On Jan 30, 2014, at 12:46 PM, Brad Aagaard <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 01/30/2014 10:34 AM, Jed Brown wrote:
>> Brad Aagaard <[email protected]> writes:
>> 
>>> Matt and Jed,
>>> 
>>> I see that Jed pushed some changes (jed/malloc-zero) for PetscMalloc to
>>> deal with memory alignment and a zero size. It looks like the pointer
>>> will NOT be NULL for a size of 0. Is this true?
>> 
>> Yes, just like malloc(), it can be either a unique pointer or NULL.  You
>> need the size anyway to know how many elements are in the array.
> 
> I thought it was a nice feature that PETSc improved on malloc() and free() by 
> returning NULL for zero sized allocation (although this wasn't true for 
> --with-debugging=0 due to memory alignment) and set pointers to NULL after 
> freeing.

   With PetscMalloc() we could certainly return NULL on 0 mallocs but the code 
is a bit more involved  for the PetscMallocn() case. 

   Here is what I suggestion. Someone suggest (i.e.. write) a refactorization 
of PetscMalloc(), PetscMallocn() that handles correctly any of the sizes being 
zero correctly in a branch and see how it goes. 


   Barry


> 
> What is the rationale for not returning NULL for mallocs of size zero other 
> than conforming to C malloc behavior?
> 
> Brad
> 
> 

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