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Home/ Questions/Q 8589435
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 11, 20262026-06-11T23:03:28+00:00 2026-06-11T23:03:28+00:00

I’ve read that stl vector does not work well with SYS V shared memory.

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I’ve read that stl vector does not work well with SYS V shared memory. But if I use POSIX shm_open and then mmap with NULL (mmap(NULL, LARGE_SIZE, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, fd, 0) and give a much larger size than my object, which contains my vector, and after mapping add aditional items to the vector, can there be a problem other than exceeding the LARGE_SIZE space? Other related question: is it guaranteed on a recent SUSE linux that when mapped to the same start address (using above syntax) in unrelated processes my object will be mapped directly and no (system) copy is performed to actualize changed values in the processes (like what happens with normal open and normal files when mmap-ed)?
Thanks!

Edit:
Is this correct then?:

void* mem = allocate_memory_with_mmap(); // say from a shared region
MyType* ptr = new ( mem ) MyType( args );
ptr.~MyType() //is this really needed?

now in an unrelated process:

MyType* myptr = (MyType*)fetch_address_from_mmap(...)
myptr->printHelloWorld();
myptr->myvalue = 1; //writes to shared memory
myptr.~MyType() //is this really needed?

now if I want to free memory

munmap(address...) //but this done only once, when none of the processes use it any more
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-11T23:03:29+00:00Added an answer on June 11, 2026 at 11:03 pm

    You are missing the fact that the STL vector is usually just a tuple of (mem pointer, mem size, element count), where actual memory for contained objects is received from the allocator template parameter.

    Placing an instance of std::vector in shared memory does not make any sense. You probably want to check out boost::interprocess library instead.

    Edit 0:

    Memory allocation and object construction are two distinct phased, though combined in a single statement like bellow (unless operator new is re-defined for MyType):

    // allocates from process heap and constructs
    MyType* ptr = new MyType( args );
    

    You can split these two phases with placement new:

    void* mem = allocate_memory_somehow(); // say from a shared region
    MyType* ptr = new ( mem ) MyType( args );
    

    Though now you will have to explicitly call the destructor and release the memory:

    ptr->~MyType();
    release_memory_back_to_where_it_came_from( ptr );
    

    This is essentially how you can construct objects in shared memory in C++. Note though that types that store pointers are not suitable for shared memory since any pointer in one process memory space does not make any sense in the other. Use explicit sizes and offsets instead.

    Hope this helps.

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