I did mention it briefly in the post, but you can opt-in for a fixed-size statically allocated buffer by configuring libstdc++ with --enable-libstdcxx-static-eh-pool. Also, you can opt-out of the pool entirely by configuring the number of objects in the pool to zero with the environment variable GLIBCXX_TUNABLES=glibcxx.eh_pool.obj_count=0.
I wonder why it’s opt-in. Maybe it’s part of the whole “you only pay for what you use” ethos, i.e. you shouldn’t have to pay the cost for a static emergency pool if you don’t even use dynamic memory allocation.
The exact implementation of mymalloc isn't relevant to the post. I have an old allocator published at https://github.com/joelsiks/jsmalloc that I did as part of my Master's thesis, which uses a similar debug-logging mechanism that is described in the post.
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