Fix the MS-Windows build broken by few last commits.
[bpt/emacs.git] / src / w32heap.c
CommitLineData
587fd086
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1/* Heap management routines for GNU Emacs on the Microsoft Windows
2 API. Copyright (C) 1994, 2001-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
95ed0025 3
587fd086 4 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
95ed0025 5
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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.
95ed0025 10
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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.
95ed0025 15
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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/>. */
95ed0025 18
9ec0b715 19/*
587fd086 20 Geoff Voelker (voelker@cs.washington.edu) 7-29-94
95ed0025
RS
21*/
22
587fd086
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23/*
24 Heavily modified by Fabrice Popineau (fabrice.popineau@gmail.com) 28-02-2014
25*/
26
27/*
28 Memory allocation scheme for w32/w64:
29
30 - Buffers are mmap'ed using a very simple emulation of mmap/munmap
31 - During the temacs phase:
32 * we use a private heap declared to be stored into the `dumped_data'
33 * unfortunately, this heap cannot be made growable, so the size of
34 blocks it can allocate is limited to (0x80000 - pagesize)
35 * the blocks that are larger than this are allocated from the end
36 of the `dumped_data' array; there are not so many of them.
37 We use a very simple first-fit scheme to reuse those blocks.
38 * we check that the private heap does not cross the area used
39 by the bigger chunks.
40 - During the emacs phase:
41 * we create a private heap for new memory blocks
42 * we make sure that we never free a block that has been dumped.
43 Freeing a dumped block could work in principle, but may prove
44 unreliable if we distribute binaries of emacs.exe: MS does not
45 guarantee that the heap data structures are the same across all
46 versions of their OS, even though the API is available since XP. */
47
4838e624 48#include <config.h>
95ed0025 49#include <stdio.h>
6c572f9a 50#include <errno.h>
95ed0025 51
587fd086 52#include <sys/mman.h>
501199a3 53#include "w32common.h"
489f9371 54#include "w32heap.h"
8dfdd41f 55#include "lisp.h" /* for VALMASK */
95ed0025 56
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57/* We chose to leave those declarations here. They are used only in
58 this file. The RtlCreateHeap is available since XP. It is located
59 in ntdll.dll and is available with the DDK. People often
60 complained that HeapCreate doesn't offer the ability to create a
61 heap at a given place, which we need here, and which RtlCreateHeap
62 provides. We reproduce here the definitions available with the
63 DDK. */
64
65typedef PVOID (WINAPI * RtlCreateHeap_Proc) (
66 /* _In_ */ ULONG Flags,
67 /* _In_opt_ */ PVOID HeapBase,
68 /* _In_opt_ */ SIZE_T ReserveSize,
69 /* _In_opt_ */ SIZE_T CommitSize,
70 /* _In_opt_ */ PVOID Lock,
71 /* _In_opt_ */ PVOID Parameters
72 );
73
74typedef LONG NTSTATUS;
75
76typedef NTSTATUS
77(NTAPI * PRTL_HEAP_COMMIT_ROUTINE)(
78 IN PVOID Base,
79 IN OUT PVOID *CommitAddress,
80 IN OUT PSIZE_T CommitSize
81 );
82
83typedef struct _RTL_HEAP_PARAMETERS {
84 ULONG Length;
85 SIZE_T SegmentReserve;
86 SIZE_T SegmentCommit;
87 SIZE_T DeCommitFreeBlockThreshold;
88 SIZE_T DeCommitTotalFreeThreshold;
89 SIZE_T MaximumAllocationSize;
90 SIZE_T VirtualMemoryThreshold;
91 SIZE_T InitialCommit;
92 SIZE_T InitialReserve;
93 PRTL_HEAP_COMMIT_ROUTINE CommitRoutine;
94 SIZE_T Reserved[ 2 ];
95} RTL_HEAP_PARAMETERS, *PRTL_HEAP_PARAMETERS;
96
97/* We reserve space for dumping emacs lisp byte-code inside a static
98 array. By storing it in an array, the generic mechanism in
99 unexecw32.c will be able to dump it without the need to add a
100 special segment to the executable. In order to be able to do this
101 without losing too much space, we need to create a Windows heap at
102 the specific address of the static array. The RtlCreateHeap
103 available inside the NT kernel since XP will do this. It allows to
104 create a non-growable heap at a specific address. So before
105 dumping, we create a non-growable heap at the address of the
106 dumped_data[] array. After dumping, we reuse memory allocated
107 there without being able to free it (but most of it is not meant to
108 be freed anyway), and we use a new private heap for all new
109 allocations. */
110
89b36202
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111/* FIXME: Most of the space reserved for dumped_data[] is only used by
112 the 1st bootstrap-emacs.exe built while bootstrapping. Once the
113 preloaded Lisp files are byte-compiled, the next loadup uses less
114 than half of the size stated below. It would be nice to find a way
115 to build only the first bootstrap-emacs.exe with the large size,
116 and reset that to a lower value afterwards. */
117#ifdef _WIN64
118# define DUMPED_HEAP_SIZE (18*1024*1024)
119#else
120# define DUMPED_HEAP_SIZE (12*1024*1024)
121#endif
122
123static unsigned char dumped_data[DUMPED_HEAP_SIZE];
e54c8cd1 124
221e0a20 125/* Info for keeping track of our dynamic heap used after dumping. */
95ed0025
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126unsigned char *data_region_base = NULL;
127unsigned char *data_region_end = NULL;
587fd086 128static DWORD_PTR committed = 0;
95ed0025 129
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130/* The maximum block size that can be handled by a non-growable w32
131 heap is limited by the MaxBlockSize value below.
