Mailing-List: contact cygwin-developers-help AT cygwin DOT com; run by ezmlm List-Subscribe: List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: , Sender: cygwin-developers-owner AT cygwin DOT com Delivered-To: mailing list cygwin-developers AT cygwin DOT com Date: Tue, 2 Apr 2002 13:31:41 -0500 From: Christopher Faylor To: cygwin-developers AT cygwin DOT com Subject: Re: newlib/libc/stdlib/mallocr.c Message-ID: <20020402183141.GA24930@redhat.com> Reply-To: cygwin-developers AT cygwin DOT com Mail-Followup-To: cygwin-developers AT cygwin DOT com References: <3CA9A7A9 DOT 1A8AD3C5 AT yahoo DOT com> <20020402151655 DOT GB17969 AT redhat DOT com> <3CA9CD1B DOT CC324CF3 AT yahoo DOT com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Disposition: inline In-Reply-To: <3CA9CD1B.CC324CF3@yahoo.com> User-Agent: Mutt/1.3.23.1i On Tue, Apr 02, 2002 at 10:24:11AM -0500, Earnie Boyd wrote: >Christopher Faylor wrote: >> >> On Tue, Apr 02, 2002 at 07:44:25AM -0500, Earnie Boyd wrote: >> >In my modifying Cygwin source for MSYS I began having issues with malloc >> >and the offending pieces being within this source. I noticed that the >> >HAVE_MMAP macro was set to 0 by default instead of 1 by default as >> >Dave's documentation says that it does. Modifying the macro value to 1 >> >caused all of the problems I was experiencing to disappear. >> > >> >Do other Cygwin developers see benefit for a patch to newlib? >> >> Can you describe the problem? I guess it's possible that allowing this code >> would fix the out-of-memory heap issues we continually have but, the last time >> I benchmarked this, using mmap had a performance hit. This was on UNIX but >> I can't imagine it isn't the same on cygwin. >> > >I would get segmentation faults within mallocr.c. The first time it >occurred was the originating call was within the code I was adding. I >modified the code a bit and that caused the malloc's in environ.cc to >issue the segmentation faults in mallocr.c. If you need to know exactly >where in mallocr.c that was causing the problem I can most likely >reproduce it to get the failure point. SEGVs are invariably a sign of attempts to free memory that hasn't been allocated. cgf