Use $#array and a 4k page of COW'd memory get copied...and (at least) another 4k gets copied

This is only true if all these variables reside in different memory pages, otherwise just one page is copied (and afterwards, the copy is modified). As such, this example of events is misleading.

These piecemeal requests for another single page of VM followed by a 4k copy through ring 0 add up to far more than an up-front single request for as many pages of VM as are required followed by a single ring 3 rep mov.

Umm, when put as the general case, no. Moving stuff around in RAM is expensive. The CPU/MMU operations required to throw a page fault and allocate memory are insignificant compared to the time it takes to actually copy the data in memory. Which means that there is only a very slight difference (over the lifetime of a process) between copying the whole process address space in one move or doing so whenever a page is dirtied.

Also, for most use cases, the process will not have to read/write access its entire memory throughout its lifetime. For the far more common usage scenario, when part of the memory remains untouched and therefore shared, copy-on-write is far more efficient than copy-all-at-once (even only talking about speed, this is obviously even more true for process memory consumption).


All dogma is stupid.

In reply to Re^13: Strange memory leak using just threads (forks.pm) by tirwhan
in thread Strange memory leak using just threads by MnkyBrain

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