Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/malloc.c @ 853:2b6fa2618f76
[xemacs-hg @ 2002-05-28 08:44:22 by ben]
merge my stderr-proc ws
make-docfile.c: Fix places where we forget to check for EOF.
code-init.el: Don't use CRLF conversion by default on process output. CMD.EXE and
friends work both ways but Cygwin programs don't like the CRs.
code-process.el, multicast.el, process.el: Removed.
Improvements to call-process-internal:
-- allows a buffer to be specified for input and stderr output
-- use it on all systems
-- implement C-g as documented
-- clean up and comment
call-process-region uses new call-process facilities; no temp file.
remove duplicate funs in process.el.
comment exactly how coding systems work and fix various problems.
open-multicast-group now does similar coding-system frobbing to
open-network-stream.
dumped-lisp.el, faces.el, msw-faces.el: Fix some hidden errors due to code not being defined at the right time.
xemacs.mak: Add -DSTRICT.
================================================================
ALLOW SEPARATION OF STDOUT AND STDERR IN PROCESSES
================================================================
Standard output and standard error can be processed separately in
a process. Each can have its own buffer, its own mark in that buffer,
and its filter function. You can specify a separate buffer for stderr
in `start-process' to get things started, or use the new primitives:
set-process-stderr-buffer
process-stderr-buffer
process-stderr-mark
set-process-stderr-filter
process-stderr-filter
Also, process-send-region takes a 4th optional arg, a buffer.
Currently always uses a pipe() under Unix to read the error output.
(#### Would a PTY be better?)
sysdep.h, sysproc.h, unexfreebsd.c, unexsunos4.c, nt.c, emacs.c, callproc.c, symsinit.h, sysdep.c, Makefile.in.in, process-unix.c: Delete callproc.c. Move child_setup() to process-unix.c.
wait_for_termination() now only needed on a few really old systems.
console-msw.h, event-Xt.c, event-msw.c, event-stream.c, event-tty.c, event-unixoid.c, events.h, process-nt.c, process-unix.c, process.c, process.h, procimpl.h: Rewrite the process methods to handle a separate channel for
error input. Create Lstreams for reading in the error channel.
Many process methods need change. In general the changes are
fairly clear as they involve duplicating what's used for reading
the normal stdout and changing for stderr -- although tedious,
as such changes are required throughout the entire process code.
Rewrote the code that reads process output to do two loops, one
for stdout and one for stderr.
gpmevent.c, tooltalk.c: set_process_filter takes an argument for stderr.
================================================================
NEW ERROR-TRAPPING MECHANISM
================================================================
Totally rewrite error trapping code to be unified and support more
features. Basic function is call_trapping_problems(), which lets
you specify, by means of flags, what sorts of problems you want
trapped. these can include
-- quit
-- errors
-- throws past the function
-- creation of "display objects" (e.g. buffers)
-- deletion of already-existing "display objects" (e.g. buffers)
-- modification of already-existing buffers
-- entering the debugger
-- gc
-- errors->warnings (ala suspended errors)
etc. All other error funs rewritten in terms of this one.
Various older mechanisms removed or rewritten.
window.c, insdel.c, console.c, buffer.c, device.c, frame.c: When creating a display object, added call to
note_object_created(), for use with trapping_problems mechanism.
When deleting, call check_allowed_operation() and note_object
deleted().
The trapping-problems code records the objects created since the
call-trapping-problems began. Those objects can be deleted, but
none others (i.e. previously existing ones).
bytecode.c, cmdloop.c: internal_catch takes another arg.
eval.c: Add long comments describing the "five lists" used to maintain
state (backtrace, gcpro, specbind, etc.) in the Lisp engine.
backtrace.h, eval.c: Implement trapping-problems mechanism, eliminate old mechanisms or
redo in terms of new one.
frame.c, gutter.c: Flush out the concept of "critical display section", defined by
the in_display() var. Use an internal_bind() to get it reset,
rather than just doing it at end, because there may be a non-local
exit.
event-msw.c, event-stream.c, console-msw.h, device.c, dialog-msw.c, frame.c, frame.h, intl.c, toolbar.c, menubar-msw.c, redisplay.c, alloc.c, menubar-x.c: Make use of new trapping-errors stuff and rewrite code based on
old mechanisms.
glyphs-widget.c, redisplay.h: Protect calling Lisp in redisplay.
insdel.c: Protect hooks against deleting existing buffers.
frame-msw.c: Use EQ, not EQUAL in hash tables whose keys are just numbers.
