table of contents
        
      
      
    | std::pmr::null_memory_resource(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::pmr::null_memory_resource(3) | 
NAME¶
std::pmr::null_memory_resource - std::pmr::null_memory_resource
Synopsis¶
 Defined in header <memory_resource>
  
   std::pmr::memory_resource* null_memory_resource() noexcept; (since
    C++17)
  
   Returns a pointer to a memory_resource that doesn't perform any
  allocation.
Return value¶
 Returns a pointer p to a static storage duration object of a type
    derived from
  
   std::pmr::memory_resource, with the following properties:
  
   * its allocate() function always throws std::bad_alloc;
  
   * its deallocate() function has no effect;
  
   * for any memory_resource r, p->is_equal(r) returns &r == p.
  
   The same value is returned every time this function is called.
Example¶
 The program demos the main usage of null_memory_resource: ensure
    that a memory pool
  
   which requires memory allocated on the stack will NOT allocate memory on the
    heap if
  
   it needs more memory.
// Run this code
  
   #include <array>
  
   #include <cstddef>
  
   #include <iostream>
  
   #include <memory_resource>
  
   #include <string>
  
   #include <unordered_map>
  
   int main()
  
   {
  
   // allocate memory on the stack
  
   std::array<std::byte, 20000> buf;
  
   // without fallback memory allocation on heap
  
   std::pmr::monotonic_buffer_resource pool{buf.data(), buf.size(),
  
   std::pmr::null_memory_resource()};
  
   // allocate too much memory
  
   std::pmr::unordered_map<long, std::pmr::string> coll{&pool};
  
   try
  
   {
  
   for (std::size_t i = 0; i < buf.size(); ++i)
  
   {
  
   coll.emplace(i, "just a string with number " +
  std::to_string(i));
  
   if (i && i % 50 == 0)
  
   std::clog << "size: " << i << "...\n";
  
   }
  
   }
  
   catch (const std::bad_alloc& e)
  
   {
  
   std::cerr << e.what() << '\n';
  
   }
  
   std::cout << "size: " << coll.size() << '\n';
  
   }
Possible output:¶
 size: 50...
  
   size: 100...
  
   size: 150...
  
   std::bad_alloc
  
   size: 183
| 2024.06.10 | http://cppreference.com |