- 5b675ef65e4977b3ac778a75a21e99db1ebe78e7 Remove "not an official google project" disclaimer. by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com> - 77d2aacc03efe6841612b38bcbb745dde1ad7d3e Avoid weak virtual table warnings (-Wweak-vtables) and re... by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com> GitOrigin-RevId: 5b675ef65e4977b3ac778a75a21e99db1ebe78e7 Change-Id: Ia0d1d6e39169c7ad9783d25dc92dad041de3a966
		
			
				
	
	
		
			426 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			18 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			C++
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			426 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			18 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			C++
		
	
	
	
	
	
//
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// Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors.
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//
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// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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// You may obtain a copy of the License at
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//
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//      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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//
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// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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// limitations under the License.
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//
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// Extra extensions exported by some malloc implementations.  These
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// extensions are accessed through a virtual base class so an
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// application can link against a malloc that does not implement these
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// extensions, and it will get default versions that do nothing.
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//
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// NOTE FOR C USERS: If you wish to use this functionality from within
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// a C program, see malloc_extension_c.h.
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#ifndef ABSL_BASE_INTERNAL_MALLOC_EXTENSION_H_
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#define ABSL_BASE_INTERNAL_MALLOC_EXTENSION_H_
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#include <stddef.h>
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#include <stdint.h>
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#include <atomic>
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#include <map>
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#include <memory>
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#include <string>
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#include <vector>
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#include "absl/base/attributes.h"
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#include "absl/base/macros.h"
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#include "absl/base/port.h"
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namespace absl {
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namespace base_internal {
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class MallocExtensionWriter;
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// Interface to a pluggable system allocator.
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class SysAllocator {
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 public:
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  SysAllocator() {
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  }
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  virtual ~SysAllocator();
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  // Allocates "size"-byte of memory from system aligned with "alignment".
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  // Returns null if failed. Otherwise, the returned pointer p up to and
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  // including (p + actual_size -1) have been allocated.
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  virtual void* Alloc(size_t size, size_t *actual_size, size_t alignment) = 0;
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  // Get a human-readable description of the current state of the
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  // allocator.  The state is stored as a null-terminated std::string in
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  // a prefix of buffer.
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  virtual void GetStats(char* buffer, int length);
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};
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// The default implementations of the following routines do nothing.
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// All implementations should be thread-safe; the current ones
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// (DebugMallocImplementation and TCMallocImplementation) are.
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class MallocExtension {
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 public:
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  virtual ~MallocExtension();
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  // Verifies that all blocks are valid.  Returns true if all are; dumps
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  // core otherwise.  A no-op except in debug mode.  Even in debug mode,
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  // they may not do any checking except with certain malloc
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  // implementations.  Thread-safe.
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  virtual bool VerifyAllMemory();
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  // Verifies that p was returned by new, has not been deleted, and is
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  // valid.  Returns true if p is good; dumps core otherwise.  A no-op
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  // except in debug mode.  Even in debug mode, may not do any checking
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  // except with certain malloc implementations.  Thread-safe.
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  virtual bool VerifyNewMemory(const void* p);
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  // Verifies that p was returned by new[], has not been deleted, and is
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  // valid.  Returns true if p is good; dumps core otherwise.  A no-op
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  // except in debug mode.  Even in debug mode, may not do any checking
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  // except with certain malloc implementations.  Thread-safe.
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  virtual bool VerifyArrayNewMemory(const void* p);
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  // Verifies that p was returned by malloc, has not been freed, and is
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  // valid.  Returns true if p is good; dumps core otherwise.  A no-op
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  // except in debug mode.  Even in debug mode, may not do any checking
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  // except with certain malloc implementations.  Thread-safe.
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  virtual bool VerifyMallocMemory(const void* p);
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  // If statistics collection is enabled, sets *blocks to be the number of
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  // currently allocated blocks, sets *total to be the total size allocated
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  // over all blocks, sets histogram[n] to be the number of blocks with
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  // size between 2^n-1 and 2^(n+1), and returns true.  Returns false, and
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  // does not change *blocks, *total, or *histogram, if statistics
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  // collection is disabled.
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  //
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  // Note that these statistics reflect memory allocated by new, new[],
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  // malloc(), and realloc(), but not mmap().  They may be larger (if not
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  // all pages have been written to) or smaller (if pages have been
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  // allocated by mmap()) than the total RSS size.  They will always be
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  // smaller than the total virtual memory size.
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  static constexpr int kMallocHistogramSize = 64;
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  virtual bool MallocMemoryStats(int* blocks, size_t* total,
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                                 int histogram[kMallocHistogramSize]);
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  // Get a human readable description of the current state of the malloc
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  // data structures.  The state is stored as a null-terminated std::string
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  // in a prefix of "buffer[0,buffer_length-1]".