Otherwise we run into stickiness in redisplay because
internal_equal() can QUIT.
================================================================
SIGNAL, C-G CHANGES
================================================================
Here we change the way that C-g interacts with event reading. The
idea is that a C-g occurring while we're reading a user event
should be read as C-g, but elsewhere should be a QUIT. The former
code did all sorts of bizarreness -- requiring that no QUIT occurs
anywhere in event-reading code (impossible to enforce given the
stuff called or Lisp code invoked), and having some weird system
involving enqueue/dequeue of a C-g and interaction with Vquit_flag
-- and it didn't work.
Now, we simply enclose all code where we want C-g read as an event
with {begin/end}_dont_check_for_quit(). This completely turns off
the mechanism that checks (and may remove or alter) C-g in the
read-ahead queues, so we just get the C-g normal.
Signal.c documents this very carefully.
cmdloop.c: Correct use of dont_check_for_quit to new scheme, remove old
out-of-date comments.
event-stream.c: Fix C-g handling to actually work.
device-x.c: Disable quit checking when err out.
signal.c: Cleanup. Add large descriptive comment.
process-unix.c, process-nt.c, sysdep.c: Use QUIT instead of REALLY_QUIT.
It's not necessary to use REALLY_QUIT and just confuses the issue.
lisp.h: Comment quit handlers.
================================================================
CONS CHANGES
================================================================
free_cons() now takes a Lisp_Object not the result of XCONS().
car and cdr have been renamed so that they don't get used directly;
go through XCAR(), XCDR() instead.
alloc.c, dired.c, editfns.c, emodules.c, fns.c, glyphs-msw.c, glyphs-x.c, glyphs.c, keymap.c, minibuf.c, search.c, eval.c, lread.c, lisp.h: Correct free_cons calling convention: now takes Lisp_Object,
not Lisp_Cons
chartab.c: Eliminate direct use of ->car, ->cdr, should be black box.
callint.c: Rewrote using EXTERNAL_LIST_LOOP to avoid use of Lisp_Cons.
================================================================
USE INTERNAL-BIND-*
================================================================
eval.c: Cleanups of these funs.
alloc.c, fileio.c, undo.c, specifier.c, text.c, profile.c, lread.c, redisplay.c, menubar-x.c, macros.c: Rewrote to use internal_bind_int() and internal_bind_lisp_object()
in place of whatever varied and cumbersome mechanisms were
formerly there.
================================================================
SPECBIND SANITY
================================================================
backtrace.h: - Improved comments
backtrace.h, bytecode.c, eval.c: Add new mechanism check_specbind_stack_sanity() for sanity
checking code each time the catchlist or specbind stack change.
Removed older prototype of same mechanism.
================================================================
MISC
================================================================
lisp.h, insdel.c, window.c, device.c, console.c, buffer.c: Fleshed out authorship.
device-msw.c: Correct bad Unicode-ization.
print.c: Be more careful when not initialized or in fatal error handling.
search.c: Eliminate running_asynch_code, an FSF holdover.
alloc.c: Added comments about gc-cons-threshold.
dialog-x.c: Use begin_gc_forbidden() around code to build up a widget value
tree, like in menubar-x.c.
gui.c: Use Qunbound not Qnil as the default for
gethash.
lisp-disunion.h, lisp-union.h: Added warnings on use of VOID_TO_LISP().
lisp.h: Use ERROR_CHECK_STRUCTURES to turn on
ERROR_CHECK_TRAPPING_PROBLEMS and ERROR_CHECK_TYPECHECK
lisp.h: Add assert_with_message.
lisp.h: Add macros for gcproing entire arrays. (You could do this before
but it required manual twiddling the gcpro structure.)
lisp.h: Add prototypes for new functions defined elsewhere.
