I want to check whether an allocated memory is aligned or not. I am using _aligned_malloc(size, align); And it returns a pointer. Can I check it by simply dividing the pointer content by 16 for example? If the the pointer content is divisible by 16, does it mean that the memory is aligned by 16 bytes?
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An "aligned" pointer by definition means that the numeric value of the pointer is evenly divisible by N (where N is the desired alignment). To check this, cast the pointer to an integer of suitable size, take the modulus N, and check whether the result is zero. In code:
If you want to check the pointer value by hand, just look at the hex representation of the pointer and see whether it ends with the required number of 0 bits. A 16 byte aligned pointer value will always end in four zero bits, for example. |
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On a modern Unix system a pointer returned by
This is simply a faster version of |
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Memory returned by malloc is aligned for everything (ie, it generally uses the an alignment that works for everything)*. That means, if you have an alignment issue, it is something else. http://www.delorie.com/gnu/docs/glibc/libc_31.html http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms859665.aspx (There appears to be exceptions for higher orders of alignment, which is an unusual requirement anyway.) |
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_aligned_malloc()function? – Greg Hewgill Jun 5 '11 at 0:56