Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/unexnt.c @ 4690:257b468bf2ca
Move the #'query-coding-region implementation to C.
This is necessary because there is no reasonable way to access the
corresponding mswindows-multibyte functionality from Lisp, and we need such
functionality if we're going to have a reliable and portable
#'query-coding-region implementation. However, this change doesn't yet
provide #'query-coding-region for the mswindow-multibyte coding systems,
there should be no functional differences between an XEmacs with this change
and one without it.
src/ChangeLog addition:
2009-09-19 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Move the #'query-coding-region implementation to C.
This is necessary because there is no reasonable way to access the
corresponding mswindows-multibyte functionality from Lisp, and we
need such functionality if we're going to have a reliable and
portable #'query-coding-region implementation. However, this
change doesn't yet provide #'query-coding-region for the
mswindow-multibyte coding systems, there should be no functional
differences between an XEmacs with this change and one without it.
* mule-coding.c (struct fixed_width_coding_system):
Add a new coding system type, fixed_width, and implement it. It
uses the CCL infrastructure but has a much simpler creation API,
and its own query_method, formerly in lisp/mule/mule-coding.el.
* unicode.c:
Move the Unicode query method implementation here from
unicode.el.
* lisp.h: Declare Fmake_coding_system_internal, Fcopy_range_table
here.
* intl-win32.c (complex_vars_of_intl_win32):
Use Fmake_coding_system_internal, not Fmake_coding_system.
* general-slots.h: Add Qsucceeded, Qunencodable, Qinvalid_sequence
here.
* file-coding.h (enum coding_system_variant):
Add fixed_width_coding_system here.
(struct coding_system_methods):
Add query_method and query_lstream_method to the coding system
methods.
Provide flags for the query methods.
Declare the default query method; initialise it correctly in
INITIALIZE_CODING_SYSTEM_TYPE.
* file-coding.c (default_query_method):
New function, the default query method for coding systems that do
not set it. Moved from coding.el.
(make_coding_system_1):
Accept new elements in PROPS in #'make-coding-system; aliases, a
list of aliases; safe-chars and safe-charsets (these were
previously accepted but not saved); and category.
(Fmake_coding_system_internal):
New function, what used to be #'make-coding-system--on Mule
builds, we've now moved some of the functionality of this to
Lisp.
(Fcoding_system_canonical_name_p):
Move this earlier in the file, since it's now called from within
make_coding_system_1.
(Fquery_coding_region):
Move the implementation of this here, from coding.el.
(complex_vars_of_file_coding):
Call Fmake_coding_system_internal, not Fmake_coding_system;
specify safe-charsets properties when we're a mule build.
* extents.h (mouse_highlight_priority, Fset_extent_priority,
Fset_extent_face, Fmap_extents):
Make these available to other C files.
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2009-09-19 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Move the #'query-coding-region implementation to C.
* coding.el:
Consolidate code that depends on the presence or absence of Mule
at the end of this file.
(default-query-coding-region, query-coding-region):
Move these functions to C.
(default-query-coding-region-safe-charset-skip-chars-map):
Remove this variable, the corresponding C variable is
Vdefault_query_coding_region_chartab_cache in file-coding.c.
(query-coding-string): Update docstring to reflect actual multiple
values, be more careful about not modifying a range table that
we're currently mapping over.
(encode-coding-char): Make the implementation of this simpler.
(featurep 'mule): Autoload #'make-coding-system from
mule/make-coding-system.el if we're a mule build; provide an
appropriate compiler macro.
Do various non-mule compatibility things if we're not a mule
build.
* update-elc.el (additional-dump-dependencies):
Add mule/make-coding-system as a dump time dependency if we're a
mule build.
* unicode.el (ccl-encode-to-ucs-2):
(decode-char):
(encode-char):
Move these earlier in the file, for the sake of some byte compile
warnings.
(unicode-query-coding-region):
Move this to unicode.c
* mule/make-coding-system.el:
New file, not dumped. Contains the functionality to rework the
arguments necessary for fixed-width coding systems, and contains
the implementation of #'make-coding-system, which now calls
#'make-coding-system-internal.
