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Tobias Stoeckmann authored
If malloc cannot allocate enough memory, it could return NULL. This is not necessarily true for default Linux settings, but can be provoked there as well by adjusting proc entries. Other systems like the *BSD ones definitely do this. The function _emalloc exists for exactly this purpose, so use it instead of calling malloc directly. Signed-off-by:
Tobias Stoeckmann <tobias@stoeckmann.org>
Tobias Stoeckmann authoredIf malloc cannot allocate enough memory, it could return NULL. This is not necessarily true for default Linux settings, but can be provoked there as well by adjusting proc entries. Other systems like the *BSD ones definitely do this. The function _emalloc exists for exactly this purpose, so use it instead of calling malloc directly. Signed-off-by:
Tobias Stoeckmann <tobias@stoeckmann.org>