1 /* Block-relocating memory allocator.
2 Copyright (C) 1993, 1995, 2000-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
6 GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
7 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
8 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
9 (at your option) any later version.
11 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
12 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
13 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
14 GNU General Public License for more details.
16 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
17 along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
21 Only relocate the blocs necessary for SIZE in r_alloc_sbrk,
22 rather than all of them. This means allowing for a possible
23 hole between the first bloc and the end of malloc storage. */
29 #include "lisp.h" /* Needed for VALBITS. */
30 #include "blockinput.h"
34 #ifdef DOUG_LEA_MALLOC
36 extern int mallopt (int, int);
37 #else /* not DOUG_LEA_MALLOC */
39 extern size_t __malloc_extra_blocks
;
40 #endif /* SYSTEM_MALLOC */
41 #endif /* not DOUG_LEA_MALLOC */
50 #endif /* not emacs */
53 #include "getpagesize.h"
55 /* A flag to indicate whether we have initialized ralloc yet. For
56 Emacs's sake, please do not make this local to malloc_init; on some
57 machines, the dumping procedure makes all static variables
58 read-only. On these machines, the word static is #defined to be
59 the empty string, meaning that r_alloc_initialized becomes an
60 automatic variable, and loses its value each time Emacs is started
63 static int r_alloc_initialized
= 0;
65 static void r_alloc_init (void);
68 /* Declarations for working with the malloc, ralloc, and system breaks. */
70 /* Function to set the real break value. */
71 void *(*real_morecore
) (ptrdiff_t);
73 /* The break value, as seen by malloc. */
74 static void *virtual_break_value
;
76 /* The address of the end of the last data in use by ralloc,
77 including relocatable blocs as well as malloc data. */
78 static void *break_value
;
80 /* This is the size of a page. We round memory requests to this boundary. */
83 /* Whenever we get memory from the system, get this many extra bytes. This
84 must be a multiple of page_size. */
85 static int extra_bytes
;
87 /* Macros for rounding. Note that rounding to any value is possible
88 by changing the definition of PAGE. */
89 #define PAGE (getpagesize ())
90 #define ROUNDUP(size) (((size_t) (size) + page_size - 1) \
91 & ~((size_t) (page_size - 1)))
93 #define MEM_ALIGN sizeof (double)
94 #define MEM_ROUNDUP(addr) (((size_t) (addr) + MEM_ALIGN - 1) \
97 /* The hook `malloc' uses for the function which gets more space
100 #ifndef SYSTEM_MALLOC
101 extern void *(*__morecore
) (ptrdiff_t);
106 /***********************************************************************
107 Implementation using sbrk
108 ***********************************************************************/
110 /* Data structures of heaps and blocs. */
112 /* The relocatable objects, or blocs, and the malloc data
113 both reside within one or more heaps.
114 Each heap contains malloc data, running from `start' to `bloc_start',
115 and relocatable objects, running from `bloc_start' to `free'.
117 Relocatable objects may relocate within the same heap
118 or may move into another heap; the heaps themselves may grow
121 We try to make just one heap and make it larger as necessary.
122 But sometimes we can't do that, because we can't get contiguous
123 space to add onto the heap. When that happens, we start a new heap. */
129 /* Start of memory range of this heap. */
131 /* End of memory range of this heap. */
133 /* Start of relocatable data in this heap. */
135 /* Start of unused space in this heap. */
137 /* First bloc in this heap. */
138 struct bp
*first_bloc
;
139 /* Last bloc in this heap. */
140 struct bp
*last_bloc
;
143 #define NIL_HEAP ((heap_ptr) 0)
145 /* This is the first heap object.
146 If we need additional heap objects, each one resides at the beginning of
147 the space it covers. */
148 static struct heap heap_base
;
150 /* Head and tail of the list of heaps. */
151 static heap_ptr first_heap
, last_heap
;
153 /* These structures are allocated in the malloc arena.
154 The linked list is kept in order of increasing '.data' members.
155 The data blocks abut each other; if b->next is non-nil, then
156 b->data + b->size == b->next->data.