* mule/vietnamese.el (viscii):
* mule/latin.el (iso-8859-2):
(windows-1250):
(iso-8859-3):
(iso-8859-4):
(iso-8859-14):
(iso-8859-15):
(iso-8859-16):
(iso-8859-9):
(macintosh):
(windows-1252):
* mule/hebrew.el (iso-8859-8):
* mule/greek.el (iso-8859-7):
(windows-1253):
* mule/cyrillic.el (iso-8859-5):
(koi8-r):
(koi8-u):
(windows-1251):
(alternativnyj):
(koi8-ru):
(koi8-t):
(koi8-c):
(koi8-o):
* mule/arabic.el (iso-8859-6):
(windows-1256):
Move all these coding systems to being of type fixed-width, not of
type CCL. This allows the distinct query-coding-region for them to
be in C, something which will eventually allow us to implement
query-coding-region for the mswindows-multibyte coding systems.
* mule/general-late.el (posix-charset-to-coding-system-hash):
Document why we're pre-emptively persuading the byte compiler that
the ELC for this file needs to be written using escape-quoted.
Call #'set-unicode-query-skip-chars-args, now the Unicode
query-coding-region implementation is in C.
* mule/thai-xtis.el (tis-620):
Don't bother checking whether we're XEmacs or not here.
* mule/mule-coding.el:
Move the eight bit fixed-width functionality from this file to
make-coding-system.el.
tests/ChangeLog addition:
2009-09-19 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* automated/mule-tests.el:
Check a coding system's type, not an 8-bit-fixed property, for
whether that coding system should be treated as a fixed-width
coding system.
* automated/query-coding-tests.el:
Don't test the query coding functionality for mswindows-multibyte
coding systems, it's not yet implemented.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 19 Sep 2009 22:53:13 +0100 |
parents | 3d8143fc88e1 |
children | 95c4ced5c07c |
line wrap: on
line source
/* unexec for XEmacs on Windows NT. Copyright (C) 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copyright (C) 2002 Ben Wing. This file is part of XEmacs. XEmacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. XEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with XEmacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. Geoff Voelker (voelker@cs.washington.edu) 8-12-94 */ /* Adapted for XEmacs by David Hobley <david@spook-le0.cia.com.au> */ /* This file has been Mule-ized, Ben Wing, 4-13-02. */ /* The linkers that come with MSVC >= 4.0 merge .bss into .data and reorder * uninitialised data so that the .data section looks like: * * crt0 initialised data * emacs initialised data * <my_edata> * library initialised data * <start of bss part of .data> * emacs static uninitialised data * library static uninitialised data * emacs global uninitialised data * <my_ebss> * library global uninitialised data * * This means that we can't use the normal my_ebss in lastfile.c trick to * differentiate between unitialised data that belongs to emacs and * uninitialised data that belongs to system libraries. This is bad because * we do want to initialise the emacs data, but we don't want to initialise * the system library data. * * To solve this problem using MSVC >= 5.0 we use a pragma directive to tell * the compiler to put emacs's data (both initialised and uninitialised) in * a separate section in the executable, and we only dump that section. This * means that all files that define initialized data must include config.h * to pick up the pragma. We don't try to make any part of that section * read-only. * * This pragma directive isn't supported by the MSVC 4.x compiler. Instead, * we dump crt0 initialised data and library static uninitialised data in * addition to the emacs data. This is wrong, but we appear to be able to * get away with it. A proper fix might involve the introduction of a static * version of my_ebss in lastfile.c and a new firstfile.c file. jhar */ #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" #include "sysfile.h" #include "syswindows.h" /* From IMAGEHLP.H which is not installed by default by MSVC < 5 */ /* The IMAGEHLP.DLL library is not distributed by default with Windows95 */ typedef PIMAGE_NT_HEADERS (__stdcall * pfnCheckSumMappedFile_t) (LPVOID BaseAddress, DWORD FileLength, LPDWORD HeaderSum, LPDWORD CheckSum); #if 0 extern BOOL ctrl_c_handler (unsigned long type); #endif /* Sync with FSF Emacs 19.34.6 note: struct file_data is now defined in nt.h */ enum { HEAP_UNINITIALIZED = 1, HEAP_UNLOADED, HEAP_LOADED }; /* Basically, our "initialized" flag. */ int heap_state = HEAP_UNINITIALIZED; /* So we can find our heap in the file to recreate it. */ unsigned long heap_index_in_executable = UNINIT_LONG; void get_section_info (file_data *p_file); void copy_executable_and_dump_data_section (file_data *, file_data *); void dump_bss_and_heap (file_data *p_infile, file_data *p_outfile); /* Cached info about the .data section in the executable. */ PUCHAR data_start_va = UNINIT_PTR; DWORD data_start_file = UNINIT_LONG; DWORD data_size = UNINIT_LONG; /* Cached info about the .bss section in the executable. */ PUCHAR bss_start = UNINIT_PTR; DWORD bss_size = UNINIT_LONG; /* Startup code for running on NT. When we are running as the dumped version, we need to bootstrap our heap and .bss section into our address space before we can actually hand off control to the startup code supplied by NT (primarily because that code relies upon malloc ()). */ /* ********************** Hackers please remember, this _start() thingy is *not* called either when dumping portably, or when running from temacs! Do not put significant XEmacs initialization here! ********************** */ EXTERN_C void mainCRTStartup (void); EXTERN_C int _start (void); int _start (void) { /* Cache system info, e.g., the NT page size. */ cache_system_info (); /* Set OS type, so that tchar stuff below works */ init_win32_very_early (); /* If we're a dumped version of emacs then we need to recreate our heap and play tricks with our .bss section. Do this before start up. (WARNING: Do not put any code before this section that relies upon malloc () and runs in the dumped version. It won't work.) */ if (heap_state == HEAP_UNLOADED) { Extbyte executable_path[PATH_MAX_EXTERNAL]; /* Don't use mswindows_get_module_file_name() because it uses xmalloc() */ if (qxeGetModuleFileName (NULL, executable_path, _MAX_PATH) == 0) { exit (1); } /* #### This is super-bogus. When I rename xemacs.exe, the renamed file still loads its heap from xemacs.exe --kkm */ #if 0 { Extbyte *p; /* To allow profiling, make sure executable_path names the .exe file, not the file created by the profiler */ p = qxetcsrchr (executable_path, '\\'); qxetcscpy (p + 1, XETEXT (PATH_PROGNAME ".exe")); } #endif recreate_heap (executable_path); heap_state = HEAP_LOADED; } /* #### This is bogus, too. _fmode is set to different values when we run `xemacs' and `temacs run-emacs'. The sooner we hit and fix all the weirdities this causes us, the better --kkm */ #if 0 /* The default behavior is to treat files as binary and patch up text files appropriately. */ _fmode = O_BINARY; #endif #if 0 /* This prevents ctrl-c's in shells running while we're suspended from having us exit. */ SetConsoleCtrlHandler ((PHANDLER_ROUTINE) ctrl_c_handler, TRUE); #endif mainCRTStartup (); return 0; /* not reached? */ } /* Dump out .data and .bss sections into a new executable. */ int unexec (Ibyte *new_name, Ibyte *old_name, unsigned int UNUSED (start_data), unsigned int UNUSED (start_bss), unsigned int UNUSED (entry_address)) { file_data in_file, out_file; Ibyte *out_filename = alloca_ibytes (qxestrlen (new_name) + 10); Ibyte *in_filename = alloca_ibytes (qxestrlen (old_name) + 10); unsigned long size; Ibyte *ptr; HINSTANCE hImagehelp; /* Make sure that the input and output filenames have the ".exe" extension...patch them up