+2011-10-07 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu>
+
+ * alloc.c (GC_LISP_OBJECT_ALIGNMENT): Use offsetof, not __alignof__
+ or sizeof. __alignof__ gives the wrong answer on Fedora x86-64
+ with GCC 4.6.1 when configured with CC='gcc -m32' --with-wide-int;
+ this makes Emacs dump core during garbage collection on rare
+ occasions. sizeof is obviously inferior to offsetof here, so
+ stick with offsetof.
+ (GC_POINTER_ALIGNMENT): New macro.
+ (mark_memory): Omit 3rd (offset) arg; caller changed.
+ Don't assume EMACS_INT alignment is the same as pointer alignment.
+
2011-10-03 Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca>
* keyboard.c (read_key_sequence_remapped): New var.
static int live_float_p (struct mem_node *, void *);
static int live_misc_p (struct mem_node *, void *);
static void mark_maybe_object (Lisp_Object);
-static void mark_memory (void *, void *, int);
+static void mark_memory (void *, void *);
static void mem_init (void);
static struct mem_node *mem_insert (void *, void *, enum mem_type);
static void mem_insert_fixup (struct mem_node *);
}
+#ifndef GC_LISP_OBJECT_ALIGNMENT
+# define GC_LISP_OBJECT_ALIGNMENT offsetof (struct {char a; Lisp_Object b;}, b)
+#endif
+#define GC_POINTER_ALIGNMENT offsetof (struct {char a; void *b;}, b)
+
/* Mark Lisp objects referenced from the address range START+OFFSET..END
or END+OFFSET..START. */
static void
-mark_memory (void *start, void *end, int offset)
+mark_memory (void *start, void *end)
{
Lisp_Object *p;
void **pp;
+ int i;
#if GC_MARK_STACK == GC_USE_GCPROS_CHECK_ZOMBIES
nzombies = 0;
}
/* Mark Lisp_Objects. */
- for (p = (Lisp_Object *) ((char *) start + offset); (void *) p < end; ++p)
- mark_maybe_object (*p);
+ for (p = start; (void *) p < end; p++)
+ for (i = 0; i < sizeof *p; i += GC_LISP_OBJECT_ALIGNMENT)
+ mark_maybe_object (*(Lisp_Object *) ((char *) p + i));
/* Mark Lisp data pointed to. This is necessary because, in some
situations, the C compiler optimizes Lisp objects away, so that
away. The only reference to the life string is through the
pointer `s'. */
- for (pp = (void **) ((char *) start + offset); (void *) pp < end; ++pp)
- mark_maybe_pointer (*pp);
+ for (pp = start; (void *) pp < end; pp++)
+ for (i = 0; i < sizeof *pp; i += GC_POINTER_ALIGNMENT)
+ mark_maybe_pointer (*(void **) ((char *) pp + i));
}
/* setjmp will work with GCC unless NON_SAVING_SETJMP is defined in
pass starting at the start of the stack + 2. Likewise, if the
minimal alignment of Lisp_Objects on the stack is 1, four passes
would be necessary, each one starting with one byte more offset
- from the stack start.
-
- The current code assumes by default that Lisp_Objects are aligned
- equally on the stack. */
+ from the stack start. */
static void
mark_stack (void)
{
- int i;
void *end;
#ifdef HAVE___BUILTIN_UNWIND_INIT
/* This assumes that the stack is a contiguous region in memory. If
that's not the case, something has to be done here to iterate
over the stack segments. */
-#ifndef GC_LISP_OBJECT_ALIGNMENT
-#ifdef __GNUC__
-#define GC_LISP_OBJECT_ALIGNMENT __alignof__ (Lisp_Object)
-#else
-#define GC_LISP_OBJECT_ALIGNMENT sizeof (Lisp_Object)
-#endif
-#endif
- for (i = 0; i < sizeof (Lisp_Object); i += GC_LISP_OBJECT_ALIGNMENT)
- mark_memory (stack_base, end, i);
+ mark_memory (stack_base, end);
+
/* Allow for marking a secondary stack, like the register stack on the
ia64. */
#ifdef GC_MARK_SECONDARY_STACK