Namespaces
Variants
Views
Actions

std::align

From cppreference.com
< cpp‎ | memory
Revision as of 19:12, 31 May 2013 by P12bot (Talk | contribs)

 
 
Utilities library
General utilities
Relational operators (deprecated in C++20)
 
Dynamic memory management
Uninitialized memory algorithms
Constrained uninitialized memory algorithms
Allocators
Garbage collection support
(C++11)(until C++23)
(C++11)(until C++23)
(C++11)(until C++23)
(C++11)(until C++23)
(C++11)(until C++23)
(C++11)(until C++23)



 
Defined in header <memory>
void* align( std::size_t alignment,

             std::size_t size,
             void*& ptr,

             std::size_t& space );
(since C++11)

If it is possible to fit size bytes of storage aligned by alignment into the buffer pointed to by ptr with length space, the function modifies ptr to point to the first possible address of such aligned storage and decreases space by the number of bytes used for alignment. If it is impossible (the buffer is too small), align does nothing.

Contents

Parameters

alignment - the desired alignment
size - the size of the storage to be aligned
ptr - pointer to contiguous storage of at least space bytes
space - the size of the buffer in which to operate

Return value

The adjusted value of ptr, or null pointer value if the space provided is too small.

Example

demonstrates the use of std::align to place objects of different type in memory

#include <iostream>
#include <memory>
 
template <std::size_t N>
struct MyAllocator
{
    char data[N];
    void* p;
    std::size_t sz;
    MyAllocator() : p(data), sz(N) {}
    template <typename T>
    T* aligned_alloc(std::size_t a = alignof(T))
    {
        if (std::align(a, sizeof(T), p, sz))
        {
            T* result = reinterpret_cast<T*>(p);
            p = (char*)p + sizeof(T);
            return result;
        }
        return nullptr;
    }
};
 
int main()
{
    MyAllocator<64> a;
 
    // allocate a char
    char* p1 = a.aligned_alloc<char>();
    if (p1)
        *p1 = 'a';
    std::cout << "allocated a char at " << (void*)p1 << '\n';
 
    // allocate an int
    int* p2 = a.aligned_alloc<int>();
    if (p2)
        *p2 = 1;
    std::cout << "allocated an int at " << (void*)p2 << '\n';
 
    // allocate an int, aligned at 32-byte boundary
    int* p3 = a.aligned_alloc<int>(32);
    if (p3)
        *p3 = 2;
    std::cout << "allocated an int at " << (void*)p3 << " (32 byte alignment)\n";
}

Possible output:

allocated a char at 0x2ff21a08
allocated an int at 0x2ff21a0c
allocated an int at 0x2ff21a20 (32 byte alignment)

See also

Template:cpp/language/dcl list alignofTemplate:cpp/language/dcl list alignas
(C++11)(deprecated in C++23)
defines the type suitable for use as uninitialized storage for types of given size
(class template) [edit]