if they don't. */ qxestrcpy (in_filename, old_name); ptr = in_filename + qxestrlen (in_filename) - 4; if (qxestrcmp_ascii (ptr, ".exe")) qxestrcat_ascii (in_filename, ".exe"); qxestrcpy (out_filename, new_name); ptr = out_filename + qxestrlen (out_filename) - 4; if (qxestrcmp_ascii (ptr, ".exe")) qxestrcat_ascii (out_filename, ".exe"); stdout_out ("Dumping from %s\n", in_filename); stdout_out (" to %s\n", out_filename); /* We need to round off our heap to NT's allocation unit (64KB). */ round_heap (get_allocation_unit ()); /* Open the undumped executable file. */ if (!open_input_file (&in_file, in_filename)) { stdout_out ("Failed to open %s (%d)...bailing.\n", in_filename, GetLastError ()); exit (1); } /* Get the interesting section info, like start and size of .bss... */ get_section_info (&in_file); /* The size of the dumped executable is the size of the original executable plus the size of the heap and the size of the .bss section. */ heap_index_in_executable = (unsigned long) round_to_next ((Rawbyte *) in_file.size, get_allocation_unit ()); size = heap_index_in_executable + get_committed_heap_size () + bss_size; if (!open_output_file (&out_file, out_filename, size)) { stdout_out ("Failed to open %s (%d)...bailing.\n", out_filename, GetLastError ()); exit (1); } /* Set the flag (before dumping). */ heap_state = HEAP_UNLOADED; copy_executable_and_dump_data_section (&in_file, &out_file); dump_bss_and_heap (&in_file, &out_file); /* Patch up header fields; profiler is picky about this. */ hImagehelp = LoadLibraryA ("imagehlp.dll"); if (hImagehelp) { PIMAGE_DOS_HEADER dos_header; PIMAGE_NT_HEADERS nt_header; DWORD headersum; DWORD checksum; pfnCheckSumMappedFile_t pfnCheckSumMappedFile; dos_header = (PIMAGE_DOS_HEADER) out_file.file_base; nt_header = (PIMAGE_NT_HEADERS) ((Rawbyte *) dos_header + dos_header->e_lfanew); nt_header->OptionalHeader.CheckSum = 0; #if 0 nt_header->FileHeader.TimeDateStamp = time (NULL); dos_header->e_cp = size / 512; nt_header->OptionalHeader.SizeOfImage = size; #endif pfnCheckSumMappedFile = (pfnCheckSumMappedFile_t) GetProcAddress (hImagehelp, "CheckSumMappedFile"); if (pfnCheckSumMappedFile) { #if 0 nt_header->FileHeader.TimeDateStamp = time (NULL); #endif pfnCheckSumMappedFile (out_file.file_base, out_file.size, &headersum, &checksum); nt_header->OptionalHeader.CheckSum = checksum; } FreeLibrary (hImagehelp); } close_file_data (&in_file); close_file_data (&out_file); return 0; } /* Routines to manipulate NT executable file sections. */ #ifndef DUMP_SEPARATE_SECTION static void get_bss_info_from_map_file (file_data *p_infile, PUCHAR *p_bss_start, DWORD *p_bss_size) { int n, start, len; Ibyte *map_filename = alloca_ibytes (qxestrlen (p_infile->name) + 10); Extbyte buffer[256]; FILE *map; /* Overwrite the .exe extension on the executable file name with the .map extension. */ qxestrcpy (map_filename, p_infile->name); n = qxestrlen (map_filename) - 3; qxestrcpy (&map_filename[n], "map"); map = qxe_fopen (map_filename, "r"); if (!map) { stdout_out ("Failed to open map file %s, error %d...bailing out.\n", map_filename, GetLastError ()); exit (-1); } while (fgets (buffer, sizeof (buffer), map)) { if (!(strstr (buffer, ".bss") && strstr (buffer, "DATA"))) continue; n = sscanf (buffer, " %*d:%x %x", &start, &len); if (n != 2) { /* printf with external data, stdout_out with internal */ printf ("Failed to scan the .bss section line:\n%s", buffer); exit (-1); } break; } *p_bss_start = (PUCHAR) start; *p_bss_size = (DWORD) len; } #endif /* Flip through the executable and cache the info necessary for dumping. */ static void get_section_info (file_data *p_infile) { PIMAGE_DOS_HEADER dos_header; PIMAGE_NT_HEADERS nt_header; PIMAGE_SECTION_HEADER section, data_section; Rawbyte *ptr; int i; dos_header = (PIMAGE_DOS_HEADER) p_infile->file_base; if (dos_header->e_magic != IMAGE_DOS_SIGNATURE) { stdout_out ("Unknown EXE header in %s...bailing.