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mirror of https://git.FreeBSD.org/src.git synced 2024-12-17 10:26:15 +00:00

Remove mmalloc since we're now using phkmalloc. This is made possible

by the -DNO_MMALLOC flag in gdb/Makefile.

The one thing we lose by doing this, AFAIK, is the possibility of using
mmap. Does anyone use that feature at all ?

2.2 candidate ?
This commit is contained in:
Gary Jennejohn 1997-01-15 22:47:36 +00:00
parent 9d5922197f
commit 753f57aff1
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-20 02:59:44 +00:00
svn path=/head/; revision=21747
19 changed files with 0 additions and 3044 deletions

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@ -1,481 +0,0 @@
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That's all there is to it!

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@ -1,10 +0,0 @@
LIB= mmalloc
SRCS= mcalloc.c mfree.c mmalloc.c mmcheck.c mmemalign.c mmstats.c \
mmtrace.c mrealloc.c mvalloc.c mmap-sup.c attach.c detach.c keys.c \
sbrk-sup.c
NOPROFILE=no
NOPIC=no
install:
@echo -n
.include <bsd.lib.mk>

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@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
This is a greatly pared down libmmalloc directory. Only what's required to build
gdb-4.13 on FreeBSD 2.0 was kept.
gj@freebsd.org

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@ -1,218 +0,0 @@
/* Initialization for access to a mmap'd malloc managed region.
Copyright 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Contributed by Fred Fish at Cygnus Support. fnf@cygnus.com
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <fcntl.h> /* After sys/types.h, at least for dpx/2. */
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "mmalloc.h"
#ifndef SEEK_SET
#define SEEK_SET 0
#endif
#if defined(HAVE_MMAP)
/* Forward declarations/prototypes for local functions */
static struct mdesc *reuse PARAMS ((int));
/* Initialize access to a mmalloc managed region.
If FD is a valid file descriptor for an open file then data for the
mmalloc managed region is mapped to that file, otherwise "/dev/zero"
is used and the data will not exist in any filesystem object.
If the open file corresponding to FD is from a previous use of
mmalloc and passes some basic sanity checks to ensure that it is
compatible with the current mmalloc package, then it's data is
mapped in and is immediately accessible at the same addresses in
the current process as the process that created the file.
If BASEADDR is not NULL, the mapping is established starting at the
specified address in the process address space. If BASEADDR is NULL,
the mmalloc package chooses a suitable address at which to start the
mapped region, which will be the value of the previous mapping if
opening an existing file which was previously built by mmalloc, or
for new files will be a value chosen by mmap.
Specifying BASEADDR provides more control over where the regions
start and how big they can be before bumping into existing mapped
regions or future mapped regions.
On success, returns a "malloc descriptor" which is used in subsequent
calls to other mmalloc package functions. It is explicitly "void *"
("char *" for systems that don't fully support void) so that users
of the package don't have to worry about the actual implementation
details.
On failure returns NULL. */
PTR
mmalloc_attach (fd, baseaddr)
int fd;
PTR baseaddr;
{
struct mdesc mtemp;
struct mdesc *mdp;
PTR mbase;
struct stat sbuf;
/* First check to see if FD is a valid file descriptor, and if so, see
if the file has any current contents (size > 0). If it does, then
attempt to reuse the file. If we can't reuse the file, either
because it isn't a valid mmalloc produced file, was produced by an
obsolete version, or any other reason, then we fail to attach to
this file. */
if (fd >= 0)
{
if (fstat (fd, &sbuf) < 0)
{
return (NULL);
}
else if (sbuf.st_size > 0)
{
return ((PTR) reuse (fd));
}
}
/* We start off with the malloc descriptor allocated on the stack, until
we build it up enough to call _mmalloc_mmap_morecore() to allocate the
first page of the region and copy it there. Ensure that it is zero'd and
then initialize the fields that we know values for. */
mdp = &mtemp;
memset ((char *) mdp, 0, sizeof (mtemp));
strncpy (mdp -> magic, MMALLOC_MAGIC, MMALLOC_MAGIC_SIZE);
mdp -> headersize = sizeof (mtemp);
mdp -> version = MMALLOC_VERSION;
mdp -> morecore = __mmalloc_mmap_morecore;
mdp -> fd = fd;
mdp -> base = mdp -> breakval = mdp -> top = baseaddr;
/* If we have not been passed a valid open file descriptor for the file
to map to, then open /dev/zero and use that to map to. */
if (mdp -> fd < 0)
{
if ((mdp -> fd = open ("/dev/zero", O_RDWR)) < 0)
{
return (NULL);
}
else
{
mdp -> flags |= MMALLOC_DEVZERO;
}
}
/* Now try to map in the first page, copy the malloc descriptor structure
there, and arrange to return a pointer to this new copy. If the mapping
fails, then close the file descriptor if it was opened by us, and arrange
to return a NULL. */
if ((mbase = mdp -> morecore (mdp, sizeof (mtemp))) != NULL)
{
memcpy (mbase, mdp, sizeof (mtemp));
mdp = (struct mdesc *) mbase;
}
else
{
if (mdp -> flags & MMALLOC_DEVZERO)
{
close (mdp -> fd);
}
mdp = NULL;
}
return ((PTR) mdp);
}
/* Given an valid file descriptor on an open file, test to see if that file
is a valid mmalloc produced file, and if so, attempt to remap it into the
current process at the same address to which it was previously mapped.
Note that we have to update the file descriptor number in the malloc-
descriptor read from the file to match the current valid one, before
trying to map the file in, and again after a successful mapping and
after we've switched over to using the mapped in malloc descriptor
rather than the temporary one on the stack.
Once we've switched over to using the mapped in malloc descriptor, we
have to update the pointer to the morecore function, since it almost
certainly will be at a different address if the process reusing the
mapped region is from a different executable.
Also note that if the heap being remapped previously used the mmcheck()
routines, we need to update the hooks since their target functions
will have certainly moved if the executable has changed in any way.
We do this by calling mmcheck() internally.
Returns a pointer to the malloc descriptor if successful, or NULL if
unsuccessful for some reason. */
static struct mdesc *
reuse (fd)
int fd;
{
struct mdesc mtemp;
struct mdesc *mdp = NULL;
if ((lseek (fd, 0L, SEEK_SET) == 0) &&
(read (fd, (char *) &mtemp, sizeof (mtemp)) == sizeof (mtemp)) &&
(mtemp.headersize == sizeof (mtemp)) &&
(strcmp (mtemp.magic, MMALLOC_MAGIC) == 0) &&
(mtemp.version <= MMALLOC_VERSION))
{
mtemp.fd = fd;
if (__mmalloc_remap_core (&mtemp) == mtemp.base)
{
mdp = (struct mdesc *) mtemp.base;
mdp -> fd = fd;
mdp -> morecore = __mmalloc_mmap_morecore;
if (mdp -> mfree_hook != NULL)
{
mmcheck ((PTR) mdp, (void (*) PARAMS ((void))) NULL);
}
}
}
return (mdp);
}
#else /* !defined (HAVE_MMAP) */
/* For systems without mmap, the library still supplies an entry point
to link to, but trying to initialize access to an mmap'd managed region
always fails. */
/* ARGSUSED */
PTR
mmalloc_attach (fd, baseaddr)
int fd;
PTR baseaddr;
{
return (NULL);
}
#endif /* defined (HAVE_MMAP) */

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@ -1,71 +0,0 @@
/* Finish access to a mmap'd malloc managed region.
Copyright 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Contributed by Fred Fish at Cygnus Support. fnf@cygnus.com
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <fcntl.h> /* After sys/types.h, at least for dpx/2. */
#include "mmalloc.h"
/* Terminate access to a mmalloc managed region by unmapping all memory pages
associated with the region, and closing the file descriptor if it is one
that we opened.
Returns NULL on success.
Returns the malloc descriptor on failure, which can subsequently be used
for further action, such as obtaining more information about the nature of
the failure by examining the preserved errno value.
Note that the malloc descriptor that we are using is currently located in
region we are about to unmap, so we first make a local copy of it on the
stack and use the copy. */
PTR
mmalloc_detach (md)
PTR md;
{
struct mdesc mtemp;
if (md != NULL)
{
mtemp = *(struct mdesc *) md;
/* Now unmap all the pages associated with this region by asking for a
negative increment equal to the current size of the region. */
if ((mtemp.morecore (&mtemp, mtemp.base - mtemp.top)) == NULL)
{
/* Update the original malloc descriptor with any changes */
*(struct mdesc *) md = mtemp;
}
else
{
if (mtemp.flags & MMALLOC_DEVZERO)
{
close (mtemp.fd);
}
md = NULL;
}
}
return (md);
}

