| // Copyright (c) 2013 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. |
| // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be |
| // found in the LICENSE file. |
| |
| #ifndef BASE_PROCESS_MEMORY_H_ |
| #define BASE_PROCESS_MEMORY_H_ |
| |
| #include <stddef.h> |
| |
| #include "base/base_export.h" |
| #include "base/process/process_handle.h" |
| #include "build/build_config.h" |
| |
| #ifdef PVALLOC_AVAILABLE |
| // Build config explicitly tells us whether or not pvalloc is available. |
| #elif defined(LIBC_GLIBC) && !defined(USE_TCMALLOC) |
| #define PVALLOC_AVAILABLE 1 |
| #else |
| #define PVALLOC_AVAILABLE 0 |
| #endif |
| |
| namespace base { |
| |
| // Enables 'terminate on heap corruption' flag. Helps protect against heap |
| // overflow. Has no effect if the OS doesn't provide the necessary facility. |
| BASE_EXPORT void EnableTerminationOnHeapCorruption(); |
| |
| // Turns on process termination if memory runs out. |
| BASE_EXPORT void EnableTerminationOnOutOfMemory(); |
| |
| // Terminates process. Should be called only for out of memory errors. |
| // Crash reporting classifies such crashes as OOM. |
| BASE_EXPORT void TerminateBecauseOutOfMemory(size_t size); |
| |
| #if defined(OS_LINUX) || defined(OS_ANDROID) |
| BASE_EXPORT extern size_t g_oom_size; |
| |
| // The maximum allowed value for the OOM score. |
| const int kMaxOomScore = 1000; |
| |
| // This adjusts /proc/<pid>/oom_score_adj so the Linux OOM killer will |
| // prefer to kill certain process types over others. The range for the |
| // adjustment is [-1000, 1000], with [0, 1000] being user accessible. |
| // If the Linux system doesn't support the newer oom_score_adj range |
| // of [0, 1000], then we revert to using the older oom_adj, and |
| // translate the given value into [0, 15]. Some aliasing of values |
| // may occur in that case, of course. |
| BASE_EXPORT bool AdjustOOMScore(ProcessId process, int score); |
| #endif |
| |
| #if defined(OS_WIN) |
| namespace win { |
| |
| // Custom Windows exception code chosen to indicate an out of memory error. |
| // See https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/het71c37.aspx. |
| // "To make sure that you do not define a code that conflicts with an existing |
| // exception code" ... "The resulting error code should therefore have the |
| // highest four bits set to hexadecimal E." |
| // 0xe0000008 was chosen arbitrarily, as 0x00000008 is ERROR_NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY. |
| const DWORD kOomExceptionCode = 0xe0000008; |
| |
| } // namespace win |
| #endif |
| |
| // Special allocator functions for callers that want to check for OOM. |
| // These will not abort if the allocation fails even if |
| // EnableTerminationOnOutOfMemory has been called. |
| // This can be useful for huge and/or unpredictable size memory allocations. |
| // Please only use this if you really handle the case when the allocation |
| // fails. Doing otherwise would risk security. |
| // These functions may still crash on OOM when running under memory tools, |
| // specifically ASan and other sanitizers. |
| // Return value tells whether the allocation succeeded. If it fails |result| is |
| // set to NULL, otherwise it holds the memory address. |
| BASE_EXPORT WARN_UNUSED_RESULT bool UncheckedMalloc(size_t size, |
| void** result); |
| BASE_EXPORT WARN_UNUSED_RESULT bool UncheckedCalloc(size_t num_items, |
| size_t size, |
| void** result); |
| |
| } // namespace base |
| |
| #endif // BASE_PROCESS_MEMORY_H_ |