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Full Discussion: Strange behavior in C++
Top Forums Programming Strange behavior in C++ Post 302425734 by binlib on Saturday 29th of May 2010 11:46:47 AM
Old 05-29-2010
To find out the reason, you can dig into the assembly code that g++ produced. But I guess by calling cout, g++ pushed small values onto the stack so that the uninitialized variable g doesn't have a huge value which is what happened with calling cout. With a huge value of g, the while loop is never entered, so the function returns 0 most of the time.
 

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GETHUGEPAGESIZES(3)					     Library Functions Manual					       GETHUGEPAGESIZES(3)

NAME
gethugepagesizes - Get the system supported huge page sizes SYNOPSIS
#include <hugetlbfs.h> int gethugepagesizes(long pagesizes[], int n_elem); DESCRIPTION
The gethugepagesizes() function returns either the number of system supported huge page sizes or the sizes themselves. If pagesizes is NULL and n_elem is 0, then the number of huge pages the system supports is returned. Otherwise, pagesizes is filled with at most n_elem page sizes. RETURN VALUE
On success, either the number of huge page sizes supported by the system or the number of huge page sizes stored in pagesizes is returned. On failure, -1 is returned and errno is set appropriately. ERRORS
EINVAL n_elem is less than zero or n_elem is greater than zero and pagesizes is NULL. Also see opendir(3) for other possible values for errno. This error occurs when the sysfs directory exists but cannot be opened. NOTES
This call will return all huge page sizes as reported by the kernel. Not all of these sizes may be usable by the programmer since mount points may not be available for all sizes. To test whether a size will be usable by libhugetlbfs, hugetlbfs_find_path_for_size() can be called on a specific size to see if a mount point is configured. SEE ALSO
oprofile(1), opendir(3), hugetlbfs_find_path_for_size(3), libhugetlbfs(7) AUTHORS
libhugetlbfs was written by various people on the libhugetlbfs-devel mailing list. October 10, 2008 GETHUGEPAGESIZES(3)
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