On 05/11/2015 05:28 PM, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
On 5/10/15 5:08 AM, Timon Gehr wrote:
On 05/10/2015 01:48 PM, Timon Gehr wrote:


"bool expand(ref void[] b, size_t delta);
Post: !result || b.length == old(b).length + delta     Expands b by
delta bytes. If delta == 0, succeeds without changing b. If b is null,
the call evaluates b = allocate(delta) and returns b !is null.
Otherwise, *b must be a buffer previously allocated with the same
allocator*. If expansion was successful, expand changes b's length to
b.length + delta and returns true. Upon failure, the call effects no
change upon the allocator object, leaves b unchanged, and returns
false."

Actually, reading that snippet of the documentation, I notice more
problems in the implementation of expand/the documentation of the
rounding function.

If the rounding function returns a non-zero result for a zero argument,
expand can return invalid memory (starting from address 0) if given an
empty block 'b'.

Thanks again for the great review.

No problem!

Just updated quantizer.d, I think I've addressed all points:

https://github.com/andralex/phobos/blob/allocator/std/experimental/allocator/quantizer.d



Unfortunately,

- If the rounding function is not piecewise constant with one fixed point per piece, it can happen that 'allocated >= needed' but 'allocated < goodAllocSize(needed)'. Then, the allocated size will be inconsistent with goodAllocSize. (This is why I recommended to require the rounding function to have this property, which is stronger than monotonicity.)

- If b.ptr is null, then line 113 is bad in case goodAllocSize(0) > 0.

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