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Home/ Questions/Q 700099
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T03:27:35+00:00 2026-05-14T03:27:35+00:00

I’m writing a memory allocator, and I need a way to store an integer

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I’m writing a memory allocator, and I need a way to store an integer inside of a chunk of memory. This integer will represent the size of the block so I can navigate to the end given the pointer to the beginning.

Here’s my test example:

// EDIT: Declared space for testInt
int* testInt = new int;

head_ptr = (char*) malloc(4*1024*1024); // Allocate 4MB

// EDIT: Should have used std::fill and std::copy
memset(head_ptr,23,sizeof(int)); // Set Address head_ptr = 12345

memcpy(testInt,head_ptr,sizeof(int)); // Set testInt = head_ptr

printf("testInt = %i",testInt);

This throws a segmentation fault on the second to last line.

Does what I’m trying to do make sense?

If so, what is the correct approach?

Thank you so much everyone for your help!! Problem solved 🙂

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T03:27:35+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 3:27 am

    Answer to original question

    memset(head_ptr,12345,sizeof(int)); // Set Address head_ptr = 12345
    

    No it doesn’t. This sets the first sizeof(int) bytes of head_ptr to 12345, which will overflow (unless you are using an architecture where a byte is more than 8 bits).

    memcpy(testInt,head_ptr,sizeof(int)); // Set testInt = head_ptr
    

    What is testInt? An int*? An int? In the latter case use &testInt.

    Also it appears from your tags that you are using C++ rather than C. But your code is really just C, you should really use the safer C++ functions and features:

    • memset -> std::fill
    • memcpy -> std::copy
    • malloc -> new
    • printf -> cout or (better) Boost::Format

    Answer to your edit

    int* testInt; is a pointer to an integer variable but it’s not initialized: it will point to a random memory area (we can consider it "random" for all intent and purposes even if it isn’t).

    memcpy will then try to write to this random memory area to which most likely you don’t have access to, and therefore this results in a segmentation fault (that means "you can’t access this memory area").

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