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Diffstat (limited to 'compat/nedmalloc')
-rw-r--r-- | compat/nedmalloc/License.txt | 23 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | compat/nedmalloc/Readme.txt | 136 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | compat/nedmalloc/malloc.c.h | 5752 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | compat/nedmalloc/nedmalloc.c | 966 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | compat/nedmalloc/nedmalloc.h | 180 |
5 files changed, 7057 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/compat/nedmalloc/License.txt b/compat/nedmalloc/License.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..36b7cd93cd --- /dev/null +++ b/compat/nedmalloc/License.txt @@ -0,0 +1,23 @@ +Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 + +Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person or organization +obtaining a copy of the software and accompanying documentation covered by +this license (the "Software") to use, reproduce, display, distribute, +execute, and transmit the Software, and to prepare derivative works of the +Software, and to permit third-parties to whom the Software is furnished to +do so, all subject to the following: + +The copyright notices in the Software and this entire statement, including +the above license grant, this restriction and the following disclaimer, +must be included in all copies of the Software, in whole or in part, and +all derivative works of the Software, unless such copies or derivative +works are solely in the form of machine-executable object code generated by +a source language processor. + +THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR +IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, +FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TITLE AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT +SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS OR ANYONE DISTRIBUTING THE SOFTWARE BE LIABLE +FOR ANY DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, +ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER +DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. diff --git a/compat/nedmalloc/Readme.txt b/compat/nedmalloc/Readme.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..876365646e --- /dev/null +++ b/compat/nedmalloc/Readme.txt @@ -0,0 +1,136 @@ +nedalloc v1.05 15th June 2008: +-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= + +by Niall Douglas (http://www.nedprod.com/programs/portable/nedmalloc/) + +Enclosed is nedalloc, an alternative malloc implementation for multiple +threads without lock contention based on dlmalloc v2.8.4. It is more +or less a newer implementation of ptmalloc2, the standard allocator in +Linux (which is based on dlmalloc v2.7.0) but also contains a per-thread +cache for maximum CPU scalability. + +It is licensed under the Boost Software License which basically means +you can do anything you like with it. This does not apply to the malloc.c.h +file which remains copyright to others. + +It has been tested on win32 (x86), win64 (x64), Linux (x64), FreeBSD (x64) +and Apple MacOS X (x86). It works very well on all of these and is very +significantly faster than the system allocator on all of these platforms. + +By literally dropping in this allocator as a replacement for your system +allocator, you can see real world improvements of up to three times in normal +code! + +To use: +-=-=-=- +Drop in nedmalloc.h, nedmalloc.c and malloc.c.h into your project. +Configure using the instructions in nedmalloc.h. Run and enjoy. + +To test, compile test.c. It will run a comparison between your system +allocator and nedalloc and tell you how much faster nedalloc is. It also +serves as an example of usage. + +Notes: +-=-=-= +If you want the very latest version of this allocator, get it from the +TnFOX SVN repository at svn://svn.berlios.de/viewcvs/tnfox/trunk/src/nedmalloc + +Because of how nedalloc allocates an mspace per thread, it can cause +severe bloating of memory usage under certain allocation patterns. +You can substantially reduce this wastage by setting MAXTHREADSINPOOL +or the threads parameter to nedcreatepool() to a fraction of the number of +threads which would normally be in a pool at once. This will reduce +bloating at the cost of an increase in lock contention. If allocated size +is less than THREADCACHEMAX, locking is avoided 90-99% of the time and +if most of your allocations are below this value, you can safely set +MAXTHREADSINPOOL to one. + +You will suffer memory leakage unless you call neddisablethreadcache() +per pool for every thread which exits. This is because nedalloc cannot +portably know when a thread exits and thus when its thread cache can +be returned for use by other code. Don't forget pool zero, the system pool. + +For C++ type allocation patterns (where the same sizes of memory are +regularly allocated and deallocated as objects are created and destroyed), +the