GTK+ FAQ | ||
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GLib tries to be "intelligent" on this special issue: it assumes that you are likely to reuse the objects, so caches the allocated memory. If you do not want to use this behavior, you'll probably want to set up a special allocator.
To quote Tim Janik:
"If you have a certain portion of code that uses *lots* of GLists or GNodes, and you know you'd better want to release all of them after a short while, you'd want to use a GAllocator. Pushing an allocator into g_list will make all subsequent glist operations private to that allocator's memory pool (and thus you have to take care to pop the allocator again, before making any external calls): "
GAllocator *allocator; GList *list = NULL; guint i; /* set a new allocation pool for GList nodes */ allocator = g_allocator_new ("list heap", 1024); g_list_push_allocator (allocator); /* do some list operations */ for (i = 0; i < 4096; i++) list = g_list_prepend (list, NULL); list = g_list_reverse (list); /* beware to pop allocator befor calling external functions */ g_list_pop_allocator (); gtk_label_set_text (GTK_LABEL (some_label), "some text"); /* and set our private glist pool again */ g_list_push_allocator (allocator); /* do some list operations */ g_list_free (list); list = NULL; for (i = 0; i < 4096; i++) list = g_list_prepend (list, NULL); /* and back out (while freeing all of the list nodes in our pool) */ g_list_pop_allocator (); g_allocator_free (allocator); |
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