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Date:      Fri, 11 Jun 2010 14:56:29 -0500
From:      Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
To:        Vikash Badal <Vikash.Badal@is.co.za>
Cc:        "freebsd-questions@freebsd.org" <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: threads and malloc/free  on freebsd 8.0
Message-ID:  <20100611195628.GB36450@dan.emsphone.com>
In-Reply-To: <9B425C841283E0418B1825D40CBCFA613D9E3CA643@ZABRYSVISEXMBX1.af.didata.local>
References:  <9B425C841283E0418B1825D40CBCFA613D9E3CA643@ZABRYSVISEXMBX1.af.didata.local>

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In the last episode (Jun 11), Vikash Badal said:
> I have a thread socket application that seems to be behaving strangely
> 
> In a worker thread, I have the following.
>
> <CODE>-----------
>    LogMessage(DEBUG_0, "allocated %ld", malloc_usable_size(inst));
>    free(inst);
>    LogMessage(DEBUG_0, "after free allocated %ld", malloc_usable_size(inst));
>    free(inst);
>     return 0;
> -----------</CODE>
> output> allocated 2304
> output> after free allocated 2304
> 
> from playing around, this should have segfaulted but it didn't:
> 
> if I try this from a non threaded, non socket code:
> <CODE>------------------
>    char *z;
> 
>    z = (char*)malloc(1000);
>    printf("malloc is %ld\n", malloc_usable_size(z));
>    free(z);
>    printf("after malloc is %ld\n", malloc_usable_size(z));
> ------------------</CODE>
> 
> Output> malloc is 1024
> Output> Segmentation fault (core dumped)
> 
> Can anyone enlighten me ? why did the 2nd free not cause a segmentation
> fault ?

You asked this same question on May 24:

  http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2010-May/216652.html

The answer is still the same:

 You're invoking undefined behaviour here by calling malloc_usable_size on a
 free'd pointer.  The function is free to crash, return useful data, or
 return useless data, at its discretion :)

The fix is to remove your second call to malloc_usable_size(z)).  Then
neither version will crash.  Also, a useful habit to start is to explicitly
zero the pointer you just free'd, to prevent it from being used accidentally
later.

-- 
	Dan Nelson
	dnelson@allantgroup.com



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