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Windows CE Memory Management

Windows CE Memory Management. Virtual Memory Simplicity Efficient use of physical memory Code and Data share-ability Protection But CE shares the address space between processes (not really switching them). Use of 32-bit Addressing. FFFF FFFF. Process Slots. Reserved for OS (on ROM?).

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Windows CE Memory Management

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  1. Windows CE Memory Management • Virtual Memory • Simplicity • Efficient use of physical memory • Code and Data share-ability • Protection • But CE shares the address space between processes (not really switching them)

  2. Use of 32-bit Addressing FFFF FFFF Process Slots Reserved for OS (on ROM?) 32 31 8000 0000 Memory-mapped Files 4200 0000 1 0 0000 0000

  3. Each process gets a 32 MB slot • But CE supports only 32 processes max • Remember processes typically need for VA 0 to some value. • This implies that a process needs to be copied to slot 0 before it can run • Context switch will swap back from slot 0 to appropriate slot.

  4. Process Address Space (32MB) DLLs Extra Heaps & Stacks Heap Primary Stack Data Code Reserved area (64K)

  5. There is not really extensive protection between processes. • A process can read and rite another process’ memory by calling ReadProcessMemory() and WriteProcessMemory(). • Question: Why cannot a process directly read/write someone else’s memory?

  6. 10 bits 10 bits 12 bits Offset Frame # Page Table Page Dir. Paging • CE implements VM via paging • Page sizes can be either 1KB or 4KB (depends on CPU) • On a x86,

  7. Memory Allocation • Stacks • Default size is 58KB • Heaps • Can use malloc()/free() • Can use HeapAlloc()/HeapFree() • Can use VirtualAlloc()/VirtualFree()

  8. Local Heap • Each process has a default local heap • Of 384 KB, and can grow based on requirements • You can allocate/de-allocate from local heap using LocalAlloc/LocalFree Ptr = (void *) LocalAlloc(LPTR, size); ….. LocalFree((HLOCAL) Ptr);

  9. Supplemental Heaps • With just 1 heap, fragmentation problems can become prevalent with multiple allocation sizes. • You may want to create multiple heap sizes, each operating for one small range of sizes.

  10. Using supplemental heaps HANDLE Hp = HeapCreate(0, // No special flag size, // Initial size 0); // No max size in CE Ptr = (void *) HeapAlloc(Hp, // Heap to allocate from HEAP_ZERO_MEMORY, // Zero it out size); ……. HeapFree(Hp, 0, Ptr); GetProcessHeap() returns handle to Local Heap

  11. Page Allocation • Can directly call VirtualAlloc()/VirtualFree() provided by CE for page level management. • These are anyway used by HeapAlloc/HeapFree (which are in turn used in implementing malloc/free). • You can reserve a group of contiguous pages (without actually allocating physical memory), or you can also commit the physical memory at the same time. • Usually, you auto-commit, i.e. you reserve and physical memory is allocated when you actually use this space

  12. VirtualAlloc() pMemPool = VirtualAlloc(NULL, POOL_SIZE, MEM_RESERVE | MEM_AUTO_COMMIT. // Can also be MEM_COMMIT PAGE_READWRITE); // Permissions ….. UncommitMemory(pMemPool,MEM_POOL_SIZE); // Has to be uncommitted before freeing! VirtualFree(pMemPool, 0, MEM_RELEASE);

  13. Uncommiting Memory UncommitMemory(LPVOID paddr, DWORD dwsize) { MaxAddr = paddr + dwsize; do { MEMORY_BASIC_INFORMATION mbi; VirtualQuery(paddr, &mbi, sizeof(mbi)); if (mbi.State & MEM_COMMIT) VirtualFree(mbi.BaseAddress, mbi.RegionSize, MEM_DECOMMIT); paddr = mbi.BaseAddress + mbi.RegionSize; } while (paddr < pMaxAddr); }

  14. Application Malloc()/new() Stack Globals LocalAlloc() HeapAlloc() VirtualAlloc() Relationship

  15. Thread Local Storage • Having globals creates problems, either in application programs or in DLLs • The variables are not actually shared! • But at the same time using different names is inconvenient. • CE provides declarations for TLBs. E.g. __declspec(thread) static int count; // Each thread has one such count

  16. Memory Shortage • It enters low memory state when available memory falls below threshold (128KB) • It sends WM_HIBERNATE signal to applns asking them to release memory, and sends WM_ACTIVATE afterwards • The memory allocation functions may start failing.

  17. Static Memory Usage • dumpbin /headers appln.exe • Dumps the virtual addresses and sizes of different sections of the program. • The common sections include • .text (executable code) • .data (global/static variables) • .rdata (read-only data – strings, constants) • .debug (debug information) • You can try to go over the static layout, move things around to lower memory needs.

  18. Dynamic Memory Usage • GlobalMemoryStatus() returns VM and PM usage info using MEMORYSTATUS structure. • Important fields of this structure • dwMemoryLoad (util, in %) • dwTotalPhys (total PM size) • dwAvailPhys (Available PM size for system) • dwTotalVirtual (total VM size) • dwAvailVirtual (available VM size for process)

  19. Remote Heap Walker • This CE utility shows all the heaps used by an executing process • For each heap, you can get what is allocated and what is free (and their addresses)

  20. CESH Utility • You can run “mi full” • It gives for every process, for each page whether it is • C (Code in ROM), R (read-only in ROM), c (Code in RAM), W (read-write in RAM), r (read-only in RAM), S (stack), O (Object store), P (pending commit), - (reserved, ready for commitment)

  21. Optimizing for Low Memory • Look at static and dynamic info for any possible optimizations • Move as much data into read-only section (CE discards this more readily than read-write) • Load data files only only when needed and write back as soon as possible. • Process the WM_HIBERNATE message • Track and fix memory leaks.

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