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  // REQUIRES: buffer_length > 0.
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  virtual void GetStats(char* buffer, int buffer_length);
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  // Outputs to "writer" a sample of live objects and the stack traces
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  // that allocated these objects. The output can be passed to pprof.
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  virtual void GetHeapSample(MallocExtensionWriter* writer);
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  // Outputs to "writer" the stack traces that caused growth in the
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  // address space size. The output can be passed to "pprof".
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  virtual void GetHeapGrowthStacks(MallocExtensionWriter* writer);
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  // Outputs to "writer" a fragmentation profile. The output can be
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  // passed to "pprof".  In particular, the result is a list of
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  // <n,total,stacktrace> tuples that says that "total" bytes in "n"
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  // objects are currently unusable because of fragmentation caused by
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  // an allocation with the specified "stacktrace".
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  virtual void GetFragmentationProfile(MallocExtensionWriter* writer);
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  // -------------------------------------------------------------------
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  // Control operations for getting and setting malloc implementation
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  // specific parameters.  Some currently useful properties:
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  //
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  // generic
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  // -------
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  // "generic.current_allocated_bytes"
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  //      Number of bytes currently allocated by application
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  //      This property is not writable.
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  //
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  // "generic.heap_size"
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  //      Number of bytes in the heap ==
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  //            current_allocated_bytes +
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  //            fragmentation +
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  //            freed memory regions
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  //      This property is not writable.
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  //
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  // tcmalloc
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  // --------
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  // "tcmalloc.max_total_thread_cache_bytes"
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  //      Upper limit on total number of bytes stored across all
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  //      per-thread caches.  Default: 16MB.
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  //
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  // "tcmalloc.current_total_thread_cache_bytes"
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  //      Number of bytes used across all thread caches.
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  //      This property is not writable.
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  //
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  // "tcmalloc.pageheap_free_bytes"
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  //      Number of bytes in free, mapped pages in page heap.  These
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  //      bytes can be used to fulfill allocation requests.  They
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  //      always count towards virtual memory usage, and unless the
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  //      underlying memory is swapped out by the OS, they also count
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  //      towards physical memory usage.  This property is not writable.
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  //
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  // "tcmalloc.pageheap_unmapped_bytes"
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  //      Number of bytes in free, unmapped pages in page heap.
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  //      These are bytes that have been released back to the OS,
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  //      possibly by one of the MallocExtension "Release" calls.
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  //      They can be used to fulfill allocation requests, but
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  //      typically incur a page fault.  They always count towards
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  //      virtual memory usage, and depending on the OS, typically
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  //      do not count towards physical memory usage.  This property
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  //      is not writable.
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  //
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  //  "tcmalloc.per_cpu_caches_active"
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  //      Whether tcmalloc is using per-CPU caches (1 or 0 respectively).
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  //      This property is not writable.
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  // -------------------------------------------------------------------
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  // Get the named "property"'s value.  Returns true if the property
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  // is known.  Returns false if the property is not a valid property
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  // name for the current malloc implementation.
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  // REQUIRES: property != null; value != null
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  virtual bool GetNumericProperty(const char* property, size_t* value);
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  // Set the named "property"'s value.  Returns true if the property
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  // is known and writable.  Returns false if the property is not a
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  // valid property name for the current malloc implementation, or
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  // is not writable.
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  // REQUIRES: property != null
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  virtual bool SetNumericProperty(const char* property, size_t value);
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  // Mark the current thread as "idle".  This routine may optionally
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  // be called by threads as a hint to the malloc implementation that
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  // any thread-specific resources should be released.  Note: this may
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  // be an expensive routine, so it should not be called too often.
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  //
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  // Also, if the code that calls this routine will go to sleep for
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  // a while, it should take care to not allocate anything between
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  // the call to this routine and the beginning of the sleep.
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  //
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  // Most malloc implementations ignore this routine.
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  virtual void MarkThreadIdle();
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  // Mark the current thread as "busy".  This routine should be
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  // called after MarkThreadIdle() if the thread will now do more
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  // work.  If this method is not called, performance may suffer.
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  //
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  // Most malloc implementations ignore this routine.
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  virtual void MarkThreadBusy();
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  // Attempt to free any resources associated with cpu <cpu> (in the sense
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  // of only being usable from that CPU.)  Returns the number of bytes
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  // previously assigned to "cpu" that were freed.  Safe to call from
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  // any processor, not just <cpu>.
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  //
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  // Most malloc implementations ignore this routine (known exceptions:
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  // tcmalloc with --tcmalloc_per_cpu_caches=true.)
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  virtual size_t ReleaseCPUMemory(int cpu);
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  // Gets the system allocator used by the malloc extension instance. Returns
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  // null for malloc implementations that do not support pluggable system
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  // allocators.
