Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/ntheap.c @ 558:ed498ef2108b
[xemacs-hg @ 2001-05-23 09:59:33 by ben]
xemacs.mak: call `ver' to get the exact os version and put it in the
installation; suggestion from adrian.
behavior-defs.el: Add scroll-in-place, jka-compr, efs, fix up some things.
pop.c: Remove BROKEN_CYGWIN.
etc\sample.init.el: Rewrite to be much more careful about loading features --
now it decays gracefully even in the complete absence of packages.
Also avoid doing obnoxious things when loading efs.
configure.in: add some support for eventually turning on file coding by
default. Fix numerous places where AC_MSG_WARN had quotes
around its arg, which is bad. Replace with []. Same for
AC_MSG_ERROR.
s\cygwin32.h, s\mingw32.h: remove support for way old beta versions of cygwin.
don't put -Wno-sign-compare in the system switches; this
isn't a system issue. define BROKEN_SIGIO for cygwin to
get C-g support.
device-msw.c: signal an error rather than crash with an unavailable network
printer (from Mike Alexander).
event-msw.c: cleanup headers. fix (hopefully) an error with data corruption
when sending to a network connection.
fileio.c: Fix evil code that attempts
to handle the ~user prefix by (a) always assuming we're referencing
ourselves and not even verifying the user -- hence any file with
a tilde as its first char is invalid! (b) if there wasn't a slash
following the filename, the pointer was set *past* the end of
file and we started reading from uninitialized memory. Now we
simply treat these as files, always.
optionally for 21.4 (doc fix):
lread.c: cambia de pas_de_lache_ici -- al minimo usa la palabra certa.
frame.c: fix warnings.
emacs.c, nt.c, ntproc.c, process-nt.c, realpath.c, unexnt.c: rename MAX_PATH
to standard PATH_MAX.
process-nt.c, realpath.c: cleanup headers.
process-unix.c, sysdep.c, systime.h, syswindows.h: kill BROKEN_CYGWIN and
support for way old beta versions of cygwin.
sysfile.h: use _MAX_PATH (Windows) preferentially for PATH_MAX if defined.
include io.h on Cygwin (we need get_osfhandle()). include
sys/fcntl.h always, since we were including it in various
header files anyway.
unexcw.c: fix up style to conform to standard. remove duplicate definition
of PERROR.
buffer.c: comment change.
database.c, debug.h, device-tty.c, dired-msw.c, glyphs-msw.c: header
cleanups (remove places that directly include a system
header file, because we have our own layer to do this more cleanly
and portably); indentation fixes.
author | ben |
---|---|
date | Wed, 23 May 2001 09:59:48 +0000 |
parents | abe6d1db359e |
children | b39c14581166 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Heap management routines for XEmacs on Windows NT. Copyright (C) 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 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) 7-29-94 */ /* Adapted for XEmacs by David Hobley <david@spook-le0.cia.com.au> */ /* Synced with FSF Emacs 19.34.6 by Marc Paquette <marcpa@cam.org> */ #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" /* for VALMASK */ #include <stdlib.h> #include "ntheap.h" /* This gives us the page size and the size of the allocation unit on NT. */ SYSTEM_INFO sysinfo_cache; unsigned long syspage_mask = 0; /* These are defined to get Emacs to compile, but are not used. */ int edata; int etext; /* Cache information describing the NT system for later use. */ void cache_system_info (void) { /* Cache page size, allocation unit, processor type, etc. */ GetSystemInfo (&sysinfo_cache); syspage_mask = sysinfo_cache.dwPageSize - 1; } /* Round ADDRESS up to be aligned with ALIGN. */ unsigned char * round_to_next (unsigned char *address, unsigned long align) { unsigned long tmp; tmp = (unsigned long) address; tmp = (tmp + align - 1) / align; return (unsigned char *) (tmp * align); } /* Info for keeping track of our heap. */ unsigned char *data_region_base = UNINIT_PTR; unsigned char *data_region_end = UNINIT_PTR; unsigned char *real_data_region_end = UNINIT_PTR; unsigned long data_region_size = UNINIT_LONG; unsigned long reserved_heap_size = UNINIT_LONG; /* The start of the data segment. */ unsigned char * get_data_start (void) { return data_region_base; } /* The end of the data segment. */ unsigned char * get_data_end (void) { return data_region_end; } static unsigned char * allocate_heap (void) { /* The base address for our GNU malloc heap is chosen in conjunction with the link settings for temacs.exe which control the stack size, the initial default process heap size and the executable image base address. The link settings and the malloc heap base below must all correspond; the relationship between these values depends on how NT and Win95 arrange the virtual address space for a process (and on the size of the code and data segments in temacs.exe). The most important thing is to make base address for the executable image high enough to leave enough room between it and the 4MB floor of the process address space on Win95 for the primary thread stack, the process default heap, and other assorted odds and ends (eg. environment strings, private system dll memory etc) that are allocated before temacs has a chance to grab its malloc arena. The malloc heap base can then be set several MB higher than the executable image base, leaving enough room for the code and data segments. Because some parts of Emacs can use rather a lot of stack space (for instance, the regular expression routines can potentially allocate several MB of stack space) we allow 8MB for the stack. Allowing 1MB for the default process heap, and 1MB for odds and ends, we can base the executable at 16MB and still have a generous safety margin. At the moment, the executable has about 810KB of code (for x86) and about 550KB of data - on RISC platforms the code size could be