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Mastering Embedded Linux Programming - Third Edition

You're reading from  Mastering Embedded Linux Programming - Third Edition

Product type Book
Published in May 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789530384
Pages 758 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Frank Vasquez Frank Vasquez
Profile icon Frank Vasquez
Chris Simmonds Chris Simmonds
Profile icon Chris Simmonds
View More author details

Table of Contents (27) Chapters

Preface 1. Section 1: Elements of Embedded Linux
2. Chapter 1: Starting Out 3. Chapter 2: Learning about Toolchains 4. Chapter 3: All about Bootloaders 5. Chapter 4: Configuring and Building the Kernel 6. Chapter 5: Building a Root Filesystem 7. Chapter 6: Selecting a Build System 8. Chapter 7: Developing with Yocto 9. Chapter 8: Yocto Under the Hood 10. Section 2: System Architecture and Design Decisions
11. Chapter 9: Creating a Storage Strategy 12. Chapter 10: Updating Software in the Field 13. Chapter 11: Interfacing with Device Drivers 14. Chapter 12: Prototyping with Breakout Boards 15. Chapter 13: Starting Up – The init Program 16. Chapter 14: Starting with BusyBox runit 17. Chapter 15: Managing Power 18. Section 3: Writing Embedded Applications
19. Chapter 16: Packaging Python 20. Chapter 17: Learning about Processes and Threads 21. Chapter 18: Managing Memory 22. Section 4: Debugging and Optimizing Performance
23. Chapter 19: Debugging with GDB 24. Chapter 20: Profiling and Tracing 25. Chapter 21: Real-Time Programming 26. Other Books You May Enjoy

How much memory does my application use?

As with kernel space, the different ways of allocating, mapping, and sharing user space memory make it quite difficult to answer this seemingly simple question.

To begin, you can ask the kernel how much memory it thinks is available, which you can do using the free command. Here is a typical example of the output:

   total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 509016 504312 4704 0 26456 363860
-/+ buffers/cache: 113996 395020
Swap: 0 0 0

At first sight, this looks like a system that is almost out of memory with only 4,704 KiB free out of 509,016 KiB: less than 1%. However, note that 26,456 KiB is in buffers and
a whopping 363,860 KiB is in caches. Linux believes that free memory is wasted memory; the kernel uses free memory for buffers and caches with the knowledge that they can be shrunk when the need arises. Removing buffers and cache from the measurement provides true free memory, which is 395,020 KiB: 77% of the total...

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