158 An element with variable==NULL denotes a freed block, which has not yet
159 been collected. They may only appear while r_alloc_freeze_level > 0,
160 and will be freed when the arena is thawed. Currently, these blocs are
161 not reusable, while the arena is frozen. Very inefficient. */
170 void *new_data
; /* temporarily used for relocation */
171 struct heap
*heap
; /* Heap this bloc is in. */
174 #define NIL_BLOC ((bloc_ptr) 0)
175 #define BLOC_PTR_SIZE (sizeof (struct bp))
177 /* Head and tail of the list of relocatable blocs. */
178 static bloc_ptr first_bloc
, last_bloc
;
180 static int use_relocatable_buffers
;
182 /* If >0, no relocation whatsoever takes place. */
183 static int r_alloc_freeze_level
;
186 /* Functions to get and return memory from the system. */
188 /* Find the heap that ADDRESS falls within. */
191 find_heap (void *address
)
195 for (heap
= last_heap
; heap
; heap
= heap
->prev
)
197 if (heap
->start
<= address
&& address
<= heap
->end
)
204 /* Find SIZE bytes of space in a heap.
205 Try to get them at ADDRESS (which must fall within some heap's range)
206 if we can get that many within one heap.
208 If enough space is not presently available in our reserve, this means
209 getting more page-aligned space from the system. If the returned space
210 is not contiguous to the last heap, allocate a new heap, and append it
213 obtain does not try to keep track of whether space is in use or not
214 in use. It just returns the address of SIZE bytes that fall within a
215 single heap. If you call obtain twice in a row with the same arguments,
216 you typically get the same value. It's the caller's responsibility to
217 keep track of what space is in use.
219 Return the address of the space if all went well, or zero if we couldn't
220 allocate the memory. */
223 obtain (void *address
, size_t size
)
226 size_t already_available
;
228 /* Find the heap that ADDRESS falls within. */
229 for (heap
= last_heap
; heap
; heap
= heap
->prev
)
231 if (heap
->start
<= address
&& address
<= heap
->end
)
238 /* If we can't fit SIZE bytes in that heap,
239 try successive later heaps. */
240 while (heap
&& (char *) address
+ size
> (char *) heap
->end
)
243 if (heap
== NIL_HEAP
)
245 address
= heap
->bloc_start
;
248 /* If we can't fit them within any existing heap,
250 if (heap
== NIL_HEAP
)
252 void *new = real_morecore (0);
255 already_available
= (char *) last_heap
->end
- (char *) address
;
257 if (new != last_heap
->end
)
259 /* Someone else called sbrk. Make a new heap. */
261 heap_ptr new_heap
= (heap_ptr
) MEM_ROUNDUP (new);
262 void *bloc_start
= (void *) MEM_ROUNDUP ((void *) (new_heap
+ 1));
264 if (real_morecore ((char *) bloc_start
- (char *) new) != new)
267 new_heap
->start
= new;
268 new_heap
->end
= bloc_start
;
269 new_heap
->bloc_start
= bloc_start
;
270 new_heap
->free
= bloc_start
;
271 new_heap
->next
= NIL_HEAP
;
272 new_heap
->prev
= last_heap
;
273 new_heap
->first_bloc
= NIL_BLOC
;
274 new_heap
->last_bloc
= NIL_BLOC
;
275 last_heap
->next
= new_heap
;
276 last_heap
= new_heap
;
278 address
= bloc_start
;
279 already_available
= 0;
282 /* Add space to the last heap (which we may have just created).
283 Get some extra, so we can come here less often. */
285 get
= size
+ extra_bytes
- already_available
;
286 get
= (char *) ROUNDUP ((char *) last_heap
->end
+ get
)
287 - (char *) last_heap
->end
;
289 if (real_morecore (get
) != last_heap
->end
)
292 last_heap
->end
= (char *) last_heap
->end
+ get
;
298 /* Return unused heap space to the system
299 if there is a lot of unused space now.
300 This can make the last heap smaller;
301 it can also eliminate the last heap entirely. */
307 ptrdiff_t excess
= 0;
309 /* Add the amount of space beyond break_value
310 in all heaps which have extend beyond break_value at all. */
312 for (h
= last_heap
; h
&& break_value
< h
->end
; h
= h
->prev
)
314 excess
+= (char *) h
->end
- (char *) ((break_value
< h
->bloc_start
)
315 ? h
->bloc_start
: break_value
);
318 if (excess
> extra_bytes
* 2 && real_morecore (0) == last_heap
->end
)
320 /* Keep extra_bytes worth of empty space.