threadcache always benefits performance. If however your allocation +patterns are different, searching the threadcache may significantly slow +down your code - as a rule of thumb, if cache utilisation is below 80% +(see the source for neddisablethreadcache() for how to enable debug +printing in release mode) then you should disable the thread cache for +that thread. You can compile out the threadcache code by setting +THREADCACHEMAX to zero. + +Speed comparisons: +-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= +See Benchmarks.xls for details. + +The enclosed test.c can do two things: it can be a torture test or a speed +test. The speed test is designed to be a representative synthetic +memory allocator test. It works by randomly mixing allocations with frees +with half of the allocation sizes being a two power multiple less than +512 bytes (to mimic C++ stack instantiated objects) and the other half +being a simple random value less than 16Kb. + +The real world code results are from Tn's TestIO benchmark. This is a +heavily multithreaded and memory intensive benchmark with a lot of branching +and other stuff modern processors don't like so much. As you'll note, the +test doesn't show the benefits of the threadcache mostly due to the saturation +of the memory bus being the limiting factor. + +ChangeLog: +-=-=-=-=-= +v1.05 15th June 2008: + * { 1042 } Added error check for TLSSET() and TLSFREE() macros. Thanks to +Markus Elfring for reporting this. + * { 1043 } Fixed a segfault when freeing memory allocated using +nedindependent_comalloc(). Thanks to Pavel Vozenilek for reporting this. + +v1.04 14th July 2007: + * Fixed a bug with the new optimised implementation that failed to lock +on a realloc under certain conditions. + * Fixed lack of thread synchronisation in InitPool() causing pool corruption + * Fixed a memory leak of thread cache contents on disabling. Thanks to Earl +Chew for reporting this. + * Added a sanity check for freed blocks being valid. + * Reworked test.c into being a torture test. + * Fixed GCC assembler optimisation misspecification + +v1.04alpha_svn915 7th October 2006: + * Fixed failure to unlock thread cache list if allocating a new list failed. +Thanks to Dmitry Chichkov for reporting this. Futher thanks to Aleksey Sanin. + * Fixed realloc(0, <size>) segfaulting. Thanks to Dmitry Chichkov for +reporting this. + * Made config defines #ifndef so they can be overriden by the build system. +Thanks to Aleksey Sanin for suggesting this. + * Fixed deadlock in nedprealloc() due to unnecessary locking of preferred +thread mspace when mspace_realloc() always uses the original block's mspace +anyway. Thanks to Aleksey Sanin for reporting this. + * Made some speed improvements by hacking mspace_malloc() to no longer lock +its mspace, thus allowing the recursive mutex implementation to be removed +with an associated speed increase. Thanks to Aleksey Sanin for suggesting this. + * Fixed a bug where allocating mspaces overran its max limit. Thanks to +Aleksey Sanin for reporting this. + +v1.03 10th July 2006: + * Fixed memory corruption bug in threadcache code which only appeared with >4 +threads and in heavy use of the threadcache. + +v1.02 15th May 2006: + * Integrated dlmalloc v2.8.4, fixing the win32 memory release problem and +improving performance still further. Speed is now up to twice the speed of v1.01 +(average is 67% faster). + * Fixed win32 critical section implementation. Thanks to Pavel Kuznetsov +for reporting this. + * Wasn't locking mspace if all mspaces were locked. Thanks to Pavel Kuznetsov +for reporting this. + * Added Apple Mac OS X support. + +v1.01 24th February 2006: + * Fixed multiprocessor scaling problems by removing sources of cache sloshing + * Earl Chew <earl_chew <at> agilent <dot> com> sent patches for the following: + 1. size2binidx() wasn't working for default code path (non x86) + 2. Fixed failure to release mspace lock under certain circumstances which + caused a deadlock + +v1.00 1st January 2006: + * First release diff --git a/compat/nedmalloc/malloc.c.h b/compat/nedmalloc/malloc.c.h new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..74c42e3162 --- /dev/null +++ b/compat/nedmalloc/malloc.c.h @@ -0,0 +1,5752 @@ +/* + This is a version (aka dlmalloc) of malloc/free/realloc written by + Doug Lea and released to the public domain, as explained at + http://creativecommons.org/licenses/publicdomain. Send questions, + comments, complaints, performance data, etc to dl@cs.oswego.edu + +* Version pre-2.8.4 Mon Nov 27 11:22:37 2006 (dl at gee) + + Note: There may be an updated version of this malloc obtainable at + ftp://gee.cs.oswego.edu/pub/misc/malloc.c + Check before installing! + +* Quickstart + + This library is all in one file to simplify the most common usage: + ftp it, compile it (-O3), and link it into another program. All of + the compile-time options default to reasonable values for use on + most platforms. You