Mercurial > emacs
changeset 15143:d7d0413e95e2
Include lisp.h.
(allocate_heap): Use VALBITS to determine size of heap.
(allocate_heap) [WINDOWS95]: Conditional code removed.
(sbrk): Use VALMASK instead of an unsigned integer mask.
author | Geoff Voelker <voelker@cs.washington.edu> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 03 May 1996 18:34:21 +0000 |
parents | 6879c02a290c |
children | 9dd18e9e0362 |
files | src/w32heap.c |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 40 insertions(+), 39 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/src/w32heap.c Fri May 03 18:33:20 1996 +0000 +++ b/src/w32heap.c Fri May 03 18:34:21 1996 +0000 @@ -27,6 +27,7 @@ #include <stdio.h> #include "ntheap.h" +#include "lisp.h" /* for VALMASK */ /* This gives us the page size and the size of the allocation unit on NT. */ SYSTEM_INFO sysinfo_cache; @@ -98,12 +99,45 @@ return data_region_end; } -#ifndef WINDOWS95 static char * allocate_heap (void) { - unsigned long base = 0x00030000; - unsigned long end = 0x00D00000; + /* The base address for our GNU malloc heap is chosen in conjuction + 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 set the malloc heap base to 20MB. 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 - 236MB is + still a pretty decent arena to play in! */ + + unsigned long base = 0x01400000; /* 20MB */ + unsigned long end = 1 << VALBITS; /* 256MB */ reserved_heap_size = end - base; @@ -112,39 +146,6 @@ MEM_RESERVE, PAGE_NOACCESS); } -#else -static char * -allocate_heap (void) -{ - unsigned long start = 0x400000; - unsigned long stop = 0xD00000; - unsigned long increment = 0x100000; - char *ptr, *begin = NULL, *end = NULL; - int i; - - for (i = start; i < stop; i += increment) - { - ptr = VirtualAlloc ((void *) i, increment, MEM_RESERVE, PAGE_NOACCESS); - if (ptr) - begin = begin ? begin : ptr; - else if (begin) - { - end = ptr; - break; - } - } - - if (begin && !end) - end = (char *) i; - - if (!begin) - /* We couldn't allocate any memory for the heap. Exit. */ - exit (-2); - - reserved_heap_size = end - begin; - return begin; -} -#endif /* Emulate Unix sbrk. */ @@ -161,9 +162,9 @@ if (!data_region_base) return NULL; - /* Ensure that the addresses don't use the upper 8 bits since - the Lisp type goes there (yucko). */ - if (((unsigned long) data_region_base & 0xFF000000) != 0) + /* Ensure that the addresses don't use the upper tag bits since + the Lisp type goes there. */ + if (((unsigned long) data_region_base & ~VALMASK) != 0) { printf ("Error: The heap was allocated in upper memory.\n"); exit (1);