Mercurial > emacs
view src/vm-limit.c @ 112437:f3d875901372
Merge from mainline.
author | Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> |
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date | Sat, 22 Jan 2011 20:30:57 -0800 |
parents | ef719132ddfa |
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/* Functions for memory limit warnings. Copyright (C) 1990, 1992, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs 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 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs 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 GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ #include <config.h> #include <setjmp.h> #include "lisp.h" #include "mem-limits.h" /* Level number of warnings already issued. 0 -- no warnings issued. 1 -- 75% warning already issued. 2 -- 85% warning already issued. 3 -- 95% warning issued; keep warning frequently. */ enum warnlevel { not_warned, warned_75, warned_85, warned_95 }; static enum warnlevel warnlevel; typedef POINTER_TYPE *POINTER; /* Function to call to issue a warning; 0 means don't issue them. */ static void (*warn_function) (const char *); /* Start of data space; can be changed by calling malloc_init. */ static POINTER data_space_start; /* Number of bytes of writable memory we can expect to be able to get. */ static unsigned long lim_data; #if defined (HAVE_GETRLIMIT) && defined (RLIMIT_AS) static void get_lim_data (void) { struct rlimit rlimit; getrlimit (RLIMIT_AS, &rlimit); if (rlimit.rlim_cur == RLIM_INFINITY) lim_data = -1; else lim_data = rlimit.rlim_cur; } #else /* not HAVE_GETRLIMIT */ #ifdef USG static void get_lim_data (void) { extern long ulimit (); lim_data = -1; /* Use the ulimit call, if we seem to have it. */ #if !defined (ULIMIT_BREAK_VALUE) || defined (GNU_LINUX) lim_data = ulimit (3, 0); #endif /* If that didn't work, just use the macro's value. */ #ifdef ULIMIT_BREAK_VALUE if (lim_data == -1) lim_data = ULIMIT_BREAK_VALUE; #endif lim_data -= (long) data_space_start; } #else /* not USG */ #ifdef WINDOWSNT static void get_lim_data (void) { extern unsigned long reserved_heap_size; lim_data = reserved_heap_size; } #else #if !defined (BSD4_2) && !defined (CYGWIN) #ifdef MSDOS void get_lim_data (void) { _go32_dpmi_meminfo info; unsigned long lim1, lim2; _go32_dpmi_get_free_memory_information (&info); /* DPMI server of Windows NT and its descendants reports in info.available_memory a much lower amount that is really available, which causes bogus "past 95% of memory limit" warnings. Try to overcome that via circumstantial evidence. */ lim1 = info.available_memory; lim2 = info.available_physical_pages; /* DPMI Spec: "Fields that are unavailable will hold -1." */ if ((long)lim1 == -1L) lim1 = 0; if ((long)lim2 == -1L) lim2 = 0; else lim2 *= 4096; /* Surely, the available memory is at least what we have physically available, right? */ if (lim1 >= lim2) lim_data = lim1; else lim_data = lim2; /* Don't believe they will give us more that 0.5 GB. */ if (lim_data > 512U * 1024U * 1024U) lim_data = 512U * 1024U * 1024U; } unsigned long ret_lim_data (void) { get_lim_data (); return lim_data; } #else /* not MSDOS */ static void get_lim_data (void) { lim_data = vlimit (LIM_DATA, -1); } #endif /* not MSDOS */ #else /* BSD4_2 || CYGWIN */ 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 WINDOWSNT */ #endif /* not USG */ #endif /* not HAVE_GETRLIMIT */ /* Verify amount of memory available, complaining if we're near the end. */ static void check_memory_limits (void) { #ifdef REL_ALLOC extern POINTER (*real_morecore) (SIZE); #endif extern POINTER (*__morecore) (SIZE); register POINTER cp; unsigned long five_percent; unsigned long data_size; enum warnlevel new_warnlevel; if (lim_data == 0) get_lim_data (); five_percent = lim_data / 20; /* Find current end of memory and issue warning if getting near max */ #ifdef REL_ALLOC if (real_morecore) cp = (char *) (*real_morecore) (0); else #endif cp = (char *) (*__morecore) (0); data_size = (char *) cp - (char *) data_space_start; if (!warn_function) return; /* What level of warning does current memory usage demand? */ new_warnlevel = (data_size > five_percent * 19) ? warned_95 : (data_size > five_percent * 17) ? warned_85 : (data_size > five_percent * 15) ? warned_75 : not_warned; /* If we have gone up a level, give the appropriate warning. */ if (new_warnlevel > warnlevel || new_warnlevel == warned_95) { warnlevel = new_warnlevel; switch (warnlevel) { case warned_75: (*warn_function) ("Warning: past 75% of memory limit"); break; case warned_85: (*warn_function) ("Warning: past 85% of memory limit"); break; case warned_95: (*warn_function) ("Warning: past 95% of memory limit"); } } /* Handle going down in usage levels, with some hysteresis. */ else { /* If we go down below 70% full, issue another 75% warning when we go up again. */ if (data_size < five_percent * 14) warnlevel = not_warned; /* If we go down below 80% full, issue another 85% warning when we go up again. */ else if (warnlevel > warned_75 && data_size < five_percent * 16) warnlevel = warned_75; /* If we go down below 90% full, issue another 95% warning when we go up again. */ else if (warnlevel > warned_85 && data_size < five_percent * 18) warnlevel = warned_85; } if (EXCEEDS_LISP_PTR (cp)) (*warn_function) ("Warning: memory in use exceeds lisp pointer size"); } #if !defined(CANNOT_DUMP) || !defined(SYSTEM_MALLOC) /* Some systems that cannot dump also cannot implement these. */ /* * Return the address of the start of the data segment prior to * doing an unexec. After unexec the return value is undefined. * See crt0.c for further information and definition of data_start. * * Apparently, on BSD systems this is etext at startup. On * USG systems (swapping) this is highly mmu dependent and * is also dependent on whether or not the program is running * with shared text. Generally there is a (possibly large) * gap between end of text and start of data with shared text. * */ char * start_of_data (void) { #ifdef BSD_SYSTEM extern char etext; return (POINTER)(&etext); #elif defined DATA_START return ((POINTER) DATA_START); #elif defined ORDINARY_LINK /* * This is a hack. Since we're not linking crt0.c or pre_crt0.c, * data_start isn't defined. We take the address of environ, which * is known to live at or near the start of the system crt0.c, and * we don't sweat the handful of bytes that might lose. */ extern char **environ; return ((POINTER) &environ); #else extern int data_start; return ((POINTER) &data_start); #endif } #endif /* (not CANNOT_DUMP or not SYSTEM_MALLOC) */ /* Enable memory usage warnings. START says where the end of pure storage is. WARNFUN specifies the function to call to issue a warning. */ void memory_warnings (POINTER start, void (*warnfun) (const char *)) { extern void (* __after_morecore_hook) (void); /* From gmalloc.c */ if (start) data_space_start = start; else data_space_start = start_of_data (); warn_function = warnfun; __after_morecore_hook = check_memory_limits; /* Force data limit to be recalculated on each run. */ lim_data = 0; }