Another in the how-it-works series.
This commit is contained in:
parent
12ca96df93
commit
128f2650a5
|
@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
|
|||
[Not yet complete]
|
||||
Cygwin has recently adopted something called the "cygwin heap". This is
|
||||
an internal heap that is inherited by forked/execed children. It
|
||||
consists of process specific information that should be inherited. So
|
||||
things like the file descriptor table, the current working directory,
|
||||
and the chroot value live there.
|
||||
|
||||
The cygheap is also used to pass argv information to a child process.
|
||||
There is a problem here, though. If you allocate space for argv on the
|
||||
heap and then exec a process the child process (1) will happily use the
|
||||
space in the heap. But what happens when that process execs another
|
||||
process (2)? The space used by child process (1) still is being used in
|
||||
child process (2) but it is basically just a memory leak.
|
||||
|
||||
To rectify this problem, memory used by child process 1 is tagged in
|
||||
such a way that child process 2 will know to delete it. This is in
|
||||
cygheap_fixup_in_child.
|
||||
|
||||
The cygheap memory allocation functions are adapted from memory
|
||||
allocators developed by DJ Delorie. They are similar to early BSD
|
||||
malloc and are intended to be relatively lightweight and relatively
|
||||
fast.
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue