/* Copyright (c) 2014 Arduino. All right reserved. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA */ #include "new.h" // The C++ spec dicates 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; } 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(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 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) 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 }