There's been plenty of research done in allocators (fortunate or not), with different memory layout, segregation, etc. Andrei Alexandrescu authored a cool presentation about those CppCon 2015: Andrei Alexandrescu “std::allocator...”. You may find it useful.
One of the examples he provides may shed some light on the possibilities:
typedef Segregator<4096,
Segregator<128,
Freelist<Mallocator, 0, 128>,
MediumAllocator>,
Mallocator>
Allocator;
Allocation strategy:
- if object is smaller than than 4096B:
- if object is smaller than 128B use a Freelist (batches of elements),
- else use a MediumAllocator (supposedly good for medium sized objects),
- else use Mallocator (based on
malloc
) to alloc memory block.
Ergo depending on the type of objects, you may use a different allocation strategy (there's also a stack-based allocator to choose from).