132
133 This point deserves and explanation.
134
135 The W32 heap allocator can be used for a growable
136 heap or a non-growable one.
137
138 A growable heap is not compatible with a fixed base address for the
139 heap. Only a non-growable one is. One drawback of non-growable
140 heaps is that they can hold only objects smaller than a certain
141 size (the one defined below). Most of the largest blocks are GC'ed
142 before dumping. In any case and to be safe, we implement a simple
143 first-fit allocation algorithm starting at the end of the
144 dumped_data[] array like depicted below:
95ed0025 145
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146 ----------------------------------------------
147 | | | |
148 | Private heap |-> <-| Big chunks |
149 | | | |
150 ----------------------------------------------
151 ^ ^ ^
152 dumped_data dumped_data bc_limit
153 + committed
154
155*/
221e0a20
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156
157/* Info for managing our preload heap, which is essentially a fixed size
158 data area in the executable. */
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159#define PAGE_SIZE 0x1000
160#define MaxBlockSize (0x80000 - PAGE_SIZE)
161
162#define MAX_BLOCKS 0x40
163
164static struct
95ed0025 165{
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166 unsigned char *address;
167 size_t size;
168 DWORD occupied;
169} blocks[MAX_BLOCKS];
170
171static DWORD blocks_number = 0;
172static unsigned char *bc_limit;
173
174/* Handle for the private heap:
175 - inside the dumped_data[] array before dump,
176 - outside of it after dump.
177*/
178HANDLE heap = NULL;
179
180/* We redirect the standard allocation functions. */
181malloc_fn the_malloc_fn;
182realloc_fn the_realloc_fn;
183free_fn the_free_fn;
95ed0025 184
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185/* It doesn't seem to be useful to allocate from a file mapping.
186 It would be if the memory was shared.
187 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/307060/what-is-the-purpose-of-allocating-pages-in-the-pagefile-with-createfilemapping */
188
189/* This is the function to commit memory when the heap allocator
190 claims for new memory. Before dumping, we allocate space
191 from the fixed size dumped_data[] array.
192*/
193NTSTATUS NTAPI
194dumped_data_commit (PVOID Base, PVOID *CommitAddress, PSIZE_T CommitSize)
011db670 195{
587fd086
FP
196 /* This is used before dumping.
197
198 The private heap is stored at dumped_data[] address.
199 We commit contiguous areas of the dumped_data array
200 as requests arrive. */
201 *CommitAddress = data_region_base + committed;
202 committed += *CommitSize;
203 if (((unsigned char *)(*CommitAddress)) + *CommitSize >= bc_limit)
709fd16b 204 {
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205 /* Check that the private heap area does not overlap the big
206 chunks area. */
207 fprintf(stderr,
208 "dumped_data_commit: memory exhausted.\nEnlarge dumped_data[]!\n");
209 exit (-1);
709fd16b 210 }
587fd086 211 return 0;
011db670 212}
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213
214/* Heap creation. */
215
904e7cf8 216/* We want to turn on Low Fragmentation Heap for XP and older systems.