might later want to step through various + compile-time and dynamic tuning options. + + For convenience, an include file for code using this malloc is at: + ftp://gee.cs.oswego.edu/pub/misc/malloc-2.8.4.h + You don't really need this .h file unless you call functions not + defined in your system include files. The .h file contains only the + excerpts from this file needed for using this malloc on ANSI C/C++ + systems, so long as you haven't changed compile-time options about + naming and tuning parameters. If you do, then you can create your + own malloc.h that does include all settings by cutting at the point + indicated below. Note that you may already by default be using a C + library containing a malloc that is based on some version of this + malloc (for example in linux). You might still want to use the one + in this file to customize settings or to avoid overheads associated + with library versions. + +* Vital statistics: + + Supported pointer/size_t representation: 4 or 8 bytes + size_t MUST be an unsigned type of the same width as + pointers. (If you are using an ancient system that declares + size_t as a signed type, or need it to be a different width + than pointers, you can use a previous release of this malloc + (e.g. 2.7.2) supporting these.) + + Alignment: 8 bytes (default) + This suffices for nearly all current machines and C compilers. + However, you can define MALLOC_ALIGNMENT to be wider than this + if necessary (up to 128bytes), at the expense of using more space. + + Minimum overhead per allocated chunk: 4 or 8 bytes (if 4byte sizes) + 8 or 16 bytes (if 8byte sizes) + Each malloced chunk has a hidden word of overhead holding size + and status information, and additional cross-check word + if FOOTERS is defined. + + Minimum allocated size: 4-byte ptrs: 16 bytes (including overhead) + 8-byte ptrs: 32 bytes (including overhead) + + Even a request for zero bytes (i.e., malloc(0)) returns a + pointer to something of the minimum allocatable size. + The maximum overhead wastage (i.e., number of extra bytes + allocated than were requested in malloc) is less than or equal + to the minimum size, except for requests >= mmap_threshold that + are serviced via mmap(), where the worst case wastage is about + 32 bytes plus the remainder from a system page (the minimal + mmap unit); typically 4096 or 8192 bytes. + + Security: static-safe; optionally more or less + The "security" of malloc refers to the ability of malicious + code to accentuate the effects of errors (for example, freeing + space that is not currently malloc'ed or overwriting past the + ends of chunks) in code that calls malloc. This malloc + guarantees not to modify any memory locations below the base of + heap, i.e., static variables, even in the presence of usage + errors. The routines additionally detect most improper frees + and reallocs. All this holds as long as the static bookkeeping + for malloc itself is not corrupted by some other means. This + is only one aspect of security -- these checks do not, and + cannot, detect all possible programming errors. + + If FOOTERS is defined nonzero, then each allocated chunk + carries an additional check word to verify that it was malloced + from its space. These check words are the same within each + execution of a program using malloc, but differ across + executions, so externally crafted fake chunks cannot be + freed. This improves security by rejecting frees/reallocs that + could corrupt heap memory, in addition to the checks preventing + writes to statics that are always on. This may further improve + security at the expense of time and space overhead. (Note that + FOOTERS may also be worth using with MSPACES.) + + By default detected errors cause the program to abort (calling + "abort()"). You can override this to instead proceed past + errors by defining PROCEED_ON_ERROR. In this case, a bad free + has no effect, and a malloc that encounters a bad address + caused by user overwrites will ignore the bad address by + dropping pointers and indices to all known memory. This may + be appropriate for programs that should continue if at all + possible in the face of programming errors, although they may + run out of memory because dropped memory is never reclaimed. + + If you don't like either of these options, you can define + CORRUPTION_ERROR_ACTION and USAGE_ERROR_ACTION to do anything + else. And if if you are sure that your program using malloc has + no errors or vulnerabilities, you can define INSECURE to 1, + which might (or might not) provide a small performance improvement. + + Thread-safety: NOT thread-safe unless USE_LOCKS defined + When USE_LOCKS is defined, each public call to malloc, free, + etc is surrounded with either a pthread mutex or a win32 + spinlock (depending on WIN32). This is not especially fast, and + can be a major bottleneck. It is designed only to provide + minimal protection in concurrent environments, and to provide a + basis for extensions. If you are using malloc in a concurrent + program, consider instead using nedmalloc + (http://www.nedprod.com/programs/portable/nedmalloc/) or + ptmalloc (See http://www.malloc.de), which are derived + from versions of this malloc. + + System requirements: Any combination of MORECORE and/or MMAP/MUNMAP + This malloc can use unix sbrk or any emulation (invoked using + the CALL_MORECORE macro) and/or mmap/munmap or any emulation + (invoked using CALL_MMAP/CALL_MUNMAP) to get and release system + memory. On most unix systems, it tends to work best if both + MORECORE and MMAP are enabled. On Win32, it uses emulations + based on VirtualAlloc. It also uses common C library functions + like memset. + + Compliance: I believe it is compliant with the Single Unix Specification + (See http://www.unix.org). Also SVID/XPG, ANSI C, and probably + others as well. + +* Overview of algorithms + + This is not the fastest, most space-conserving, most portable, or + most tunable malloc ever written. However it is among the fastest + while also being among the most space-conserving, portable and + tunable. Consistent balance across these factors results in a good + general-purpose allocator for malloc-intensive programs. + + In most ways, this malloc is a best-fit allocator. Generally, it + chooses the best-fitting existing chunk for a request, with ties + broken in approximately least-recently-used order. (This strategy + normally maintains low fragmentation.) However, for requests less + than 256bytes, it deviates from best-fit when there is not an + exactly fitting available chunk by preferring to use space adjacent + to that used for the previous small request, as well as by breaking + ties in approximately most-recently-used order. (These enhance + locality of series of small allocations.) And for very large requests + (>= 256Kb by default), it relies on system memory mapping + facilities, if supported. (This helps avoid carrying around and + possibly fragmenting memory used only for large chunks.) + + All operations (except malloc_stats and mallinfo) have execution + times that are bounded by a constant factor of the number of bits in + a size_t, not counting any clearing in calloc or copying in realloc, + or actions surrounding MORECORE and MMAP that have times + proportional to the number of non-contiguous regions returned by + system allocation routines, which is often just 1. In real-time + applications, you can optionally suppress segment traversals using + NO_SEGMENT_TRAVERSAL, which assures bounded execution even when + system allocators return non-contiguous spaces, at the typical + expense of carrying around more memory and increased fragmentation. + + The implementation is not very modular and seriously overuses + macros. Perhaps someday all C compilers will do as good a job + inlining modular code as can now be done by brute-force expansion, + but now, enough of them seem not to. + + Some compilers issue a lot of warnings about code that is + dead/unreachable only on some platforms, and also about intentional + uses of negation on unsigned types. All known cases of each can be + ignored. + + For a longer but out of date high-level description, see + http://gee.cs.oswego.edu/dl/html/malloc.html + +* MSPACES + If MSPACES is defined, then in addition to malloc, free, etc., + this file also defines mspace_malloc, mspace_free, etc. These + are versions of malloc routines that take an "mspace" argument + obtained using create_mspace, to control all internal bookkeeping. + If ONLY_MSPACES is defined, only these versions are compiled. + So if you would like to use this allocator for only some allocations, + and your system malloc for others, you can compile with + ONLY_MSPACES and then do something like... + static mspace mymspace = create_mspace(0,0); // for example + #define mymalloc(bytes) mspace_malloc(mymspace, bytes) + + (Note: If you only need one instance of an mspace, you can instead + use "USE_DL_PREFIX" to relabel the global malloc.) + + You can similarly create thread-local allocators by storing + mspaces as thread-locals. For example: + static __thread mspace tlms = 0; + void* tlmalloc(size_t bytes) { + if (tlms == 0) tlms = create_mspace(0, 0); + return mspace_malloc(tlms, bytes); + } + void tlfree(void* mem) { mspace_free(tlms, mem); } + + Unless FOOTERS is defined, each mspace is completely independent. + You cannot allocate from one and free to another (although + conformance is only weakly checked, so usage errors are not always + caught). If FOOTERS is defined, then each chunk carries around a tag + indicating its originating mspace, and frees are directed to their + originating spaces. + + ------------------------- Compile-time options --------------------------- + +Be careful in setting #define values for numerical constants of type +size_t. On some systems, literal values are not automatically extended +to size_t precision unless they are explicitly