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@ -1,66 +0,0 @@
/* Access for application keys in mmap'd malloc managed region.
Copyright 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Contributed by Fred Fish at Cygnus Support. fnf@cygnus.com
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
/* This module provides access to some keys that the application can use to
provide persistent access to locations in the mapped memory section.
The intent is that these keys are to be used sparingly as sort of
persistent global variables which the application can use to reinitialize
access to data in the mapped region.
For the moment, these keys are simply stored in the malloc descriptor
itself, in an array of fixed length. This should be fixed so that there
can be an unlimited number of keys, possibly using a multilevel access
scheme of some sort. */
#include "mmalloc.h"
int
mmalloc_setkey (md, keynum, key)
PTR md;
int keynum;
PTR key;
{
struct mdesc *mdp = (struct mdesc *) md;
int result = 0;
if ((mdp != NULL) && (keynum >= 0) && (keynum < MMALLOC_KEYS))
{
mdp -> keys [keynum] = key;
result++;
}
return (result);
}
PTR
mmalloc_getkey (md, keynum)
PTR md;
int keynum;
{
struct mdesc *mdp = (struct mdesc *) md;
PTR keyval = NULL;
if ((mdp != NULL) && (keynum >= 0) && (keynum < MMALLOC_KEYS))
{
keyval = mdp -> keys [keynum];
}
return (keyval);
}

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@ -1,53 +0,0 @@
/* Copyright (C) 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#include <string.h> /* Prototypes for memcpy, memmove, memset, etc */
#include "mmalloc.h"
/* Allocate an array of NMEMB elements each SIZE bytes long.
The entire array is initialized to zeros. */
PTR
mcalloc (md, nmemb, size)
PTR md;
register size_t nmemb;
register size_t size;
{
register PTR result;
if ((result = mmalloc (md, nmemb * size)) != NULL)
{
memset (result, 0, nmemb * size);
}
return (result);
}
/* When using this package, provide a version of malloc/realloc/free built
on top of it, so that if we use the default sbrk() region we will not
collide with another malloc package trying to do the same thing, if
the application contains any "hidden" calls to malloc/realloc/free (such
as inside a system library). */
PTR
calloc (nmemb, size)
size_t nmemb;
size_t size;
{
return (mcalloc ((PTR) NULL, nmemb, size));
}

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@ -1,247 +0,0 @@
/* Free a block of memory allocated by `mmalloc'.
Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation
Written May 1989 by Mike Haertel.
Heavily modified Mar 1992 by Fred Fish. (fnf@cygnus.com)
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
The author may be reached (Email) at the address mike@ai.mit.edu,
or (US mail) as Mike Haertel c/o Free Software Foundation. */
#include "mmalloc.h"
/* Return memory to the heap.
Like `mfree' but don't call a mfree_hook if there is one. */
void
__mmalloc_free (mdp, ptr)
struct mdesc *mdp;
PTR ptr;
{
int type;
size_t block, blocks;
register size_t i;
struct list *prev, *next;
block = BLOCK (ptr);
type = mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.type;
switch (type)
{
case 0:
/* Get as many statistics as early as we can. */
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_used--;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_used -=
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size * BLOCKSIZE;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_free +=
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size * BLOCKSIZE;
/* Find the free cluster previous to this one in the free list.
Start searching at the last block referenced; this may benefit
programs with locality of allocation. */
i = mdp -> heapindex;
if (i > block)
{
while (i > block)
{
i = mdp -> heapinfo[i].free.prev;
}
}
else
{
do
{
i = mdp -> heapinfo[i].free.next;
}
while ((i != 0) && (i < block));
i = mdp -> heapinfo[i].free.prev;
}
/* Determine how to link this block into the free list. */
if (block == i + mdp -> heapinfo[i].free.size)
{
/* Coalesce this block with its predecessor. */
mdp -> heapinfo[i].free.size +=
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size;
block = i;
}
else
{
/* Really link this block back into the free list. */
mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.size =
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next = mdp -> heapinfo[i].free.next;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.prev = i;
mdp -> heapinfo[i].free.next = block;
mdp -> heapinfo[mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next].free.prev = block;
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_free++;
}
/* Now that the block is linked in, see if we can coalesce it
with its successor (by deleting its successor from the list
and adding in its size). */
if (block + mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.size ==
mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next)
{
mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.size
+= mdp -> heapinfo[mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next].free.size;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next
= mdp -> heapinfo[mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next].free.next;
mdp -> heapinfo[mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next].free.prev = block;
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_free--;
}
/* Now see if we can return stuff to the system. */
blocks = mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.size;
if (blocks >= FINAL_FREE_BLOCKS && block + blocks == mdp -> heaplimit
&& mdp -> morecore (mdp, 0) == ADDRESS (block + blocks))
{
register size_t bytes = blocks * BLOCKSIZE;
mdp -> heaplimit -= blocks;
mdp -> morecore (mdp, -bytes);
mdp -> heapinfo[mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.prev].free.next
= mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next;
mdp -> heapinfo[mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next].free.prev
= mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.prev;
block = mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.prev;
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_free--;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_free -= bytes;
}
/* Set the next search to begin at this block. */
mdp -> heapindex = block;
break;
default:
/* Do some of the statistics. */
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_used--;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_used -= 1 << type;
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_free++;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_free += 1 << type;
/* Get the address of the first free fragment in this block. */
prev = (struct list *)
((char *) ADDRESS(block) +
(mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.frag.first << type));
if (mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.frag.nfree ==
(BLOCKSIZE >> type) - 1)
{
/* If all fragments of this block are free, remove them
from the fragment list and free the whole block. */
next = prev;
for (i = 1; i < (size_t) (BLOCKSIZE >> type); ++i)
{
next = next -> next;
}
prev -> prev -> next = next;
if (next != NULL)
{
next -> prev = prev -> prev;
}
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.type = 0;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size = 1;
/* Keep the statistics accurate. */
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_used++;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_used += BLOCKSIZE;
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_free -= BLOCKSIZE >> type;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_free -= BLOCKSIZE;
mfree ((PTR) mdp, (PTR) ADDRESS(block));
}
else if (mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.frag.nfree != 0)
{
/* If some fragments of this block are free, link this
fragment into the fragment list after the first free
fragment of this block. */
next = (struct list *) ptr;
next -> next = prev -> next;
next -> prev = prev;
prev -> next = next;
if (next -> next != NULL)
{
next -> next -> prev = next;
}
++mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.frag.nfree;
}
else
{
/* No fragments of this block are free, so link this
fragment into the fragment list and announce that
it is the first free fragment of this block. */
prev = (struct list *) ptr;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.frag.nfree = 1;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.frag.first =
RESIDUAL (ptr, BLOCKSIZE) >> type;
prev -> next = mdp -> fraghead[type].next;
prev -> prev = &mdp -> fraghead[type];
prev -> prev -> next = prev;
if (prev -> next != NULL)
{
prev -> next -> prev = prev;
}
}
break;
}
}
/* Return memory to the heap. */
void
mfree (md, ptr)
PTR md;
PTR ptr;
{
struct mdesc *mdp;
register struct alignlist *l;
if (ptr != NULL)
{
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
for (l = mdp -> aligned_blocks; l != NULL; l = l -> next)
{
if (l -> aligned == ptr)
{
l -> aligned = NULL; /* Mark the slot in the list as free. */
ptr = l -> exact;
break;
}
}
if (mdp -> mfree_hook != NULL)
{
(*mdp -> mfree_hook) (md, ptr);
}
else
{
__mmalloc_free (mdp, ptr);
}
}
}
/* When using this package, provide a version of malloc/realloc/free built
on top of it, so that if we use the default sbrk() region we will not
collide with another malloc package trying to do the same thing, if
the application contains any "hidden" calls to malloc/realloc/free (such
as inside a system library). */
void
free (ptr)
PTR ptr;
{
mfree ((PTR) NULL, ptr);
}