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217 MinGW32 lacks those definitions. */
218#ifndef _W64
219typedef enum _HEAP_INFORMATION_CLASS {
220 HeapCompatibilityInformation
221} HEAP_INFORMATION_CLASS;
222
223typedef WINBASEAPI BOOL (WINAPI * HeapSetInformation_Proc)(HANDLE,HEAP_INFORMATION_CLASS,PVOID,SIZE_T);
224#endif
225
226void
227init_heap (void)
fab624aa 228{
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229 if (using_dynamic_heap)
230 {
231 unsigned long enable_lfh = 2;
232
233 /* After dumping, use a new private heap. We explicitly enable
e67cf8c6
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234 the low fragmentation heap (LFH) here, for the sake of pre
235 Vista versions. Note: this will harmlessly fail on Vista and
236 later, where the low-fragmentation heap is enabled by
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237 default. It will also fail on pre-Vista versions when Emacs
238 is run under a debugger; set _NO_DEBUG_HEAP=1 in the
239 environment before starting GDB to get low fragmentation heap
240 on XP and older systems, for the price of losing "certain
241 heap debug options"; for the details see
242 http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa366705%28v=vs.85%29.aspx. */
243 data_region_end = data_region_base;
244
245 /* Create the private heap. */
246 heap = HeapCreate(0, 0, 0);
247
248#ifndef _W64
904e7cf8 249 /* Set the low-fragmentation heap for OS before Vista. */
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250 HMODULE hm_kernel32dll = LoadLibrary("kernel32.dll");
251 HeapSetInformation_Proc s_pfn_Heap_Set_Information = (HeapSetInformation_Proc) GetProcAddress(hm_kernel32dll, "HeapSetInformation");
252 if (s_pfn_Heap_Set_Information != NULL)
253 if (s_pfn_Heap_Set_Information ((PVOID) heap,
254 HeapCompatibilityInformation,
255 &enable_lfh, sizeof(enable_lfh)) == 0)
6c572f9a
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256 DebPrint (("Enabling Low Fragmentation Heap failed: error %ld\n",
257 GetLastError ()));
62aba0d4 258#endif
fab624aa 259
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260 the_malloc_fn = malloc_after_dump;
261 the_realloc_fn = realloc_after_dump;
262 the_free_fn = free_after_dump;
263 }
264 else
fab624aa 265 {
587fd086
FP
266 /* Find the RtlCreateHeap function. Headers for this function
267 are provided with the w32 ddk, but the function is available
268 in ntdll.dll since XP. */
269 HMODULE hm_ntdll = LoadLibrary ("ntdll.dll");
270 RtlCreateHeap_Proc s_pfn_Rtl_Create_Heap
271 = (RtlCreateHeap_Proc) GetProcAddress (hm_ntdll, "RtlCreateHeap");
272 /* Specific parameters for the private heap. */
273 RTL_HEAP_PARAMETERS params;
274 ZeroMemory(&params, sizeof(params));
275 params.Length = sizeof(RTL_HEAP_PARAMETERS);
276
277 data_region_base = (unsigned char *)ROUND_UP (dumped_data, 0x1000);
278 data_region_end = bc_limit = dumped_data + DUMPED_HEAP_SIZE;
279
280 params.InitialCommit = committed = 0x1000;
281 params.InitialReserve = sizeof(dumped_data);
282 /* Use our own routine to commit memory from the dumped_data
283 array. */
284 params.CommitRoutine = &dumped_data_commit;
285
286 /* Create the private heap. */
287 heap = s_pfn_Rtl_Create_Heap (0, data_region_base, 0, 0, NULL, &params);
288 the_malloc_fn = malloc_before_dump;
289 the_realloc_fn = realloc_before_dump;
290 the_free_fn = free_before_dump;
fab624aa
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291 }
292
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293 /* Update system version information to match current system. */
294 cache_system_info ();
fab624aa 295}
011db670 296
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297#undef malloc
298#undef realloc
