Bunch of grammar fixes from meyering.
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@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ Using liblzma securely
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The simplest solution is to use setrlimit() if the kernel supports
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RLIMIT_AS, which limits the memory usage of the whole process.
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For more portable and fine-grained limitting, you can use
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For more portable and fine-grained limiting, you can use
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memory limiter functions found from <lzma/memlimit.h>.
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@ -121,7 +121,7 @@ Using liblzma securely
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A single-threaded decoder should simply use a memory limiter and
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indicate an error if it runs out of memory.
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Memory-limitting with multi-threaded decoding is tricky. The simple
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Memory-limiting with multi-threaded decoding is tricky. The simple
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solution is to divide the maximum allowed memory usage with the
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maximum allowed threads, and give each Block decoder their own
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independent lzma_memory_limiter. The drawback is that if one Block
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@ -132,7 +132,7 @@ Using liblzma securely
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Depending on the application and the expected type of input, this may
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either be the best solution or a source of hard-to-repeat problems.
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Consider the following requirements:
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- You use at maximum of n threads.
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- You use a maximum of n threads.
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- x(i) is the decoder memory requirements of the Block number i
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in an expected input Stream.
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- The memory limiter is set to higher value than the sum of n
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@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ Using liblzma securely
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Most .lzma files have all the Blocks encoded with identical settings,
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or at least the memory usage won't vary dramatically. That's why most
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multi-threaded decoders probably want to use the simple "separate
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lzma_memory_limiter for each thread" solution, possibly fallbacking
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lzma_memory_limiter for each thread" solution, possibly falling back
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to single-threaded mode in case the per-thread memory limits aren't
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enough in multi-threaded mode.
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@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
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/**
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* \brief Opaque data type used with the memory usage limitting functions
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* \brief Opaque data type used with the memory usage limiting functions
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*/
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typedef struct lzma_memlimit_s lzma_memlimit;
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@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ typedef struct lzma_memlimit_s lzma_memlimit;
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* to these functions can be used in lzma_allocator structure, which makes
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* it easy to limit memory usage with liblzma.
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*
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* The memory limiter functions are not tied to limitting memory usage
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* The memory limiter functions are not tied to limiting memory usage
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* with liblzma itself. You can use them with anything you like.
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*
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* In multi-threaded applications, only one thread at once may use the same
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@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ extern void *lzma_memlimit_alloc(
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/**
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* \brief Removes the pointer from memory limitting list
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* \brief Removes the pointer from memory limiting list
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*
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* \param mem Pointer to a lzma_memlimit structure returned
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* earlier by lzma_memry_limit_create().
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@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ These aren't implemented yet.
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" Resource usage options:\n"
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"\n"
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" -M, --memory=NUM use roughly NUM bytes of memory at maximum\n"
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" -T, --threads=NUM use at maximum of NUM (de)compression threads\n"
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" -T, --threads=NUM use a maximum of NUM (de)compression threads\n"
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// " --threading=STR threading style; possible values are `auto' (default),\n"
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// " `files', and `stream'
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));
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@ -25,7 +25,7 @@
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specification, but try to trigger excessive CPU, RAM or disk usage in
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the decoder. To prevent malicious files from putting the decoder in
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inifinite loop (*), eating all available RAM or disk space, decoders
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should have internal limitters that catch these situations.
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should have internal limiters that catch these situations.
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(*) Strictly speaking not infinite, but if decoding of a small file
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would take a few weeks or even years, it's an infinite loop in
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