On Linux, malloc doesn't necessarily return a null pointer if you're out of memory. You might get back a pointer and then have the OOM killer start eating processes if you're really out of memory. Is the same true for c++'s operator new or will you get the bad_alloc exception?
+5
A:
It's a kernel function rather than a language function - and you can control it with the vm.overcommit_memory
and vm.overcommit_ratio
sysctls.
They're visible in the proc filesystem at /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
and /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_ratio
.
caf
2009-10-20 05:20:40
Not a whole lot the C++ runtime can do when the OS is lying.
MSalters
2009-10-20 08:30:52