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Full Discussion: stack region
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users stack region Post 302101014 by Perderabo on Wednesday 27th of December 2006 01:50:27 AM
Old 12-27-2006
Most solutions are going to be very specific to the exact OS involved. Poking around on FC5, I see that Linux has this kind of info available in the /proc filesystem. Excerpt from "man 5 proc":
Code:
/proc/[number]/stat
              Status   information   about   the   process.    This   is   used   by   ps(1).    It   is   defined  in
              /usr/src/linux/fs/proc/array.c.

              The fields, in order, with their proper scanf(3) format specifiers, are:
              startstack %lu
                     The address of the start of the stack.

              kstkesp %lu
                     The current value of esp (stack pointer), as found in the kernel stack page for the process.

So maybe you can look at Tru64 to see if it has anything like that.

Here is a crazy idea that might work on any OS to get a good approximate value. Earlly in main() take the address of an auto variable and store the address for future reference. Later, when you want to check the stack size, allocate a new auto variable and now subtract the addresses and take the absolute value to get an approximate stack size.
 

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pthread_attr_getstack(3C)												 pthread_attr_getstack(3C)

NAME
pthread_attr_getstack, pthread_attr_setstack - get or set stack attributes SYNOPSIS
cc -mt [ flag... ] file... -lpthread [ library... ] #include <pthread.h> int pthread_attr_getstack(const pthread_attr_t *restrict attr, void **restrict stackaddr, size_t *restrict stacksize); int pthread_attr_setstack(pthread_attr_t * attr, void *stackaddr, size_t stacksize); The pthread_attr_getstack() and pthread_attr_setstack() functions, respectively, get and set the thread creation stack attributes stackaddr and stacksize in the attr object. The stack attributes specify the area of storage to be used for the created thread's stack. The base (lowest addressable byte) of the stor- age is stackaddr, and the size of the storage is stacksize bytes. The stacksize argument must be at least {PTHREAD_STACK_MIN}. The stack- addr argument must be aligned appropriately to be used as a stack; for example, pthread_attr_setstack() might fail with EINVAL if (stack- addr & 0x7) is not 0. All pages within the stack described by stackaddr and stacksize are both readable and writable by the thread. Upon successful completion, these functions return a 0; otherwise, an error number is returned to indicate the error. The pthread_attr_getstack() function stores the stack attribute values in stackaddr and stacksize if successful. The pthread_attr_setstack() function will fail if: EINVAL The value of stacksize is less than {PTHREAD_STACK_MIN}. The pthread_attr_setstack() function may fail if: EACCES The stack page(s) described by stackaddr and stacksize are not both readable and writable by the thread. EINVAL The value of stackaddr does not have proper alignment to be used as a stack, or (stackaddr + stacksize) lacks proper align- ment. These functions are appropriate for use by applications in an environment where the stack for a thread must be placed in some particular region of memory. See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Standard | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |MT-Level |Async-Signal-Safe | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ pthread_attr_init(3C), pthread_attr_setdetachstate(3C), pthread_attr_setstacksize(3C), pthread_create(3C), attributes(5) 23 Mar 2005 pthread_attr_getstack(3C)
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