\n", p_infile->name); exit (1); } nt_header = (PIMAGE_NT_HEADERS) (((unsigned long) dos_header) + dos_header->e_lfanew); if (nt_header == NULL) { stdout_out ("Failed to find IMAGE_NT_HEADER in %s...bailing.\n", p_infile->name); exit (1); } /* Check the NT header signature ... */ if (nt_header->Signature != IMAGE_NT_SIGNATURE) { stdout_out ("Invalid IMAGE_NT_SIGNATURE 0x%x in %s...bailing.\n", nt_header->Signature, p_infile->name); } /* Flip through the sections for .data and .bss ... */ section = (PIMAGE_SECTION_HEADER) IMAGE_FIRST_SECTION (nt_header); for (i = 0; i < nt_header->FileHeader.NumberOfSections; i++) { #ifndef DUMP_SEPARATE_SECTION if (!qxestrcmp_ascii (section->Name, ".bss")) { extern int my_ebss; /* From lastfile.c */ ptr = (Rawbyte *) nt_header->OptionalHeader.ImageBase + section->VirtualAddress; bss_start = ptr; bss_size = (Rawbyte*) &my_ebss - (Rawbyte*) bss_start; } if (!qxestrcmp_ascii (section->Name, ".data")) #else if (!qxestrcmp_ascii (section->Name, "xdata")) #endif { extern Rawbyte my_edata[]; /* From lastfile.c */ /* The .data section. */ data_section = section; ptr = (Rawbyte *) nt_header->OptionalHeader.ImageBase + section->VirtualAddress; data_start_va = ptr; data_start_file = section->PointerToRawData; #ifndef DUMP_SEPARATE_SECTION /* Write only the part of the section that contains emacs data. */ data_size = my_edata - data_start_va; #else /* Write back the full section. */ data_size = section->SizeOfRawData; /* This code doesn't know how to grow the raw size of a section. */ if (section->SizeOfRawData < section->Misc.VirtualSize) { stdout_out ("The emacs data section is smaller than expected" "...bailing.\n"); exit (1); } #endif } section++; } #ifndef DUMP_SEPARATE_SECTION if (bss_start == UNINIT_PTR) { /* Starting with MSVC 4.0, the .bss section has been eliminated and appended virtually to the end of the .data section. Our only hint about where the .bss section starts in the address comes from the SizeOfRawData field in the .data section header. Unfortunately, this field is only approximate, as it is a rounded number and is typically rounded just beyond the start of the .bss section. To find the start and size of the .bss section exactly, we have to peek into the map file. */ extern int my_ebss; get_bss_info_from_map_file (p_infile, &ptr, &bss_size); bss_start = ptr + nt_header->OptionalHeader.ImageBase + data_section->VirtualAddress; bss_size = (Rawbyte *) &my_ebss - (Rawbyte *) bss_start; } #else bss_size = 0; #endif } /* The dump routines. */ #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS /* printf with external data, stdout_out with internal */ #define DUMP_MSG(x) printf x #else #define DUMP_MSG(x) #endif static void copy_executable_and_dump_data_section (file_data *p_infile, file_data *p_outfile) { Rawbyte *data_file, *data_va; unsigned long size, index; /* Get a pointer to where the raw data should go in the executable file. */ data_file = (Rawbyte *) p_outfile->file_base + data_start_file; /* Get a pointer to the raw data in our address space. */ data_va = data_start_va; size = (DWORD) data_file - (DWORD) p_outfile->file_base; DUMP_MSG (("Copying executable up to data section...\n")); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Offset in input file.\n", 0)); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Offset in output file.\n", 0)); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Size in bytes.\n", size)); memcpy (p_outfile->file_base, p_infile->file_base, size); size = data_size; DUMP_MSG (("Dumping data section...\n")); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Address in process.\n", data_va)); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Offset in output file.