Any malloc
is generally free
'd elsewhere by the same module. I say generally because you may never intend to give the memory back for performance or persistence reasons. Furthermore, memory allocations will be reclaimed by the operating system when the process terminates regardless You're not endangering the system.
Since you malloc
ed the buf, you should actually free
it yourself. Save SDL_FreeWav
for wave buffers passed to you by SDL that you are done with (such as from SDL_LoadWav
).
Internal to SDL_LoadWav
, will be a malloc
call by SDL. SDL_FreeWav
is a wrapper around the corresponding free
. This allocate/deallocate function pairing is common as some libraries may implement custom memory management routines that resemble or wrap malloc
and free
. They may even open up new heap contexts that are not accessible from the standard functions, and intended to be private. There's not even a requirement that the memory be allocated on a heap, but this is orthogonal to your question.
It's likely that SDL_FreeWav
is just a straight free
, but when a library provides deallocation functions you should prefer those in case the behaviour differs.
When in doubt, always call the deallocation routine if you believe you're done with the memory resource. Double free
errors are noisy and generally generate stack traces that will let you quickly identify the problem. Other libraries such as glib will usually have built-in diagnostics that will alert you to overzealous deallocation. Deallocating aggressively also aids in locating logical errors: If you think you're done with the memory, but some other part of the program isn't, the resource use will need to be re-examined.
SDL_FreeWAV()
, however it would be surprising (and quite asymetric) thatSDL
requires you to allocate manually but takes care of the deletion itself (how can it know how you allocated your memory ?)SDL_LoadWAV
, and freed withSDL_FreeWAV
, but that is not what I am asking. Everything tells you (and @Armen) are right.