularly useful for void* private pointers. It is equivalent to
-this::
-
- (type *)talloc_check_name(ptr, #type)
-
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-talloc_set_type(const void *ptr, type);
-
-This macro allows you to force the name of a pointer to be a
-particular type. This can be used in conjunction with
-talloc_get_type() to do type checking on void* pointers.
-
-It is equivalent to this::
-
- talloc_set_name_const(ptr, #type)
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-talloc_get_size(const void *ctx);
-
-This function lets you know the amount of memory alloced so far by
-this context. It does NOT account for subcontext memory.
-This can be used to calculate the size of an array.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void *talloc_find_parent_byname(const void *ctx, const char *name);
-
-Find a parent memory context of the current context that has the given
-name. This can be very useful in complex programs where it may be
-difficult to pass all information down to the level you need, but you
-know the structure you want is a parent of another context.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-(type *)talloc_find_parent_bytype(ctx, type);
-
-Like talloc_find_parent_byname() but takes a type, making it typesafe.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_set_log_fn(void (*log_fn)(const char *message));
-
-This function sets a logging function that talloc will use for
-warnings and errors. By default talloc will not print any warnings or
-errors.
-
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-void talloc_set_log_stderr(void)
-
-This sets the talloc log function to write log messages to stderr