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/* Memory allocator `malloc'.
Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation
Written May 1989 by Mike Haertel.
Heavily modified Mar 1992 by Fred Fish for mmap'd version.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
The author may be reached (Email) at the address mike@ai.mit.edu,
or (US mail) as Mike Haertel c/o Free Software Foundation. */
#include <string.h> /* Prototypes for memcpy, memmove, memset, etc */
#include "mmalloc.h"
/* Prototypes for local functions */
static int initialize PARAMS ((struct mdesc *));
static PTR morecore PARAMS ((struct mdesc *, size_t));
static PTR align PARAMS ((struct mdesc *, size_t));
/* Aligned allocation. */
static PTR
align (mdp, size)
struct mdesc *mdp;
size_t size;
{
PTR result;
unsigned long int adj;
result = mdp -> morecore (mdp, size);
adj = RESIDUAL (result, BLOCKSIZE);
if (adj != 0)
{
adj = BLOCKSIZE - adj;
mdp -> morecore (mdp, adj);
result = (char *) result + adj;
}
return (result);
}
/* Set everything up and remember that we have. */
static int
initialize (mdp)
struct mdesc *mdp;
{
mdp -> heapsize = HEAP / BLOCKSIZE;
mdp -> heapinfo = (malloc_info *)
align (mdp, mdp -> heapsize * sizeof (malloc_info));
if (mdp -> heapinfo == NULL)
{
return (0);
}
memset ((PTR)mdp -> heapinfo, 0, mdp -> heapsize * sizeof (malloc_info));
mdp -> heapinfo[0].free.size = 0;
mdp -> heapinfo[0].free.next = mdp -> heapinfo[0].free.prev = 0;
mdp -> heapindex = 0;
mdp -> heapbase = (char *) mdp -> heapinfo;
mdp -> flags |= MMALLOC_INITIALIZED;
return (1);
}
/* Get neatly aligned memory, initializing or
growing the heap info table as necessary. */
static PTR
morecore (mdp, size)
struct mdesc *mdp;
size_t size;
{
PTR result;
malloc_info *newinfo, *oldinfo;
size_t newsize;
result = align (mdp, size);
if (result == NULL)
{
return (NULL);
}
/* Check if we need to grow the info table. */
if ((size_t) BLOCK ((char *) result + size) > mdp -> heapsize)
{
newsize = mdp -> heapsize;
while ((size_t) BLOCK ((char *) result + size) > newsize)
{
newsize *= 2;
}
newinfo = (malloc_info *) align (mdp, newsize * sizeof (malloc_info));
if (newinfo == NULL)
{
mdp -> morecore (mdp, -size);
return (NULL);
}
memset ((PTR) newinfo, 0, newsize * sizeof (malloc_info));
memcpy ((PTR) newinfo, (PTR) mdp -> heapinfo,
mdp -> heapsize * sizeof (malloc_info));
oldinfo = mdp -> heapinfo;
newinfo[BLOCK (oldinfo)].busy.type = 0;
newinfo[BLOCK (oldinfo)].busy.info.size
= BLOCKIFY (mdp -> heapsize * sizeof (malloc_info));
mdp -> heapinfo = newinfo;
__mmalloc_free (mdp, (PTR)oldinfo);
mdp -> heapsize = newsize;
}
mdp -> heaplimit = BLOCK ((char *) result + size);
return (result);
}
/* Allocate memory from the heap. */
PTR
mmalloc (md, size)
PTR md;
size_t size;
{
struct mdesc *mdp;
PTR result;
size_t block, blocks, lastblocks, start;
register size_t i;
struct list *next;
register size_t log;
if (size == 0)
{
return (NULL);
}
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
if (mdp -> mmalloc_hook != NULL)
{
return ((*mdp -> mmalloc_hook) (md, size));
}
if (!(mdp -> flags & MMALLOC_INITIALIZED))
{
if (!initialize (mdp))
{
return (NULL);
}
}
if (size < sizeof (struct list))
{
size = sizeof (struct list);
}
/* Determine the allocation policy based on the request size. */
if (size <= BLOCKSIZE / 2)
{
/* Small allocation to receive a fragment of a block.
Determine the logarithm to base two of the fragment size. */
log = 1;
--size;
while ((size /= 2) != 0)
{
++log;
}
/* Look in the fragment lists for a
free fragment of the desired size. */
next = mdp -> fraghead[log].next;
if (next != NULL)
{
/* There are free fragments of this size.
Pop a fragment out of the fragment list and return it.
Update the block's nfree and first counters. */
result = (PTR) next;
next -> prev -> next = next -> next;
if (next -> next != NULL)
{
next -> next -> prev = next -> prev;
}
block = BLOCK (result);
if (--mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.frag.nfree != 0)
{
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.frag.first =
RESIDUAL (next -> next, BLOCKSIZE) >> log;
}
/* Update the statistics. */
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_used++;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_used += 1 << log;
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_free--;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_free -= 1 << log;
}
else
{
/* No free fragments of the desired size, so get a new block
and break it into fragments, returning the first. */
result = mmalloc (md, BLOCKSIZE);
if (result == NULL)
{
return (NULL);
}
/* Link all fragments but the first into the free list. */
for (i = 1; i < (size_t) (BLOCKSIZE >> log); ++i)
{
next = (struct list *) ((char *) result + (i << log));
next -> next = mdp -> fraghead[log].next;
next -> prev = &mdp -> fraghead[log];
next -> prev -> next = next;
if (next -> next != NULL)
{
next -> next -> prev = next;
}
}
/* Initialize the nfree and first counters for this block. */
block = BLOCK (result);
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.type = log;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.frag.nfree = i - 1;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.frag.first = i - 1;
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_free += (BLOCKSIZE >> log) - 1;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_free += BLOCKSIZE - (1 << log);
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_used -= BLOCKSIZE - (1 << log);
}
}
else
{
/* Large allocation to receive one or more blocks.
Search the free list in a circle starting at the last place visited.
If we loop completely around without finding a large enough
space we will have to get more memory from the system. */
blocks = BLOCKIFY(size);
start = block = MALLOC_SEARCH_START;
while (mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.size < blocks)
{
block = mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next;
if (block == start)
{
/* Need to get more from the system. Check to see if
the new core will be contiguous with the final free
block; if so we don't need to get as much. */
block = mdp -> heapinfo[0].free.prev;
lastblocks = mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.size;
if (mdp -> heaplimit != 0 &&
block + lastblocks == mdp -> heaplimit &&
mdp -> morecore (mdp, 0) == ADDRESS(block + lastblocks) &&
(morecore (mdp, (blocks - lastblocks) * BLOCKSIZE)) != NULL)
{
/* Which block we are extending (the `final free
block' referred to above) might have changed, if
it got combined with a freed info table. */
block = mdp -> heapinfo[0].free.prev;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.size += (blocks - lastblocks);
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_free +=
(blocks - lastblocks) * BLOCKSIZE;
continue;
}
result = morecore(mdp, blocks * BLOCKSIZE);
if (result == NULL)
{
return (NULL);
}
block = BLOCK (result);
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.type = 0;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size = blocks;
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_used++;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_used += blocks * BLOCKSIZE;
return (result);
}
}
/* At this point we have found a suitable free list entry.
Figure out how to remove what we need from the list. */
result = ADDRESS(block);
if (mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.size > blocks)
{
/* The block we found has a bit left over,
so relink the tail end back into the free list. */
mdp -> heapinfo[block + blocks].free.size
= mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.size - blocks;
mdp -> heapinfo[block + blocks].free.next
= mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next;
mdp -> heapinfo[block + blocks].free.prev
= mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.prev;
mdp -> heapinfo[mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.prev].free.next
= mdp -> heapinfo[mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next].free.prev
= mdp -> heapindex = block + blocks;
}
else
{
/* The block exactly matches our requirements,
so just remove it from the list. */
mdp -> heapinfo[mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next].free.prev
= mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.prev;
mdp -> heapinfo[mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.prev].free.next
= mdp -> heapindex = mdp -> heapinfo[block].free.next;
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_free--;
}
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.type = 0;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size = blocks;
mdp -> heapstats.chunks_used++;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_used += blocks * BLOCKSIZE;
mdp -> heapstats.bytes_free -= blocks * BLOCKSIZE;
}
return (result);
}
/* When using this package, provide a version of malloc/realloc/free built
on top of it, so that if we use the default sbrk() region we will not
collide with another malloc package trying to do the same thing, if
the application contains any "hidden" calls to malloc/realloc/free (such
as inside a system library). */
PTR
malloc (size)
size_t size;
{
return (mmalloc ((PTR) NULL, size));
}