321 And don't free anything unless we can free at least extra_bytes. */
322 excess
-= extra_bytes
;
324 if ((char *) last_heap
->end
- (char *) last_heap
->bloc_start
<= excess
)
328 /* This heap should have no blocs in it. If it does, we
329 cannot return it to the system. */
330 if (last_heap
->first_bloc
!= NIL_BLOC
331 || last_heap
->last_bloc
!= NIL_BLOC
)
334 /* Return the last heap, with its header, to the system. */
335 excess
= (char *) last_heap
->end
- (char *) last_heap
->start
;
336 lh_prev
= last_heap
->prev
;
337 /* If the system doesn't want that much memory back, leave
338 last_heap unaltered to reflect that. This can occur if
339 break_value is still within the original data segment. */
340 if (real_morecore (- excess
) != 0)
343 last_heap
->next
= NIL_HEAP
;
348 excess
= ((char *) last_heap
->end
349 - (char *) ROUNDUP ((char *) last_heap
->end
- excess
));
350 /* If the system doesn't want that much memory back, leave
351 the end of the last heap unchanged to reflect that. This
352 can occur if break_value is still within the original
354 if (real_morecore (- excess
) != 0)
355 last_heap
->end
= (char *) last_heap
->end
- excess
;
360 /* The meat - allocating, freeing, and relocating blocs. */
362 /* Find the bloc referenced by the address in PTR. Returns a pointer
366 find_bloc (void **ptr
)
368 bloc_ptr p
= first_bloc
;
370 while (p
!= NIL_BLOC
)
372 /* Consistency check. Don't return inconsistent blocs.
373 Don't abort here, as callers might be expecting this, but
374 callers that always expect a bloc to be returned should abort
375 if one isn't to avoid a memory corruption bug that is
376 difficult to track down. */
377 if (p
->variable
== ptr
&& p
->data
== *ptr
)
386 /* Allocate a bloc of SIZE bytes and append it to the chain of blocs.
387 Returns a pointer to the new bloc, or zero if we couldn't allocate
388 memory for the new block. */
391 get_bloc (size_t size
)
396 if (! (new_bloc
= malloc (BLOC_PTR_SIZE
))
397 || ! (new_bloc
->data
= obtain (break_value
, size
)))
404 break_value
= (char *) new_bloc
->data
+ size
;
406 new_bloc
->size
= size
;
407 new_bloc
->next
= NIL_BLOC
;
408 new_bloc
->variable
= NULL
;
409 new_bloc
->new_data
= 0;
411 /* Record in the heap that this space is in use. */
412 heap
= find_heap (new_bloc
->data
);
413 heap
->free
= break_value
;
415 /* Maintain the correspondence between heaps and blocs. */
416 new_bloc
->heap
= heap
;
417 heap
->last_bloc
= new_bloc
;
418 if (heap
->first_bloc
== NIL_BLOC
)
419 heap
->first_bloc
= new_bloc
;
421 /* Put this bloc on the doubly-linked list of blocs. */
424 new_bloc
->prev
= last_bloc
;
425 last_bloc
->next
= new_bloc
;
426 last_bloc
= new_bloc
;
430 first_bloc
= last_bloc
= new_bloc
;
431 new_bloc
->prev
= NIL_BLOC
;
