Areas¶
Declared in: |
kernel/OS.h |
Library: |
An area is a chunk of virtual memory that can be shared between threads (possibly in different teams). If your application needs to allocate large chunks of memory, or wants to share lots of data with another application, you should consider using an area.
For more on area concepts, see “Areas Overview”.
For examples of creating and sharing areas, see “Area Examples
”.
Area Functions¶
area_for()
area_id area_for(void *addr)
Returns the area that contains the given address (within your own team’s address space). The argument needn’t be the starting address of an area, nor must it start on a page boundary: If the address lies anywhere within one of your application’s areas, the ID of that area is returned.
Since the address is taken to be in the local address space, the area that’s returned will also be local—it will have been created or cloned by your application.
Return Code |
Description |
---|---|
|
The address doesn’t lie within an area. |
See also: find_area()
clone_area()
area_id clone_area(const char *clone_name, void **clone_addr, uint32 clone_addr_spec, uint32 clone_protection, area_id source_area)
Creates a new area (the clone area) that maps to the same physical memory as an existing area (the source area).
Parameter |
Description |
---|---|
clone_name |
Is the name that you wish to assign to the clone area. Area names are, at
most, |
clone_addr |
Points to a value that gives the address at which you want the clone area
to start; the pointed-to value must be a multiple of
|
clone_addr_spec |
Is one of four constants that describes how clone_addr is to be
interpreted. The first three constants, The fourth constant, |
clone_protection |
Is one or both of |
source_area |
Is the area_id of the area that you wish to clone. You usually
supply this value by passing an area name to the |
The cloned area inherits the source area’s locking scheme.
Usually, the source area and clone area are in two different applications. It’s possible to clone an area from a source that’s in the same application, but there’s not much reason to do so unless you want the areas to have different protections.
If clone_area() clone is successful, the clone’s area_id is returned. Otherwise, it returns a descriptive error code, listed below.
Return Code |
Description |
---|---|
|
Bad argument value; you passed an unrecognized constant for
addr_spec or lock, the addr value isn’t a
multiple of |
|
Not enough memory to allocate the system structures that support this area (unlikely). |
|
Some other system error prevented the area from being created. |
create_area()
area_id create_area(const char *name, void **addr, uint32 addr_spec, uint32 size, uint32 lock, uint32 protection)
Creates a new area and returns its area_id.
If create_area() is successful, the new area_id number is returned. If it’s unsuccessful, one of the following error constants is returned.
Return Code |
Description |
---|---|
|
Bad argument value. You passed an unrecognized constant for
addr_spec or lock, the addr or size
value isn’t a multiple of |
|
Not enough memory to allocate the system structures that support this area (unlikely), not enough physical memory to support a locked area, or not enough swap space to allocate virtual memory (in other words, size is too big.) |
|
Some other system error prevented the area from being created. |
delete_area()
status_t delete_area(area_id area)
Deletes the designated area. If no one other area maps to the physical memory that this area represents, the memory is freed. After being deleted, the area value is invalid as an area identifier.
Warning
Currently, anybody can delete any area—the act isn’t denied if, for example, the area_id argument was created by another application. This freedom will be rescinded in a later release. Until then, try to avoid deleting other application’s areas.
Return Code |
Description |
---|---|
|
The area was deleted; area is now invalid. |
|
area doesn’t designate an actual area. |
find_area()
area_id find_area(const char *name)
Returns an area that has a name that matches the argument. Area names needn’t be unique—successive calls to this function with the same argument value may not return the same area_id.
What you do with the area you’ve found depends on where it came from:
If you’re finding an area that your own application created or cloned, you can use the returned ID directly.
If the area was created or cloned by some other application, you should immediately clone the area (unless you’re doing something truly innocuous, such as simply examining the area’s info structure).
Return Code |
Description |
---|---|
|
The argument doesn’t identify an existing area. |
See also: area_for()
get_area_info(), get_next_area_info()
status_t get_area_info(area_id area, area_info *info)
status_t get_next_area_info(team_id team, int32 *cookie, area_info *info)
struct {} area_info
Copies information about a particular area into the area_info structure designated by info. The first version of the function designates the area directly, by area_id.
The get_next_area_info() version lets you step through the list of a team’s
areas through iterated calls on the function. The team argument
identifies the team you want to look at; a team value of 0 means
the team of the calling thread. The cookie argument is a
placemark; you set it to 0 on your first call, and let the function do the
rest. The function returns B_BAD_VALUE
when there are no
more areas to visit:
/* Get the area_info for every area in this team. */
area_info info;
int32 cookie = 0;
while (get_next_area_info(0, &cookie, &info) == B_OK)
...
The area_info structure is:
typedef struct area_info {
area_id area;
char name[B_OS_NAME_LENGTH];
size_t size;
uint32 lock;
uint32 protection;
team_id team;
size_t ram_size;
uint32 copy_count;
uint32 in_count;
uint32 out_count;
void* address;
} area_info;
The fields are:
Field |
Description |
---|---|
area |
Is the area_id that identifies the area. |
name |
Is the name that was assigned to the area when it was created or cloned. |
size |
Is the (virtual) size of the area, in bytes. |
lock |
Is a constant that represents the area’s locking scheme. This will be one
of |
protection |
Specifies whether the area’s memory can be read or written. It’s a
combination of |
team |
Is the team_id of the team that created or cloned this area. |
address |
Is a pointer to the area’s starting address. Keep in mind that this address is only meaningful to the team that created (or cloned) the area. |
The final four fields give information about the area that’s useful in diagnosing system use. The fields are particularly valuable if you’re hunting for memory leaks:
Field |
Description |
---|---|
ram_size |
Gives the amount of the area, in bytes, that’s currently swapped in. |
copy_count |
Is a “copy-on write” count that can be ignored—it doesn’t apply to the areas that you create. The system can create copy-on-write areas (it does so when it loads the data section of an executable, for example), but you can’t. |
in_count |
Is a count of the total number of times any of the pages in the area have been swapped in. |
out_count |
Is a count of the total number of times any of the pages in the area have been swapped out. |
Return Code |
Description |
---|---|
|
The area was found; info contains valid information. |
|
area doesn’t identify an existing area, team doesn’t identify an existing team, or there are no more areas to visit. |
resize_area()
status_t resize_area(area_id area, size_t new_size)
Sets the size of the designated area to new_size, measured in
bytes. The new_size argument must be a multiple of
B_PAGE_SIZE
(4096).
Size modifications affect the end of the area’s existing memory allocation: If you’re increasing the size of the area, the new memory is added to the end of area; if you’re shrinking the area, end pages are released and freed. In neither case does the area’s starting address change, nor is existing data modified (except, of course, for data that’s lost due to shrinkage).
Resizing affects all areas that refer to this areas physical memory. For example, if B is a clone of A, and you resize A, B will be automatically resized (if possible).
Return Code |
Description |
---|---|
|
The area was successfully resized. |
|
area doesn’t signify a valid area, or new_size isn’t a
multiple of |
|
Not enough memory to support the new portion of the area. This should only happen if you’re increasing the size of the area. |
|
Some other system error prevented the area from being created. |
set_area_protection()
status_t set_area_protection(area_id area, uint32 new_protection)
Sets the given area’s read and write protection. The new_protection
argument is a mask that specifies one or both of the values
B_READ_AREA
and B_WRITE_AREA
. The
former means that the area can be read; the latter, that it can be written
to. An area’s protection only applies to access to the underlying memory
through that specific area. Different area clones that refer to the same
memory may have different protections.
Return Code |
Description |
---|---|
|
The protection was changed. |
|
area doesn’t identify a valid area. |