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/**
@page libtalloc_stealing Chapter 2: Stealing a context

@section stealing Stealing a context

Talloc has the ability to change the parent of a talloc context to another
one. This operation is commonly referred to as stealing and it is one of
the most important actions performed with talloc contexts.

Stealing a context is necessary if we want the pointer to outlive the context it
is created on. This has many possible use cases, for instance stealing a result
of a database search to an in-memory cache context, changing the parent of a
field of a generic structure to a more specific one or vice-versa. The most
common scenario, at least in Samba, is to steal output data from a function-specific
context to the output context given as an argument of that function.

@code
struct foo {
    char *a1;
    char *a2;
    char *a3;
};

struct bar {
    char *wurst;
    struct foo *foo;
};

struct foo *foo = talloc_zero(ctx, struct foo);
foo->a1 = talloc_strdup(foo, "a1");
foo->a2 = talloc_strdup(foo, "a2");
foo->a3 = talloc_strdup(foo, "a3");

struct bar *bar = talloc_zero(NULL, struct bar);
/* change parent of foo from ctx to bar */
bar->foo = talloc_steal(bar, foo);

/* or do the same but assign foo = NULL */
bar->foo = talloc_move(bar, &foo);
@endcode

The talloc_move() function is similar to the talloc_steal() function but
additionally sets the source pointer to NULL.

In general, the source pointer itself is not changed (it only replaces the
parent in the meta data). But the common usage is that the result is
assigned to another variable, thus further accessing the pointer from the
original variable should be avoided unless it is necessary. In this case
talloc_move() is the preferred way of stealing a context. Additionally sets the
source pointer to NULL, thus.protects the pointer from being accidentally freed
and accessed using the old variable after its parent has been changed.

@image html stealing.png

*/