author | ben |
---|---|
date | Tue, 28 May 2002 08:45:36 +0000 |
parents | fdefd0186b75 |
children | 13e47461d509 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* dynamic memory allocation for GNU. Copyright (C) 1985, 1987 Free Software Foundation, Inc. NO WARRANTY BECAUSE THIS PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, WE PROVIDE ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE STATE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING, FREE SOFTWARE FOUNDATION, INC, RICHARD M. STALLMAN AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THIS PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW WILL RICHARD M. STALLMAN, THE FREE SOFTWARE FOUNDATION, INC., AND/OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND REDISTRIBUTE THIS PROGRAM AS PERMITTED BELOW, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY LOST PROFITS, LOST MONIES, OR OTHER SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS) THIS PROGRAM, EVEN IF YOU HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES, OR FOR ANY CLAIM BY ANY OTHER PARTY. GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE TO COPY 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of this source file as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy a valid copyright notice "Copyright (C) 1985 Free Software Foundation, Inc."; and include following the copyright notice a verbatim copy of the above disclaimer of warranty and of this License. You may charge a distribution fee for the physical act of transferring a copy. 2. You may modify your copy or copies of this source file or any portion of it, and copy and distribute such modifications under the terms of Paragraph 1 above, provided that you also do the following: a) cause the modified files to carry prominent notices stating that you changed the files and the date of any change; and b) cause the whole of any work that you distribute or publish, that in whole or in part contains or is a derivative of this program or any part thereof, to be licensed at no charge to all third parties on terms identical to those contained in this License Agreement (except that you may choose to grant more extensive warranty protection to some or all third parties, at your option). c) You may charge a distribution fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. Mere aggregation of another unrelated program with this program (or its derivative) on a volume of a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other program under the scope of these terms. 3. You may copy and distribute this program (or a portion or derivative of it, under Paragraph 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of Paragraphs 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following: a) accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Paragraphs 1 and 2 above; or, b) accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three years, to give any third party free (except for a nominal shipping charge) a complete machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be distributed under the terms of Paragraphs 1 and 2 above; or, c) accompany it with the information you received as to where the corresponding source code may be obtained. (This alternative is allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you received the program in object code or executable form alone.) For an executable file, complete source code means all the source code for all modules it contains; but, as a special exception, it need not include source code for modules which are standard libraries that accompany the operating system on which the executable file runs. 4. You may not copy, sublicense, distribute or transfer this program except as expressly provided under this License Agreement. Any attempt otherwise to copy, sublicense, distribute or transfer this program is void and your rights to use the program under this License agreement shall be automatically terminated. However, parties who have received computer software programs from you with this License Agreement will not have their licenses terminated so long as such parties remain in full compliance. 