/* Replace operator new/new[], for GDB, the GNU debugger. Copyright (C) 2016-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program 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 General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ /* GCC does not understand __has_feature. */ #if !defined(__has_feature) # define __has_feature(x) 0 #endif #if !__has_feature(address_sanitizer) && !defined(__SANITIZE_ADDRESS__) #include "common-defs.h" #include "host-defs.h" #include /* Override operator new / operator new[], in order to internal_error on allocation failure and thus query the user for abort/core dump/continue, just like xmalloc does. We don't do this from a new-handler function instead (std::set_new_handler) because we want to catch allocation errors from within global constructors too. Skip overriding if building with -fsanitize=address though. Address sanitizer wants to override operator new/delete too in order to detect malloc+delete and new+free mismatches. Our versions would mask out ASan's, with the result of losing that useful mismatch detection. Note that C++ implementations could either have their throw versions call the nothrow versions (libstdc++), or the other way around (clang/libc++). For that reason, we replace both throw and nothrow variants and call malloc directly. */ void * operator new (std::size_t sz) { /* malloc (0) is unpredictable; avoid it. */ if (sz == 0) sz = 1; void *p = malloc (sz); /* ARI: malloc */ if (p == NULL) { /* If the user decides to continue debugging, throw a gdb_quit_bad_alloc exception instead of a regular QUIT gdb_exception. The former extends both std::bad_alloc and a QUIT gdb_exception. This is necessary because operator new can only ever throw std::bad_alloc, or something that extends it. */ try { malloc_failure (sz); } catch (gdb_exception &ex) { throw gdb_quit_bad_alloc (std::move (ex)); } } return p; } void * operator new (std::size_t sz, const std::nothrow_t&) noexcept { /* malloc (0) is unpredictable; avoid it. */ if (sz == 0) sz = 1; return malloc (sz); /* ARI: malloc */ } void * operator new[] (std::size_t sz) { return ::operator new (sz); } void* operator new[] (std::size_t sz, const std::nothrow_t&) noexcept { return ::operator new (sz, std::nothrow); } #endif