437 /* Calculate new locations of blocs in the list beginning with BLOC,
438 relocating it to start at ADDRESS, in heap HEAP. If enough space is
439 not presently available in our reserve, call obtain for
442 Store the new location of each bloc in its new_data field.
443 Do not touch the contents of blocs or break_value. */
446 relocate_blocs (bloc_ptr bloc
, heap_ptr heap
, void *address
)
450 /* No need to ever call this if arena is frozen, bug somewhere! */
451 if (r_alloc_freeze_level
)
456 /* If bloc B won't fit within HEAP,
457 move to the next heap and try again. */
458 while (heap
&& (char *) address
+ b
->size
> (char *) heap
->end
)
461 if (heap
== NIL_HEAP
)
463 address
= heap
->bloc_start
;
466 /* If BLOC won't fit in any heap,
467 get enough new space to hold BLOC and all following blocs. */
468 if (heap
== NIL_HEAP
)
473 /* Add up the size of all the following blocs. */
474 while (tb
!= NIL_BLOC
)
482 /* Get that space. */
483 address
= obtain (address
, s
);
490 /* Record the new address of this bloc
491 and update where the next bloc can start. */
492 b
->new_data
= address
;
494 address
= (char *) address
+ b
->size
;
501 /* Update the records of which heaps contain which blocs, starting
502 with heap HEAP and bloc BLOC. */
505 update_heap_bloc_correspondence (bloc_ptr bloc
, heap_ptr heap
)
509 /* Initialize HEAP's status to reflect blocs before BLOC. */
510 if (bloc
!= NIL_BLOC
&& bloc
->prev
!= NIL_BLOC
&& bloc
->prev
->heap
== heap
)
512 /* The previous bloc is in HEAP. */
513 heap
->last_bloc
= bloc
->prev
;
514 heap
->free
= (char *) bloc
->prev
->data
+ bloc
->prev
->size
;
518 /* HEAP contains no blocs before BLOC. */
519 heap
->first_bloc
= NIL_BLOC
;
520 heap
->last_bloc
= NIL_BLOC
;
521 heap
->free
= heap
->bloc_start
;
524 /* Advance through blocs one by one. */
525 for (b
= bloc
; b
!= NIL_BLOC
; b
= b
->next
)
527 /* Advance through heaps, marking them empty,
528 till we get to the one that B is in. */
531 if (heap
->bloc_start
<= b
->data
&& b
->data
<= heap
->end
)
534 /* We know HEAP is not null now,
535 because there has to be space for bloc B. */
536 heap
->first_bloc
= NIL_BLOC
;
537 heap
->last_bloc
= NIL_BLOC
;
538 heap
->free
= heap
->bloc_start
;
541 /* Update HEAP's status for bloc B. */
542 heap
->free
= (char *) b
->data
+ b
->size
;
544 if (heap
->first_bloc
== NIL_BLOC
)
545 heap
->first_bloc
= b
;
547 /* Record that B is in HEAP. */
551 /* If there are any remaining heaps and no blocs left,
552 mark those heaps as empty. */
556 heap
->first_bloc
= NIL_BLOC
;
557 heap
->last_bloc
= NIL_BLOC
;
558 heap
->free
= heap
->bloc_start
;
563 /* Resize BLOC to SIZE bytes. This relocates the blocs
564 that come after BLOC in memory. */
567 resize_bloc (bloc_ptr bloc
, size_t size
)
574 /* No need to ever call this if arena is frozen, bug somewhere! */
575 if (r_alloc_freeze_level
)
578 if (bloc
== NIL_BLOC
|| size
== bloc
->size
)
581 for (heap
= first_heap
; heap
!= NIL_HEAP
; heap
= heap
->next
)
583 if (heap
->bloc_start
<= bloc
->data
&& bloc
->data
<= heap
->end
)
587 if (heap
== NIL_HEAP
)
590 old_size
= bloc
->size
;
593 /* Note that bloc could be moved into the previous heap. */
594 address
= (bloc
->prev
? (char *) bloc
->prev
->data
+ bloc
->prev
->size
595 : (char *) first_heap
->bloc_start
);
598 if (heap
->bloc_start
<= address
&& address
<= heap
->end
)
603 if (! relocate_blocs (bloc
, heap
, address
))
605 bloc
->size
= old_size
;
611 for (b
= last_bloc
; b
!= bloc
; b
= b
->prev
)
616 b
->data
= b
->new_data
;
620 if (b
->new_data
!= b
->data
)
621 memmove (b
->new_data
, b
->data
, b
->size
);
622 *b
->variable
= b
->data
= b
->new_data
;
628 bloc
->data
= bloc
->new_data
;
632 if (bloc
->new_data
!= bloc
->data
)
633 memmove (bloc
->new_data
, bloc
->data
, old_size
);
634 memset ((char *) bloc
->new_data
+ old_size
, 0, size
- old_size
);
635 *bloc
->variable
= bloc
->data
= bloc
->new_data
;
640 for (b
= bloc
; b
!= NIL_BLOC
; b
= b
->next
)
645 b
->data
= b
->new_data
;
649 if (b
->new_data
!= b
->data
)
650 memmove (b
->new_data
, b
->data
, b
->size
);
651 *b
->variable
= b
->data
= b
->new_data
;
656 update_heap_bloc_correspondence (bloc
, heap
);
658 break_value
= (last_bloc
? (char *) last_bloc
->data
+ last_bloc
->size
659 : (char *) first_heap
->bloc_start
);
663 /* Free BLOC from the chain of blocs, relocating any blocs above it.
