I have a function which looks like this:
void rho(matrix_t *out, matrix_t *in)
{
static int firsttime = 1;
static matrix_t *words;
/* ... other variables ... */
if (firsttime) {
firsttime = 0
words = malloc(NUM_WORD S * sizeof(matrix_t ));
if (!words) {
/* complain */
}
/* calculate words[0], ... words[NUM_WORDS-1] */
}
/* other processing */
}
The idea is that a number of matrices are computed the first time
the function is run, which can then be used for subsequent runs.
However, the memory never gets freed. Is this legal, and if not,
what's the best way round it?
--
Simon Nickerson
Nov 13 '05
15 4686
Ben Pfaff wrote: If you want to free it, I'd suggest putting the function in a module[1] by itself, make the matrix object a local global[1], and add another function that frees it. Then just call that on exit.
I think you mean a variable with internal linkage, static lifetime, and file scope.
Internal linkage meaning that the resulting object code neither
exports the symbols, not expects to find them elsewhere? If so, 3
out of 3.
Is there a shorter term in common use?
Thanks,
--
Tom Zych
This email address will expire at some point to thwart spammers.
Permanent address: echo 'g******@cbobk. pbz' | rot13
Tom Zych <tz******@pobox .com> writes: Ben Pfaff wrote:
If you want to free it, I'd suggest putting the function in a module[1] by itself, make the matrix object a local global[1], and add another function that frees it. Then just call that on exit. I think you mean a variable with internal linkage, static lifetime, and file scope.
Internal linkage meaning that the resulting object code neither exports the symbols, not expects to find them elsewhere?
Yes.
If so, 3 out of 3.
Is there a shorter term in common use?
"file-scope static"
Ben Pfaff wrote: Is there a shorter term in common use?
"file-scope static"
Ah. Thank you.
--
Tom Zych
This email address will expire at some point to thwart spammers.
Permanent address: echo 'g******@cbobk. pbz' | rot13
Simon Nickerson wrote: I have a function which looks like this:
void rho(matrix_t *out, matrix_t *in) { static int firsttime = 1; static matrix_t *words; /* ... other variables ... */
if (firsttime) { firsttime = 0 words = malloc(NUM_WORD S * sizeof(matrix_t ));
If it's a fixed size, why not:
void rho(matrix_t *out, matrix_t *in)
{
static int firsttime = 1;
static matrix_t words[NUM_WORDS];
/* ... */
}
The idea is that a number of matrices are computed the first time the function is run, which can then be used for subsequent runs. However, the memory never gets freed. Is this legal, and if not, what's the best way round it?
I don't know if it's legal as-is, but you could use atexit() to free it,
provided you move the pointer out of the function. (You can use static to
restrict it to the file it's defined in, though)
--
Work expands to fill the time available.
-- Cyril Northcote Parkinson, "The Economist", 1955
Simon Nickerson wrote: I have a function which looks like this:
void rho(matrix_t *out, matrix_t *in) { static int firsttime = 1; static matrix_t *words; /* ... other variables ... */
if (firsttime) { firsttime = 0 words = malloc(NUM_WORD S * sizeof(matrix_t ));
If it's a fixed size, why not:
void rho(matrix_t *out, matrix_t *in)
{
static int firsttime = 1;
static matrix_t words[NUM_WORDS];
/* ... */
}
The idea is that a number of matrices are computed the first time the function is run, which can then be used for subsequent runs. However, the memory never gets freed. Is this legal, and if not, what's the best way round it?
I don't know if it's legal as-is, but you could use atexit() to free it,
provided you move the pointer out of the function. (You can use static to
restrict it to the file it's defined in, though)
--
Work expands to fill the time available.
-- Cyril Northcote Parkinson, "The Economist", 1955
Tom Zych <tz******@pobox .com> wrote in message news:<3F******* ********@pobox. com>... Simon Nickerson wrote:
void rho(matrix_t *out, matrix_t *in) { static int firsttime = 1; static matrix_t *words; /* ... other variables ... */
if (firsttime) { firsttime = 0 I hope the actual function has a semicolon there.
Yes, mea culpa.
It's perfectly legal. Whether it's good design depends on whether your program will want to keep these matrices until it terminates, and whether your platform frees everything upon termination (bearing in mind that either or both could change).
Thanks very much to everyone who replied. As it happens, the old
approach
turned out to be too inflexible, so in the end, I decided to split my
function up into three functions:
int create_rho_cont ext(rhocontext_ t *context /* and some other
variables */);
void rho(rhocontext_ t *context, matrix_t *out, matrix_t *in);
void destroy_rho_con text(rhocontext _t *context);
where rhocontext_t is a (typedef for) a struct containing the
precomputed matrices and some other data.
--
Simon Nickerson This thread has been closed and replies have been disabled. Please start a new discussion. Similar topics |
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