Provided by: libffi-platypus-perl_0.47-3_amd64 

NAME
FFI::Platypus::Memory - Memory functions for FFI
VERSION
version 0.47
SYNOPSIS
use FFI::Platypus::Memory;
# allocate 64 bytes of memory using the
# libc malloc function.
my $pointer = malloc 64;
# use that memory wisely
...
# free the memory when you are done.
free $pointer;
DESCRIPTION
This module provides an interface to common memory functions provided by the standard C library. They
may be useful when constructing interfaces to C libraries with FFI.
FUNCTIONS
calloc
my $pointer = calloc $count, $size;
The "calloc" function contiguously allocates enough space for $count objects that are $size bytes of
memory each.
free
free $pointer;
The "free" function frees the memory allocated by "malloc", "calloc", "realloc" or "strdup". It is
important to only free memory that you yourself have allocated. A good way to crash your program is to
try and free a pointer that some C library has returned to you.
malloc
my $pointer = malloc $size;
The "malloc" function allocates $size bytes of memory.
memcpy
memcpy $dst_pointer, $src_pointer, $size;
The "memcpy" function copies $size bytes from $src_pointer to $dst_pointer. It also returns
$dst_pointer.
memset
memset $buffer, $value, $length;
The "memset" function writes $length bytes of $value to the address specified by $buffer.
realloc
my $new_pointer = realloc $old_pointer, $size;
The "realloc" function reallocates enough memory to fit $size bytes. It copies the existing data and
frees $old_pointer.
If you pass "undef" in as $old_pointer, then it behaves exactly like "malloc":
my $pointer = realloc undef, 64; # same as malloc 64
strdup
my $pointer = strdup $string;
The "strdup" function allocates enough memory to contain $string and then copies it to that newly
allocated memory. This version of "strdup" returns an opaque pointer type, not a string type. This may
seem a little strange, but returning a string type would not be very useful in Perl.
Platforms that do not support "strdup" will be provided with an equivalent using "malloc" and "memcpy"
written in Perl. This version is slower.
ENVIRONMENT
FFI_PLATYPUS_MEMORY_STRDUP_IMPL
"strdup" isn't always supported by all platforms. On platforms that do not support it, it is emulated
using calls to "malloc" and "memcpy" which are part of the standard C library. Because this requires two
function calls it is probably not as fast on most platforms.
If you experience problems with the "strdup" provided by your platform, you can force the emulated
implementation using the FFI_PLATYPUS_MEMORY_STRDUP_IMPL environment variable.
# bash:
$ export FFI_PLATYPUS_MEMORY_STRDUP_IMPL=perl
# tcsh:
% setenv FFI_PLATYPUS_MEMORY_STRDUP_IMPL perl
# Windows:
> SET FFI_PLATYPUS_MEMORY_STRDUP_IMPL=perl
SEE ALSO
FFI::Platypus
Main Platypus documentation.
AUTHOR
Author: Graham Ollis <plicease@cpan.org>
Contributors:
Bakkiaraj Murugesan (bakkiaraj)
Dylan Cali (calid)
pipcet
Zaki Mughal (zmughal)
Fitz Elliott (felliott)
Vickenty Fesunov (vyf)
Gregor Herrmann (gregoa)
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2015 by Graham Ollis.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5
programming language system itself.
perl v5.26.1 2017-11-26 FFI::Platypus::Memory(3pm)