casted. You can also +use the symbolic values MAX_SIZE_T, SIZE_T_ONE, etc below. + +WIN32 default: defined if _WIN32 defined + Defining WIN32 sets up defaults for MS environment and compilers. + Otherwise defaults are for unix. Beware that there seem to be some + cases where this malloc might not be a pure drop-in replacement for + Win32 malloc: Random-looking failures from Win32 GDI API's (eg; + SetDIBits()) may be due to bugs in some video driver implementations + when pixel buffers are malloc()ed, and the region spans more than + one VirtualAlloc()ed region. Because dlmalloc uses a small (64Kb) + default granularity, pixel buffers may straddle virtual allocation + regions more often than when using the Microsoft allocator. You can + avoid this by using VirtualAlloc() and VirtualFree() for all pixel + buffers rather than using malloc(). If this is not possible, + recompile this malloc with a larger DEFAULT_GRANULARITY. + +MALLOC_ALIGNMENT default: (size_t)8 + Controls the minimum alignment for malloc'ed chunks. It must be a + power of two and at least 8, even on machines for which smaller + alignments would suffice. It may be defined as larger than this + though. Note however that code and data structures are optimized for + the case of 8-byte alignment. + +MSPACES default: 0 (false) + If true, compile in support for independent allocation spaces. + This is only supported if HAVE_MMAP is true. + +ONLY_MSPACES default: 0 (false) + If true, only compile in mspace versions, not regular versions. + +USE_LOCKS default: 0 (false) + Causes each call to each public routine to be surrounded with + pthread or WIN32 mutex lock/unlock. (If set true, this can be + overridden on a per-mspace basis for mspace versions.) If set to a + non-zero value other than 1, locks are used, but their + implementation is left out, so lock functions must be supplied manually. + +USE_SPIN_LOCKS default: 1 iff USE_LOCKS and on x86 using gcc or MSC + If true, uses custom spin locks for locking. This is currently + supported only for x86 platforms using gcc or recent MS compilers. + Otherwise, posix locks or win32 critical sections are used. + +FOOTERS default: 0 + If true, provide extra checking and dispatching by placing + information in the footers of allocated chunks. This adds + space and time overhead. + +INSECURE default: 0 + If true, omit checks for usage errors and heap space overwrites. + +USE_DL_PREFIX default: NOT defined + Causes compiler to prefix all public routines with the string 'dl'. + This can be useful when you only want to use this malloc in one part + of a program, using your regular system malloc elsewhere. + +ABORT default: defined as abort() + Defines how to abort on failed checks. On most systems, a failed + check cannot die with an "assert" or even print an informative + message, because the underlying print routines in turn call malloc, + which will fail again. Generally, the best policy is to simply call + abort(). It's not very useful to do more than this because many + errors due to overwriting will show up as address faults (null, odd + addresses etc) rather than malloc-triggered checks, so will also + abort. Also, most compilers know that abort() does not return, so + can better optimize code conditionally calling it. + +PROCEED_ON_ERROR default: defined as 0 (false) + Controls whether detected bad addresses cause them to bypassed + rather than aborting. If set, detected bad arguments to free and + realloc are ignored. And all bookkeeping information is zeroed out + upon a detected overwrite of freed heap space, thus losing the + ability to ever return it from malloc again, but enabling the + application to proceed. If PROCEED_ON_ERROR is defined, the + static variable malloc_corruption_error_count is compiled in + and can be examined to see if errors have occurred. This option + generates slower code than the default abort policy. + +DEBUG default: NOT defined + The DEBUG setting is mainly intended for people trying to modify + this code or diagnose problems when porting to new platforms. + However, it may also be able to better isolate user errors than just + using runtime checks. The assertions in the check routines spell + out in more detail the assumptions and invariants underlying the + algorithms. The checking is fairly extensive, and will slow down + execution noticeably. Calling malloc_stats or mallinfo with DEBUG + set will attempt to check every non-mmapped allocated and free chunk + in the course of computing the summaries. + +ABORT_ON_ASSERT_FAILURE default: defined as 1 (true) + Debugging assertion failures can be nearly impossible if your + version of the assert macro causes malloc to be called, which will + lead to a cascade of further failures, blowing the runtime stack. + ABORT_ON_ASSERT_FAILURE cause assertions failures to call abort(), + which will usually make debugging easier. + +MALLOC_FAILURE_ACTION default: sets errno to ENOMEM, or no-op on