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299#undef free
300
301/* FREEABLE_P checks if the block can be safely freed. */
302#define FREEABLE_P(addr) \
303 ((unsigned char *)(addr) < dumped_data \
304 || (unsigned char *)(addr) >= dumped_data + DUMPED_HEAP_SIZE)
011db670 305
95ed0025 306void *
587fd086 307malloc_after_dump (size_t size)
95ed0025 308{
587fd086
FP
309 /* Use the new private heap. */
310 void *p = HeapAlloc (heap, 0, size);
ce20e03e 311
0dd0ad37 312 /* After dump, keep track of the "brk value" for sbrk(0). */
6c572f9a 313 if (p)
0dd0ad37
EZ
314 {
315 unsigned char *new_brk = (unsigned char *)p + size;
316
317 if (new_brk > data_region_end)
318 data_region_end = new_brk;
319 }
6c572f9a
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320 else
321 errno = ENOMEM;
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322 return p;
323}
ce20e03e 324
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325void *
326malloc_before_dump (size_t size)
327{
328 void *p;
329
330 /* Before dumping. The private heap can handle only requests for
331 less than MaxBlockSize. */
332 if (size < MaxBlockSize)
333 {
334 /* Use the private heap if possible. */
335 p = HeapAlloc (heap, 0, size);
6c572f9a
EZ
336 if (!p)
337 errno = ENOMEM;
587fd086
FP
338 }
339 else
95ed0025 340 {
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341 /* Find the first big chunk that can hold the requested size. */
342 int i = 0;
343
344 for (i = 0; i < blocks_number; i++)
345 {
346 if (blocks[i].occupied == 0 && blocks[i].size >= size)
347 break;
348 }
349 if (i < blocks_number)
3bbabc43 350 {
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FP
351 /* If found, use it. */
352 p = blocks[i].address;
353 blocks[i].occupied = TRUE;
354 }
355 else
356 {
357 /* Allocate a new big chunk from the end of the dumped_data
358 array. */
359 if (blocks_number >= MAX_BLOCKS)
360 {
361 fprintf(stderr,
362 "malloc_before_dump: no more big chunks available.\nEnlarge MAX_BLOCKS!\n");
363 exit (-1);
364 }
365 bc_limit -= size;
366 bc_limit = (unsigned char *)ROUND_DOWN (bc_limit, 0x10);
367 p = bc_limit;
368 blocks[blocks_number].address = p;
369 blocks[blocks_number].size = size;
370 blocks[blocks_number].occupied = TRUE;
371 blocks_number++;
372 if (bc_limit < dumped_data + committed)
373 {
374 /* Check that areas do not overlap. */
375 fprintf(stderr,
376 "malloc_before_dump: memory exhausted.\nEnlarge dumped_data[]!\n");
377 exit (-1);
378 }
379 }
380 }
381 return p;
382}
383
384/* Re-allocate the previously allocated block in ptr, making the new
385 block SIZE bytes long. */
386void *
387realloc_after_dump (void *ptr, size_t size)
388{
389 void *p;
95ed0025 390
587fd086
FP
391 /* After dumping. */
392 if (FREEABLE_P (ptr))
393 {
394 /* Reallocate the block since it lies in the new heap. */
395 p = HeapReAlloc (heap, 0, ptr, size);
6c572f9a
EZ
396 if (!p)
397 errno = ENOMEM;
ce20e03e 398 }
587fd086 399 else
95ed0025 400 {
587fd086
FP
401 /* If the block lies in the dumped data, do not free it. Only
402 allocate a new one. */
403 p = HeapAlloc (heap, 0, size);
6c572f9a
EZ
404 if (p)
405 CopyMemory (p, ptr, size);
406 else
407 errno = ENOMEM;
95ed0025 408 }
0dd0ad37 409 /* After dump, keep track of the "brk value" for sbrk(0). */
6c572f9a 410 if (p)
0dd0ad37
EZ
411 {
412 unsigned char *new_brk = (unsigned char *)p + size;
413
414 if (new_brk > data_region_end)
415 data_region_end = new_brk;
416 }
587fd086
FP
417 return p;
418}
ce20e03e 419
587fd086
FP
420void *
421realloc_before_dump (void *ptr, size_t size)
422{
423 void *p;
424
425 /* Before dumping. */
426 if (dumped_data < (unsigned char *)ptr
427 && (unsigned char *)ptr < bc_limit && size <= MaxBlockSize)
6c572f9a