664 This may return space to the system. */
667 free_bloc (bloc_ptr bloc
)
669 heap_ptr heap
= bloc
->heap
;
672 if (r_alloc_freeze_level
)
674 bloc
->variable
= NULL
;
678 resize_bloc (bloc
, 0);
680 if (bloc
== first_bloc
&& bloc
== last_bloc
)
682 first_bloc
= last_bloc
= NIL_BLOC
;
684 else if (bloc
== last_bloc
)
686 last_bloc
= bloc
->prev
;
687 last_bloc
->next
= NIL_BLOC
;
689 else if (bloc
== first_bloc
)
691 first_bloc
= bloc
->next
;
692 first_bloc
->prev
= NIL_BLOC
;
696 bloc
->next
->prev
= bloc
->prev
;
697 bloc
->prev
->next
= bloc
->next
;
700 /* Sometimes, 'heap' obtained from bloc->heap above is not really a
701 'heap' structure. It can even be beyond the current break point,
702 which will cause crashes when we dereference it below (see
703 bug#12242). Evidently, the reason is bloc allocations done while
704 use_relocatable_buffers was non-positive, because additional
705 memory we get then is not recorded in the heaps we manage. If
706 bloc->heap records such a "heap", we cannot (and don't need to)
707 update its records. So we validate the 'heap' value by making
708 sure it is one of the heaps we manage via the heaps linked list,
709 and don't touch a 'heap' that isn't found there. This avoids
710 accessing memory we know nothing about. */
711 for (h
= first_heap
; h
!= NIL_HEAP
; h
= h
->next
)
717 /* Update the records of which blocs are in HEAP. */
718 if (heap
->first_bloc
== bloc
)
720 if (bloc
->next
!= 0 && bloc
->next
->heap
== heap
)
721 heap
->first_bloc
= bloc
->next
;
723 heap
->first_bloc
= heap
->last_bloc
= NIL_BLOC
;
725 if (heap
->last_bloc
== bloc
)
727 if (bloc
->prev
!= 0 && bloc
->prev
->heap
== heap
)
728 heap
->last_bloc
= bloc
->prev
;
730 heap
->first_bloc
= heap
->last_bloc
= NIL_BLOC
;