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  virtual SysAllocator* GetSystemAllocator();
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  // Sets the system allocator to the specified.
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  //
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  // Users could register their own system allocators for malloc implementation
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  // that supports pluggable system allocators, such as TCMalloc, by doing:
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  //   alloc = new MyOwnSysAllocator();
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  //   MallocExtension::instance()->SetSystemAllocator(alloc);
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  // It's up to users whether to fall back (recommended) to the default
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  // system allocator (use GetSystemAllocator() above) or not. The caller is
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  // responsible to any necessary locking.
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  // See tcmalloc/system-alloc.h for the interface and
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  //     tcmalloc/memfs_malloc.cc for the examples.
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  //
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  // It's a no-op for malloc implementations that do not support pluggable
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  // system allocators.
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  virtual void SetSystemAllocator(SysAllocator *a);
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  // Try to release num_bytes of free memory back to the operating
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  // system for reuse.  Use this extension with caution -- to get this
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  // memory back may require faulting pages back in by the OS, and
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  // that may be slow.  (Currently only implemented in tcmalloc.)
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  virtual void ReleaseToSystem(size_t num_bytes);
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  // Same as ReleaseToSystem() but release as much memory as possible.
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  virtual void ReleaseFreeMemory();
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  // Sets the rate at which we release unused memory to the system.
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  // Zero means we never release memory back to the system.  Increase
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  // this flag to return memory faster; decrease it to return memory
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  // slower.  Reasonable rates are in the range [0,10].  (Currently
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  // only implemented in tcmalloc).
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  virtual void SetMemoryReleaseRate(double rate);
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  // Gets the release rate.  Returns a value < 0 if unknown.
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  virtual double GetMemoryReleaseRate();
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  // Returns the estimated number of bytes that will be allocated for
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  // a request of "size" bytes.  This is an estimate: an allocation of
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  // SIZE bytes may reserve more bytes, but will never reserve less.
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  // (Currently only implemented in tcmalloc, other implementations
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  // always return SIZE.)
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  // This is equivalent to malloc_good_size() in OS X.
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  virtual size_t GetEstimatedAllocatedSize(size_t size);
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  // Returns the actual number N of bytes reserved by tcmalloc for the
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  // pointer p.  This number may be equal to or greater than the
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  // number of bytes requested when p was allocated.
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  //
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  // This routine is just useful for statistics collection.  The
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  // client must *not* read or write from the extra bytes that are
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  // indicated by this call.
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  //
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  // Example, suppose the client gets memory by calling
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  //    p = malloc(10)
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  // and GetAllocatedSize(p) returns 16.  The client must only use the
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  // first 10 bytes p[0..9], and not attempt to read or write p[10..15].
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  //
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  // p must have been allocated by this malloc implementation, must
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  // not be an interior pointer -- that is, must be exactly the
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  // pointer returned to by malloc() et al., not some offset from that
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  // -- and should not have been freed yet.  p may be null.
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  // (Currently only implemented in tcmalloc; other implementations
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  // will return 0.)
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  virtual size_t GetAllocatedSize(const void* p);
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  // Returns kOwned if this malloc implementation allocated the memory
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  // pointed to by p, or kNotOwned if some other malloc implementation
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  // allocated it or p is null.  May also return kUnknownOwnership if
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  // the malloc implementation does not keep track of ownership.
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  // REQUIRES: p must be a value returned from a previous call to
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  // malloc(), calloc(), realloc(), memalign(), posix_memalign(),
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  // valloc(), pvalloc(), new, or new[], and must refer to memory that
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  // is currently allocated (so, for instance, you should not pass in
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  // a pointer after having called free() on it).
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  enum Ownership {
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    // NOTE: Enum values MUST be kept in sync with the version in
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    // malloc_extension_c.h
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    kUnknownOwnership = 0,
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    kOwned,
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    kNotOwned
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  };
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  virtual Ownership GetOwnership(const void* p);
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  // The current malloc implementation.  Always non-null.
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  static MallocExtension* instance() {
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    InitModuleOnce();
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    return current_instance_.load(std::memory_order_acquire);
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  }
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  // Change the malloc implementation.  Typically called by the
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  // malloc implementation during initialization.
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  static void Register(MallocExtension* implementation);
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  // Type used by GetProperties.  See comment on GetProperties.
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  struct Property {
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    size_t value;
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    // Stores breakdown of the property value bucketed by object size.
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    struct Bucket {
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      size_t min_object_size;
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      size_t max_object_size;
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      size_t size;
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    };
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    // Empty unless detailed info was asked for and this type has buckets
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    std::vector<Bucket> buckets;
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  };
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  // Type used by GetProperties.  See comment on GetProperties.