5. If you wish to incorporate parts of this program into other free programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.. We have not yet worked out a simple rule that can be stated here, but we will often permit this. We will be guided by the two goals of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and of promoting the sharing and reuse of software. In other words, you are welcome to use, share and improve this program. You are forbidden to forbid anyone else to use, share and improve what you give them. Help stamp out software-hoarding! */ /* Synched up with: Not synched with FSF. */ /* * @(#)nmalloc.c 1 (Caltech) 2/21/82 * * U of M Modified: 20 Jun 1983 ACT: strange hacks for Emacs * * Nov 1983, Mike@BRL, Added support for 4.1C/4.2 BSD. * * This is a very fast storage allocator. It allocates blocks of a small * number of different sizes, and keeps free lists of each size. Blocks * that don't exactly fit are passed up to the next larger size. In this * implementation, the available sizes are (2^n)-4 (or -16) bytes long. * This is designed for use in a program that uses vast quantities of * memory, but bombs when it runs out. To make it a little better, it * warns the user when he starts to get near the end. * * June 84, ACT: modified rcheck code to check the range given to malloc, * rather than the range determined by the 2-power used. * * Jan 85, RMS: calls malloc_warning to issue warning on nearly full. * No longer Emacs-specific; can serve as all-purpose malloc for GNU. * You should call malloc_init to reinitialize after loading dumped Emacs. * Call malloc_stats to get info on memory stats if MSTATS turned on. * realloc knows how to return same block given, just changing its size, * if the power of 2 is correct. */ /* * nextf[i] is the pointer to the next free block of size 2^(i+3). The * smallest allocatable block is 8 bytes. The overhead information will * go in the first int of the block, and the returned pointer will point * to the second. * #ifdef MSTATS * nmalloc[i] is the difference between the number of mallocs and frees * for a given block size. #endif MSTATS */ #ifdef emacs /* config.h specifies which kind of system this is. */ #include <config.h> #else /* Determine which kind of system this is. */ #include <signal.h> #ifndef SIGTSTP #ifndef USG #define USG #endif #else /* SIGTSTP */ #ifdef SIGIO #define BSD4_2 #endif /* SIGIO */ #endif /* SIGTSTP */ #if defined(hpux) #define USG #endif #endif /* not emacs */ #include <stddef.h> /* Define getpagesize () if the system does not. */ #include "getpagesize.h" #ifdef HAVE_ULIMIT_H #include <ulimit.h> #endif #ifndef BSD4_2 #ifndef USG #include <sys/vlimit.h> /* warn the user when near the end */ #endif /* not USG */ #else /* if BSD4_2 */ #include <sys/time.h> #include <sys/resource.h> #endif /* BSD4_2 */ #ifdef __STDC__ #ifndef HPUX /* not sure where this for NetBSD should really go and it probably applies to other systems */ #if !defined(__NetBSD__) && !defined(__bsdi__) && !defined(__OpenBSD__) extern void *sbrk (ptrdiff_t); #else extern char *sbrk (); #endif /* __NetBSD__ or __OpenBSD__ */ #endif /* HPUX */ #else extern void *sbrk (); #endif /* __STDC__ */ extern char *start_of_data (void); #ifdef BSD #define start_of_data() &etext #endif #ifndef emacs #define start_of_data() &etext #endif #define ISALLOC ((char) 0xf7) /* magic byte that implies allocation */ #define ISFREE ((char) 0x54) /* magic byte that implies free block */ /* this is for error checking only */ #define ISMEMALIGN ((char) 0xd6) /* Stored before the value returned by memalign, with the rest of the word being the distance to the true beginning of the block. */ extern char etext; /* These two are for user programs to look at, when they are interested. */ Bytecount malloc_sbrk_used; /* amount of data space used now */ Bytecount malloc_sbrk_unused; /* amount more we can have */ /* start of data space; can be changed by calling init_malloc */ static char *data_space_start; #ifdef MSTATS static int nmalloc[30]; static int nmal, nfre; #endif /* MSTATS */ /* If range checking is not turned on, all we have is a flag indicating whether memory is allocated, an index in nextf[], and a size field; to realloc() memory we copy either size bytes or 1<<(index+3) bytes depending on whether the former can hold the exact size (given the value of 'index'). If range checking is on, we always need to know how much space is allocated, so the 'size' field is never used. */ struct mhead { char mh_alloc; /* ISALLOC or ISFREE */ char mh_index; /* index in nextf[] */ /* Remainder are valid only when block is allocated */ unsigned short mh_size; /* size, if < 0x10000 */ #ifdef rcheck unsigned mh_nbytes; /* number of bytes allocated */ int mh_magic4; /* should be == MAGIC4 */ #endif /* rcheck */ }; /* Access free-list pointer of a block. It is stored at block + 4. This is not a field in the mhead structure because we want sizeof (struct mhead) to describe the overhead for when the block is in use, and we do not want the free-list pointer to count in that. */ #define CHAIN(a) \ (*(struct mhead **) (sizeof (char *) + (char *) (a))) #ifdef rcheck /* To implement range checking, we write magic values in at the beginning and end of each allocated block, and make sure they are undisturbed whenever a free or a realloc occurs. */ /* Written in each of the 4 bytes following the block's real space */ #define MAGIC1 0x55 /* Written in the 4 bytes before the block's real space */ #define MAGIC4 0x55555555 #define ASSERT(p) if (!(p)) botch("p"); else #define EXTRA 4 /* 4 bytes extra for MAGIC1s */ #else #define ASSERT(p) #define EXTRA 0 #endif /* rcheck */ /* nextf[i] is free list of blocks of size 2**(i + 3) */ static struct mhead *nextf[30]; /* busy[i] is nonzero while allocation of block size i is in progress. */ static char busy[30]; /* Number of bytes of writable memory we can expect to be able to get */ extern unsigned int lim_data; /* Level number of warnings already issued. 0 -- no warnings issued. 1 -- 75% warning already issued. 2 -- 85% warning already issued. */ static int warnlevel; /* Function to call to issue a warning; 0 means don't issue them. */ static void (*warnfunction) (); /* nonzero once initial bunch of free blocks made */ static int gotpool; char *_malloc_base; static void getpool (void); /* Cause reinitialization based on job parameters; also declare where the end of pure storage is. */ void malloc_init (start, warnfun) char *start; void (*warnfun) (); { if (start) data_space_start = start; lim_data = 0; warnlevel = 0; warnfunction = warnfun; } /* Return the maximum size to which MEM can be realloc'd without actually requiring copying. */ int malloc_usable_size (mem) char *mem; { int blocksize = 8 << (((struct mhead *) mem) - 1) -> mh_index; return blocksize - sizeof (struct mhead) - EXTRA; } static void get_lim_data (); static void morecore (nu) /* ask system for more memory */ int nu; /* size index to get more of */ { char *cp; int nblks; unsigned int siz; int oldmask; #ifdef BSD #ifndef BSD4_1 /* ?? There was a suggestion not to block SIGILL, somehow for GDB's sake. */ oldmask = sigsetmask (-1); #endif #endif if (!data_space_start) { data_space_start = start_of_data (); } if (lim_data == 0) get_lim_data (); /* On initial startup, get two blocks of each size up to 1k bytes */ if (!gotpool) { getpool (); getpool (); gotpool = 1; } /* Find current end of memory and issue warning if getting near max */ cp = sbrk (0); siz = cp - data_space_start; if (warnfunction) switch (warnlevel) { case 0: if (siz > (lim_data / 4) * 3) { warnlevel++; (*warnfunction) ("Warning: past 75% of memory limit"); } break; case 1: if (siz > (lim_data / 20) * 17) { warnlevel++; (*warnfunction) ("Warning: past 85% of memory limit"); } break; case 2: if (siz > (lim_data / 20) * 19) { warnlevel++; (*warnfunction) ("Warning: past 95% of memory limit"); } break; } if ((int) cp & 0x3ff) /* land on 1K boundaries */ sbrk (1024 - ((int) cp & 0x3ff)); /* Take at least 2k, and figure out how many blocks of the desired size we're about to get */ nblks = 1; if ((siz = nu) < 8) nblks = 1 << ((siz = 8) - nu); if ((cp = sbrk (1 << (siz + 3))) == (char *) -1) { #ifdef BSD #ifndef BSD4_1 sigsetmask (oldmask); #endif #endif return; /* no more room! */ } malloc_sbrk_used = siz; malloc_sbrk_unused = lim_data - siz; if ((int) cp & 7) { /* shouldn't happen, but just in case */ cp = (char *) (((int) cp + 8) & ~7); nblks--; } /* save new header and link the nblks blocks together */ nextf[nu] = (struct mhead *) cp; siz = 1 << (nu + 3); while (1) { ((struct mhead *) cp) -> mh_alloc = ISFREE; ((struct mhead *) cp) -> mh_index = nu; if (--nblks <= 0) break; CHAIN ((struct mhead *) cp) = (struct mhead *) (cp + siz); cp += siz; } CHAIN ((struct mhead *) cp) = 0; #ifdef BSD #ifndef BSD4_1 sigsetmask (oldmask); #endif #endif } static void getpool (void) { int nu; char *cp = sbrk (0); if ((int) cp & 0x3ff) /* land on 1K boundaries */ sbrk (1024 - ((int) cp & 0x3ff)); /* Record address of start of space allocated by malloc. */ if (_malloc_base == 0) _malloc_base = cp; /* Get 2k of storage */ cp = sbrk (04000); if (cp == (char *) -1) return; /* Divide it into an initial 8-word block plus one block of size 2**nu for nu = 3 ... 10. */ CHAIN (cp) = nextf[0]; nextf[0] = (struct mhead *) cp; ((struct mhead *) cp) -> mh_alloc = ISFREE; ((struct mhead *) cp) -> mh_index = 0; cp += 8; for (nu = 0; nu < 7; nu++) { CHAIN (cp) = nextf[nu]; nextf[nu] = (struct mhead *) cp; ((struct mhead *) cp) -> mh_alloc = ISFREE; ((struct mhead *) cp) -> mh_index = nu; cp += 8 << nu; } } char * malloc (n) /* get a block */ unsigned n; { struct mhead *p; unsigned int nbytes; int nunits = 0; /* Figure out how many bytes are required, rounding up to the nearest multiple of 8, then figure out which nestf[] area to use. Both the beginning of the header and the beginning of the block should be on an eight byte boundary. */ nbytes = (n + ((sizeof (*p) + 7) & ~7) + EXTRA + 7) & ~7; { unsigned int shiftr = (nbytes - 1) >> 2; while (shiftr >>= 1) nunits++; } /* In case this is reentrant use of malloc from signal handler, pick a block size that no other malloc level is currently trying to allocate. That's the easiest harmless way not to interfere with the other level of execution. */ while (busy[nunits]) nunits++; busy[nunits] = 1; /* If there are no blocks of the appropriate size, go get some */ /* COULD SPLIT UP A LARGER BLOCK HERE ... ACT */ if (nextf[nunits] == 0) morecore (nunits); /* Get one block off the list, and set the new list head */ if ((p = nextf[nunits]) == 0) { busy[nunits] = 0; return 0; } nextf[nunits] = CHAIN (p); busy[nunits] = 0; /* Check for free block clobbered */ /* If not for this check, we would gobble a clobbered free chain ptr */ /* and bomb out on the NEXT allocate of this size block */ if (p -> mh_alloc != ISFREE || p -> mh_index != nunits) #ifdef rcheck botch ("block on free list clobbered"); #else /* not rcheck */ abort (); #endif /* not rcheck */ /* Fill in the info, and if range checking, set up the magic numbers */ p -> mh_alloc = ISALLOC; #ifdef rcheck p -> mh_nbytes = n; p -> mh_magic4 = MAGIC4; { /* Get the location n after the beginning of the user's space. */ char *m = (char *) p + ((sizeof (*p) + 7) & ~7) + n; *m++ = MAGIC1, *m++ = MAGIC1, *m++ = MAGIC1, *m = MAGIC1; } #else /* not rcheck */ p -> mh_size = n; #endif /* not rcheck */ #ifdef MSTATS nmalloc[nunits]++; nmal++; #endif /* MSTATS */ return (char *) p + ((sizeof (*p) + 7) & ~7); } void free (mem) char *mem; { struct mhead *p; { char *ap = mem; if (ap == 0) return; p = (struct mhead *) (ap - ((sizeof (*p) + 7) & ~7)); if (p -> mh_alloc == ISMEMALIGN) { ap -= p->mh_size; p = (struct mhead *) (ap - ((sizeof (*p) + 7) & ~7)); } #ifndef rcheck if (p -> mh_alloc != ISALLOC) abort (); #else /* rcheck */ if (p -> mh_alloc != ISALLOC) { if (p -> mh_alloc == ISFREE) botch ("free: Called with already freed block argument\n"); else botch ("free: Called with bad argument\n"); } ASSERT (p -> mh_magic4 == MAGIC4); ap += p -> mh_nbytes; ASSERT (*ap++ == MAGIC1); ASSERT (*ap++ == MAGIC1); ASSERT (*ap++ == MAGIC1); ASSERT (*ap == MAGIC1); #endif /* rcheck */ } { int nunits = p -> mh_index; ASSERT (nunits <= 29); p -> mh_alloc = ISFREE; /* Protect