Allocate space for an array
#include <stdlib.h> void* calloc ( size_t n, size_t size );
libc
Use the -l c option to qcc to link against this library. This library is usually included automatically.
The calloc() function allocates space from the heap for an array of n objects, each of size bytes, and initializes them to 0. Use free() or realloc() to free the block of memory.
Because the malloc() implementation uses signed, 32-bit integers to represent the size internally, you can't allocate more than 2 GB in a single allocation. If the size is greater than 2 GB, calloc() indicates an error of ENOMEM. |
If n or size is zero, the default behavior is to return a non-NULL pointer that's valid only to a corresponding call to free() or realloc(). Don't assume that this pointer points to any valid memory. You can control this behavior via the MALLOC_OPTIONS environmental variable; if the value of MALLOC_OPTIONS contains a V, calloc() returns a NULL pointer. This environment variable also affects malloc() and realloc(). This is known as the “System V” behavior.
A pointer to the start of the allocated memory, or NULL if an error occurred (errno is set).
#include <stdlib.h> #include <stdio.h> int main( void ) { char* buffer; buffer = (char* )calloc( 80, sizeof(char) ); if( buffer == NULL ) { printf( "Can't allocate memory for buffer!\n" ); return EXIT_FAILURE; } free( buffer ); return EXIT_SUCCESS; }
Function | Default | V | R |
---|---|---|---|
calloc(n, 0) | Non-NULL | NULL | No effect |
malloc(0) | Non-NULL | NULL | No effect |
realloc(NULL, 0) | Non-NULL | NULL | No effect |
realloc(non-NULL, 0) | Non-NULL | NULL | NULL |
In all the above cases, if the function returns a non-NULL pointer, it's valid only for a corresponding call to free() or realloc().
Safety: | |
---|---|
Cancellation point | No |
Interrupt handler | No |
Signal handler | No |
Thread | Yes |
free(), malloc(), realloc(), sbrk()