emballoc — Embedded Memory Allocator

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This repository provides the emballoc crate: a simple memory allocator developed for usage in small embedded systems. It is one possible way to support dynamic memory on targets without the standard library, i.e. ones with #![no_std]. This is achieved by providing a type Allocation which can be registered as the global allocator for the binary. See the usage description below.

An allocator is a rather critical part of a software project: when using dynamic memory many operations implicitly can or will allocate, sometimes unexpectedly. Therefore a misbehaving allocator can "randomly" crash the program in very obscure ways. As such an allocator has to be well-tested and battle-proven (see more information here and a real world example). Furthermore it has to be simple: the simpler the algorithm is, the more likely is a correct implementation.

Refer to the crate-documentation for details on the algorithm and usage hints.

Usage

Copy the following snippet to your Cargo.toml to pull the crate in as one of your dependencies.

toml [dependencies.emballoc] version = "*" # replace with current version from crates.io

After that the usage is very simple: just copy the following code to the binary crate of the project. Substitute the 4096 with the desired heap size in bytes.

```rust

[global_allocator]

static ALLOCATOR: emballoc::Allocator<4096> = emballoc::Allocator::new();

extern crate alloc; ```

Now the crate can use the std collections such as Vec<T>, BTreeMap<K, V>, etc. together with important types like Box<T> and Rc<T>. Note, that things in the std-prelude (e.g. Vec<T>, Box<T>, ...) have to be imported explicitly.

Why choosing this crate

This crate started as part of an embedded project, but was extracted to make it usable in other projects and for other users. This sections answers the question:

Why should you consider using this crate in your project?

I'm glad, if that convinced you, but if you have any questions simply open an issue.

A note to users on systems with advanced memory features like MMUs and MPUs:

Minimum supported Rust version

This crate has a stability guarantee about the compiler version supported. The so-called minimum supported Rust version is currently set to 1.57 and won't be raised without a proper increase in the semantic version number scheme. This MSRV is specified in Cargo.toml and is tested in CI.

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.