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author | David Madison <dmadison@users.noreply.github.com> | 2022-02-22 02:11:13 -0500 |
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committer | David Madison <dmadison@users.noreply.github.com> | 2022-02-22 02:11:13 -0500 |
commit | 65f1968b755855315b931b4b8fa45747576d6536 (patch) | |
tree | 77f4cf88950d90182f57c73f69027b4d39375d64 /cores/arduino/new.cpp | |
parent | f47a97522dc28c16c432422e3085035de69cfaf6 (diff) | |
parent | a1c76c0651192587f495d88b419553edd12a4881 (diff) |
Merge tag '1.8.4' into upstream-1.8.4
Diffstat (limited to 'cores/arduino/new.cpp')
-rw-r--r-- | cores/arduino/new.cpp | 96 |
1 files changed, 86 insertions, 10 deletions
diff --git a/cores/arduino/new.cpp b/cores/arduino/new.cpp index fc30cf8..7ca4931 100644 --- a/cores/arduino/new.cpp +++ b/cores/arduino/new.cpp @@ -16,26 +16,102 @@ Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA */ -#include <stdlib.h> +#include "new.h" -void *operator new(size_t size) { - return malloc(size); +// The C++ spec dictates that allocation failure should cause the +// (non-nothrow version of the) operator new to throw an exception. +// Since we expect to have exceptions disabled, it would be more +// appropriate (and probably standards-compliant) to terminate instead. +// Historically failure causes null to be returned, but this define +// allows switching to more robust terminating behaviour (that might +// become the default at some point in the future). Note that any code +// that wants null to be returned can (and should) use the nothrow +// versions of the new statement anyway and is unaffected by this. +// #define NEW_TERMINATES_ON_FAILURE + +namespace std { + // Defined in abi.cpp + void terminate(); + + const nothrow_t nothrow; } -void *operator new[](size_t size) { +static void * new_helper(std::size_t size) { + // Even zero-sized allocations should return a unique pointer, but + // malloc does not guarantee this + if (size == 0) + size = 1; return malloc(size); } -void * operator new(size_t size, void * ptr) noexcept { - (void)size; - return ptr; +void * operator new(std::size_t size) { + void *res = new_helper(size); +#if defined(NEW_TERMINATES_ON_FAILURE) + if (!res) + std::terminate(); +#endif + return res; +} +void * operator new[](std::size_t size) { + return operator new(size); } -void operator delete(void * ptr) { - free(ptr); +void * operator new(std::size_t size, const std::nothrow_t tag) noexcept { +#if defined(NEW_TERMINATES_ON_FAILURE) + // Cannot call throwing operator new as standard suggests, so call + // new_helper directly then + return new_helper(size); +#else + return operator new(size); +#endif +} +void * operator new[](std::size_t size, const std::nothrow_t& tag) noexcept { +#if defined(NEW_TERMINATES_ON_FAILURE) + // Cannot call throwing operator new[] as standard suggests, so call + // malloc directly then + return new_helper(size); +#else + return operator new[](size); +#endif +} + +void * operator new(std::size_t size, void *place) noexcept { + // Nothing to do + (void)size; // unused + return place; +} +void * operator new[](std::size_t size, void *place) noexcept { + return operator new(size, place); } -void operator delete[](void * ptr) { +void operator delete(void * ptr) noexcept { free(ptr); } +void operator delete[](void * ptr) noexcept { + operator delete(ptr); +} +#if __cplusplus >= 201402L +void operator delete(void* ptr, std::size_t size) noexcept { + operator delete(ptr); +} +void operator delete[](void * ptr, std::size_t size) noexcept { + operator delete[](ptr); +} +#endif // __cplusplus >= 201402L + +void operator delete(void* ptr, const std::nothrow_t& tag) noexcept { + operator delete(ptr); +} +void operator delete[](void* ptr, const std::nothrow_t& tag) noexcept { + operator delete[](ptr); +} + +void operator delete(void* ptr, void* place) noexcept { + (void)ptr; (void)place; // unused + // Nothing to do +} +void operator delete[](void* ptr, void* place) noexcept { + (void)ptr; (void)place; // unused + // Nothing to do +} |