\n", (Rawbyte *) data_file - (Rawbyte *) p_outfile->file_base)); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Size in bytes.\n", size)); memcpy (data_file, data_va, size); index = (DWORD) data_file + size - (DWORD) p_outfile->file_base; size = p_infile->size - index; DUMP_MSG (("Copying rest of executable...\n")); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Offset in input file.\n", index)); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Offset in output file.\n", index)); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Size in bytes.\n", size)); memcpy ((Rawbyte *) p_outfile->file_base + index, (Rawbyte *) p_infile->file_base + index, size); } static void dump_bss_and_heap (file_data *UNUSED (p_infile), file_data *p_outfile) { Rawbyte *heap_data; unsigned long size, index; DUMP_MSG (("Dumping heap onto end of executable...\n")); index = heap_index_in_executable; size = get_committed_heap_size (); heap_data = get_heap_start (); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Heap start in process.\n", heap_data)); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Heap offset in executable.\n", index)); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x Heap size in bytes.\n", size)); memcpy ((PUCHAR) p_outfile->file_base + index, heap_data, size); #ifndef DUMP_SEPARATE_SECTION DUMP_MSG (("Dumping bss onto end of executable...\n")); index += size; size = bss_size; DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x BSS start in process.\n", bss_start)); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x BSS offset in executable.\n", index)); DUMP_MSG (("\t0x%08x BSS size in bytes.\n", size)); memcpy ((Rawbyte *) p_outfile->file_base + index, bss_start, size); #endif } #undef DUMP_MSG /* Reload and remap routines. */ /* Load the dumped .bss section into the .bss area of our address space. */ /* Already done if the .bss was part of a separate emacs data section */ void read_in_bss (Extbyte *filename) { #ifndef DUMP_SEPARATE_SECTION HANDLE file; unsigned long index, n_read; file = qxeCreateFile (filename, GENERIC_READ, FILE_SHARE_READ, NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, 0); if (file == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) ABORT (); /* Seek to where the .bss section is tucked away after the heap... */ index = heap_index_in_executable + get_committed_heap_size (); if (SetFilePointer (file, index, NULL, FILE_BEGIN) == 0xFFFFFFFF) ABORT (); /* Ok, read in the saved .bss section and initialize all uninitialized variables. */ if (!ReadFile (file, bss_start, bss_size, &n_read, NULL)) ABORT (); CloseHandle (file); #endif } /* Map the heap dumped into the executable file into our address space. */ void map_in_heap (Extbyte *filename) { HANDLE file; HANDLE file_mapping; void *file_base; unsigned long size, upper_size, n_read; file = qxeCreateFile (filename, GENERIC_READ, FILE_SHARE_READ, NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, 0); if (file == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) ABORT (); size = GetFileSize (file, &upper_size); file_mapping = qxeCreateFileMapping (file, NULL, PAGE_WRITECOPY, 0, size, NULL); if (!file_mapping) ABORT (); size = get_committed_heap_size (); file_base = MapViewOfFileEx (file_mapping, FILE_MAP_COPY, 0, heap_index_in_executable, size, get_heap_start ()); if (file_base != 0) { return; } /* If we don't succeed with the mapping, then copy from the data into the heap. */ CloseHandle (file_mapping); if (VirtualAlloc (get_heap_start (), get_committed_heap_size (), MEM_RESERVE | MEM_COMMIT, PAGE_READWRITE) == NULL) ABORT (); /* Seek to the location of the heap data in the executable. */ if (SetFilePointer (file, heap_index_in_executable, NULL, FILE_BEGIN) == 0xFFFFFFFF) ABORT (); /* Read in the data. */ if (!ReadFile (file, get_heap_start (), get_committed_heap_size (), &n_read, NULL)) ABORT (); CloseHandle (file); }