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 MALLOC(3) MALLOC(3)
 NAME
 malloc, free, realloc, calloc - main memory allocator
 SYNOPSIS
 char *malloc(size)
 unsigned size;
 free(ptr)
 char *ptr;
 char *realloc(ptr, size)
 char *ptr;
 unsigned size;
 char *calloc(nelem, elsize)
 unsigned nelem, elsize;
 DESCRIPTION
 Malloc and free provide a simple general-purpose memory
 allocation package. Malloc returns a pointer to a block of
 at least size bytes beginning on a word boundary.
 The argument to free is a pointer to a block previously
 allocated by malloc; this space is made available for
 further allocation, but its contents are left undisturbed.
 Needless to say, grave disorder will result if the space
 assigned by malloc is overrun or if some random number is
 handed to free.
 Malloc allocates the first big enough contiguous reach of
 free space found in a circular search from the last block
 allocated or freed, coalescing adjacent free blocks as it
 searches. It calls sbrk (see break(2)) to get more memory
 from the system when there is no suitable space already
 free.
 Realloc changes the size of the block pointed to by ptr to
 size bytes and returns a pointer to the (possibly moved)
 block. The contents will be unchanged up to the lesser of
 the new and old sizes.
 Realloc also works if ptr points to a block freed since the
 last call of malloc, realloc or calloc; thus sequences of
 free, malloc and realloc can exploit the search strategy of
 malloc to do storage compaction.
 Calloc allocates space for an array of nelem elements of
 size elsize. The space is initialized to zeros.
 MALLOC(3) MALLOC(3)
 Each of the allocation routines returns a pointer to space
 suitably aligned (after possible pointer coercion) for
 storage of any type of object.
 DIAGNOSTICS
 Malloc, realloc and calloc return a null pointer (0) if
 there is no available memory or if the arena has been
 detectably corrupted by storing outside the bounds of a
 block. Malloc may be recompiled to check the arena very
 stringently on every transaction; see the source code.
 BUGS
 When realloc returns 0, the block pointed to by ptr may be
 destroyed.

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