I wrote: > I also avoided using 001: based on my work with converting guc.c to use > palloc [1], it seems that pfree'ing a malloc-provided pointer is likely > to see 001 a lot, at least on 64-bit glibc platforms.
I poked at this some more by creating a function that intentionally does pfree(malloc(N)) for various values of N. RHEL8, x86_64: the low-order nibble of the header is consistently 0001. macOS 12.6, arm64: the low-order nibble is consistently 0000. FreeBSD 13.0, arm64: Usually the low-order nibble is 0000 or 1111, but for some smaller values of N it sometimes comes up as 0010. NetBSD 9.2, amd64: results similar to FreeBSD. I still haven't looked into anybody's source code, but based on these results I'm inclined to leave both 001 and 010 IDs unused for now. That'll help the GUC malloc -> palloc transition tremendously, because people will get fairly clear errors rather than weird assertions and/or memory corruption. That'll leave us in a situation where only one more context ID can be assigned without risk of reducing our error detection ability, but I'm content with that for now. regards, tom lane