EZ
428 {
429 p = HeapReAlloc (heap, 0, ptr, size);
430 if (!p)
431 errno = ENOMEM;
432 }
587fd086
FP
433 else
434 {
435 /* In this case, either the new block is too large for the heap,
436 or the old block was already too large. In both cases,
437 malloc_before_dump() and free_before_dump() will take care of
438 reallocation. */
439 p = malloc_before_dump (size);
be04283a
EZ
440 /* If SIZE is below MaxBlockSize, malloc_before_dump will try to
441 allocate it in the fixed heap. If that fails, we could have
442 kept the block in its original place, above bc_limit, instead
443 of failing the call as below. But this doesn't seem to be
444 worth the added complexity, as loadup allocates only a very
445 small number of large blocks, and never reallocates them. */
6c572f9a
EZ
446 if (p)
447 {
448 CopyMemory (p, ptr, size);
449 free_before_dump (ptr);
450 }
587fd086
FP
451 }
452 return p;
95ed0025
RS
453}
454
587fd086 455/* Free a block allocated by `malloc', `realloc' or `calloc'. */
95ed0025 456void
587fd086 457free_after_dump (void *ptr)
95ed0025 458{
587fd086
FP
459 /* After dumping. */
460 if (FREEABLE_P (ptr))
461 {
462 /* Free the block if it is in the new private heap. */
463 HeapFree (heap, 0, ptr);
464 }
465}
30d2b1c2 466
587fd086
FP
467void
468free_before_dump (void *ptr)
469{
470 /* Before dumping. */
471 if (dumped_data < (unsigned char *)ptr
472 && (unsigned char *)ptr < bc_limit)
30d2b1c2 473 {
587fd086
FP
474 /* Free the block if it is allocated in the private heap. */
475 HeapFree (heap, 0, ptr);
476 }
477 else
478 {
479 /* Look for the big chunk. */
480 int i;
30d2b1c2 481
587fd086 482 for(i = 0; i < blocks_number; i++)
30d2b1c2 483 {
587fd086
FP
484 if (blocks[i].address == ptr)
485 {
486 /* Reset block occupation if found. */
487 blocks[i].occupied = 0;
488 break;
489 }
490 /* What if the block is not found? We should trigger an
491 error here. */
492 eassert (i < blocks_number);
30d2b1c2 493 }
30d2b1c2 494 }
587fd086
FP
495}
496
d2ff520a
EZ
497#ifdef ENABLE_CHECKING
498void
499report_temacs_memory_usage (void)
500{
501 /* Emulate 'message', which writes to stderr in non-interactive
502 sessions. */
503 fprintf (stderr,
504 "Dump memory usage: Heap: %" PRIu64 " Large blocks(%lu): %" PRIu64 "\n",
505 (unsigned long long)committed, blocks_number,
506 (unsigned long long)(dumped_data + DUMPED_HEAP_SIZE - bc_limit));
507}
508#endif
509
587fd086
FP
510/* Emulate getpagesize. */
511int
512getpagesize (void)
513{
514 return sysinfo_cache.dwPageSize;
515}
516
517void *
518sbrk (ptrdiff_t increment)
519{
0dd0ad37
EZ
520 /* data_region_end is the address beyond the last allocated byte.
521 The sbrk() function is not emulated at all, except for a 0 value
522 of its parameter. This is needed by the Emacs Lisp function
523 `memory-limit'. */
524 eassert (increment == 0);
587fd086
FP
525 return data_region_end;
526}
527
528#define MAX_BUFFER_SIZE (512 * 1024 * 1024)
529
530/* MMAP allocation for buffers. */
531void *
532mmap_alloc (void **var, size_t nbytes)
533{
534 void *p = NULL;
535
536 /* We implement amortized allocation. We start by reserving twice
537 the size requested and commit only the size requested. Then
538 realloc could proceed and use the reserved pages, reallocating
539 only if needed. Buffer shrink would happen only so that we stay
540 in the 2x range. This is a big win when visiting compressed
541 files, where the final size of the buffer is not known in
542 advance, and the buffer is enlarged several times as the data is
543 decompressed on the fly. */
544 if (nbytes < MAX_BUFFER_SIZE)
545 p = VirtualAlloc (NULL, (nbytes * 2), MEM_RESERVE, PAGE_READWRITE);
546
547 /* If it fails, or if the request is above 512MB, try with the
