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							- /*
 
-  * PuTTY memory-handling header.
 
-  */
 
- #ifndef PUTTY_PUTTYMEM_H
 
- #define PUTTY_PUTTYMEM_H
 
- #include <stddef.h>                    /* for size_t */
 
- #include <string.h>                    /* for memcpy() */
 
- #include "defs.h"
 
- #define smalloc(z) safemalloc(z,1,0)
 
- #define snmalloc safemalloc
 
- #define srealloc(y,z) saferealloc(y,z,1)
 
- #define snrealloc saferealloc
 
- #define sfree safefree
 
- void *safemalloc(size_t factor1, size_t factor2, size_t addend);
 
- void *saferealloc(void *, size_t, size_t);
 
- void safefree(void *);
 
- /*
 
-  * Direct use of smalloc within the code should be avoided where
 
-  * possible, in favour of these type-casting macros which ensure you
 
-  * don't mistakenly allocate enough space for one sort of structure
 
-  * and assign it to a different sort of pointer. sresize also uses
 
-  * TYPECHECK to verify that the _input_ pointer is a pointer to the
 
-  * correct type.
 
-  */
 
- #define snew(type) ((type *)snmalloc(1, sizeof(type), 0))
 
- #define snewn(n, type) ((type *)snmalloc((n), sizeof(type), 0))
 
- #define sresize(ptr, n, type) TYPECHECK((type *)0 == (ptr), \
 
-     ((type *)snrealloc((ptr), (n), sizeof(type))))
 
- /*
 
-  * For cases where you want to allocate a struct plus a subsidiary
 
-  * data buffer in one step, this macro lets you add a constant to the
 
-  * amount malloced.
 
-  *
 
-  * Since the return value is already cast to the struct type, a
 
-  * pointer to that many bytes of extra data can be conveniently
 
-  * obtained by simply adding 1 to the returned pointer!
 
-  * snew_plus_get_aux is a handy macro that does that and casts the
 
-  * result to void *, so you can assign it straight to wherever you
 
-  * wanted it.
 
-  */
 
- #define snew_plus(type, extra) ((type *)snmalloc(1, sizeof(type), (extra)))
 
- #define snew_plus_get_aux(ptr) ((void *)((ptr) + 1))
 
- /*
 
-  * Helper macros to deal with the common use case of growing an array.
 
-  *
 
-  * The common setup is that 'array' is a pointer to the first element
 
-  * of a dynamic array of some type, and 'size' represents the current
 
-  * allocated size of that array (in elements). Both of those macro
 
-  * parameters are implicitly written back to.
 
-  *
 
-  * Then sgrowarray(array, size, n) means: make sure the nth element of
 
-  * the array exists (i.e. the size is at least n+1). You call that
 
-  * before writing to the nth element, if you're looping round
 
-  * appending to the array.
 
-  *
 
-  * If you need to grow the array by more than one element, you can
 
-  * instead call sgrowarrayn(array, size, n, m), which will ensure the
 
-  * size of the array is at least n+m. (So sgrowarray is just the
 
-  * special case of that in which m == 1.)
 
-  *
 
-  * It's common to call sgrowarrayn with one of n,m equal to the
 
-  * previous logical length of the array, and the other equal to the
 
-  * new number of logical entries you want to add, so that n <= size on
 
-  * entry. But that's not actually a mandatory precondition: the two
 
-  * length parameters are just arbitrary integers that get added
 
-  * together with an initial check for overflow, and the semantics are
 
-  * simply 'make sure the array is big enough to take their sum, no
 
-  * matter how big it was to start with'.)
 
-  *
 
-  * Another occasionally useful idiom is to call sgrowarray with n ==
 
-  * size, i.e. sgrowarray(array, size, size). That just means: make
 
-  * array bigger by _some_ amount, I don't particularly mind how much.
 
-  * You might use that style if you were repeatedly calling an API
 
-  * function outside your control, which would either fill your buffer
 
-  * and return success, or else return a 'too big' error without
 
-  * telling you how much bigger it needed to be.
 
-  *
 
-  * The _nm variants of the macro set the 'private' flag in the
 
-  * underlying function, which forces array resizes to be done by a
 
-  * manual allocate/copy/free instead of realloc, with careful clearing
 
-  * of the previous memory block before we free it. This costs
 
-  * performance, but if the block contains important secrets such as
 
-  * private keys or passwords, it avoids the risk that a realloc that
 
-  * moves the memory block might leave a copy of the data visible in
 
-  * the freed memory at the previous location.
 
-  */
 
- void *safegrowarray(void *array, size_t *size, size_t eltsize,
 
-                     size_t oldlen, size_t extralen, bool private_); // WINSCP (_ to avoid use of reserved keyword)
 
- /* The master macro wrapper, of which all others are special cases */
 
- #define sgrowarray_general(array, size, n, m, priv)                     \
 
-     ((array) = safegrowarray(array, &(size), sizeof(*array), n, m, priv))
 
- /* The special-case macros that are easier to use in most situations */
 
- #define sgrowarrayn(   a, s, n, m) sgrowarray_general(a, s, n, m, false)
 
- #define sgrowarray(    a, s, n   ) sgrowarray_general(a, s, n, 1, false)
 
- #define sgrowarrayn_nm(a, s, n, m) sgrowarray_general(a, s, n, m, true )
 
- #define sgrowarray_nm( a, s, n   ) sgrowarray_general(a, s, n, 1, true )
 
- /*
 
-  * This function is called by the innermost safemalloc/saferealloc
 
-  * functions when allocation fails. Usually it's provided by misc.c
 
-  * which ties it into an application's existing modalfatalbox()
 
-  * system, but standalone test applications can reimplement it some
 
-  * other way if they prefer.
 
-  */
 
- NORETURN void out_of_memory(void);
 
- #ifdef MINEFIELD
 
- /*
 
-  * Definitions for Minefield, PuTTY's own Windows-specific malloc
 
-  * debugger in the style of Electric Fence. Implemented in winmisc.c,
 
-  * and referred to by the main malloc wrappers in memory.c.
 
-  */
 
- void *minefield_c_malloc(size_t size);
 
- void minefield_c_free(void *p);
 
- void *minefield_c_realloc(void *p, size_t size);
 
- #endif
 
- #endif
 
 
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