simple c malloc-Collection of common programming errors

I would generally not reinvent the wheel with allocation functions unless my memory-usage pattern either is not supported by malloc/etc. or memory can be partitioned into one or more pre-allocated zones, each containing one or two LIFO heaps (freeing any object releases all objects in the same heap that were allocated after it). In a common version of the latter scenario, the only time anything is freed, everything is freed; in such a case, malloc() may be usefully rewritten as:

char *malloc_ptr;
void *malloc(int size)
{
  void *ret;
  ret = (void*)malloc_ptr;
  malloc_ptr += size;
  return ret;
}

Zero bytes of overhead per allocated object. An example of a scenario where a custom memory manager was used for a scenario where malloc() was insufficient was an application where variable-length test records produced variable-length result records (which could be longer or shorter); the application needed to support fetching results and adding more tests mid-batch. Tests were stored at increasing addresses starting at the bottom of the buffer, while results were stored at decreasing addresses starting at the top. As a background task, tests after the current one would be copied to the start of the buffer (since there was only one pointer that was used to read tests for processing, the copy logic would update that pointer as required). Had the application used malloc/free, it’s possible that the interleaving of allocations for tests and results could have fragmented memory, but with the system used there was no such risk.