Commit Graph

63 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tim Peters d97a1c008c Lots of changes:
+ A new scheme for determining whether an address belongs to a pymalloc
  arena.  This should be 100% reliable.  The poolp->pooladdr and
  poolp->magic members are gone.  A new poolp->arenaindex member takes
  their place.  Note that the pool header overhead doesn't actually
  shrink, though, since the header is padded to a multiple of 8 bytes.

+ _PyMalloc_Free and _PyMalloc_Realloc should now be safe to call for
  any legit address, whether obtained from a _PyMalloc function or from
  the system malloc/realloc.  It should even be safe to call
   _PyMalloc_Free when *not* holding the GIL, provided that the passed-in
  address was obtained from system malloc/realloc.  Since this is
  accomplished without any locks, you better believe the code is subtle.
  I hope it's sufficiently commented.

+ The above implies we don't need the new PyMalloc_{New, NewVar, Del}
  API anymore, and could switch back to PyObject_XXX without breaking
  existing code mixing PyObject_XXX with PyMem_{Del, DEL, Free, FREE}.
  Nothing is done here about that yet, and I'd like to see this new
  code exercised more first.

+ The small object threshhold is boosted to 256 (the max).  We should
  play with that some more, but the old 64 was way too small for 2.3.

+ Getting a new arena is now done via new function new_arena().

+ Removed some unused macros, and squashed out some macros that were
  used only once to define other macros.

+ Arenas are no longer linked together.  A new vector of arena base
  addresses had to be created anyway to make address classification
  bulletproof.

+ A lot of the patch size is an illusion:  given the way address
  classification works now, it was more convenient to switch the
  sense of the prime "if" tests in the realloc and free functions,
  so the "if" and "else" blocks got swapped.

+ Assorted minor code, comment and whitespace cleanup.

Back to the Windows installer <wink>.
2002-03-30 06:09:22 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer bd02b14255 Add missing "void" to function. 2002-03-28 21:05:38 +00:00
Tim Peters d1139e043c PYMALLOC_DEBUG routines: The "check API family" gimmick was going nowhere
fast, and just cluttered the code.  Get rid of it for now.  If a compelling
case can be made for it, easy to restore it later.
2002-03-28 07:32:11 +00:00
Tim Peters e085017ab7 _PyMalloc_DebugRealloc(): simplify decl of "fresh".
Assorted:  bump the serial number via a trivial new bumpserialno()
function.  The point is to give a single place to set a breakpoint when
waiting for a specific serial number.
2002-03-24 00:34:21 +00:00
Tim Peters 62c06ba6a9 Minor code cleanup -- no semantic changes. 2002-03-23 22:28:18 +00:00
Tim Peters ddea208be9 Give Python a debug-mode pymalloc, much as sketched on Python-Dev.
When WITH_PYMALLOC is defined, define PYMALLOC_DEBUG to enable the debug
allocator.  This can be done independent of build type (release or debug).
A debug build automatically defines PYMALLOC_DEBUG when pymalloc is
enabled.  It's a detected error to define PYMALLOC_DEBUG when pymalloc
isn't enabled.

Two debugging entry points defined only under PYMALLOC_DEBUG:

+ _PyMalloc_DebugCheckAddress(const void *p) can be used (e.g., from gdb)
  to sanity-check a memory block obtained from pymalloc.  It sprays
  info to stderr (see next) and dies via Py_FatalError if the block is
  detectably damaged.

+ _PyMalloc_DebugDumpAddress(const void *p) can be used to spray info
  about a debug memory block to stderr.

A tiny start at implementing "API family" checks isn't good for
anything yet.

_PyMalloc_DebugRealloc() has been optimized to do little when the new
size is <= old size.  However, if the new size is larger, it really
can't call the underlying realloc() routine without either violating its
contract, or knowing something non-trivial about how the underlying
realloc() works.  A memcpy is always done in this case.

This was a disaster for (and only) one of the std tests:  test_bufio
creates single text file lines up to a million characters long.  On
Windows, fileobject.c's get_line() uses the horridly funky
getline_via_fgets(), which keeps growing and growing a string object
hoping to find a newline.  It grew the string object 1000 bytes each
time, so for a million-character string it took approximately forever
(I gave up after a few minutes).

So, also:

fileobject.c, getline_via_fgets():  When a single line is outrageously
long, grow the string object at a mildly exponential rate, instead of
just 1000 bytes at a time.

That's enough so that a debug-build test_bufio finishes in about 5 seconds
on my Win98SE box.  I'm curious to try this on Win2K, because it has very
different memory behavior than Win9X, and test_bufio always took a factor
of 10 longer to complete on Win2K.  It *could* be that the endless
reallocs were simply killing it on Win2K even in the release build.
2002-03-23 10:03:50 +00:00
Tim Peters ce7fb9b515 Just whitespace fiddling. 2002-03-23 00:28:57 +00:00
Tim Peters 1221c0a435 Build obmalloc.c directly instead of #include'ing from object.c.
Also move all _PyMalloc_XXX entry points into obmalloc.c.

The Windows build works fine.
The Unix build is changed here (Makefile.pre.in), but not tested.
No other platform's build process has been fiddled.
2002-03-23 00:20:15 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 558ba52f10 Remove malloc hooks. 2002-03-22 23:20:15 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 25f3dc21b5 Drop the PyCore_* memory API. 2002-03-18 21:06:21 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 11f5be8d88 Simpilify PyCore_* macros by assuming the function prototypes for
malloc() and free() don't change.
2002-03-18 18:13:41 +00:00
Tim Peters b2336529ef Identifiers matching _[A-Z_]\w* are reserved for C implementations.
May or may not be related to bug 407680 (obmalloc.c - looks like it's
corrupted).  This repairs the illegal vrbl names, but leaves a pile of
illegal macro names (_THIS_xxx, _SYSTEM_xxx, _SET_HOOKS, _FETCH_HOOKS).
2001-03-11 18:36:13 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer a35c688055 Add Vladimir Marangozov's object allocator. It is disabled by default. This
closes SF patch #401229.
2001-02-27 04:45:05 +00:00