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author | Chris Cannam <cannam@all-day-breakfast.com> |
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date | Wed, 20 Mar 2013 15:35:50 +0000 |
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<html lang="en"> <head> <title>Memory Allocation - FFTW 3.3.3</title> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html"> <meta name="description" content="FFTW 3.3.3"> <meta name="generator" content="makeinfo 4.13"> <link title="Top" rel="start" href="index.html#Top"> <link rel="up" href="Data-Types-and-Files.html#Data-Types-and-Files" title="Data Types and Files"> <link rel="prev" href="Precision.html#Precision" title="Precision"> <link href="http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/" rel="generator-home" title="Texinfo Homepage"> <!-- This manual is for FFTW (version 3.3.3, 25 November 2012). Copyright (C) 2003 Matteo Frigo. Copyright (C) 2003 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved by the Free Software Foundation. --> <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css"> <style type="text/css"><!-- pre.display { font-family:inherit } pre.format { font-family:inherit } pre.smalldisplay { font-family:inherit; font-size:smaller } pre.smallformat { font-family:inherit; font-size:smaller } pre.smallexample { font-size:smaller } pre.smalllisp { font-size:smaller } span.sc { font-variant:small-caps } span.roman { font-family:serif; font-weight:normal; } span.sansserif { font-family:sans-serif; font-weight:normal; } --></style> </head> <body> <div class="node"> <a name="Memory-Allocation"></a> <p> Previous: <a rel="previous" accesskey="p" href="Precision.html#Precision">Precision</a>, Up: <a rel="up" accesskey="u" href="Data-Types-and-Files.html#Data-Types-and-Files">Data Types and Files</a> <hr> </div> <h4 class="subsection">4.1.3 Memory Allocation</h4> <pre class="example"> void *fftw_malloc(size_t n); void fftw_free(void *p); </pre> <p><a name="index-fftw_005fmalloc-145"></a><a name="index-fftw_005ffree-146"></a> These are functions that behave identically to <code>malloc</code> and <code>free</code>, except that they guarantee that the returned pointer obeys any special alignment restrictions imposed by any algorithm in FFTW (e.g. for SIMD acceleration). See <a href="SIMD-alignment-and-fftw_005fmalloc.html#SIMD-alignment-and-fftw_005fmalloc">SIMD alignment and fftw_malloc</a>. <a name="index-alignment-147"></a> <p>Data allocated by <code>fftw_malloc</code> <em>must</em> be deallocated by <code>fftw_free</code> and not by the ordinary <code>free</code>. <p>These routines simply call through to your operating system's <code>malloc</code> or, if necessary, its aligned equivalent (e.g. <code>memalign</code>), so you normally need not worry about any significant time or space overhead. You are <em>not required</em> to use them to allocate your data, but we strongly recommend it. <p>Note: in C++, just as with ordinary <code>malloc</code>, you must typecast the output of <code>fftw_malloc</code> to whatever pointer type you are allocating. <a name="index-C_002b_002b-148"></a> <p>We also provide the following two convenience functions to allocate real and complex arrays with <code>n</code> elements, which are equivalent to <code>(double *) fftw_malloc(sizeof(double) * n)</code> and <code>(fftw_complex *) fftw_malloc(sizeof(fftw_complex) * n)</code>, respectively: <pre class="example"> double *fftw_alloc_real(size_t n); fftw_complex *fftw_alloc_complex(size_t n); </pre> <p><a name="index-fftw_005falloc_005freal-149"></a><a name="index-fftw_005falloc_005fcomplex-150"></a> The equivalent functions in other precisions allocate arrays of <code>n</code> elements in that precision. e.g. <code>fftwf_alloc_real(n)</code> is equivalent to <code>(float *) fftwf_malloc(sizeof(float) * n)</code>. <a name="index-precision-151"></a> <!-- --> </body></html>