548 requested size. */
549 if (p == NULL)
550 p = VirtualAlloc (NULL, nbytes, MEM_RESERVE, PAGE_READWRITE);
551
552 if (p != NULL)
30d2b1c2 553 {
587fd086
FP
554 /* Now, commit pages for NBYTES. */
555 *var = VirtualAlloc (p, nbytes, MEM_COMMIT, PAGE_READWRITE);
30d2b1c2 556 }
801f68b9 557
6c572f9a
EZ
558 if (!p)
559 {
560 if (GetLastError () == ERROR_NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY)
561 errno = ENOMEM;
562 else
563 {
564 DebPrint (("mmap_alloc: error %ld\n", GetLastError ()));
565 errno = EINVAL;
566 }
567 }
587fd086
FP
568
569 return *var = p;
95ed0025
RS
570}
571
95ed0025 572void
587fd086 573mmap_free (void **var)
95ed0025 574{
587fd086
FP
575 if (*var)
576 {
577 if (VirtualFree (*var, 0, MEM_RELEASE) == 0)
6c572f9a 578 DebPrint (("mmap_free: error %ld\n", GetLastError ()));
587fd086
FP
579 *var = NULL;
580 }
581}
ce20e03e 582
587fd086
FP
583void *
584mmap_realloc (void **var, size_t nbytes)
585{
586 MEMORY_BASIC_INFORMATION memInfo, m2;
587
588 if (*var == NULL)
589 return mmap_alloc (var, nbytes);
590
591 /* This case happens in init_buffer(). */
592 if (nbytes == 0)
593 {
594 mmap_free (var);
595 return mmap_alloc (var, nbytes);
596 }
597
598 if (VirtualQuery (*var, &memInfo, sizeof (memInfo)) == 0)
6c572f9a 599 DebPrint (("mmap_realloc: VirtualQuery error = %ld\n", GetLastError ()));
587fd086
FP
600
601 /* We need to enlarge the block. */
602 if (memInfo.RegionSize < nbytes)
603 {
604 if (VirtualQuery (*var + memInfo.RegionSize, &m2, sizeof(m2)) == 0)
6c572f9a
EZ
605 DebPrint (("mmap_realloc: VirtualQuery error = %ld\n",
606 GetLastError ()));
587fd086
FP
607 /* If there is enough room in the current reserved area, then
608 commit more pages as needed. */
609 if (m2.State == MEM_RESERVE
610 && nbytes <= memInfo.RegionSize + m2.RegionSize)
611 {
612 void *p;
613
614 p = VirtualAlloc (*var + memInfo.RegionSize,
615 nbytes - memInfo.RegionSize,
616 MEM_COMMIT, PAGE_READWRITE);
617 if (!p /* && GetLastError() != ERROR_NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY */)
6c572f9a
EZ
618 {
619 DebPrint (("realloc enlarge: VirtualAlloc error %ld\n",
620 GetLastError ()));
621 errno = ENOMEM;
622 }
587fd086
FP
623 return *var;
624 }
625 else
626 {
627 /* Else we must actually enlarge the block by allocating a
628 new one and copying previous contents from the old to the
629 new one. */
630 void *old_ptr = *var;
631
632 if (mmap_alloc (var, nbytes))
633 {
634 CopyMemory (*var, old_ptr, memInfo.RegionSize);
635 mmap_free (&old_ptr);
636 return *var;
637 }
638 else
639 {
640 /* We failed to enlarge the buffer. */
641 *var = old_ptr;
642 return NULL;
643 }
644 }
645 }
646
647 /* If we are shrinking by more than one page... */
648 if (memInfo.RegionSize > nbytes + getpagesize())
649 {
650 /* If we are shrinking a lot... */
651 if ((memInfo.RegionSize / 2) > nbytes)
652 {
653 /* Let's give some memory back to the system and release
654 some pages. */
655 void *old_ptr = *var;
656
657 if (mmap_alloc (var, nbytes))
658 {
659 CopyMemory (*var, old_ptr, nbytes);
660 mmap_free (&old_ptr);
661 return *var;
662 }
663 else
664 {
665 /* In case we fail to shrink, try to go on with the old block.
666 But that means there is a lot of memory pressure.
667 We could also decommit pages. */
668 *var = old_ptr;
669 return *var;
670 }
671 }
672
673 /* We still can decommit pages. */
674 if (VirtualFree (*var + nbytes + get_page_size(),
675 memInfo.RegionSize - nbytes - get_page_size(),
676 MEM_DECOMMIT) == 0)
6c572f9a 677 DebPrint (("mmap_realloc: VirtualFree error %ld\n", GetLastError ()));
587fd086
FP
678 return *var;
679 }
ce20e03e 680
587fd086
FP
681 /* Not enlarging, not shrinking by more than one page. */
682 return *var;
95ed0025 683}