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# Windows Override
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Dynamically overriding mimalloc on Windows is robust and has the
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particular advantage to be able to redirect all malloc/free calls that go through
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the (dynamic) C runtime allocator, including those from other DLL's or libraries.
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As it intercepts all allocation calls on a low level, it can be used reliably
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on large programs that include other 3rd party components.
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There are four requirements to make the overriding work robustly:
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1. Use the C-runtime library as a DLL (using the `/MD` or `/MDd` switch).
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2. Link your program explicitly with `mimalloc-override.dll` library.
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To ensure the `mimalloc-override.dll` is loaded at run-time it is easiest to insert some
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call to the mimalloc API in the `main` function, like `mi_version()`
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(or use the `/INCLUDE:mi_version` switch on the linker). See the `mimalloc-override-test` project
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for an example on how to use this.
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3. The `mimalloc-redirect.dll` (or `mimalloc-redirect32.dll`) must be put
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in the same folder as the main `mimalloc-override.dll` at runtime (as it is a dependency of that DLL).
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The redirection DLL ensures that all calls to the C runtime malloc API get redirected to
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mimalloc functions (which reside in `mimalloc-override.dll`).
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4. Ensure the `mimalloc-override.dll` comes as early as possible in the import
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list of the final executable (so it can intercept all potential allocations).
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For best performance on Windows with C++, it
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is also recommended to also override the `new`/`delete` operations (by including
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[`mimalloc-new-delete.h`](https://github.com/microsoft/mimalloc/blob/master/include/mimalloc-new-delete.h) a single(!) source file in your project).
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The environment variable `MIMALLOC_DISABLE_REDIRECT=1` can be used to disable dynamic
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overriding at run-time. Use `MIMALLOC_VERBOSE=1` to check if mimalloc was successfully redirected.
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# Minject
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We cannot always re-link an executable with `mimalloc-override.dll`, and similarly, we cannot always
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ensure the the DLL comes first in the import table of the final executable.
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We can in many cases though patch existing executables without any recompilation
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if they are linked with the dynamic C runtime (`ucrtbase.dll`) -- just put the `mimalloc-override.dll`
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into the import table (and put `mimalloc-redirect.dll` in the same folder)
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Such patching can be done for example with [CFF Explorer](https://ntcore.com/?page_id=388)).
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The `minject` program can also do this from the command line, use `minject --help` for options.
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10
readme.md
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@ -29,6 +29,8 @@ It also includes a robust way to override the default allocator in [Windows](#ov
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bounded worst-case times with reference counting).
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bounded worst-case times with reference counting).
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Partly due to its simplicity, mimalloc has been ported to many systems (Windows, macOS,
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Partly due to its simplicity, mimalloc has been ported to many systems (Windows, macOS,
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Linux, WASM, various BSD's, Haiku, MUSL, etc) and has excellent support for dynamic overriding.
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Linux, WASM, various BSD's, Haiku, MUSL, etc) and has excellent support for dynamic overriding.
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At the same time, it is an industrial strength allocator that runs (very) large scale
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distributed services on thousands of machines with excellent worst case latencies.
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- __free list sharding__: instead of one big free list (per size class) we have
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- __free list sharding__: instead of one big free list (per size class) we have
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many smaller lists per "mimalloc page" which reduces fragmentation and
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many smaller lists per "mimalloc page" which reduces fragmentation and
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increases locality --
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increases locality --
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@ -439,7 +441,7 @@ This is provided by [`mimalloc-override.h`](https://github.com/microsoft/mimallo
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under your control or otherwise mixing of pointers from different heaps may occur!
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under your control or otherwise mixing of pointers from different heaps may occur!
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## Tools
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# Tools
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Generally, we recommend using the standard allocator with memory tracking tools, but mimalloc
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Generally, we recommend using the standard allocator with memory tracking tools, but mimalloc
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can also be build to support the [address sanitizer][asan] or the excellent [Valgrind] tool.
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can also be build to support the [address sanitizer][asan] or the excellent [Valgrind] tool.
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@ -447,7 +449,7 @@ Moreover, it can be build to support Windows event tracing ([ETW]).
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This has a small performance overhead but does allow detecting memory leaks and byte-precise
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This has a small performance overhead but does allow detecting memory leaks and byte-precise
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buffer overflows directly on final executables. See also the `test/test-wrong.c` file to test with various tools.
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buffer overflows directly on final executables. See also the `test/test-wrong.c` file to test with various tools.
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### Valgrind
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## Valgrind
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To build with [valgrind] support, use the `MI_TRACK_VALGRIND=ON` cmake option:
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To build with [valgrind] support, use the `MI_TRACK_VALGRIND=ON` cmake option:
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@ -481,7 +483,7 @@ Valgrind support is in its initial development -- please report any issues.
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[Valgrind]: https://valgrind.org/
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[Valgrind]: https://valgrind.org/
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[valgrind-soname]: https://valgrind.org/docs/manual/manual-core.html#opt.soname-synonyms
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[valgrind-soname]: https://valgrind.org/docs/manual/manual-core.html#opt.soname-synonyms
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### ASAN
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## ASAN
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To build with the address sanitizer, use the `-DMI_TRACK_ASAN=ON` cmake option:
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To build with the address sanitizer, use the `-DMI_TRACK_ASAN=ON` cmake option:
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@ -510,7 +512,7 @@ Adress sanitizer support is in its initial development -- please report any issu
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[asan]: https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizer
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[asan]: https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizer
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### ETW
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## ETW
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Event tracing for Windows ([ETW]) provides a high performance way to capture all allocations though
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Event tracing for Windows ([ETW]) provides a high performance way to capture all allocations though
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mimalloc and analyze them later. To build with ETW support, use the `-DMI_TRACK_ETW=ON` cmake option.
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mimalloc and analyze them later. To build with ETW support, use the `-DMI_TRACK_ETW=ON` cmake option.
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