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@ -1,390 +0,0 @@
/* Declarations for `mmalloc' and friends.
Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation
Written May 1989 by Mike Haertel.
Heavily modified Mar 1992 by Fred Fish. (fnf@cygnus.com)
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
The author may be reached (Email) at the address mike@ai.mit.edu,
or (US mail) as Mike Haertel c/o Free Software Foundation. */
#ifndef __MMALLOC_H
#define __MMALLOC_H 1
#ifdef __STDC__
# include <stddef.h>
# define PTR void *
# define CONST const
# define PARAMS(paramlist) paramlist
# include <limits.h>
# ifndef NULL
# define NULL (void *) 0
# endif
#else
# define PTR char *
# define CONST /* nothing */
# define PARAMS(paramlist) ()
# ifndef size_t
# define size_t unsigned int
# endif
# ifndef CHAR_BIT
# define CHAR_BIT 8
# endif
# ifndef NULL
# define NULL 0
# endif
#endif
#ifndef MIN
# define MIN(A, B) ((A) < (B) ? (A) : (B))
#endif
#define MMALLOC_MAGIC "mmalloc" /* Mapped file magic number */
#define MMALLOC_MAGIC_SIZE 8 /* Size of magic number buf */
#define MMALLOC_VERSION 1 /* Current mmalloc version */
#define MMALLOC_KEYS 16 /* Keys for application use */
/* The allocator divides the heap into blocks of fixed size; large
requests receive one or more whole blocks, and small requests
receive a fragment of a block. Fragment sizes are powers of two,
and all fragments of a block are the same size. When all the
fragments in a block have been freed, the block itself is freed. */
#define INT_BIT (CHAR_BIT * sizeof(int))
#define BLOCKLOG (INT_BIT > 16 ? 12 : 9)
#define BLOCKSIZE ((unsigned int) 1 << BLOCKLOG)
#define BLOCKIFY(SIZE) (((SIZE) + BLOCKSIZE - 1) / BLOCKSIZE)
/* The difference between two pointers is a signed int. On machines where
the data addresses have the high bit set, we need to ensure that the
difference becomes an unsigned int when we are using the address as an
integral value. In addition, when using with the '%' operator, the
sign of the result is machine dependent for negative values, so force
it to be treated as an unsigned int. */
#define ADDR2UINT(addr) ((unsigned int) ((char *) (addr) - (char *) NULL))
#define RESIDUAL(addr,bsize) ((unsigned int) (ADDR2UINT (addr) % (bsize)))
/* Determine the amount of memory spanned by the initial heap table
(not an absolute limit). */
#define HEAP (INT_BIT > 16 ? 4194304 : 65536)
/* Number of contiguous free blocks allowed to build up at the end of
memory before they will be returned to the system. */
#define FINAL_FREE_BLOCKS 8
/* Where to start searching the free list when looking for new memory.
The two possible values are 0 and heapindex. Starting at 0 seems
to reduce total memory usage, while starting at heapindex seems to
run faster. */
#define MALLOC_SEARCH_START mdp -> heapindex
/* Address to block number and vice versa. */
#define BLOCK(A) (((char *) (A) - mdp -> heapbase) / BLOCKSIZE + 1)
#define ADDRESS(B) ((PTR) (((B) - 1) * BLOCKSIZE + mdp -> heapbase))
/* Data structure giving per-block information. */
typedef union
{
/* Heap information for a busy block. */
struct
{
/* Zero for a large block, or positive giving the
logarithm to the base two of the fragment size. */
int type;
union
{
struct
{
size_t nfree; /* Free fragments in a fragmented block. */
size_t first; /* First free fragment of the block. */
} frag;
/* Size (in blocks) of a large cluster. */
size_t size;
} info;
} busy;
/* Heap information for a free block (that may be the first of
a free cluster). */
struct
{
size_t size; /* Size (in blocks) of a free cluster. */
size_t next; /* Index of next free cluster. */
size_t prev; /* Index of previous free cluster. */
} free;
} malloc_info;
/* List of blocks allocated with `mmemalign' (or `mvalloc'). */
struct alignlist
{
struct alignlist *next;
PTR aligned; /* The address that mmemaligned returned. */
PTR exact; /* The address that malloc returned. */
};
/* Doubly linked lists of free fragments. */
struct list
{
struct list *next;
struct list *prev;
};
/* Statistics available to the user.
FIXME: By design, the internals of the malloc package are no longer
exported to the user via an include file, so access to this data needs
to be via some other mechanism, such as mmstat_<something> where the
return value is the <something> the user is interested in. */
struct mstats
{
size_t bytes_total; /* Total size of the heap. */
size_t chunks_used; /* Chunks allocated by the user. */
size_t bytes_used; /* Byte total of user-allocated chunks. */
size_t chunks_free; /* Chunks in the free list. */
size_t bytes_free; /* Byte total of chunks in the free list. */
};
/* Internal structure that defines the format of the malloc-descriptor.
This gets written to the base address of the region that mmalloc is
managing, and thus also becomes the file header for the mapped file,
if such a file exists. */
struct mdesc
{
/* The "magic number" for an mmalloc file. */
char magic[MMALLOC_MAGIC_SIZE];
/* The size in bytes of this structure, used as a sanity check when reusing
a previously created mapped file. */
unsigned int headersize;
/* The version number of the mmalloc package that created this file. */
unsigned char version;
/* Some flag bits to keep track of various internal things. */
unsigned int flags;
/* If a system call made by the mmalloc package fails, the errno is
preserved for future examination. */
int saved_errno;
/* Pointer to the function that is used to get more core, or return core
to the system, for requests using this malloc descriptor. For memory
mapped regions, this is the mmap() based routine. There may also be
a single malloc descriptor that points to an sbrk() based routine
for systems without mmap() or for applications that call the mmalloc()
package with a NULL malloc descriptor.
FIXME: For mapped regions shared by more than one process, this
needs to be maintained on a per-process basis. */
PTR (*morecore) PARAMS ((struct mdesc *, int));
/* Pointer to the function that causes an abort when the memory checking
features are activated. By default this is set to abort(), but can
be set to another function by the application using mmalloc().
FIXME: For mapped regions shared by more than one process, this
needs to be maintained on a per-process basis. */
void (*abortfunc) PARAMS ((void));
/* Debugging hook for free.
FIXME: For mapped regions shared by more than one process, this
needs to be maintained on a per-process basis. */
void (*mfree_hook) PARAMS ((PTR, PTR));
/* Debugging hook for `malloc'.
FIXME: For mapped regions shared by more than one process, this
needs to be maintained on a per-process basis. */
PTR (*mmalloc_hook) PARAMS ((PTR, size_t));
/* Debugging hook for realloc.
FIXME: For mapped regions shared by more than one process, this
needs to be maintained on a per-process basis. */
PTR (*mrealloc_hook) PARAMS ((PTR, PTR, size_t));
/* Number of info entries. */
size_t heapsize;
/* Pointer to first block of the heap (base of the first block). */
char *heapbase;
/* Current search index for the heap table. */
/* Search index in the info table. */
size_t heapindex;
/* Limit of valid info table indices. */
size_t heaplimit;
/* Block information table.
Allocated with malign/__mmalloc_free (not mmalloc/mfree). */
/* Table indexed by block number giving per-block information. */
malloc_info *heapinfo;
/* Instrumentation. */
struct mstats heapstats;
/* Free list headers for each fragment size. */
/* Free lists for each fragment size. */
struct list fraghead[BLOCKLOG];
/* List of blocks allocated by memalign. */
struct alignlist *aligned_blocks;
/* The base address of the memory region for this malloc heap. This
is the location where the bookkeeping data for mmap and for malloc
begins. */
char *base;
/* The current location in the memory region for this malloc heap which
represents the end of memory in use. */
char *breakval;
/* The end of the current memory region for this malloc heap. This is
the first location past the end of mapped memory. */
char *top;
/* Open file descriptor for the file to which this malloc heap is mapped.
This will always be a valid file descriptor, since /dev/zero is used
by default if no open file is supplied by the client. Also note that
it may change each time the region is mapped and unmapped. */
int fd;
/* An array of keys to data within the mapped region, for use by the
application. */
PTR keys[MMALLOC_KEYS];
};
/* Bits to look at in the malloc descriptor flags word */
#define MMALLOC_DEVZERO (1 << 0) /* Have mapped to /dev/zero */
#define MMALLOC_INITIALIZED (1 << 1) /* Initialized mmalloc */
#define MMALLOC_MMCHECK_USED (1 << 2) /* mmcheck() called already */
/* Allocate SIZE bytes of memory. */
extern PTR mmalloc PARAMS ((PTR, size_t));
/* Re-allocate the previously allocated block in PTR, making the new block
SIZE bytes long. */
extern PTR mrealloc PARAMS ((PTR, PTR, size_t));
/* Allocate NMEMB elements of SIZE bytes each, all initialized to 0. */
extern PTR mcalloc PARAMS ((PTR, size_t, size_t));
/* Free a block allocated by `mmalloc', `mrealloc' or `mcalloc'. */
extern void mfree PARAMS ((PTR, PTR));
/* Allocate SIZE bytes allocated to ALIGNMENT bytes. */
extern PTR mmemalign PARAMS ((PTR, size_t, size_t));
/* Allocate SIZE bytes on a page boundary. */
extern PTR mvalloc PARAMS ((PTR, size_t));
/* Activate a standard collection of debugging hooks. */
extern int mmcheck PARAMS ((PTR, void (*) (void)));
/* Pick up the current statistics. (see FIXME elsewhere) */
extern struct mstats mmstats PARAMS ((PTR));
/* Internal version of `mfree' used in `morecore'. */
extern void __mmalloc_free PARAMS ((struct mdesc *, PTR));
/* Hooks for debugging versions. */
extern void (*__mfree_hook) PARAMS ((PTR, PTR));
extern PTR (*__mmalloc_hook) PARAMS ((PTR, size_t));
extern PTR (*__mrealloc_hook) PARAMS ((PTR, PTR, size_t));
/* A default malloc descriptor for the single sbrk() managed region. */
extern struct mdesc *__mmalloc_default_mdp;
/* Initialize the first use of the default malloc descriptor, which uses
an sbrk() region. */
extern struct mdesc *__mmalloc_sbrk_init PARAMS ((void));
/* Grow or shrink a contiguous mapped region using mmap().
Works much like sbrk() */
#if defined(HAVE_MMAP)
extern PTR __mmalloc_mmap_morecore PARAMS ((struct mdesc *, int));
#endif
/* Remap a mmalloc region that was previously mapped. */
extern PTR __mmalloc_remap_core PARAMS ((struct mdesc *));
/* Macro to convert from a user supplied malloc descriptor to pointer to the
internal malloc descriptor. If the user supplied descriptor is NULL, then
use the default internal version, initializing it if necessary. Otherwise
just cast the user supplied version (which is void *) to the proper type
(struct mdesc *). */
#define MD_TO_MDP(md) \
((md) == NULL \
? (__mmalloc_default_mdp == NULL \
? __mmalloc_sbrk_init () \
: __mmalloc_default_mdp) \
: (struct mdesc *) (md))
#endif /* __MMALLOC_H */

