My struct looks like this:
struct tlv_msg
{
uint8_t datatype; //type of data
/* data stored in a union */
union{
int32_t s32val; /* int */
int64_t s64val; /* long long */
uint32_t u32val; /* unsigned int */
uint64_t u64val; /* unsigned long long */
char* strval; /* string */
unsigned char* binval; /* any binary data */
};
uint32_t bytelen; /* no. bytes of union/data part */
};
This struct uses a union to hold some different data types. I have an alloc function which allocates memory for the struct on the heap. Am I correct in thinking that if I am allocating for an integral type (ie the first four types above in union) I only need to allocate as follows:
tlv_msg* msg = malloc(sizeof(tlv_msg));
sizeof(tlv_msg) returns 24. I presume this is enough bytes to hold the largest data type in the union plus the other data members. (not sure why 24 - can someone explain?).
But if the data type to be stored is a pointer type, eg char* then I then need to also do this:
msg->strval = (char*)malloc(sizeof(string_length+1);
That would make sense to me and that seems to work but just wanted to check.
datatype
.