of a few dozen kilobytes on startup. This pool is used to ensure it's
possible to throw exceptions (such as <code class="classname">bad_alloc</code>)
even when <code class="code">malloc</code> is unable to allocate any more memory.
- With some versions of <a class="link" href="http://valgrind.org/" target="_top"><span class="command"><strong>valgrind</strong></span></a>
+ With some versions of <a class="link" href="https://valgrind.org" target="_top"><span class="command"><strong>valgrind</strong></span></a>
this pool will be shown as "still reachable" when the process exits, e.g.
<code class="code">still reachable: 72,704 bytes in 1 blocks</code>.
This memory is not a leak, because it's still in use by libstdc++,
</p><p>
In the past, a few people reported that the standard containers appear
to leak memory when tested with memory checkers such as
- <a class="link" href="http://valgrind.org/" target="_top"><span class="command"><strong>valgrind</strong></span></a>.
+ <span class="command"><strong>valgrind</strong></span>.
Under some (non-default) configurations the library's allocators keep
free memory in a
pool for later reuse, rather than deallocating it with <code class="code">delete</code>
of a few dozen kilobytes on startup. This pool is used to ensure it's
possible to throw exceptions (such as <classname>bad_alloc</classname>)
even when <code>malloc</code> is unable to allocate any more memory.
- With some versions of <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://valgrind.org/"><command>valgrind</command></link>
+ With some versions of <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://valgrind.org"><command>valgrind</command></link>
this pool will be shown as "still reachable" when the process exits, e.g.
<code>still reachable: 72,704 bytes in 1 blocks</code>.
This memory is not a leak, because it's still in use by libstdc++,
<para>
In the past, a few people reported that the standard containers appear
to leak memory when tested with memory checkers such as
- <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://valgrind.org/"><command>valgrind</command></link>.
+ <command>valgrind</command>.
Under some (non-default) configurations the library's allocators keep
free memory in a
pool for later reuse, rather than deallocating it with <code>delete</code>