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diff --git a/doc/tutorial_bestpractices.dox b/doc/tutorial_bestpractices.dox new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3634446 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tutorial_bestpractices.dox @@ -0,0 +1,192 @@ +/** +@page libtalloc_bestpractices Chapter 7: Best practises + +The following sections contain several best practices and good manners that were +found by the <a href="http://www.samba.org">Samba</a> and +<a href="https://fedorahosted.org/sssd">SSSD</a> developers over the years. +These will help you to write code which is better, easier to debug and with as +few (hopefully none) memory leaks as possible. + +@section bp-hierarchy Keep the context hierarchy steady + +The talloc is a hierarchy memory allocator. The hierarchy nature is what makes +the programming more error proof. It makes the memory easier to manage and to +free. Therefore, the first thing we should have on our mind is: always project +your data structures into the talloc context hierarchy. + +That means if we have a structure, we should always use it as a parent context +for its elements. This way we will not encounter any troubles when freeing the +structure or when changing its parent. The same rule applies for arrays. + +For example, the structure <code>user</code> from section @ref context-hierarchy +should be created with the context hierarchy illustrated on the next image. + +@image html context_tree.png + +@section bp-tmpctx Every function should use its own context + +It is a good practice to create a temporary talloc context at the function +beginning and free the context just before the return statement. All the data +must be allocated on this context or on its children. This ensures that no +memory leaks are created as long as we do not forget to free the temporary +context. + +This pattern applies to both situations - when a function does not return any +dynamically allocated value and when it does. However, it needs a little +extension for the latter case. + +@subsection bp-tmpctx-1 Functions that do not return any dynamically allocated +value + +If the function does not return any value created on the heap, we will just obey +the aforementioned pattern. + +@code +int bar() +{ + int ret; + TALLOC_CTX *tmp_ctx = talloc_new(NULL); + if (tmp_ctx == NULL) { + ret = ENOMEM; + goto done; + } + /* allocate data on tmp_ctx or on its descendants */ + ret = EOK; +done: + talloc_free(tmp_ctx); + return ret; +} +@endcode + +@subsection bp-tmpctx-2 Functions returning dynamically allocated values + +If our function returns any dynamically allocated data, its first parameter +should always be the destination talloc context. This context serves as a parent +for the output values. But again, we will create the output values as the +descendants of the temporary context. If everything goes well, we will change +the parent of the output values from the temporary to the destination talloc +context. + +This pattern ensures that if an error occurs (e.g. I/O error or insufficient +amount of the memory), all allocated data is freed and no garbage appears on +the destination context. + +@code +int struct_foo_init(TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct foo **_foo) +{ + int ret; + struct foo *foo = NULL; + TALLOC_CTX *tmp_ctx = talloc_new(NULL); + if (tmp_ctx == NULL) { + ret = ENOMEM; + goto done; + } + foo = talloc_zero(tmp_ctx, struct foo); + /* ... */ + *_foo = talloc_steal(mem_ctx, foo); + ret = EOK; +done: + talloc_free(tmp_ctx); + return ret; +} +@endcode + +@section bp-null Allocate temporary contexts on NULL + +As it can be seen on the previous listing, instead of allocating the temporary +context directly on <code>mem_ctx</code>, we created a new top level context +using <code>NULL</code> as the parameter for <code>talloc_new()</code> function. +Take a look at the following example: + +@code +char *create_user_filter(TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, + uid_t uid, const char *username) +{ + char *filter = NULL; + char *sanitized_username = NULL; + /* tmp_ctx is a child of mem_ctx */ + TALLOC_CTX *tmp_ctx = talloc_new(mem_ctx); + if (tmp_ctx == NULL) { + return NULL; + } + + sanitized_username = sanitize_string(tmp_ctx, username); + if (sanitized_username == NULL) { + talloc_free(tmp_ctx); + return NULL; + } + + filter = talloc_aprintf(tmp_ctx,"(|(uid=%llu)(uname=%s))", + uid, sanitized_username); + if (filter == NULL) { + return NULL; /* tmp_ctx is not freed */ (*@\label{lst:tmp-ctx-3:leak}@*) + } + + /* filter becomes a child of mem_ctx */ + filter = talloc_steal(mem_ctx, filter); + talloc_free(tmp_ctx); + return filter; +} +@endcode + +We forgot to free <code>tmp_ctx</code> before the <code>return</code> statement +in the <code>filter == NULL</code> condition. However, it is created as a child +of <code>mem_ctx</code> context and as such it will be freed as soon as the +<code>mem_ctx</code> is freed. Therefore, no detectable memory leak is created. + +On the other hand, we do not have any way to access the allocated data +and for all we know <code>mem_ctx</code> may exist for the lifetime of our +application. For these reasons this should be considered as a memory leak. How +can we detect if it is unreferenced but still attached to its parent context? +The only way is to notice the mistake in the source code. + +But if we create the temporary context as a top level context, it will not be +freed and memory diagnostic tools +(e.g. <a href="http://valgrind.org">valgrind</a>) are able to do their job. + +@section bp-pool Temporary contexts and the talloc pool + +If we want to take the advantage of the talloc pool but also keep to the +pattern introduced in the previous section, we are unable to do it directly. The +best thing to do is to create a conditional build where we can decide how do we +want to create the temporary context. For example, we can create the following +macros: + +@code +#ifdef USE_POOL_CONTEXT + #define CREATE_POOL_CTX(ctx, size) talloc_pool(ctx, size) + #define CREATE_TMP_CTX(ctx) talloc_new(ctx) +#else + #define CREATE_POOL_CTX(ctx, size) talloc_new(ctx) + #define CREATE_TMP_CTX(ctx) talloc_new(NULL) +#endif +@endcode + +Now if our application is under development, we will build it with macro +<code>USE_POOL_CONTEXT</code> undefined. This way, we can use memory diagnostic +utilities to detect memory leaks. + +The release version will be compiled with the macro defined. This will enable +pool contexts and therefore reduce the <code>malloc()</code> calls, which will +end up in a little bit faster processing. + +@code +int struct_foo_init(TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct foo **_foo) +{ + int ret; + struct foo *foo = NULL; + TALLOC_CTX *tmp_ctx = CREATE_TMP_CTX(mem_ctx); + /* ... */ +} + +errno_t handle_request(TALLOC_CTX mem_ctx) +{ + int ret; + struct foo *foo = NULL; + TALLOC_CTX *pool_ctx = CREATE_POOL_CTX(NULL, 1024); + ret = struct_foo_init(mem_ctx, &foo); + /* ... */ +} +@endcode + +*/ |