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@ -1,258 +0,0 @@
\input texinfo @c -*- Texinfo -*-
@setfilename mmalloc.info
@ifinfo
@format
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* Mmalloc: (mmalloc). The GNU mapped-malloc package.
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
@end format
This file documents the GNU mmalloc (mapped-malloc) package, written by
fnf@@cygnus.com, based on GNU malloc written by mike@@ai.mit.edu.
Copyright (C) 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
are preserved on all copies.
@ignore
Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the
results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
(this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
@end ignore
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the
entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
permission notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.
@end ifinfo
@iftex
@c @finalout
@setchapternewpage odd
@settitle MMALLOC, the GNU memory-mapped malloc package
@titlepage
@title mmalloc
@subtitle The GNU memory-mapped malloc package
@author Fred Fish
@author Cygnus Support
@author Mike Haertel
@author Free Software Foundation
@page
@tex
\def\$#1${{#1}} % Kluge: collect RCS revision info without $...$
\xdef\manvers{\$Revision: 1.1.1.1 $} % For use in headers, footers too
{\parskip=0pt
\hfill Cygnus Support\par
\hfill fnf\@cygnus.com\par
\hfill {\it MMALLOC, the GNU memory-mapped malloc package}, \manvers\par
\hfill \TeX{}info \texinfoversion\par
}
@end tex
@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
Copyright @copyright{} 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
are preserved on all copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that
the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
permission notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.
@end titlepage
@end iftex
@ifinfo
@node Top, Overview, (dir), (dir)
@top mmalloc
This file documents the GNU memory-mapped malloc package mmalloc.
@menu
* Overview:: Overall Description
* Implementation:: Implementation
--- The Detailed Node Listing ---
Implementation
* Compatibility:: Backwards Compatibility
* Functions:: Function Descriptions
@end menu
@end ifinfo
@node Overview, Implementation, Top, Top
@chapter Overall Description
This is a heavily modified version of GNU @code{malloc}. It uses
@code{mmap} as the basic mechanism for for obtaining memory from the
system, rather than @code{sbrk}. This gives it several advantages over the
more traditional malloc:
@itemize @bullet
@item
Several different heaps can be used, each of them growing
or shinking under control of @code{mmap}, with the @code{mmalloc} functions
using a specific heap on a call by call basis.
@item
By using @code{mmap}, it is easy to create heaps which are intended to
be persistent and exist as a filesystem object after the creating
process has gone away.
@item
Because multiple heaps can be managed, data used for a
specific purpose can be allocated into its own heap, making
it easier to allow applications to ``dump'' and ``restore'' initialized
malloc-managed memory regions. For example, the ``unexec'' hack popularized
by GNU Emacs could potentially go away.
@end itemize
@node Implementation, , Overview, Top
@chapter Implementation
The @code{mmalloc} functions contain no internal static state. All
@code{mmalloc} internal data is allocated in the mapped in region, along
with the user data that it manages. This allows it to manage multiple
such regions and to ``pick up where it left off'' when such regions are
later dynamically mapped back in.
In some sense, malloc has been ``purified'' to contain no internal state
information and generalized to use multiple memory regions rather than a
single region managed by @code{sbrk}. However the new routines now need an
extra parameter which informs @code{mmalloc} which memory region it is dealing
with (along with other information). This parameter is called the
@dfn{malloc descriptor}.
The functions initially provided by @code{mmalloc} are:
@example
void *mmalloc_attach (int fd, void *baseaddr);
void *mmalloc_detach (void *md);
int mmalloc_errno (void *md);
int mmalloc_setkey (void *md, int keynum, void *key);
void *mmalloc_getkey (void *md, int keynum);
void *mmalloc (void *md, size_t size);
void *mrealloc (void *md, void *ptr, size_t size);
void *mvalloc (void *md, size_t size);
void mfree (void *md, void *ptr);
@end example
@menu
* Compatibility:: Backwards Compatibility
* Functions:: Function Descriptions
@end menu
@node Compatibility, Functions, Implementation, Implementation
@section Backwards Compatibility
To allow a single malloc package to be used in a given application,
provision is made for the traditional @code{malloc}, @code{realloc}, and
@code{free} functions to be implemented as special cases of the
@code{mmalloc} functions. In particular, if any of the functions that
expect malloc descriptors are called with a @code{NULL} pointer rather than a
valid malloc descriptor, then they default to using an @code{sbrk} managed
region.
The @code{mmalloc} package provides compatible @code{malloc}, @code{realloc},
and @code{free} functions using this mechanism internally.
Applications can avoid this extra interface layer by simply including the
following defines:
@example
#define malloc(size) mmalloc ((void *)0, (size))
#define realloc(ptr,size) mrealloc ((void *)0, (ptr), (size));
#define free(ptr) mfree ((void *)0, (ptr))
@end example
@noindent
or replace the existing @code{malloc}, @code{realloc}, and @code{free}
calls with the above patterns if using @code{#define} causes problems.
@node Functions, , Compatibility, Implementation
@section Function Descriptions
These are the details on the functions that make up the @code{mmalloc}
package.
@table @code
@item void *mmalloc_attach (int @var{fd}, void *@var{baseaddr});
Initialize access to a @code{mmalloc} managed region.
If @var{fd} is a valid file descriptor for an open file, then data for the
@code{mmalloc} managed region is mapped to that file. Otherwise
@file{/dev/zero} is used and the data will not exist in any filesystem object.
If the open file corresponding to @var{fd} is from a previous use of
@code{mmalloc} and passes some basic sanity checks to ensure that it is
compatible with the current @code{mmalloc} package, then its data is
mapped in and is immediately accessible at the same addresses in
the current process as the process that created the file.
If @var{baseaddr} is not @code{NULL}, the mapping is established
starting at the specified address in the process address space. If
@var{baseaddr} is @code{NULL}, the @code{mmalloc} package chooses a
suitable address at which to start the mapped region, which will be the
value of the previous mapping if opening an existing file which was
previously built by @code{mmalloc}, or for new files will be a value
chosen by @code{mmap}.
Specifying @var{baseaddr} provides more control over where the regions
start and how big they can be before bumping into existing mapped
regions or future mapped regions.
On success, returns a malloc descriptor which is used in subsequent
calls to other @code{mmalloc} package functions. It is explicitly
@samp{void *} (@samp{char *} for systems that don't fully support
@code{void}) so that users of the package don't have to worry about the
actual implementation details.
On failure returns @code{NULL}.
@item void *mmalloc_detach (void *@var{md});
Terminate access to a @code{mmalloc} managed region identified by the
descriptor @var{md}, by closing the base file and unmapping all memory
pages associated with the region.
Returns @code{NULL} on success.
Returns the malloc descriptor on failure, which can subsequently
be used for further action (such as obtaining more information about
the nature of the failure).
@item void *mmalloc (void *@var{md}, size_t @var{size});
Given an @code{mmalloc} descriptor @var{md}, allocate additional memory of
@var{size} bytes in the associated mapped region.
@item *mrealloc (void *@var{md}, void *@var{ptr}, size_t @var{size});
Given an @code{mmalloc} descriptor @var{md} and a pointer to memory
previously allocated by @code{mmalloc} in @var{ptr}, reallocate the
memory to be @var{size} bytes long, possibly moving the existing
contents of memory if necessary.
@item void *mvalloc (void *@var{md}, size_t @var{size});
Like @code{mmalloc} but the resulting memory is aligned on a page boundary.
@item void mfree (void *@var{md}, void *@var{ptr});
Given an @code{mmalloc} descriptor @var{md} and a pointer to memory previously
allocated by @code{mmalloc} in @var{ptr}, free the previously allocated memory.
@item int mmalloc_errno (void *@var{md});
Given a @code{mmalloc} descriptor, if the last @code{mmalloc} operation
failed for some reason due to a system call failure, then
returns the associated @code{errno}. Returns 0 otherwise.
(This function is not yet implemented).
@end table
@bye

