Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view lib-src/emacs.csh @ 5160:ab9ee10a53e4
fix various problems with allocation statistics, track overhead properly
-------------------- ChangeLog entries follow: --------------------
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2010-03-20 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
* diagnose.el (show-memory-usage):
* diagnose.el (show-object-memory-usage-stats):
Further changes to correspond with changes in the C code;
add an additional column showing the overhead used with each type,
and add it into the grand total memory usage.
src/ChangeLog addition:
2010-03-20 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
* alloc.c:
* alloc.c (init_lrecord_stats):
* alloc.c (free_normal_lisp_object):
* alloc.c (struct):
* alloc.c (clear_lrecord_stats):
* alloc.c (tick_lrecord_stats):
* alloc.c (COUNT_FROB_BLOCK_USAGE):
* alloc.c (COPY_INTO_LRECORD_STATS):
* alloc.c (sweep_strings):
* alloc.c (UNMARK_string):
* alloc.c (gc_sweep_1):
* alloc.c (finish_object_memory_usage_stats):
* alloc.c (object_memory_usage_stats):
* alloc.c (object_dead_p):
* alloc.c (fixed_type_block_overhead):
* alloc.c (lisp_object_storage_size):
* emacs.c (main_1):
* lisp.h:
* lrecord.h:
Export lisp_object_storage_size() and malloced_storage_size() even
when not MEMORY_USAGE_STATS, to get the non-MEMORY_USAGE_STATS
build to compile.
Don't export fixed_type_block_overhead() any more.
Some code cleanup, rearrangement, add some section headers.
Clean up various bugs especially involving computation of overhead
and double-counting certain usage in total_gc_usage. Add
statistics computing the overhead used by all types. Don't add a
special entry for string headers in the object-memory-usage-stats
because it's already present as just "string". But do count the
overhead used by long strings. Don't try to call the
memory_usage() methods when NEW_GC because there's nowhere obvious
in the sweep stage to make the calls.
* marker.c (compute_buffer_marker_usage):
Just use lisp_object_storage_size() rather than trying to
reimplement it.
author | Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 20 Mar 2010 20:20:30 -0500 |
parents | 376386a54a3c |
children | 06dd936cde16 |
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# This defines a csh command named `edit' which resumes an # existing Emacs or starts a new one if none exists. # One way or another, any arguments are passed to Emacs to specify files # (provided you have loaded `resume.el'). # - Michael DeCorte # These are the possible values of $whichjob # 1 = new ordinary emacs (the -nw is so that it doesn't try to do X) # 2 = resume emacs # 3 = new emacs under X (-i is so that you get a reasonable icon) # 4 = resume emacs under X # 5 = new emacs under suntools # 6 = resume emacs under suntools # 7 = new emacs under X and suntools - doesn't make any sense, so use X # 8 = resume emacs under X and suntools - doesn't make any sense, so use X set EMACS_PATTERN="^\[[0-9]\] . Stopped ............ $EMACS" alias edit 'set emacs_command=("emacs -nw \!*" "fg %emacs" "emacs -i \!* &"\ "emacsclient \!* &" "emacstool \!* &" "emacsclient \!* &" "emacs -i \!* &"\ "emacsclient \!* &") ; \ jobs >! $HOME/.jobs; grep "$EMACS_PATTERN" < $HOME/.jobs >& /dev/null; \ @ isjob = ! $status; \ @ whichjob = 1 + $isjob + $?DISPLAY * 2 + $?WINDOW_PARENT * 4; \ test -S ~/.emacs_server && emacsclient \!* \ || echo `pwd` \!* >! ~/.emacs_args && eval $emacs_command[$whichjob]'