Message340265
| Author |
vstinner |
| Recipients |
benjamin.peterson, fweimer, gregory.p.smith, methane, nascheme, pitrou, skrah, tgrigg, twouters, vstinner |
| Date |
2019年04月15日.11:24:14 |
| SpamBayes Score |
-1.0 |
| Marked as misclassified |
Yes |
| Message-id |
<1555327454.89.0.689417614113.issue27987@roundup.psfhosted.org> |
| In-reply-to |
| Content |
The x86-64 ABI requires that memory allocated on the heap is aligned to 16 bytes.
On x86-64, glibc malloc(size) aligns on 16 bytes for size >= 16, otherwise align to 8 bytes. So the glibc doesn't respect exactly the ABI. I understand that a compiler will not use instructions which require 16B align on a memory block smaller than 16B, so align to 8B for size < 16B should be fine *in practice*.
Python objects are at least 16B because of PyObject header. Moreover, objects tracked by the GC gets additional 16B header from PyGC_Head.
But pymalloc is also used for PyMem_Malloc() since Python 3.6, and PyMem_Malloc() is used to allocate things which are not PyObject. |
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