From ... From: Erik Naggum Subject: Re: inhibiting GC Date: 1999/06/02 Message-ID: <3137280845702221@naggum.no>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 484710897 References: mail-copies-to: never Organization: Naggum Software; +47 8800 8879; http://www.naggum.no Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp * David Bakhash | I'm interested to know if there are ways to inhibit the GC from taking | over. Suppose you have a fn that you don't want to be interrupted by the | GC. ("taking over"? is that differing from "being performed"?) there are two basic ways to avoid GC in a particular function: (1) don't cons, and (2) GC before calling it. it is not particularly hard to avoid consing, but it takes a special concern when writing the code, and you will realize that it involves doing your own local memory management, which basically means you either use all pre-allocated structures or you have to reimplement the functions that do the allocation. a non-consing CONS could re-use cons cells off of a pre-allocated list, but you would have to free them when you are done with them. the problem is basically this: when GC occurs because you're out of free memory, what would you rather do? fail, somehow? that would easily cost more than a GC would, especially if your worry is real-time response. if you are only looking to avoid global gc's, that's controllable. see the writeup in doc/cl/gc.htm in your Allegro CL installation directory. if you are looking for ways to minimize the cost of a scavenge in ACL, you can pretty much control that with the size of the newspace and the size of the oldspace allocation size. if you don't ask for global gc when oldspace is full (the default, by the way), you don't do a global gc automatically (see *GLOBAL-GC-BEHAVIOR* and *TENURED-BYTES-LIMIT*), you can do global gc when you feel like it. if your system is idle for long periods of time, you can make global GC happen in the idle time if that is more convenient. in general, you have pretty good control over the garbage collection, but I highly recommend reading the manual. this is generally tricky stuff. #:Erik -- @1999-07-22T00:37:33Z -- pi billion seconds since the turn of the century