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authorLasse Collin <lasse.collin@tukaani.org>2020-02-01 19:56:18 +0200
committerLasse Collin <lasse.collin@tukaani.org>2020-02-01 19:56:18 +0200
commit353970510895f6a80adfe60cf71b70a95adfa8bc (patch)
tree112c8b4601bb0a90243cc7c7d4a6ad3433751e30 /m4
parentxz: Set the --flush-timeout deadline when the first input byte arrives. (diff)
downloadxz-353970510895f6a80adfe60cf71b70a95adfa8bc.tar.xz
xz: Limit --memlimit-compress to at most 4020 MiB for 32-bit xz.
See the code comment for reasoning. It's far from perfect but hopefully good enough for certain cases while hopefully doing nothing bad in other situations. At presets -5 ... -9, 4020 MiB vs. 4096 MiB makes no difference on how xz scales down the number of threads. The limit has to be a few MiB below 4096 MiB because otherwise things like "xz --lzma2=dict=500MiB" won't scale down the dict size enough and xz cannot allocate enough memory. With "ulimit -v $((4096 * 1024))" on x86-64, the limit in xz had to be no more than 4085 MiB. Some safety margin is good though. This is hack but it should be useful when running 32-bit xz on a 64-bit kernel that gives full 4 GiB address space to xz. Hopefully this is enough to solve this: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1196786 FreeBSD has a patch that limits the result in tuklib_physmem() to SIZE_MAX on 32-bit systems. While I think it's not the way to do it, the results on --memlimit-compress have been good. This commit should achieve practically identical results for compression while leaving decompression and tuklib_physmem() and thus lzma_physmem() unaffected.
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