738 /* Interface routines. */
740 /* Obtain SIZE bytes of storage from the free pool, or the system, as
741 necessary. If relocatable blocs are in use, this means relocating
742 them. This function gets plugged into the GNU malloc's __morecore
745 We provide hysteresis, never relocating by less than extra_bytes.
747 If we're out of memory, we should return zero, to imitate the other
748 __morecore hook values - in particular, __default_morecore in the
749 GNU malloc package. */
752 r_alloc_sbrk (ptrdiff_t size
)
757 if (! r_alloc_initialized
)
760 if (use_relocatable_buffers
<= 0)
761 return real_morecore (size
);
764 return virtual_break_value
;
768 /* Allocate a page-aligned space. GNU malloc would reclaim an
769 extra space if we passed an unaligned one. But we could
770 not always find a space which is contiguous to the previous. */
771 void *new_bloc_start
;
772 heap_ptr h
= first_heap
;
773 size_t get
= ROUNDUP (size
);
775 address
= (void *) ROUNDUP (virtual_break_value
);
777 /* Search the list upward for a heap which is large enough. */
778 while ((char *) h
->end
< (char *) MEM_ROUNDUP ((char *) address
+ get
))
783 address
= (void *) ROUNDUP (h
->start
);
786 /* If not found, obtain more space. */
789 get
+= extra_bytes
+ page_size
;
791 if (! obtain (address
, get
))
794 if (first_heap
== last_heap
)
795 address
= (void *) ROUNDUP (virtual_break_value
);
797 address
= (void *) ROUNDUP (last_heap
->start
);
801 new_bloc_start
= (void *) MEM_ROUNDUP ((char *) address
+ get
);
803 if (first_heap
->bloc_start
< new_bloc_start
)
805 /* This is no clean solution - no idea how to do it better. */
806 if (r_alloc_freeze_level
)
809 /* There is a bug here: if the above obtain call succeeded, but the
810 relocate_blocs call below does not succeed, we need to free
811 the memory that we got with obtain. */
813 /* Move all blocs upward. */
814 if (! relocate_blocs (first_bloc
, h
, new_bloc_start
))
817 /* Note that (char *) (h + 1) <= (char *) new_bloc_start since
818 get >= page_size, so the following does not destroy the heap
820 for (b
= last_bloc
; b
!= NIL_BLOC
; b
= b
->prev
)
822 if (b
->new_data
!= b
->data
)
823 memmove (b
->new_data
, b
->data
, b
->size
);
824 *b
->variable
= b
->data
= b
->new_data
;
827 h
->bloc_start
= new_bloc_start
;
829 update_heap_bloc_correspondence (first_bloc
, h
);
833 /* Give up managing heaps below the one the new
834 virtual_break_value points to. */
835 first_heap
->prev
= NIL_HEAP
;
836 first_heap
->next
= h
->next
;
837 first_heap
->start
= h
->start
;
838 first_heap
->end
= h
->end
;
839 first_heap
->free
= h
->free
;
840 first_heap
->first_bloc
= h
->first_bloc
;
841 first_heap
->last_bloc
= h
->last_bloc
;
842 first_heap
->bloc_start
= h
->bloc_start
;
844 if (first_heap
->next
)
845 first_heap
->next
->prev
= first_heap
;
847 last_heap
= first_heap
;
850 memset (address
, 0, size
);
854 size_t excess
= ((char *) first_heap
->bloc_start
855 - ((char *) virtual_break_value
+ size
));
857 address
= virtual_break_value
;
859 if (r_alloc_freeze_level
== 0 && excess
> 2 * extra_bytes
)
861 excess
-= extra_bytes
;
862 first_heap
->bloc_start
863 = (void *) MEM_ROUNDUP ((char *) first_heap
->bloc_start
- excess
);
865 relocate_blocs (first_bloc
, first_heap
, first_heap
->bloc_start
);
867 for (b
= first_bloc
; b
!= NIL_BLOC
; b
= b
->next
)
869 if (b
->new_data
!= b
->data
)
870 memmove (b
->new_data
, b
->data
, b
->size
);
871 *b
->variable
= b
->data
= b
->new_data
;
875 if ((char *) virtual_break_value
+ size
< (char *) first_heap
->start
)
877 /* We found an additional space below the first heap */
878 first_heap
->start
= (void *) ((char *) virtual_break_value
+ size
);
882 virtual_break_value
= (void *) ((char *) address
+ size
);
883 break_value
= (last_bloc
884 ? (char *) last_bloc
->data
+ last_bloc
->size
885 : (char *) first_heap
->bloc_start
);
893 /* Allocate a relocatable bloc of storage of size SIZE. A pointer to
894 the data is returned in *PTR. PTR is thus the address of some variable
895 which will use the data area.
897 The allocation of 0 bytes is valid.
898 In case r_alloc_freeze_level is set, a best fit of unused blocs could be
899 done before allocating a new area. Not yet done.
901 If we can't allocate the necessary memory, set *PTR to zero, and
905 r_alloc (void **ptr
, size_t size
)
909 if (! r_alloc_initialized
)
912 new_bloc
= get_bloc (MEM_ROUNDUP (size
));
915 new_bloc
->variable
= ptr
;
916 *ptr
= new_bloc
->data
;
924 /* Free a bloc of relocatable storage whose data is pointed to by PTR.
925 Store 0 in *PTR to show there's no block allocated. */
928 r_alloc_free (void **ptr
)
932 if (! r_alloc_initialized
)
935 dead_bloc
= find_bloc (ptr
);
936 if (dead_bloc
== NIL_BLOC
)
937 emacs_abort (); /* Double free? PTR not originally used to allocate? */
939 free_bloc (dead_bloc
);
943 refill_memory_reserve ();
947 /* Given a pointer at address PTR to relocatable data, resize it to SIZE.
