15

I am trying to return an array using malloc in a function:

char* queueBulkDequeue(queueADT queue, unsigned int size)
{
    unsigned int i;
    char* pElements=(char*)malloc(size * sizeof(char));
    for (i=0; i<size; i++)
    {
        *(pElements+i) = queueDequeue(queue);
    }
    return pElements;
}

The problem is that I need to free it because my MCU's heap size is limited. But I want to return it so I cannot free it in the function, right?. Can I free the allocated memory outside the function (where I call the function). Is there any best practices for this? Thank you in advance!

2
  • 3
    You will have to free it outside the function. There is no requirement that malloc'd memory must be freed inside the function anyway. Aug 1, 2012 at 4:03
  • Of course. This is the entire point of malloc. If you couldn't do this, there would have been no reason for malloc to ever have been created. Aug 1, 2012 at 5:24

4 Answers 4

11

As the memory allocated by malloc() is on the heap and not on the stack, you can access it regardless of which function you are in. If you want to pass around malloc()'ed memory, you have no other option than freeing it from the caller. (in reference counting terms, that's what is called an ownership transfer.)

1
  • Great explanation.
    – George
    Jun 18, 2021 at 14:26
10

1) Yes, you can free() the malloc'ed memory outside the function

2) No, you cannot free it inside the function and have the data passed outside the function, so you must do 1) here

3) If you're concerned about scarce memory, you need to check for failure from memory allocations always, which you fail to do here, which is then likely to lead to a segfault

3
  • 1
    "...a segfault" Or worse, in an embedded system. Aug 1, 2012 at 4:06
  • yes, I do concern about this issue when you free a malloc'd memory outside the function. How can you fix it?
    – KiL
    Aug 1, 2012 at 4:19
  • @KiL the "fix" is to handle the case where your memory allocation routines are unable to allocate the memory you want, and fail gracefully, instead of whatever thread of control is executing getting b0rkened by a NULL pointer.
    – tbert
    Aug 1, 2012 at 7:19
9

Ofcourse you can free the memory allocated in a function outside of that function provided you return it.

But, an alternative would be to modify your function like below, where the caller only allocates & frees the memory. This will be inline with concept of the function which allocates the memory takes responsibility for freeing the memory.

void queueBulkDequeue(queueADT queue, char *pElements, unsigned int size) 
{     
   unsigned int i;     
   for (i=0; i<size; i++)     
   {         
      *(pElements+i) = queueDequeue(queue);     
   }     
   return; 
} 

//In the caller

char *pElements = malloc(size * sizeof(char));
queueBulkDequeue(queue, pElements, size);
//Use pElements
free(pElements);
5

Yes, you can free memory allocated in a function that you call outside the function; this is precisely what you need to do in this case.

Alternatives include passing a buffer and its length into the function, and returning the actual length to the caller, the way fgets does. This may not be the best alternative, because the callers would need to call your function in a loop.

1
  • Downvoter, please kindly explain what you think is wrong with this answer. Aug 1, 2012 at 14:00

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