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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T14:31:52+00:00 2026-05-10T14:31:52+00:00

This is a bit hypothetical and grossly simplified but… Assume a program that will

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This is a bit hypothetical and grossly simplified but…

Assume a program that will be calling functions written by third parties. These parties can be assumed to be non-hostile but can’t be assumed to be ‘competent’. Each function will take some arguments, have side effects and return a value. They have no state while they are not running.

The objective is to ensure they can’t cause memory leaks by logging all mallocs (and the like) and then freeing everything after the function exits.

Is this possible? Is this practical?

p.s. The important part to me is ensuring that no allocations persist so ways to remove memory leaks without doing that are not useful to me.

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  1. 2026-05-10T14:31:52+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 2:31 pm

    You don’t specify the operating system or environment, this answer assumes Linux, glibc, and C.

    You can set __malloc_hook, __free_hook, and __realloc_hook to point to functions which will be called from malloc(), realloc(), and free() respectively. There is a __malloc_hook manpage showing the prototypes. You can add track allocations in these hooks, then return to let glibc handle the memory allocation/deallocation.

    It sounds like you want to free any live allocations when the third-party function returns. There are ways to have gcc automatically insert calls at every function entrance and exit using -finstrument-functions, but I think that would be inelegant for what you are trying to do. Can you have your own code call a function in your memory-tracking library after calling one of these third-party functions? You could then check if there are any allocations which the third-party function did not already free.

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