948 Do this by shifting all blocks above this one up in memory, unless
949 SIZE is less than or equal to the current bloc size, in which case
952 In case r_alloc_freeze_level is set, a new bloc is allocated, and the
953 memory copied to it. Not very efficient. We could traverse the
954 bloc_list for a best fit of free blocs first.
956 Change *PTR to reflect the new bloc, and return this value.
958 If more memory cannot be allocated, then leave *PTR unchanged, and
962 r_re_alloc (void **ptr
, size_t size
)
966 if (! r_alloc_initialized
)
970 return r_alloc (ptr
, size
);
974 return r_alloc (ptr
, 0);
977 bloc
= find_bloc (ptr
);
978 if (bloc
== NIL_BLOC
)
979 emacs_abort (); /* Already freed? PTR not originally used to allocate? */
981 if (size
< bloc
->size
)
983 /* Wouldn't it be useful to actually resize the bloc here? */
984 /* I think so too, but not if it's too expensive... */
985 if ((bloc
->size
- MEM_ROUNDUP (size
) >= page_size
)
986 && r_alloc_freeze_level
== 0)
988 resize_bloc (bloc
, MEM_ROUNDUP (size
));
989 /* Never mind if this fails, just do nothing... */
990 /* It *should* be infallible! */
993 else if (size
> bloc
->size
)
995 if (r_alloc_freeze_level
)
998 new_bloc
= get_bloc (MEM_ROUNDUP (size
));
1001 new_bloc
->variable
= ptr
;
1002 *ptr
= new_bloc
->data
;
1003 bloc
->variable
= NULL
;
1010 if (! resize_bloc (bloc
, MEM_ROUNDUP (size
)))
1018 #if defined (emacs) && defined (DOUG_LEA_MALLOC)
1020 /* Reinitialize the morecore hook variables after restarting a dumped
1021 Emacs. This is needed when using Doug Lea's malloc from GNU libc. */
1023 r_alloc_reinit (void)
1025 /* Only do this if the hook has been reset, so that we don't get an
1026 infinite loop, in case Emacs was linked statically. */
1027 if (__morecore
!= r_alloc_sbrk
)
1029 real_morecore
= __morecore
;
1030 __morecore
= r_alloc_sbrk
;
1034 #endif /* emacs && DOUG_LEA_MALLOC */
1041 r_alloc_check (void)
1047 if (!r_alloc_initialized
)
1050 assert (first_heap
);
1051 assert (last_heap
->end
<= (void *) sbrk (0));
1052 assert ((void *) first_heap
< first_heap
->start
);
1053 assert (first_heap
->start
<= virtual_break_value
);
1054 assert (virtual_break_value
<= first_heap
->end
);
1056 for (h
= first_heap
; h
; h
= h
->next
)
1058 assert (h
->prev
== ph
);
1059 assert ((void *) ROUNDUP (h
->end
) == h
->end
);
1060 #if 0 /* ??? The code in ralloc.c does not really try to ensure
1061 the heap start has any sort of alignment.
1062 Perhaps it should. */
1063 assert ((void *) MEM_ROUNDUP (h
->start
) == h
->start
);
1065 assert ((void *) MEM_ROUNDUP (h
->bloc_start
) == h
->bloc_start
);
1066 assert (h
->start
<= h
->bloc_start
&& h
->bloc_start
<= h
->end
);
1070 assert (ph
->end
< h
->start
);
1071 assert (h
->start
<= (void *) h
&& (void *) (h
+ 1) <= h
->bloc_start
);
1074 if (h
->bloc_start
<= break_value
&& break_value
<= h
->end
)
1081 assert (last_heap
== ph
);
1083 for (b
= first_bloc
; b
; b
= b
->next
)
1085 assert (b
->prev
== pb
);
1086 assert ((void *) MEM_ROUNDUP (b
->data
) == b
->data
);
1087 assert ((size_t) MEM_ROUNDUP (b
->size
) == b
->size
);
1090 for (h
= first_heap
; h
; h
= h
->next
)
1092 if (h
->bloc_start
<= b
->data
&& b
->data
+ b
->size
<= h
->end
)
1099 if (pb
&& pb
->data
+ pb
->size
!= b
->data
)
1101 assert (ph
&& b
->data
== h
->bloc_start
);
1104 if (ph
->bloc_start
<= pb
->data
1105 && pb
->data
+ pb
->size
<= ph
->end
)
1107 assert (pb
->data
+ pb
->size
+ b
->size
> ph
->end
);
1112 assert (ph
->bloc_start
+ b
->size
> ph
->end
);
1120 assert (last_bloc
== pb
);
1123 assert (last_bloc
->data
+ last_bloc
->size
== break_value
);
1125 assert (first_heap
->bloc_start
== break_value
);
1130 /* Update the internal record of which variable points to some data to NEW.
