Mail Archives: djgpp/1995/09/27/13:20:26
I'm planning on installing DJGPP on my PC (with QEMM7.04 and the buggy
DPMI (normally disabled), and a lot of diskspace and memory), because I
prefer PCs DOS to UNIX (no intention on religios wars here!), but since
some af my programs will need to run on heavy UNIX-machines because of
the calculation time, it's essential that the porting problem is almost
non-existing.
The programs are relatively simple (mainly ANSI but some CPP), the main
problem is that I'm using a lot of large arrays and perform heavy math
computations on them.
A typical skeleton of a program would look like this (simplified!):
-------------------------------
#include<stdio.h>
#include<string.h>
#include<malloc.h>
#include<math.h>
#define arraysize 1000000
int intarray[arraysize];
float floatarray[4][arraysize];
functions...
main(){
calling functions...
}
--------------------------------
Q1: Will DJGPP "eat" a program like this, or do I need some special includes?
Q2: Will the array(s) be placed/swapped on disk if I'm short on memory
(that's not a problem, as long as I can use the array!)?
Q3: Do I need to worry about implementing DPMI-calls myself, when I'm
using/allocating these large arrays, or is the memoryallocation
"invisible" for me?
NB: I've studied the FAQ (chap. 15), but it's better to be absolutely
sure :-) Sorry if I'm wasting some bandwidth.
/Paw Mullit
p.t. National Institute of Standards and Technology, Maryland
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