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new and delete Operators

 

The latest version of this topic can be found at new and delete Operators.

C++ supports dynamic allocation and deallocation of objects using the new and delete operators. These operators allocate memory for objects from a pool called the free store. The new operator calls the special function operator new, and the delete operator calls the special function operator delete.

In Visual C++ .NET 2002, the new function in the Standard C++ Library will support the behavior specified in the C++ standard, which is to throw a std::bad_alloc exception if the memory allocation fails.

The C Runtime Library's new function will also throw a std::bad_alloc exception if the memory allocation fails.

If you still want the non-throwing version of new for the C Runtime Library, link your program with nothrownew.obj. However, when you link with nothrownew.obj, new in the Standard C++ Library will no longer function.

For a list of the library files that comprise the C Runtime Library and the Standard C++ Library, see CRT Library Features.

The new operator

When a statement such as the following is encountered in a program, it translates into a call to the function operator new:

char *pch = new char[BUFFER_SIZE];  

If the request is for zero bytes of storage, operator new returns a pointer to a distinct object (that is, repeated calls to operator new return different pointers). If there is insufficient memory for the allocation request, operator new returns NULL or throws an exception (see The new and delete Operators for more information).

You can write a routine that attempts to free memory and retry the allocation; see _set_new_handler for more information. For more details on the recovery scheme, see the following topic, Handling Insufficient Memory Conditions.

The two scopes for operator new functions are described in the following table.

Scope for operator new Functions

Operator Scope
::operator new Global
class-name ::operator new Class

The first argument to operator new must be of type size_t (a type defined in STDDEF.H), and the return type is always void *.

The global operator new function is called when the new operator is used to allocate objects of built-in types, objects of class type that do not contain user-defined operator new functions, and arrays of any type. When the new operator is used to allocate objects of a class type where an operator new is defined, that class's operator new is called.

An operator new function defined for a class is a static member function (which cannot, therefore, be virtual) that hides the global operator new function for objects of that class type. Consider the case where new is used to allocate and set memory to a given value:

// spec1_the_operator_new_function1.cpp  
#include <malloc.h>  
#include <memory.h>  
  
class Blanks  
{  
public:  
    Blanks(){}  
    void *operator new( size_t stAllocateBlock, char chInit );  
};  
void *Blanks::operator new( size_t stAllocateBlock, char chInit )  
{  
    void *pvTemp = malloc( stAllocateBlock );  
    if( pvTemp != 0 )  
        memset( pvTemp, chInit, stAllocateBlock );  
    return pvTemp;  
}  
// For discrete objects of type Blanks, the global operator new function  
// is hidden. Therefore, the following code allocates an object of type  
// Blanks and initializes it to 0xa5  
int main()  
{  
   Blanks *a5 = new(0xa5) Blanks;  
   return a5 != 0;  
}  

The argument supplied in parentheses to new is passed to Blanks::operator new as the chInit argument. However, the global operator new function is hidden, causing code such as the following to generate an error:

Blanks *SomeBlanks = new Blanks;  

In Visual C++ 5.0 and earlier, nonclass types and all arrays (regardless of whether they were of class type) allocated using the new operator always used the global operator new function.

Beginning with Visual C++ 5.0, the compiler supports member array new and delete operators in a class declaration. For example:

// spec1_the_operator_new_function2.cpp  
class MyClass  
{  
public:  
   void * operator new[] (size_t)  
   {  
      return 0;  
   }  
   void   operator delete[] (void*)  
   {  
   }  
};  
  
int main()   
{  
   MyClass *pMyClass = new MyClass[5];  
   delete [] pMyClass;  
}  

Handling insufficient memory

Testing for failed memory allocation can be done with code such as the following:

// insufficient_memory_conditions.cpp  
// compile with: /EHsc  
#include <iostream>  
using namespace std;  
#define BIG_NUMBER 100000000  
int main() {  
   int *pI = new int[BIG_NUMBER];  
   if( pI == 0x0 ) {  
      cout << "Insufficient memory" << endl;  
      return -1;  
   }  
}  

There is another ways to handle failed memory allocation requests: write a custom recovery routine to handle such a failure, then register your function by calling the _set_new_handler run-time function.

The delete operator

Memory that is dynamically allocated using the new operator can be freed using the delete operator. The delete operator calls the operator delete function, which frees memory back to the available pool. Using the delete operator also causes the class destructor (if there is one) to be called.

There are global and class-scoped operator delete functions. Only one operator delete function can be defined for a given class; if defined, it hides the global operator delete function. The global operator delete function is always called for arrays of any type.

The global operator delete function. Two forms exist for the global operator delete and class-member operator delete functions:

void operator delete( void * );  
void operator delete( void *, size_t );  

Only one of the preceding two forms can be present for a given class. The first form takes a single argument of type void *, which contains a pointer to the object to deallocate. The second form—sized deallocation—takes two arguments, the first of which is a pointer to the memory block to deallocate and the second of which is the number of bytes to deallocate. The return type of both forms is void (operator delete cannot return a value).

The intent of the second form is to speed up searching for the correct size category of the object to be deleted, which is often not stored near the allocation itself and likely uncached; the second form is particularly useful when an operator delete function from a base class is used to delete an object of a derived class.

The operator delete function is static; therefore, it cannot be virtual. The operator delete function obeys access control, as described in Member-Access Control.

The following example shows user-defined operator new and operator delete functions designed to log allocations and deallocations of memory:

// spec1_the_operator_delete_function1.cpp  
// compile with: /EHsc  
// arguments: 3  
#include <iostream>  
using namespace std;  
  
int fLogMemory = 0;      // Perform logging (0=no; nonzero=yes)?  
int cBlocksAllocated = 0;  // Count of blocks allocated.  
  
// User-defined operator new.  
void *operator new( size_t stAllocateBlock ) {  
   static int fInOpNew = 0;   // Guard flag.  
  
   if ( fLogMemory && !fInOpNew ) {  
      fInOpNew = 1;  
      clog << "Memory block " << ++cBlocksAllocated  
          << " allocated for " << stAllocateBlock  
          << " bytes\n";  
      fInOpNew = 0;  
   }  
   return malloc( stAllocateBlock );  
}  
  
// User-defined operator delete.  
void operator delete( void *pvMem ) {  
   static int fInOpDelete = 0;   // Guard flag.  
   if ( fLogMemory && !fInOpDelete ) {  
      fInOpDelete = 1;  
      clog << "Memory block " << cBlocksAllocated--  
          << " deallocated\n";  
      fInOpDelete = 0;  
   }  
  
   free( pvMem );  
}  
  
int main( int argc, char *argv[] ) {  
   fLogMemory = 1;   // Turn logging on  
   if( argc > 1 )  
      for( int i = 0; i < atoi( argv[1] ); ++i ) {  
         char *pMem = new char[10];  
         delete[] pMem;  
      }  
   fLogMemory = 0;  // Turn logging off.  
   return cBlocksAllocated;  
}  

The preceding code can be used to detect "memory leakage" — that is, memory that is allocated on the free store but never freed. To perform this detection, the global new and delete operators are redefined to count allocation and deallocation of memory.

Beginning with Visual C++ 5.0, the compiler supports member array new and delete operators in a class declaration. For example:

// spec1_the_operator_delete_function2.cpp  
// compile with: /c  
class X  {  
public:  
   void * operator new[] (size_t) {  
      return 0;  
   }  
   void operator delete[] (void*) {}  
};  
  
void f() {  
   X *pX = new X[5];  
   delete [] pX;  
}  

See Also

Special Member Functions