BRK(2)
NAME
brk, sbrk − change data segment space allocation
SYNOPSIS
int brk (endds)
char *endds;
char *sbrk (incr)
int incr;
HP-UX COMPATIBILITY
Level: HP-UX/RUN ONLY
Origin: System V
DESCRIPTION
Brk and sbrk are used to dynamically change the amount of space allocated for the calling process’s data segment; see exec(2). The change is made by resetting the process’s break value and allocating the appropriate amount of space. The break value is the address of the first location beyond the end of the data segment. The amount of allocated space increases as the break value increases. The newly allocated space is set to zero.
Brk sets the break value to endds and changes the allocated space accordingly.
Sbrk adds incr bytes to the break value and changes the allocated space accordingly. Incr can be negative, in which case the amount of allocated space is decreased.
Brk and sbrk will fail without making any change in the allocated space if one or more of the following are true:
[ENOMEM] Such a change would result in more space being allocated than is allowed by a system-imposed maximum (see ulimit(2)).
[ENOMEM] Such a change would cause a conflict between addresses in the data segment and any attached shared memory segment (see shmop(2)).
HARDWARE DEPENDENCIES
Series 500:
Brk and sbrk will fail without making any change in the allocated space if such a change would move the program break below the beginning of the process’ indirect data area. Note that it is not possible to release the direct data area with this system call.
If the process’ indirect data area is paged, then the size of that data area changes in increments of the page size, which is configurable. Consequently, increasing a paged process data area by one byte may cause it to increase by one page, and decreasing it by one byte may do nothing. If the process’ data area is not paged, then the size of the process data area changes similarly in increments of 32 bytes.
The pointer returned by sbrk is not necessarily word-aligned. Loading or storing words through this pointer could cause word alignment problems.
RETURN VALUE
Upon successful completion, brk returns a value of 0 and sbrk returns the old break value. Otherwise, a value of −1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
SEE ALSO
exec(2), end(3), malloc(3), shmop(2), ulimit(2).
Hewlett-Packard — last mod. May 11, 2021