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Full Discussion: find size of heap allocated
Top Forums Programming find size of heap allocated Post 302520389 by achenle on Friday 6th of May 2011 09:04:39 PM
Old 05-06-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by alister
Incorrect. The "dynamic portion of the data segment" is delimited by the break. The break is manipulated with the brk() and sbrk() system calls. As its name implies, the segment is contiguous. mmap(), however, is allowed to map/allocate memory at random locations in non-contiguous segments beyond the break. Such behavior has nothing to do with the heap.

Perhaps your mmap implementation does not do so, but there's nothing to forbid it.

Alternatively, you have a very loose definition of "data segment". Smilie

Regards,
Alister
man mapmalloc

There are a lot of ways to make a heap.

Sun once even released a library that when preloaded would put your heap into shared memory. But it may have only been for SPARC, and it was definitely only for 32-bit processes. It also failed miserably for multithreaded processes, IIRC.

So I wrote a better one for a client who wanted fast restarts for a process that used about a few-hundred GB heap. We'd create and zero-fill a single huge ISM shared memory segment upon system boot, when it would be the fastest since memory wasn't fragmented yet. Then the process would start up in about 10 seconds, instead of the 10+ minutes or longer it would take to create and zero-fill the giant heap.

And yes, you have to zero-fill such a heap upon creation, or whenever your application code that by requirement has to be really, really fast may very well hang up waiting for the OS to actually create the VM page the process merely reserved with its call to brk()/sbrk(). Like trying to do a few tens of GB of IO from a SAN at a few GB/sec into a newly-created chunk of memory that hasn't actually been allocated yet... That can generate some nasty problems since the data is coming in faster than the kernel's VM code can create application pages to put them into.
 

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BRK(2)							      BSD System Calls Manual							    BRK(2)

NAME
brk, sbrk -- change data segment size LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> int brk(void *addr); void * sbrk(intptr_t incr); DESCRIPTION
The brk and sbrk functions are legacy interfaces from before the advent of modern virtual memory management. The brk() and sbrk() functions are used to change the amount of memory allocated in a process's data segment. They do this by moving the location of the ``break''. The break is the first address after the end of the process's uninitialized data segment (also known as the ``BSS''). While the actual process data segment size maintained by the kernel will only grow or shrink in page sizes, these functions allow setting the break to unaligned values (i.e. it may point to any address inside the last page of the data segment). The brk() function sets the break to addr. The sbrk() function raises the break by at least incr bytes, thus allocating at least incr bytes of new memory in the data segment. If incr is negative, the break is lowered by incr bytes. sbrk() returns the prior address of the break. The current value of the program break may be determined by calling sbrk(0). (See also end(3)). The getrlimit(2) system call may be used to determine the maximum permissible size of the data segment; it will not be possible to set the break beyond the RLIMIT_DATA rlim_max value returned from a call to getrlimit(2), e.g. ``etext + rlim.rlim_max''. (see end(3) for the defi- nition of etext). RETURN VALUES
brk() returns 0 if successful; otherwise -1 with errno set to indicate why the allocation failed. The sbrk() function returns the prior break value if successful; otherwise ((void *)-1) is returned and errno is set to indicate why the allocation failed. ERRORS
brk() or sbrk() will fail and no additional memory will be allocated if one of the following are true: [ENOMEM] The limit, as set by setrlimit(2), was exceeded. [ENOMEM] The maximum possible size of a data segment (compiled into the system) was exceeded. [ENOMEM] Insufficient space existed in the swap area to support the expansion. SEE ALSO
execve(2), getrlimit(2), mmap(2), end(3), free(3), malloc(3), sysconf(3) HISTORY
A brk() function call appeared in Version 7 AT&T UNIX. BUGS
Note that mixing brk() and sbrk() with malloc(3), free(3), and similar functions may result in non-portable program behavior. Caution is advised. Setting the break may fail due to a temporary lack of swap space. It is not possible to distinguish this from a failure caused by exceeding the maximum size of the data segment without consulting getrlimit(2). BSD
July 12, 1999 BSD
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