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@ -1,144 +0,0 @@
/* Support for an sbrk-like function that uses mmap.
Copyright 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Contributed by Fred Fish at Cygnus Support. fnf@cygnus.com
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#if defined(HAVE_MMAP)
#include <stdio.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
#ifndef SEEK_SET
#define SEEK_SET 0
#endif
#include "mmalloc.h"
extern int munmap PARAMS ((caddr_t, size_t)); /* Not in any header file */
/* Cache the pagesize for the current host machine. Note that if the host
does not readily provide a getpagesize() function, we need to emulate it
elsewhere, not clutter up this file with lots of kluges to try to figure
it out. */
static size_t pagesize;
extern int getpagesize PARAMS ((void));
#define PAGE_ALIGN(addr) (caddr_t) (((long)(addr) + pagesize - 1) & \
~(pagesize - 1))
/* Get core for the memory region specified by MDP, using SIZE as the
amount to either add to or subtract from the existing region. Works
like sbrk(), but using mmap(). */
PTR
__mmalloc_mmap_morecore (mdp, size)
struct mdesc *mdp;
int size;
{
PTR result = NULL;
off_t foffset; /* File offset at which new mapping will start */
size_t mapbytes; /* Number of bytes to map */
caddr_t moveto; /* Address where we wish to move "break value" to */
caddr_t mapto; /* Address we actually mapped to */
char buf = 0; /* Single byte to write to extend mapped file */
if (pagesize == 0)
{
pagesize = getpagesize ();
}
if (size == 0)
{
/* Just return the current "break" value. */
result = mdp -> breakval;
}
else if (size < 0)
{
/* We are deallocating memory. If the amount requested would cause
us to try to deallocate back past the base of the mmap'd region
then do nothing, and return NULL. Otherwise, deallocate the
memory and return the old break value. */
if (mdp -> breakval + size >= mdp -> base)
{
result = (PTR) mdp -> breakval;
mdp -> breakval += size;
moveto = PAGE_ALIGN (mdp -> breakval);
munmap (moveto, (size_t) (mdp -> top - moveto));
mdp -> top = moveto;
}
}
else
{
/* We are allocating memory. Make sure we have an open file
descriptor and then go on to get the memory. */
if (mdp -> fd < 0)
{
result = NULL;
}
else if (mdp -> breakval + size > mdp -> top)
{
/* The request would move us past the end of the currently
mapped memory, so map in enough more memory to satisfy
the request. This means we also have to grow the mapped-to
file by an appropriate amount, since mmap cannot be used
to extend a file. */
moveto = PAGE_ALIGN (mdp -> breakval + size);
mapbytes = moveto - mdp -> top;
foffset = mdp -> top - mdp -> base;
/* FIXME: Test results of lseek() and write() */
lseek (mdp -> fd, foffset + mapbytes - 1, SEEK_SET);
write (mdp -> fd, &buf, 1);
mapto = mmap (mdp -> top, mapbytes, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE,
MAP_SHARED | MAP_FIXED, mdp -> fd, foffset);
if (mapto == mdp -> top)
{
mdp -> top = moveto;
result = (PTR) mdp -> breakval;
mdp -> breakval += size;
}
}
else
{
result = (PTR) mdp -> breakval;
mdp -> breakval += size;
}
}
return (result);
}
PTR
__mmalloc_remap_core (mdp)
struct mdesc *mdp;
{
caddr_t base;
/* FIXME: Quick hack, needs error checking and other attention. */
base = mmap (mdp -> base, mdp -> top - mdp -> base,
PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED | MAP_FIXED,
mdp -> fd, 0);
return ((PTR) base);
}
#else /* defined(HAVE_MMAP) */
/* Prevent "empty translation unit" warnings from the idiots at X3J11. */
static char ansi_c_idiots = 69;
#endif /* defined(HAVE_MMAP) */

