comparison src/xemacs.def.in.in @ 3024:b7f26b2f78bd

[xemacs-hg @ 2005-10-25 08:32:40 by ben] more mc-alloc-related factoring; make it hard to do the wrong thing postgresql/postgresql.c, postgresql/postgresql.h: MC-Alloc refactoring. ldap/eldap.c, ldap/eldap.h: MC-Alloc refactoring. alloc.c, buffer.c, console.c, emacs.c, file-coding.c, lrecord.h, lstream.c, mule-charset.c, print.c, scrollbar-gtk.c, scrollbar-msw.c, scrollbar-x.c, scrollbar.c, symbols.c, symeval.h, unicode.c, window.c, xemacs.def.in.in: rename `struct lcrecord_header' to `struct old_lcrecord_header'; likewise for `old_basic_alloc_lcrecord', `old_free_lcrecord', `old_zero_lcrecord', `old_zero_sized_lcrecord', `old_copy_lcrecord', `old_copy_sized_lcrecord', `old_alloc_lcrecord_type'. Created new LISPOBJ_STORAGE_SIZE() used only on objects created through allocation of Lisp-Object memory instead of basic xmalloc()/xfree(). This is distinguished from malloced_storage_size(), for non-Lisp-Objects. The definition of LISPOBJ_STORAGE_SIZE() can reduce down to malloced_storage_size() when not MC-ALLOC, but with MC-ALLOC it's a different function. The whole point other than cleaning up the use of LISPOBJ_STORAGE_SIZE is to make it harder to accidentally use the old kind (lowercase) of function in new code, since you get a compile error.
author ben
date Tue, 25 Oct 2005 08:32:50 +0000
parents 05d62157e048
children 63b684f8a823
comparison
equal deleted inserted replaced
3023:d305f4207861 3024:b7f26b2f78bd
16 #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS 16 #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS
17 mcpro_1 /* mcpro */ 17 mcpro_1 /* mcpro */
18 #endif 18 #endif
19 mc_alloc /* DEFSUBR */ 19 mc_alloc /* DEFSUBR */
20 #else /* not MC_ALLOC */ 20 #else /* not MC_ALLOC */
21 alloc_automanaged_lcrecord /* alloc_lcrecord_type */ 21 alloc_automanaged_lcrecord /* old_alloc_lcrecord_type */
22 #endif /* not MC_ALLOC */ 22 #endif /* not MC_ALLOC */
23 apply1 23 apply1
24 #ifdef USE_ASSERTIONS 24 #ifdef USE_ASSERTIONS
25 assert_failed /* abort(), assert(), etc. */ 25 assert_failed /* abort(), assert(), etc. */
26 #endif 26 #endif