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  enum StatLevel { kSummary, kDetailed };
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  // Stores in *result detailed statistics about the malloc
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  // implementation. *result will be a map keyed by the name of
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  // the statistic. Each statistic has at least a "value" field.
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  //
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  // Some statistics may also contain an array of buckets if
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  // level==kDetailed and the "value" can be subdivided
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  // into different buckets for different object sizes.  If
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  // such detailed statistics are not available, Property::buckets
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  // will be empty.  Otherwise Property::buckets will contain
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  // potentially many entries.  For each bucket b, b.value
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  // will count the value contributed by objects in the range
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  // [b.min_object_size, b.max_object_size].
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  //
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  // Common across malloc implementations:
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  //  generic.bytes_in_use_by_app  -- Bytes currently in use by application
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  //  generic.physical_memory_used -- Overall (including malloc internals)
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  //  generic.virtual_memory_used  -- Overall (including malloc internals)
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  //
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  // Tcmalloc specific properties
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  //  tcmalloc.cpu_free            -- Bytes in per-cpu free-lists
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  //  tcmalloc.thread_cache_free   -- Bytes in per-thread free-lists
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  //  tcmalloc.transfer_cache      -- Bytes in cross-thread transfer caches
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  //  tcmalloc.central_cache_free  -- Bytes in central cache
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  //  tcmalloc.page_heap_free      -- Bytes in page heap
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  //  tcmalloc.page_heap_unmapped  -- Bytes in page heap (no backing phys. mem)
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  //  tcmalloc.metadata_bytes      -- Used by internal data structures
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  //  tcmalloc.thread_cache_count  -- Number of thread caches in use
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  //
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  // Debug allocator
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  //  debug.free_queue             -- Recently freed objects
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  virtual void GetProperties(StatLevel level,
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                             std::map<std::string, Property>* result);
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 private:
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  static MallocExtension* InitModule();
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  static void InitModuleOnce() {
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    // Pointer stored here so heap leak checker will consider the default
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    // instance reachable, even if current_instance_ is later overridden by
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    // MallocExtension::Register().
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    ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED static MallocExtension* default_instance =
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        InitModule();
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  }
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  static std::atomic<MallocExtension*> current_instance_;
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};
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// Base class than can handle output generated by GetHeapSample() and
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// GetHeapGrowthStacks().  Use the available subclass or roll your
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// own.  Useful if you want explicit control over the type of output
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// buffer used (e.g. IOBuffer, Cord, etc.)
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class MallocExtensionWriter {
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 public:
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  virtual ~MallocExtensionWriter() {}
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  virtual void Write(const char* buf, int len) = 0;
 | 
						|
 protected:
 | 
						|
  MallocExtensionWriter() {}
 | 
						|
  MallocExtensionWriter(const MallocExtensionWriter&) = delete;
 | 
						|
  MallocExtensionWriter& operator=(const MallocExtensionWriter&) = delete;
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
 private:
 | 
						|
  virtual void UnusedKeyMethod();  // Dummy key method to avoid weak vtable.
 | 
						|
};
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
// A subclass that writes to the std::string "out".  NOTE: The generated
 | 
						|
// data is *appended* to "*out".  I.e., the old contents of "*out" are
 | 
						|
// preserved.
 | 
						|
class StringMallocExtensionWriter : public MallocExtensionWriter {
 | 
						|
 public:
 | 
						|
  explicit StringMallocExtensionWriter(std::string* out) : out_(out) {}
 | 
						|
  void Write(const char* buf, int len) override;
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
 private:
 | 
						|
  std::string* const out_;
 | 
						|
  StringMallocExtensionWriter(const StringMallocExtensionWriter&) = delete;
 | 
						|
  StringMallocExtensionWriter& operator=(const StringMallocExtensionWriter&) =
 | 
						|
      delete;
 | 
						|
};
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
}  // namespace base_internal
 | 
						|
}  // namespace absl
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
// The nallocx function allocates no memory, but it performs the same size
 | 
						|
// computation as the malloc function, and returns the real size of the
 | 
						|
// allocation that would result from the equivalent malloc function call.
 | 
						|
// Default weak implementation returns size unchanged, but tcmalloc overrides it
 | 
						|
// and returns rounded up size. See the following link for details:
 | 
						|
// http://www.unix.com/man-page/freebsd/3/nallocx/
 | 
						|
extern "C" size_t nallocx(size_t size, int flags);
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
#ifndef MALLOCX_LG_ALIGN
 | 
						|
#define MALLOCX_LG_ALIGN(la) (la)
 | 
						|
#endif
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
#endif  // ABSL_BASE_INTERNAL_MALLOC_EXTENSION_H_
 |