1131 Used by buffer-swap-text in Emacs to restore consistency after it
1132 swaps the buffer text between two buffer objects. The OLD pointer
1133 is checked to ensure that memory corruption does not occur due to
1136 r_alloc_reset_variable (void **old
, void **new)
1138 bloc_ptr bloc
= first_bloc
;
1140 /* Find the bloc that corresponds to the data pointed to by pointer.
1141 find_bloc cannot be used, as it has internal consistency checks
1142 which fail when the variable needs resetting. */
1143 while (bloc
!= NIL_BLOC
)
1145 if (bloc
->data
== *new)
1151 if (bloc
== NIL_BLOC
|| bloc
->variable
!= old
)
1152 emacs_abort (); /* Already freed? OLD not originally used to allocate? */
1154 /* Update variable to point to the new location. */
1155 bloc
->variable
= new;
1159 r_alloc_inhibit_buffer_relocation (int inhibit
)
1161 if (use_relocatable_buffers
> 1)
1162 use_relocatable_buffers
= 1;
1164 use_relocatable_buffers
--;
1165 else if (use_relocatable_buffers
< 1)
1166 use_relocatable_buffers
++;
1170 /***********************************************************************
1172 ***********************************************************************/
1174 /* Initialize various things for memory allocation. */
1179 if (r_alloc_initialized
)
1181 r_alloc_initialized
= 1;
1184 #ifndef SYSTEM_MALLOC
1185 real_morecore
= __morecore
;
1186 __morecore
= r_alloc_sbrk
;
1188 first_heap
= last_heap
= &heap_base
;
1189 first_heap
->next
= first_heap
->prev
= NIL_HEAP
;
1190 first_heap
->start
= first_heap
->bloc_start
1191 = virtual_break_value
= break_value
= real_morecore (0);
1192 if (break_value
== NULL
)
1195 extra_bytes
= ROUNDUP (50000);
1198 #ifdef DOUG_LEA_MALLOC
1200 mallopt (M_TOP_PAD
, 64 * 4096);
1203 #ifndef SYSTEM_MALLOC
1204 /* Give GNU malloc's morecore some hysteresis so that we move all
1205 the relocatable blocks much less often. The number used to be
1206 64, but alloc.c would override that with 32 in code that was
1207 removed when SYNC_INPUT became the only input handling mode.
1208 That code was conditioned on !DOUG_LEA_MALLOC, so the call to
1209 mallopt above is left unchanged. (Actually, I think there's no
1210 system nowadays that uses DOUG_LEA_MALLOC and also uses
1212 __malloc_extra_blocks
= 32;
1216 #ifndef SYSTEM_MALLOC
1217 first_heap
->end
= (void *) ROUNDUP (first_heap
->start
);
1219 /* The extra call to real_morecore guarantees that the end of the
1220 address space is a multiple of page_size, even if page_size is
1221 not really the page size of the system running the binary in
1222 which page_size is stored. This allows a binary to be built on a
1223 system with one page size and run on a system with a smaller page
1225 real_morecore ((char *) first_heap
->end
- (char *) first_heap
->start
);
1227 /* Clear the rest of the last page; this memory is in our address space
1228 even though it is after the sbrk value. */
1229 /* Doubly true, with the additional call that explicitly adds the
1230 rest of that page to the address space. */
1231 memset (first_heap
->start
, 0,
1232 (char *) first_heap
->end
- (char *) first_heap
->start
);
1233 virtual_break_value
= break_value
= first_heap
->bloc_start
= first_heap
->end
;
1236 use_relocatable_buffers
= 1;