The reftable library provides the ability to swap out allocators. There is a gap here though, because we continue to use `xstrdup()` even in the case where all the other allocators have been swapped out. Introduce `reftable_strdup()` that uses `reftable_malloc()` to do the allocation. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@xxxxxx> --- reftable/basics.c | 10 ++++++++++ reftable/basics.h | 1 + 2 files changed, 11 insertions(+) diff --git a/reftable/basics.c b/reftable/basics.c index cf072935c88..4adc98cf5de 100644 --- a/reftable/basics.c +++ b/reftable/basics.c @@ -43,6 +43,16 @@ void *reftable_calloc(size_t nelem, size_t elsize) return p; } +char *reftable_strdup(const char *str) +{ + size_t len = strlen(str); + char *result = reftable_malloc(len + 1); + if (!result) + return NULL; + memcpy(result, str, len + 1); + return result; +} + void reftable_set_alloc(void *(*malloc)(size_t), void *(*realloc)(void *, size_t), void (*free)(void *)) { diff --git a/reftable/basics.h b/reftable/basics.h index 4e2e76014aa..f107e148605 100644 --- a/reftable/basics.h +++ b/reftable/basics.h @@ -54,6 +54,7 @@ void *reftable_malloc(size_t sz); void *reftable_realloc(void *p, size_t sz); void reftable_free(void *p); void *reftable_calloc(size_t nelem, size_t elsize); +char *reftable_strdup(const char *str); #define REFTABLE_ALLOC_ARRAY(x, alloc) (x) = reftable_malloc(st_mult(sizeof(*(x)), (alloc))) #define REFTABLE_CALLOC_ARRAY(x, alloc) (x) = reftable_calloc((alloc), sizeof(*(x))) -- 2.46.0.551.gc5ee8f2d1c.dirty