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Home/ Questions/Q 8237773
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 7, 20262026-06-07T19:34:53+00:00 2026-06-07T19:34:53+00:00

struct hostent *gethostbyname(const char *name) Note that hostent.h_addr_list is a field with variant length.

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struct hostent *gethostbyname(const char *name)

Note that hostent.h_addr_list is a field with variant length.

How does the function gethostbyname have the implementation that returns a pointer pointing to a struct but doesn’t require the caller to release the resource?

All examples used in the famous book Unix Network Programming Vol 1 by R. Stevens do not contain code to release those returned pointers and I assume that these are not ignorance. Also one example from MSDN does the same thing example of usage

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-07T19:34:55+00:00Added an answer on June 7, 2026 at 7:34 pm

    Supposing that an implementation wants to to handle arbitrarily large lists of addresses, it could do something like this:

    struct hostent *gethostbyname(const char *name) {
        static struct hostent *results = 0;
        static size_t resultsize = 0;
        size_t count = get_count_of_addresses(name)
        if (count > resultsize) {
            struct hostent *tmp = realloc(results, N * count + M);
            if (tmp) {
                results = tmp;
                resultsize = count;
            } else {
                // handle error, I can't remember what the docs say
            }
        }
        fill_in_hostent(results, name);
        return results;
    };
    

    Optionally, the sockets library could do something to free results on exit (such as install an atexit handler), to avoid debugging tools reporting a memory leak.

    I’ve ignored the possibility that the count of addresses could change in between sizeing the structure and filling it in — in practice you’d get the DNS result back and then do stuff with it, so that would not be possible. I’ve left it as two separate calls to avoid introducing a pseudo-code representation for the DNS result.

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