is delete p where p is a pointer to array a memory leak ?
- by Eli
following a discussion in a software meeting I setup to find out if deleting an dynamically allocated primitive array with plain delete will cause a memory leak.
I have written this tiny program and compiled with visual studio 2008 running on windows XP:
#include "stdafx.h"
#include "Windows.h"
const unsigned long BLOCK_SIZE = 1024*100000;
int _tmain()
{
for (unsigned int i =0; i < 1024*1000; i++)
{
int* p = new int[1024*100000];
for (int j =0;j<BLOCK_SIZE;j++) p[j]= j % 2;
Sleep(1000);
delete p;
}
}
I than monitored the memory consumption of my application using task manager, surprisingly the memory was allocated and freed correctly, allocated memory did not steadily increase as was expected
I've modified my test program to allocate a non primitive type array :
#include "stdafx.h"
#include "Windows.h"
struct aStruct
{
aStruct() : i(1), j(0) {}
int i;
char j;
} NonePrimitive;
const unsigned long BLOCK_SIZE = 1024*100000;
int _tmain()
{
for (unsigned int i =0; i < 1024*100000; i++)
{
aStruct* p = new aStruct[1024*100000];
Sleep(1000);
delete p;
}
}
after running for for 10 minutes there was no meaningful increase in memory
I compiled the project with warning level 4 and got no warnings.
is it possible that the visual studio run time keep track of the allocated objects types so there is no different between delete and delete[] in that environment ?