win32 + The action to take before "return 0" when malloc fails to be able to + return memory because there is none available. + +HAVE_MORECORE default: 1 (true) unless win32 or ONLY_MSPACES + True if this system supports sbrk or an emulation of it. + +MORECORE default: sbrk + The name of the sbrk-style system routine to call to obtain more + memory. See below for guidance on writing custom MORECORE + functions. The type of the argument to sbrk/MORECORE varies across + systems. It cannot be size_t, because it supports negative + arguments, so it is normally the signed type of the same width as + size_t (sometimes declared as "intptr_t"). It doesn't much matter + though. Internally, we only call it with arguments less than half + the max value of a size_t, which should work across all reasonable + possibilities, although sometimes generating compiler warnings. + +MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS default: 1 (true) if HAVE_MORECORE + If true, take advantage of fact that consecutive calls to MORECORE + with positive arguments always return contiguous increasing + addresses. This is true of unix sbrk. It does not hurt too much to + set it true anyway, since malloc copes with non-contiguities. + Setting it false when definitely non-contiguous saves time + and possibly wasted space it would take to discover this though. + +MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM default: NOT defined + True if MORECORE cannot release space back to the system when given + negative arguments. This is generally necessary only if you are + using a hand-crafted MORECORE function that cannot handle negative + arguments. + +NO_SEGMENT_TRAVERSAL default: 0 + If non-zero, suppresses traversals of memory segments + returned by either MORECORE or CALL_MMAP. This disables + merging of segments that are contiguous, and selectively + releasing them to the OS if unused, but bounds execution times. + +HAVE_MMAP default: 1 (true) + True if this system supports mmap or an emulation of it. If so, and + HAVE_MORECORE is not true, MMAP is used for all system + allocation. If set and HAVE_MORECORE is true as well, MMAP is + primarily used to directly allocate very large blocks. It is also + used as a backup strategy in cases where MORECORE fails to provide + space from system. Note: A single call to MUNMAP is assumed to be + able to unmap memory that may have be allocated using multiple calls + to MMAP, so long as they are adjacent. + +HAVE_MREMAP default: 1 on linux, else 0 + If true realloc() uses mremap() to re-allocate large blocks and + extend or shrink allocation spaces. + +MMAP_CLEARS default: 1 except on WINCE. + True if mmap clears memory so calloc doesn't need to. This is true + for standard unix mmap using /dev/zero and on WIN32 except for WINCE. + +USE_BUILTIN_FFS default: 0 (i.e., not used) + Causes malloc to use the builtin ffs() function to compute indices. + Some compilers may recognize and intrinsify ffs to be faster than the + supplied C version. Also, the case of x86 using gcc is special-cased + to an asm instruction, so is already as fast as it can be, and so + this setting has no effect. Similarly for Win32 under recent MS compilers. + (On most x86s, the asm version is only slightly faster than the C version.) + +malloc_getpagesize default: derive from system includes, or 4096. + The system page size. To the extent possible, this malloc manages + memory from the system in page-size units. This may be (and + usually is) a function rather than a constant. This is ignored + if WIN32, where page size is determined using getSystemInfo during + initialization. + +USE_DEV_RANDOM default: 0 (i.e., not used) + Causes malloc to use /dev/random to initialize secure magic seed for + stamping footers. Otherwise, the current time is used. + +NO_MALLINFO default: 0 + If defined, don't compile "mallinfo". This can be a simple way + of dealing with mismatches between system declarations and + those in this file. + +MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE default: size_t + The type of the fields in the mallinfo struct. This was originally + defined as "int" in SVID etc, but is more usefully defined as + size_t. The value is used only if HAVE_USR_INCLUDE_MALLOC_H is not set + +REALLOC_ZERO_BYTES_FREES default: not defined + This should be set if a call to realloc with zero bytes should + be the same as a call to free. Some people think it should. Otherwise, + since this malloc returns a unique pointer for malloc(0), so does + realloc(p, 0). + +LACKS_UNISTD_H, LACKS_FCNTL_H, LACKS_SYS_PARAM_H, LACKS_SYS_MMAN_H +LACKS_STRINGS_H, LACKS_STRING_H, LACKS_SYS_TYPES_H, LACKS_ERRNO_H +LACKS_STDLIB_H default: NOT defined unless on WIN32 + Define these if your system does not have these header files. + You might need to manually insert some of the declarations they provide. + +DEFAULT_GRANULARITY default: page size if MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS, + system_info.dwAllocationGranularity