roughly double, so if we allow 4MB for the executable we will have plenty of room for expansion. Thus we would like to set the malloc heap base to 20MB. However, Win95 refuses to allocate the heap starting at this address, so we set the base to 27MB to make it happy. Since Emacs now leaves 28 bits available for pointers, this lets us use the remainder of the region below the 256MB line for our malloc arena - 229MB is still a pretty decent arena to play in! */ unsigned long base = 0x01B00000; /* 27MB */ /* Temporary hack for the non-starting problem - use 28 (256Mb) rather than VALBITS (1Gb) */ unsigned long end = 1 << 28; /* 256MB */ void *ptr = NULL; #define NTHEAP_PROBE_BASE 1 #if NTHEAP_PROBE_BASE /* This is never normally defined */ /* Try various addresses looking for one the kernel will let us have. */ while (!ptr && (base < end)) { reserved_heap_size = end - base; ptr = VirtualAlloc ((void *) base, get_reserved_heap_size (), MEM_RESERVE, PAGE_NOACCESS); base += 0x00100000; /* 1MB increment */ } #else reserved_heap_size = end - base; ptr = VirtualAlloc ((void *) base, get_reserved_heap_size (), MEM_RESERVE, PAGE_NOACCESS); #endif return (unsigned char*) ptr; } /* Emulate Unix sbrk. */ void * sbrk (unsigned long increment) { void *result; long size = (long) increment; /* Allocate our heap if we haven't done so already. */ if (data_region_base == UNINIT_PTR) { data_region_base = allocate_heap (); if (!data_region_base) return NULL; data_region_end = data_region_base; real_data_region_end = data_region_end; data_region_size = get_reserved_heap_size (); } result = data_region_end; /* If size is negative, shrink the heap by decommitting pages. */ if (size < 0) { int new_size; unsigned char *new_data_region_end; size = -size; /* Sanity checks. */ if ((data_region_end - size) < data_region_base) return NULL; /* We can only decommit full pages, so allow for partial deallocation [cga]. */ new_data_region_end = (data_region_end - size); new_data_region_end = (unsigned char *) ((long) (new_data_region_end + syspage_mask) & ~syspage_mask); new_size = real_data_region_end - new_data_region_end; real_data_region_end = new_data_region_end; if (new_size > 0) { /* Decommit size bytes from the end of the heap. */ if (!VirtualFree (real_data_region_end, new_size, MEM_DECOMMIT)) return NULL; } data_region_end -= size; } /* If size is positive, grow the heap by committing reserved pages. */ else if (size > 0) { /* Sanity checks. */ if ((data_region_end + size) > (data_region_base + get_reserved_heap_size ())) return NULL; /* Commit more of our heap. */ if (VirtualAlloc (data_region_end, size, MEM_COMMIT, PAGE_READWRITE) == NULL) return NULL; data_region_end += size; /* We really only commit full pages, so record where the real end of committed memory is [cga]. */ real_data_region_end = (unsigned char *) ((long) (data_region_end + syspage_mask) & ~syspage_mask); } return result; } #if !defined (CANNOT_DUMP) && !defined(HEAP_IN_DATA) && !defined(PDUMP) /* Recreate the heap from the data that was dumped to the executable. EXECUTABLE_PATH tells us where to find the executable. */ void recreate_heap (char *executable_path) { /* First reserve the upper part of our heap. (We reserve first because there have been problems in the past where doing the mapping first has loaded DLLs into the VA space of our heap.) */ /* Query the region at the end of the committed heap */ void *tmp; MEMORY_BASIC_INFORMATION info; DWORD size; unsigned char* base = get_heap_end (); unsigned char* end = base + get_reserved_heap_size () - get_committed_heap_size (); VirtualQuery (base, &info, sizeof info); if (info.State != MEM_FREE) { /* Oops, something has already reserved or commited it, nothing we can do but exit */ char buf[256]; wsprintf(buf, "XEmacs cannot start because the memory region required by the heap is not available.\n" "(BaseAddress = 0x%lx, AllocationBase = 0x%lx, Size = 0x%lx, State = %s, Type = %s)", info.BaseAddress, info.AllocationBase, info.RegionSize, info.State == MEM_COMMIT ? "COMMITED" : "RESERVED", info.Type == MEM_IMAGE ? "IMAGE" : info.Type == MEM_MAPPED ? "MAPPED" : "PRIVATE"); MessageBox(NULL, buf, "XEmacs", MB_OK | MB_ICONSTOP); exit(1); } /* Now try and reserve as much as possible */ size = min (info.RegionSize, end - base); tmp = VirtualAlloc (base, size, MEM_RESERVE, PAGE_NOACCESS); if (!tmp) { /* Can't reserve it, nothing we can do but exit */ char buf[256]; wsprintf(buf, "XEmacs cannot start because it couldn't reserve space required for the heap.\n" "(VirtualAlloc at 0x%lx of 0x%lx failed (%d))", base, size, GetLastError()); MessageBox(NULL, buf, "XEmacs", MB_OK | MB_ICONSTOP); exit (1); } /* We read in the data for the .bss section from the executable first and map in the heap from the executable second to prevent any funny interactions between file I/O and file mapping. */ read_in_bss (executable_path); map_in_heap (executable_path); /* Update system version information to match current system. */ cache_system_info (); } #endif /* CANNOT_DUMP */ /* Round the heap up to the given alignment. */ void round_heap (unsigned long align) { unsigned long needs_to_be; unsigned long need_to_alloc; needs_to_be = (unsigned long) round_to_next (get_heap_end (), align); need_to_alloc = needs_to_be - (unsigned long) get_heap_end (); if (need_to_alloc) sbrk (need_to_alloc); } #if (_MSC_VER >= 1000) /* MSVC 4.2 invokes these functions from mainCRTStartup to initialize a heap via HeapCreate. They are normally defined by the runtime, but we override them here so that the unnecessary HeapCreate call is not performed. */ int __cdecl _heap_init (void) { /* Stepping through the assembly indicates that mainCRTStartup is expecting a nonzero success return value. */ return 1; } void __cdecl _heap_term (void) { return; } #endif