Platform SDK: Memory

HeapSize

The HeapSize function returns the size, in bytes, of a memory block allocated from a heap by the HeapAlloc or HeapReAlloc function.

DWORD HeapSize(
  HANDLE hHeap,  // handle to heap
  DWORD dwFlags, // heap size options
  LPCVOID lpMem  // pointer to memory
);

Parameters

hHeap
[in] Specifies the heap in which the memory block resides. This handle is returned by the HeapCreate or GetProcessHeap function.
dwFlags
[in] Specifies several controllable aspects of accessing the memory block. Specifying the following value overrides the corresponding value specified in the flOptions parameter when the heap was created by using the HeapCreate function.
Value Meaning
HEAP_NO_SERIALIZE Specifies that mutual exclusion will not be used while HeapSize is accessing the heap.

This value should not be specified when accessing the process heap. The system may create additional threads within the application's process, such as a CTRL+C handler, that simultaneously access the process heap.


lpMem
[in] Pointer to the memory block whose size the function will obtain. This is a pointer returned by the HeapAlloc or HeapReAlloc function.

Return Values

If the function succeeds, the return value is the size, in bytes, of the allocated memory block.

If the function fails, the return value is -1. The function does not call SetLastError. An application cannot call GetLastError for extended error information.

Remarks

Serialization ensures mutual exclusion when two or more threads attempt to simultaneously allocate or free blocks from the same heap. There is a small performance cost to serialization, but it must be used whenever multiple threads allocate and free memory from the same heap. Setting the HEAP_NO_SERIALIZE value eliminates mutual exclusion on the heap. Without serialization, two or more threads that use the same heap handle might attempt to allocate or free memory simultaneously, likely causing corruption in the heap. The HEAP_NO_SERIALIZE value can, therefore, be safely used only in the following situations:

Note  To guard against an access violation, use structured exception handling to protect any code that writes to or reads from a heap. For more information on structured exception handling with memory accesses, see Reading and Writing and Structured Exception Handling.

Requirements

  Windows NT/2000: Requires Windows NT 3.1 or later.
  Windows 95/98: Requires Windows 95 or later.
  Header: Declared in Winbase.h; include Windows.h.
  Library: Use Kernel32.lib.

See Also

Memory Management Overview, Memory Management Functions, GetProcessHeap, HeapAlloc, HeapCreate, HeapDestroy, HeapFree, HeapReAlloc, SetLastError