in WIN32, + otherwise 64K. + Also settable using mallopt(M_GRANULARITY, x) + The unit for allocating and deallocating memory from the system. On + most systems with contiguous MORECORE, there is no reason to + make this more than a page. However, systems with MMAP tend to + either require or encourage larger granularities. You can increase + this value to prevent system allocation functions to be called so + often, especially if they are slow. The value must be at least one + page and must be a power of two. Setting to 0 causes initialization + to either page size or win32 region size. (Note: In previous + versions of malloc, the equivalent of this option was called + "TOP_PAD") + +DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD default: 2MB + Also settable using mallopt(M_TRIM_THRESHOLD, x) + The maximum amount of unused top-most memory to keep before + releasing via malloc_trim in free(). Automatic trimming is mainly + useful in long-lived programs using contiguous MORECORE. Because + trimming via sbrk can be slow on some systems, and can sometimes be + wasteful (in cases where programs immediately afterward allocate + more large chunks) the value should be high enough so that your + overall system performance would improve by releasing this much + memory. As a rough guide, you might set to a value close to the + average size of a process (program) running on your system. + Releasing this much memory would allow such a process to run in + memory. Generally, it is worth tuning trim thresholds when a + program undergoes phases where several large chunks are allocated + and released in ways that can reuse each other's storage, perhaps + mixed with phases where there are no such chunks at all. The trim + value must be greater than page size to have any useful effect. To + disable trimming completely, you can set to MAX_SIZE_T. Note that the trick + some people use of mallocing a huge space and then freeing it at + program startup, in an attempt to reserve system memory, doesn't + have the intended effect under automatic trimming, since that memory + will immediately be returned to the system. + +DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD default: 256K + Also settable using mallopt(M_MMAP_THRESHOLD, x) + The request size threshold for using MMAP to directly service a + request. Requests of at least this size that cannot be allocated + using already-existing space will be serviced via mmap. (If enough + normal freed space already exists it is used instead.) Using mmap + segregates relatively large chunks of memory so that they can be + individually obtained and released from the host system. A request + serviced through mmap is never reused by any other request (at least + not directly; the system may just so happen to remap successive + requests to the same locations). Segregating space in this way has + the benefits that: Mmapped space can always be individually released + back to the system, which helps keep the system level memory demands + of a long-lived program low. Also, mapped memory doesn't become + `locked' between other chunks, as can happen with normally allocated + chunks, which means that even trimming via malloc_trim would not + release them. However, it has the disadvantage that the space + cannot be reclaimed, consolidated, and then used to service later + requests, as happens with normal chunks. The advantages of mmap + nearly always outweigh disadvantages for "large" chunks, but the + value of "large" may vary across systems. The default is an + empirically derived value that works well in most systems. You can + disable mmap by setting to MAX_SIZE_T. + +MAX_RELEASE_CHECK_RATE default: 4095 unless not HAVE_MMAP + The number of consolidated frees between checks to release + unused segments when freeing. When using non-contiguous segments, + especially with multiple mspaces, checking only for topmost space + doesn't always suffice to trigger trimming. To compensate for this, + free() will, with a period of MAX_RELEASE_CHECK_RATE (or the + current number of segments, if greater) try to release unused + segments to the OS when freeing chunks that result in + consolidation. The best value for this parameter is a compromise + between slowing down frees with relatively costly checks that + rarely trigger versus holding on to unused memory. To effectively + disable, set to MAX_SIZE_T. This may lead to a very slight speed + improvement at the expense of carrying around more memory. +*/ + +/* Version identifier to allow people to support multiple versions */ +#ifndef DLMALLOC_VERSION +#define DLMALLOC_VERSION 20804 +#endif /* DLMALLOC_VERSION */ + +#ifndef WIN32 +#ifdef _WIN32 +#define WIN32 1 +#endif /* _WIN32 */ +#ifdef _WIN32_WCE +#define LACKS_FCNTL_H +#define WIN32 1 +#endif /* _WIN32_WCE */ +#endif /* WIN32 */ +#ifdef WIN32 +#define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN +#define _WIN32_WINNT 