The most direct way to allocate an object in an obstack is with
obstack_alloc
, which is invoked almost like malloc
.
void *
obstack_alloc (struct obstack *obstack-ptr, size_t size)
¶This allocates an uninitialized block of size bytes in an obstack
and returns its address. Here obstack-ptr specifies which obstack
to allocate the block in; it is the address of the struct obstack
object which represents the obstack. Each obstack macro
requires you to specify an obstack-ptr as the first argument.
This macro calls the obstack’s obstack_chunk_alloc
function if
it needs to allocate a new chunk of memory; it calls
obstack_alloc_failed_handler
if allocation of memory by
obstack_chunk_alloc
failed.
For example, here is a function that allocates a copy of a string str
in a specific obstack, which is in the variable string_obstack
:
struct obstack string_obstack; char * copystring (char *string) { size_t len = strlen (string) + 1; char *s = (char *) obstack_alloc (&string_obstack, len); memcpy (s, string, len); return s; }
To allocate a block with specified contents, use the macro obstack_copy
.
void *
obstack_copy (struct obstack *obstack-ptr, void *address, size_t size)
¶This allocates a block and initializes it by copying size
bytes of data starting at address. It calls
obstack_alloc_failed_handler
if allocation of memory by
obstack_chunk_alloc
failed.
void *
obstack_copy0 (struct obstack *obstack-ptr, void *address, size_t size)
¶Like obstack_copy
, but appends an extra byte containing a null
character. This extra byte is not counted in the argument size.
The obstack_copy0
macro is convenient for copying a sequence
of characters into an obstack as a null-terminated string. Here is an
example of its use:
char * obstack_savestring (char *addr, size_t size) { return obstack_copy0 (&myobstack, addr, size); }
Contrast this with the previous example of savestring
using
malloc
(see Basic Allocation in The GNU C Library Reference Manual).