X-Git-Url: https://git.netwichtig.de/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=win%2Finspircd_memory_functions.cpp;h=134c2136f9442900aab30f82f8033c25988c4e77;hb=86f1b6c7f32d8c23d8acd0b2aeb15973cab1f351;hp=f118a86c47d0d3615c6928ba96e41268762b77c6;hpb=aa692dc1039b63deef7886e914ec499abe7facaf;p=user%2Fhenk%2Fcode%2Finspircd.git diff --git a/win/inspircd_memory_functions.cpp b/win/inspircd_memory_functions.cpp index f118a86c4..134c2136f 100644 --- a/win/inspircd_memory_functions.cpp +++ b/win/inspircd_memory_functions.cpp @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ * whereas on POSIX systems, shared objects loaded into an executable share * the executable's heap. This means that if we pass an arbitrary pointer to * a windows DLL which is not allocated in that dll, without some form of - * marshalling, we get a page fault. To fix this, these overrided operators + * marshalling, we get a page fault. To fix this, these overridden operators * new and delete use the windows HeapAlloc and HeapFree functions to claim * memory from the windows global heap. This makes windows 'act like' POSIX * when it comes to memory usage between dlls and exes.