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Date:      Thu, 29 Jun 2006 15:33:08 -0400
From:      Pat Lashley <patl+freebsd@volant.org>
To:        joerg@britannica.bec.de, freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Return value of malloc(0)
Message-ID:  <F08E3BAE0BDAC4061A2A283F@Zelazny>
In-Reply-To: <20060629165629.GA6875@britannica.bec.de>
References:  <20060628181045.GA54915@curry.mchp.siemens.de> <20060628212956.GI822@wombat.fafoe.narf.at>	<805AA34B676EDF411B3CF548@Zelazny> <20060629165629.GA6875@britannica.bec.de>

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> On Thu, Jun 29, 2006 at 11:44:23AM -0400, Pat Lashley wrote:
> > No, our implementation is NOT legal.  We always return the SAME value.  To
> > be legal, we should not return that value again unless it has been
> > free()-ed.
>
> It is legal due to brain damaged definition of implementation defined
> behaviour, but it violates the spirit of the standard :-)

Perhaps I'm misunderstanding the 'implementation defined behavior' choices in 
the standard.  I thought that it could either 1) Return NULL; or 2) Behave as 
though it returned a 'minimum allocation' (which cannot be legally 
de-referenced).  But if it did actually perform a 'minimum allocation'; 
wouldn't it have to return a different value every time to maintain the free() 
semantics?




-Pat 



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