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@ -1,196 +0,0 @@
/* Standard debugging hooks for `mmalloc'.
Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation
Written May 1989 by Mike Haertel.
Heavily modified Mar 1992 by Fred Fish (fnf@cygnus.com)
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
The author may be reached (Email) at the address mike@ai.mit.edu,
or (US mail) as Mike Haertel c/o Free Software Foundation. */
#include "mmalloc.h"
/* Default function to call when something awful happens. The application
can specify an alternate function to be called instead (and probably will
want to). */
extern void abort PARAMS ((void));
/* Arbitrary magical numbers. */
#define MAGICWORD (unsigned int) 0xfedabeeb /* Active chunk */
#define MAGICWORDFREE (unsigned int) 0xdeadbeef /* Inactive chunk */
#define MAGICBYTE ((char) 0xd7)
/* Each memory allocation is bounded by a header structure and a trailer
byte. I.E.
<size><magicword><user's allocation><magicbyte>
The pointer returned to the user points to the first byte in the
user's allocation area. The magic word can be tested to detect
buffer underruns and the magic byte can be tested to detect overruns. */
struct hdr
{
size_t size; /* Exact size requested by user. */
unsigned long int magic; /* Magic number to check header integrity. */
};
/* Check the magicword and magicbyte, and if either is corrupted then
call the emergency abort function specified for the heap in use. */
static void
checkhdr (mdp, hdr)
struct mdesc *mdp;
CONST struct hdr *hdr;
{
if (hdr -> magic != MAGICWORD ||
((char *) &hdr[1])[hdr -> size] != MAGICBYTE)
{
(*mdp -> abortfunc)();
}
}
static void
mfree_check (md, ptr)
PTR md;
PTR ptr;
{
struct hdr *hdr = ((struct hdr *) ptr) - 1;
struct mdesc *mdp;
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
checkhdr (mdp, hdr);
hdr -> magic = MAGICWORDFREE;
mdp -> mfree_hook = NULL;
mfree (md, (PTR)hdr);
mdp -> mfree_hook = mfree_check;
}
static PTR
mmalloc_check (md, size)
PTR md;
size_t size;
{
struct hdr *hdr;
struct mdesc *mdp;
size_t nbytes;
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
mdp -> mmalloc_hook = NULL;
nbytes = sizeof (struct hdr) + size + 1;
hdr = (struct hdr *) mmalloc (md, nbytes);
mdp -> mmalloc_hook = mmalloc_check;
if (hdr != NULL)
{
hdr -> size = size;
hdr -> magic = MAGICWORD;
hdr++;
*((char *) hdr + size) = MAGICBYTE;
}
return ((PTR) hdr);
}
static PTR
mrealloc_check (md, ptr, size)
PTR md;
PTR ptr;
size_t size;
{
struct hdr *hdr = ((struct hdr *) ptr) - 1;
struct mdesc *mdp;
size_t nbytes;
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
checkhdr (mdp, hdr);
mdp -> mfree_hook = NULL;
mdp -> mmalloc_hook = NULL;
mdp -> mrealloc_hook = NULL;
nbytes = sizeof (struct hdr) + size + 1;
hdr = (struct hdr *) mrealloc (md, (PTR) hdr, nbytes);
mdp -> mfree_hook = mfree_check;
mdp -> mmalloc_hook = mmalloc_check;
mdp -> mrealloc_hook = mrealloc_check;
if (hdr != NULL)
{
hdr -> size = size;
hdr++;
*((char *) hdr + size) = MAGICBYTE;
}
return ((PTR) hdr);
}
/* Turn on default checking for mmalloc/mrealloc/mfree, for the heap specified
by MD. If FUNC is non-NULL, it is a pointer to the function to call
to abort whenever memory corruption is detected. By default, this is the
standard library function abort().
Note that we disallow installation of initial checking hooks if mmalloc
has been called at any time for this particular heap, since if any region
that is allocated prior to installation of the hooks is subsequently
reallocated or freed after installation of the hooks, it is guaranteed
to trigger a memory corruption error. We do this by checking the state
of the MMALLOC_INITIALIZED flag.
However, we can call this function at any time after the initial call,
to update the function pointers to the checking routines and to the
user defined corruption handler routine, as long as these function pointers
have been previously extablished by the initial call. Note that we
do this automatically when remapping an previously used heap, to ensure
that the hooks get updated to the correct values, although the corruption
handler pointer gets set back to the default. The application can then
call mmcheck to use a different corruption handler if desired.
Returns non-zero if checking is successfully enabled, zero otherwise. */
int
mmcheck (md, func)
PTR md;
void (*func) PARAMS ((void));
{
struct mdesc *mdp;
int rtnval;
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
/* We can safely set or update the abort function at any time, regardless
of whether or not we successfully do anything else. */
mdp -> abortfunc = (func != NULL ? func : abort);
/* If we haven't yet called mmalloc the first time for this heap, or if we
have hooks that were previously installed, then allow the hooks to be
initialized or updated. */
if (1 /* FIXME: Always allow installation for now. */ ||
!(mdp -> flags & MMALLOC_INITIALIZED) ||
(mdp -> mfree_hook != NULL))
{
mdp -> mfree_hook = mfree_check;
mdp -> mmalloc_hook = mmalloc_check;
mdp -> mrealloc_hook = mrealloc_check;
mdp -> flags |= MMALLOC_MMCHECK_USED;
rtnval = 1;
}
else
{
rtnval = 0;
}
return (rtnval);
}

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/* Copyright (C) 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#include "mmalloc.h"
PTR
mmemalign (md, alignment, size)
PTR md;
size_t alignment;
size_t size;
{
PTR result;
unsigned long int adj;
struct alignlist *l;
struct mdesc *mdp;
size = ((size + alignment - 1) / alignment) * alignment;
if ((result = mmalloc (md, size)) != NULL)
{
adj = RESIDUAL (result, alignment);
if (adj != 0)
{
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
for (l = mdp -> aligned_blocks; l != NULL; l = l -> next)
{
if (l -> aligned == NULL)
{
/* This slot is free. Use it. */
break;
}
}
if (l == NULL)
{
l = (struct alignlist *) mmalloc (md, sizeof (struct alignlist));
if (l == NULL)
{
mfree (md, result);
return (NULL);
}
}
l -> exact = result;
result = l -> aligned = (char *) result + alignment - adj;
l -> next = mdp -> aligned_blocks;
mdp -> aligned_blocks = l;
}
}
return (result);
}

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@ -1,46 +0,0 @@
/* Access the statistics maintained by `mmalloc'.
Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation
Written May 1989 by Mike Haertel.
Modified Mar 1992 by Fred Fish. (fnf@cygnus.com)
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
The author may be reached (Email) at the address mike@ai.mit.edu,
or (US mail) as Mike Haertel c/o Free Software Foundation. */
#include "mmalloc.h"
/* FIXME: See the comment in mmalloc.h where struct mstats is defined.
None of the internal mmalloc structures should be externally visible
outside the library. */
struct mstats
mmstats (md)
PTR md;
{
struct mstats result;
struct mdesc *mdp;
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
result.bytes_total =
(char *) mdp -> morecore (mdp, 0) - mdp -> heapbase;
result.chunks_used = mdp -> heapstats.chunks_used;
result.bytes_used = mdp -> heapstats.bytes_used;
result.chunks_free = mdp -> heapstats.chunks_free;
result.bytes_free = mdp -> heapstats.bytes_free;
return (result);
}

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@ -1,166 +0,0 @@
/* More debugging hooks for `mmalloc'.
Copyright 1991, 1992, 1994 Free Software Foundation
Written April 2, 1991 by John Gilmore of Cygnus Support
Based on mcheck.c by Mike Haertel.
Modified Mar 1992 by Fred Fish. (fnf@cygnus.com)
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#include <stdio.h>
#include "mmalloc.h"
#ifndef __GNU_LIBRARY__
extern char *getenv ();
#endif
static FILE *mallstream;
#if 0 /* FIXME: Disabled for now. */
static char mallenv[] = "MALLOC_TRACE";
static char mallbuf[BUFSIZ]; /* Buffer for the output. */
#endif
/* Address to breakpoint on accesses to... */
static PTR mallwatch;
/* Old hook values. */
static void (*old_mfree_hook) PARAMS ((PTR, PTR));
static PTR (*old_mmalloc_hook) PARAMS ((PTR, size_t));
static PTR (*old_mrealloc_hook) PARAMS ((PTR, PTR, size_t));
/* This function is called when the block being alloc'd, realloc'd, or
freed has an address matching the variable "mallwatch". In a debugger,
set "mallwatch" to the address of interest, then put a breakpoint on
tr_break. */
static void
tr_break ()
{
}
static void
tr_freehook (md, ptr)
PTR md;
PTR ptr;
{
struct mdesc *mdp;
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
/* Be sure to print it first. */
fprintf (mallstream, "- %08lx\n", (unsigned long) ptr);
if (ptr == mallwatch)
tr_break ();
mdp -> mfree_hook = old_mfree_hook;
mfree (md, ptr);
mdp -> mfree_hook = tr_freehook;
}
static PTR
tr_mallochook (md, size)
PTR md;
size_t size;
{
PTR hdr;
struct mdesc *mdp;
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
mdp -> mmalloc_hook = old_mmalloc_hook;
hdr = (PTR) mmalloc (md, size);
mdp -> mmalloc_hook = tr_mallochook;
/* We could be printing a NULL here; that's OK. */
fprintf (mallstream, "+ %08lx %x\n", (unsigned long) hdr, size);
if (hdr == mallwatch)
tr_break ();
return (hdr);
}
static PTR
tr_reallochook (md, ptr, size)
PTR md;
PTR ptr;
size_t size;
{
PTR hdr;
struct mdesc *mdp;
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
if (ptr == mallwatch)
tr_break ();
mdp -> mfree_hook = old_mfree_hook;
mdp -> mmalloc_hook = old_mmalloc_hook;
mdp -> mrealloc_hook = old_mrealloc_hook;
hdr = (PTR) mrealloc (md, ptr, size);
mdp -> mfree_hook = tr_freehook;
mdp -> mmalloc_hook = tr_mallochook;
mdp -> mrealloc_hook = tr_reallochook;
if (hdr == NULL)
/* Failed realloc. */
fprintf (mallstream, "! %08lx %x\n", (unsigned long) ptr, size);
else
fprintf (mallstream, "< %08lx\n> %08lx %x\n", (unsigned long) ptr,
(unsigned long) hdr, size);
if (hdr == mallwatch)
tr_break ();
return hdr;
}
/* We enable tracing if either the environment variable MALLOC_TRACE
is set, or if the variable mallwatch has been patched to an address
that the debugging user wants us to stop on. When patching mallwatch,
don't forget to set a breakpoint on tr_break! */
int
mmtrace ()
{
#if 0 /* FIXME! This is disabled for now until we figure out how to
maintain a stack of hooks per heap, since we might have other
hooks (such as set by mmcheck) active also. */
char *mallfile;
mallfile = getenv (mallenv);
if (mallfile != NULL || mallwatch != NULL)
{
mallstream = fopen (mallfile != NULL ? mallfile : "/dev/null", "w");
if (mallstream != NULL)
{
/* Be sure it doesn't mmalloc its buffer! */
setbuf (mallstream, mallbuf);
fprintf (mallstream, "= Start\n");
old_mfree_hook = mdp -> mfree_hook;
mdp -> mfree_hook = tr_freehook;
old_mmalloc_hook = mdp -> mmalloc_hook;
mdp -> mmalloc_hook = tr_mallochook;
old_mrealloc_hook = mdp -> mrealloc_hook;
mdp -> mrealloc_hook = tr_reallochook;
}
}
#endif /* 0 */
return (1);
}