against signal handlers calling malloc. */ busy[nunits] = 1; /* Put this block on the free list. */ CHAIN (p) = nextf[nunits]; nextf[nunits] = p; busy[nunits] = 0; #ifdef MSTATS nmalloc[nunits]--; nfre++; #endif /* MSTATS */ } } char * realloc (mem, n) char *mem; unsigned n; { struct mhead *p; unsigned int tocopy; unsigned int nbytes; int nunits; if (mem == 0) return malloc (n); p = (struct mhead *) (mem - ((sizeof (*p) + 7) & ~7)); nunits = p -> mh_index; ASSERT (p -> mh_alloc == ISALLOC); #ifdef rcheck ASSERT (p -> mh_magic4 == MAGIC4); { char *m = mem + (tocopy = p -> mh_nbytes); ASSERT (*m++ == MAGIC1); ASSERT (*m++ == MAGIC1); ASSERT (*m++ == MAGIC1); ASSERT (*m == MAGIC1); } #else /* not rcheck */ if (p -> mh_index >= 13) tocopy = (1 << (p -> mh_index + 3)) - ((sizeof (*p) + 7) & ~7); else tocopy = p -> mh_size; #endif /* not rcheck */ /* See if desired size rounds to same power of 2 as actual size. */ nbytes = (n + ((sizeof (*p) + 7) & ~7) + EXTRA + 7) & ~7; /* If ok, use the same block, just marking its size as changed. */ if (nbytes > (4 << nunits) && nbytes <= (8 << nunits)) { #ifdef rcheck char *m = mem + tocopy; *m++ = 0; *m++ = 0; *m++ = 0; *m++ = 0; p-> mh_nbytes = n; m = mem + n; *m++ = MAGIC1; *m++ = MAGIC1; *m++ = MAGIC1; *m++ = MAGIC1; #else /* not rcheck */ p -> mh_size = n; #endif /* not rcheck */ return mem; } if (n < tocopy) tocopy = n; { char *new; if ((new = malloc (n)) == 0) return 0; memcpy (new, mem, tocopy); free (mem); return new; } } char * memalign (alignment, size) unsigned alignment, size; { char *ptr = malloc (size + alignment); char *aligned; struct mhead *p; if (ptr == 0) return 0; /* If entire block has the desired alignment, just accept it. */ if (((int) ptr & (alignment - 1)) == 0) return ptr; /* Otherwise, get address of byte in the block that has that alignment. */ aligned = (char *) (((int) ptr + alignment - 1) & -alignment); /* Store a suitable indication of how to free the block, so that free can find the true beginning of it. */ p = (struct mhead *) aligned - 1; p -> mh_size = aligned - ptr; p -> mh_alloc = ISMEMALIGN; return aligned; } #ifndef __hpux /* This runs into trouble with getpagesize on HPUX. Patching out seems cleaner than the ugly fix needed. */ char * valloc (size) unsigned size; { return memalign (getpagesize (), size); } #endif /* not __hpux */ #ifdef MSTATS /* Return statistics describing allocation of blocks of size 2**n. */ struct mstats_value { int blocksize; int nfree; int nused; }; struct mstats_value malloc_stats (size) int size; { struct mstats_value v; int i; struct mhead *p; v.nfree = 0; if (size < 0 || size >= 30) { v.blocksize = 0; v.nused = 0; return v; } v.blocksize = 1 << (size + 3); v.nused = nmalloc[size]; for (p = nextf[size]; p; p = CHAIN (p)) v.nfree++; return v; } int malloc_mem_used (void) { int i; int size_used; size_used = 0; for (i = 0; i < 30; i++) { int allocation_size = 1 << (i + 3); struct mhead *p; size_used += nmalloc[i] * allocation_size; } return size_used; } int malloc_mem_free (void) { int i; int size_unused; size_unused = 0; for (i = 0; i < 30; i++) { int allocation_size = 1 << (i + 3); struct mhead *p; for (p = nextf[i]; p ; p = CHAIN (p)) size_unused += allocation_size; } return size_unused; } #endif /* MSTATS */ /* * This function returns the total number of bytes that the process * will be allowed to allocate via the sbrk(2) system call. On * BSD systems this is the total space allocatable to stack and * data. On USG systems this is the data space only. */ #ifdef USG static void get_lim_data (void) { #ifdef ULIMIT_BREAK_VALUE lim_data = ULIMIT_BREAK_VALUE; #else lim_data = ulimit (3, 0); #endif lim_data -= (long) data_space_start; } #else /* not USG */ #ifndef BSD4_2 static void get_lim_data (void) { lim_data = vlimit (LIM_DATA, -1); } #else /* BSD4_2 */ static void get_lim_data (void) { struct rlimit XXrlimit; getrlimit (RLIMIT_DATA, &XXrlimit); #ifdef RLIM_INFINITY lim_data = XXrlimit.rlim_cur & RLIM_INFINITY; /* soft limit */ #else lim_data = XXrlimit.rlim_cur; /* soft limit */ #endif } #endif /* BSD4_2 */ #endif /* not USG */