GNU bug report logs -
#24892
{s,}brk removed from FreeBSD 11.x and later, arm64 architecture
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Reported by: ashish.is <at> lostca.se (Ashish SHUKLA)
Date: Mon, 7 Nov 2016 06:09:02 UTC
Severity: important
Tags: fixed, patch
Merged with 28308
Fixed in version 26.1
Done: Noam Postavsky <npostavs <at> users.sourceforge.net>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
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On 11/09/2016 04:22 PM, Richard Stallman wrote:
> The point of memory-limit was to enable features useful for users.
> If memory-limit doesn't work any more, those features don't either.
>
> What exactly were those features? What problems did they help
> users deal with?
I assume memory-limit was an attempt to let Lisp code diagnose when
memory was getting low in Emacs, circa 1992. The memory-limit function
was added in commit 20d2471455526acfd5fe96681ea31f0eac88fae4 by Jim
Blandy on 1992-10-03. As far as I can see the function was never
successful, in the sense that this part of the code was being developed
at the time and that Emacs eventually used other methods (e.g., calls
from C to sbrk (0)) to get the information that memory-limit was returning.
> Are they completely unnecessary now? If not, can we make them
> function again? Or provide other features to deal with the same
> problems?
This particular feature, whatever it was, seems to have become
unnecessary in late 1992, soon after it was added.
This bug report was last modified 7 years and 201 days ago.
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