0x403 +#include <windows.h> +#define HAVE_MMAP 1 +#define HAVE_MORECORE 0 +#define LACKS_UNISTD_H +#define LACKS_SYS_PARAM_H +#define LACKS_SYS_MMAN_H +#define LACKS_STRING_H +#define LACKS_STRINGS_H +#define LACKS_SYS_TYPES_H +#define LACKS_ERRNO_H +#ifndef MALLOC_FAILURE_ACTION +#define MALLOC_FAILURE_ACTION +#endif /* MALLOC_FAILURE_ACTION */ +#ifdef _WIN32_WCE /* WINCE reportedly does not clear */ +#define MMAP_CLEARS 0 +#else +#define MMAP_CLEARS 1 +#endif /* _WIN32_WCE */ +#endif /* WIN32 */ + +#if defined(DARWIN) || defined(_DARWIN) +/* Mac OSX docs advise not to use sbrk; it seems better to use mmap */ +#ifndef HAVE_MORECORE +#define HAVE_MORECORE 0 +#define HAVE_MMAP 1 +/* OSX allocators provide 16 byte alignment */ +#ifndef MALLOC_ALIGNMENT +#define MALLOC_ALIGNMENT ((size_t)16U) +#endif +#endif /* HAVE_MORECORE */ +#endif /* DARWIN */ + +#ifndef LACKS_SYS_TYPES_H +#include <sys/types.h> /* For size_t */ +#endif /* LACKS_SYS_TYPES_H */ + +/* The maximum possible size_t value has all bits set */ +#define MAX_SIZE_T (~(size_t)0) + +#ifndef ONLY_MSPACES +#define ONLY_MSPACES 0 /* define to a value */ +#else +#define ONLY_MSPACES 1 +#endif /* ONLY_MSPACES */ +#ifndef MSPACES +#if ONLY_MSPACES +#define MSPACES 1 +#else /* ONLY_MSPACES */ +#define MSPACES 0 +#endif /* ONLY_MSPACES */ +#endif /* MSPACES */ +#ifndef MALLOC_ALIGNMENT +#define MALLOC_ALIGNMENT ((size_t)8U) +#endif /* MALLOC_ALIGNMENT */ +#ifndef FOOTERS +#define FOOTERS 0 +#endif /* FOOTERS */ +#ifndef ABORT +#define ABORT abort() +#endif /* ABORT */ +#ifndef ABORT_ON_ASSERT_FAILURE +#define ABORT_ON_ASSERT_FAILURE 1 +#endif /* ABORT_ON_ASSERT_FAILURE */ +#ifndef PROCEED_ON_ERROR +#define PROCEED_ON_ERROR 0 +#endif /* PROCEED_ON_ERROR */ +#ifndef USE_LOCKS +#define USE_LOCKS 0 +#endif /* USE_LOCKS */ +#ifndef USE_SPIN_LOCKS +#if USE_LOCKS && (defined(__GNUC__) && ((defined(__i386__) || defined(__x86_64__)))) || (defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER>=1310) +#define USE_SPIN_LOCKS 1 +#else +#define USE_SPIN_LOCKS 0 +#endif /* USE_LOCKS && ... */ +#endif /* USE_SPIN_LOCKS */ +#ifndef INSECURE +#define INSECURE 0 +#endif /* INSECURE */ +#ifndef HAVE_MMAP +#define HAVE_MMAP 1 +#endif /* HAVE_MMAP */ +#ifndef MMAP_CLEARS +#define MMAP_CLEARS 1 +#endif /* MMAP_CLEARS */ +#ifndef HAVE_MREMAP +#ifdef linux +#define HAVE_MREMAP 1 +#else /* linux */ +#define HAVE_MREMAP 0 +#endif /* linux */ +#endif /* HAVE_MREMAP */ +#ifndef MALLOC_FAILURE_ACTION +#define MALLOC_FAILURE_ACTION errno = ENOMEM; +#endif /* MALLOC_FAILURE_ACTION */ +#ifndef HAVE_MORECORE +#if ONLY_MSPACES +#define HAVE_MORECORE 0 +#else /* ONLY_MSPACES */ +#define HAVE_MORECORE 1 +#endif /* ONLY_MSPACES */ +#endif /* HAVE_MORECORE */ +#if !HAVE_MORECORE +#define MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS 0 +#else /* !HAVE_MORECORE */ +#define MORECORE_DEFAULT sbrk +#ifndef MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS +#define MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS 1 +#endif /* MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS */ +#endif /* HAVE_MORECORE */ +#ifndef DEFAULT_GRANULARITY +#if (MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS || defined(WIN32)) +#define DEFAULT_GRANULARITY (0) /* 0 means to compute in init_mparams */ +#else /* MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS */ +#define DEFAULT_GRANULARITY ((size_t)64U * (size_t)1024U) +#endif /* MORECORE_CONTIGUOUS */ +#endif /* DEFAULT_GRANULARITY */ +#ifndef DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD +#ifndef MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM +#define DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD ((size_t)2U * (size_t)1024U * (size_t)1024U) +#else /* MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM */ +#define DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD MAX_SIZE_T +#endif /* MORECORE_CANNOT_TRIM */ +#endif /* DEFAULT_TRIM_THRESHOLD */ +#ifndef DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD +#if HAVE_MMAP +#define DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD ((size_t)256U * (size_t)1024U) +#else /* HAVE_MMAP */ +#define DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD MAX_SIZE_T +#endif /* HAVE_MMAP */ +#endif /* DEFAULT_MMAP_THRESHOLD */ +#ifndef MAX_RELEASE_CHECK_RATE +#if HAVE_MMAP +#define MAX_RELEASE_CHECK_RATE 4095 +#else +#define MAX_RELEASE_CHECK_RATE MAX_SIZE_T +#endif /* HAVE_MMAP */ +#endif /* MAX_RELEASE_CHECK_RATE */ +#ifndef USE_BUILTIN_FFS +#define USE_BUILTIN_FFS 0 +#endif /* USE_BUILTIN_FFS */ +#ifndef USE_DEV_RANDOM +#define USE_DEV_RANDOM 0 +#endif /* USE_DEV_RANDOM */ +#ifndef NO_MALLINFO +#define NO_MALLINFO 0 +#endif /* NO_MALLINFO */ +#ifndef MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE +#define MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE size_t +#endif /* MALLINFO_FIELD_TYPE */ +#ifndef NO_SEGMENT_TRAVERSAL +#define NO_SEGMENT_TRAVERSAL 0 +#endif /* NO_SEGMENT_TRAVERSAL */ |