.TH NEEDSTACK 3 .SH NAME needstack \- check for execution stack overflow .SH SYNOPSIS .B #include .PP .B #include .PP .B int needstack(int n) .SH DESCRIPTION Stack overflow in the thread library leads to bugs that are difficult to diagnose. The Plan 9 libraries are careful about not allocating large structures on the stack, so typically four or eight kilobytes is plenty of stack for a thread. Other libraries are not always as careful. Calling .I needstack indicates to the thread library that an external routine is about to be called that will require .I n bytes of stack space. If there is not enough space left on the stack, the thread library prints an error and terminates the program. The call .B needstack(0) can be used to check whether the stack is currently overflowed. .PP .I Needstack is defined in .B libc.h so that library functions used in threaded and non-threaded contexts can call it. The implementation of .I needstack in .B lib9 is a no-op. .PP .I Needstack should be thought of as a comment checked at run time, like .MR assert (3) . .SH EXAMPLE The X Window library implementation of .I XLookupString allocates some very large buffers on the stack, so .B \*9/src/cmd/devdraw/x11-itrans.c calls .B needstack(64*1024) before making calls to .IR XLookupString . If a thread (in this case, the keyboard-reading thread used inside the .MR draw (3) library) does not allocate a large enough stack, the problem is diagnosed immediately rather than left to corrupt memory. .SH SOURCE .B \*9/src/lib9/needstack.c .br .B \*9/src/libthread .SH SEE ALSO .MR thread (3)