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Top Forums Programming Shared library with acces to shared memory. Post 302657999 by Corona688 on Monday 18th of June 2012 02:52:02 PM
Old 06-18-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by iamjag
Thanks Corona for your opinion.

I have been reading about mmap and I have understood
that you need a process running to keep the file in-memory.
Do not try to outsmart the operating system. Whether anything is in-memory is up to it -- things will get paged out at need. This includes shm segments too, so having it "purely in ram" is an illusion. Things which are frequently used will stay in memory.

Besides, with mmap, you get a file. With shm, you don't -- reboot and it's gone forever.

mmap may be actually more efficient since it doesn't need to back it with swap, only with file.
Quote:
I like the idea of a process which makes the memory available for the first time and does not need to be running later. Also, this operation could be delegated to the own library at the first time it is called. Is this posible using mmap?
Do not try to outsmart the operating system. Whether anything is in-memory, be it code or data, is up to it. There are reasons for this. Just dumping everything into memory isn't always for the best.

On some systems you can tell mmap to preload the data, or you can mlock() the segment you want to keep in, but this is generally not necessary -- especially when the amount of data isn't huge. Frequeqntly-used data will stay in memory.

If the amount of data is huge, you don't want it all in memory, only the frequently used bits which will actually fit, for efficiency reasons. Large database systems often rely on mmap and the system deciding intelligently which things belong in memory.
 

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SHMAT(2)						      BSD System Calls Manual							  SHMAT(2)

NAME
shmat, shmdt -- map/unmap shared memory SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/ipc.h> #include <sys/shm.h> void * shmat(int shmid, void *shmaddr, int shmflg); int shmdt(void *shmaddr); DESCRIPTION
shmat() maps the shared memory segment associated with the shared memory identifier shmid into the address space of the calling process. The address at which the segment is mapped is determined by the shmaddr parameter. If it is equal to 0, the system will pick an address itself. Otherwise, an attempt is made to map the shared memory segment at the address shmaddr specifies. If SHM_RND is set in shmflg, the system will round the address down to a multiple of SHMLBA bytes (SHMLBA is defined in <sys/shm.h> ). A shared memory segment can be mapped read-only by specifying the SHM_RDONLY flag in shmflg. shmdt() unmaps the shared memory segment that is currently mapped at shmaddr from the calling process' address space. shmaddr must be a value returned by a prior shmat() call. A shared memory segment will remain existant until it is removed by a call to shmctl(2) with the IPC_RMID command. RETURN VALUES
shmat() returns the address at which the shared memory segment has been mapped into the calling process' address space when successful, shmdt() returns 0 on successful completion. Otherwise, a value of -1 is returned, and the global variable errno is set to indicate the error. ERRORS
shmat() will fail if: [EACCES] The calling process has no permission to access this shared memory segment. [ENOMEM] There is not enough available data space for the calling process to map the shared memory segment. [EINVAL] shmid is not a valid shared memory identifier. shmaddr specifies an illegal address. [EMFILE] The number of shared memory segments has reached the system-wide limit. shmdt() will fail if: [EINVAL] shmaddr is not the start address of a mapped shared memory segment. SEE ALSO
shmctl(2), shmget(2), mmap(2) BSD
August 17, 1995 BSD
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