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c - Why does malloc allocate a different number of bytes than requested?

I have this piece of code

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <string.h>

int main(){
    void *a, *b;

    a = malloc(16);
    b = malloc(16);
    printf("
   block size (for a): %p-%p : %li", b, a, b-a);

    a = malloc(1024);
    b = malloc(1024);
    printf("
   block size (for a): %p-%p : %li", b, a, b-a);  
}

Shouldn't this print the last allocated block size (16 or 1024)? It instead prints 24 and 1032, so the amount of memory allocated seems to have 8 extra bytes.

My problem is (before making this test case) that I do malloc() in a function (1024 bytes), and return the allocated result. When checking the block size on the function return I get 516 blocks... and I don't understand why. I guess this might be the reason for the memory corruption that occurs after doing some processing on the allocated buffers:)

Edit: I've seen How can I get the size of an array from a pointer in C? and seems to ask the same thing, sorry for reposting.

I've redone my example to my more specific code:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <string.h>

short int * mallocStuff(long int number, short int base){
    short int *array;
    int size=1024;

    array=(short int*)calloc(1,size);
    //array=(short int*)malloc(size);

    return array;
}

int main(){
    short int **translatedArray;

    translatedArray=malloc(4*sizeof(short int));

    int i;
    for(i=0;i<4;i++){
        translatedArray[i]=mallocStuff(0,0);

        if(i>0)
            printf("
   block size (for a): %p-%p : %i",
                translatedArray[i], translatedArray[i-1], translatedArray[i]-translatedArray[i-1]);
    }

    return 0;
}

And the output is

   block size (for a): 0x804a420-0x804a018 : 516
   block size (for a): 0x804a828-0x804a420 : 516
   block size (for a): 0x804ac30-0x804a828 : 516

According to the above post that is bigger than 1024. Am I wrong?

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1 Answer

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First, Malloc makes no guarantees that two successive malloc calls return successive pointers.

Second, depending on your specific architecture, different alignment rules apply; sometimes you might ask for a single byte, but the architecture prefers allocations on 8- or 4-byte intervals.

Third, malloc needs some overhead to store how big the allocated block is, etc.

Don't make assumptions about what malloc is doing past what the documentation says!


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