Will memory leaks happen when the MEX file contains new & delete or STL containers (C++)?
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Eli4ph
el 5 de Sept. de 2017
Memory Management in documentation says that mxCalloc and mxFree, instead of calloc and free in standard C library, should be used to manage memory.
However, it is sometimes unavoidable to use new & delete when using C++ classes in MEX file, as well as the automatic memory management of STL containers when using them.
Here comes the question. If the user sometimes interrupts the MEX file execution using Ctrl+C, and if the MEX file contains new & delete or STL containers, will memory leaks happen? If so, how to avoid memory leaks (with least extra work)?
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José-Luis
el 5 de Sept. de 2017
Editada: José-Luis
el 5 de Sept. de 2017
Why are you worrying about this? It is the kernel that handles the memory that was allocated to a process once it is killed.
https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/275184/when-interrupting-a-process-does-a-memory-leak-occur
I am presuming something similar occurs in Windows.
Philip Borghesani
el 5 de Sept. de 2017
Editada: Philip Borghesani
el 5 de Sept. de 2017
SIGINT does not apply here. MATLAB will handle SIGINT and will throw a synchronous c++ exception when it is safe to do so. Under no circumstances should a MEX file attempt to install a signal handler doing so will interfere with MATLAB's signal handler and cause never ending grief.
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Philip Borghesani
el 5 de Sept. de 2017
The short answer is: Put anything allocated with a standard allocator into a smart pointer (unique_ptr, shared_ptr,...) and never put a MATLAB allocated object (mxMalloc, mxCreate...) into a smart pointer or attempt to free one on object destruction and you will be fine.
Most of the documentation/API is written from the perspective of C and FORTRAN mex programming and has not been updated for C++ yet. If you are using a supported C++ compiler (I am not completely sure about minGW on Windows) then the normal C++ exception mechanism is used and destructors are run when ctrl-c is used in a mex file.
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