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@ -1,160 +0,0 @@
/* Change the size of a block allocated by `mmalloc'.
Copyright 1990, 1991 Free Software Foundation
Written May 1989 by Mike Haertel.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
The author may be reached (Email) at the address mike@ai.mit.edu,
or (US mail) as Mike Haertel c/o Free Software Foundation. */
#include <string.h> /* Prototypes for memcpy, memmove, memset, etc */
#include "mmalloc.h"
/* Resize the given region to the new size, returning a pointer
to the (possibly moved) region. This is optimized for speed;
some benchmarks seem to indicate that greater compactness is
achieved by unconditionally allocating and copying to a
new region. This module has incestuous knowledge of the
internals of both mfree and mmalloc. */
PTR
mrealloc (md, ptr, size)
PTR md;
PTR ptr;
size_t size;
{
struct mdesc *mdp;
PTR result;
int type;
size_t block, blocks, oldlimit;
if (size == 0)
{
mfree (md, ptr);
return (mmalloc (md, 0));
}
else if (ptr == NULL)
{
return (mmalloc (md, size));
}
mdp = MD_TO_MDP (md);
if (mdp -> mrealloc_hook != NULL)
{
return ((*mdp -> mrealloc_hook) (md, ptr, size));
}
block = BLOCK (ptr);
type = mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.type;
switch (type)
{
case 0:
/* Maybe reallocate a large block to a small fragment. */
if (size <= BLOCKSIZE / 2)
{
result = mmalloc (md, size);
if (result != NULL)
{
memcpy (result, ptr, size);
mfree (md, ptr);
return (result);
}
}
/* The new size is a large allocation as well;
see if we can hold it in place. */
blocks = BLOCKIFY (size);
if (blocks < mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size)
{
/* The new size is smaller; return excess memory to the free list. */
mdp -> heapinfo[block + blocks].busy.type = 0;
mdp -> heapinfo[block + blocks].busy.info.size
= mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size - blocks;
mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size = blocks;
mfree (md, ADDRESS (block + blocks));
result = ptr;
}
else if (blocks == mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size)
{
/* No size change necessary. */
result = ptr;
}
else
{
/* Won't fit, so allocate a new region that will.
Free the old region first in case there is sufficient
adjacent free space to grow without moving. */
blocks = mdp -> heapinfo[block].busy.info.size;
/* Prevent free from actually returning memory to the system. */
oldlimit = mdp -> heaplimit;
mdp -> heaplimit = 0;
mfree (md, ptr);
mdp -> heaplimit = oldlimit;
result = mmalloc (md, size);
if (result == NULL)
{
mmalloc (md, blocks * BLOCKSIZE);
return (NULL);
}
if (ptr != result)
{
memmove (result, ptr, blocks * BLOCKSIZE);
}
}
break;
default:
/* Old size is a fragment; type is logarithm
to base two of the fragment size. */
if (size > (size_t) (1 << (type - 1)) && size <= (size_t) (1 << type))
{
/* The new size is the same kind of fragment. */
result = ptr;
}
else
{
/* The new size is different; allocate a new space,
and copy the lesser of the new size and the old. */
result = mmalloc (md, size);
if (result == NULL)
{
return (NULL);
}
memcpy (result, ptr, MIN (size, (size_t) 1 << type));
mfree (md, ptr);
}
break;
}
return (result);
}
/* When using this package, provide a version of malloc/realloc/free built
on top of it, so that if we use the default sbrk() region we will not
collide with another malloc package trying to do the same thing, if
the application contains any "hidden" calls to malloc/realloc/free (such
as inside a system library). */
PTR
realloc (ptr, size)
PTR ptr;
size_t size;
{
return (mrealloc ((PTR) NULL, ptr, size));
}

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@ -1,40 +0,0 @@
/* Allocate memory on a page boundary.
Copyright (C) 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#include "mmalloc.h"
/* Cache the pagesize for the current host machine. Note that if the host
does not readily provide a getpagesize() function, we need to emulate it
elsewhere, not clutter up this file with lots of kluges to try to figure
it out. */
static size_t pagesize;
extern int getpagesize PARAMS ((void));
PTR
mvalloc (md, size)
PTR md;
size_t size;
{
if (pagesize == 0)
{
pagesize = getpagesize ();
}
return (mmemalign (md, pagesize, size));
}

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@ -1,96 +0,0 @@
/* Support for sbrk() regions.
Copyright 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Contributed by Fred Fish at Cygnus Support. fnf@cygnus.com
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#include <string.h> /* Prototypes for memcpy, memmove, memset, etc */
#include "mmalloc.h"
extern PTR sbrk ();
/* The mmalloc() package can use a single implicit malloc descriptor
for mmalloc/mrealloc/mfree operations which do not supply an explicit
descriptor. For these operations, sbrk() is used to obtain more core
from the system, or return core. This allows mmalloc() to provide
backwards compatibility with the non-mmap'd version. */
struct mdesc *__mmalloc_default_mdp;
/* Use sbrk() to get more core. */
static PTR
sbrk_morecore (mdp, size)
struct mdesc *mdp;
int size;
{
PTR result;
if ((result = sbrk (size)) == (PTR) -1)
{
result = NULL;
}
else
{
mdp -> breakval += size;
mdp -> top += size;
}
return (result);
}
/* Initialize the default malloc descriptor if this is the first time
a request has been made to use the default sbrk'd region.
Since no alignment guarantees are made about the initial value returned
by sbrk, test the initial value and (if necessary) sbrk enough additional
memory to start off with alignment to BLOCKSIZE. We actually only need
it aligned to an alignment suitable for any object, so this is overkill.
But at most it wastes just part of one BLOCKSIZE chunk of memory and
minimizes portability problems by avoiding us having to figure out
what the actual minimal alignment is. The rest of the malloc code
avoids this as well, by always aligning to the minimum of the requested
size rounded up to a power of two, or to BLOCKSIZE.
Note that we are going to use some memory starting at this initial sbrk
address for the sbrk region malloc descriptor, which is a struct, so the
base address must be suitably aligned. */
struct mdesc *
__mmalloc_sbrk_init ()
{
PTR base;
unsigned int adj;
base = sbrk (0);
adj = RESIDUAL (base, BLOCKSIZE);
if (adj != 0)
{
sbrk (BLOCKSIZE - adj);
base = sbrk (0);
}
__mmalloc_default_mdp = (struct mdesc *) sbrk (sizeof (struct mdesc));
memset ((char *) __mmalloc_default_mdp, 0, sizeof (struct mdesc));
__mmalloc_default_mdp -> morecore = sbrk_morecore;
__mmalloc_default_mdp -> base = base;
__mmalloc_default_mdp -> breakval = __mmalloc_default_mdp -> top = sbrk (0);
__mmalloc_default_mdp -> fd = -1;
return (__mmalloc_default_mdp);
}