I'm making a game where the world is divided into chunks of data describing the world. I keep the chunks in a dynamically allocated array so I have to use malloc()
when initializing the world's data structures.
Reading the malloc()
man page, there is a Note as follows:
By default, Linux follows an optimistic memory allocation strategy. This means that when
malloc()
returns non-NULL there is no guarantee that the memory really is available. In case it turns out that the system is out of memory, one or more processes will be killed by the OOM killer. For more information, see the description of /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory and /proc/sys/vm/oom_adj inproc(5)
, and the Linux kernel source file Documentation/vm/overcommit-accounting.
If Linux is set to use optimistic memory allocation then does this mean it doesn't always return the full amount of memory I requested in the call to malloc()
?
I read that optimistic memory allocation an be disabled by modifying the kernel, but I don't want to do that.
So is there a way to check whether the program has allocated the requested amount?
malloc
-ed zonefork
).