Reputation: 2731
I have a 64 bit VB.NET application and want to allocate a buffer > 2GB in size.
In the following code both the "new" and the "ReDim" throw an "OverflowException."
How can I allocate buffers > 2GB when these functions only accept signed 32 bit values?
(Is this possible in C#?)
Edit - I am running WinXP 64 with 4GB of RAM.
Dim width As Long = 19005 Dim height As Long = 32768 Dim buffer() As Byte = New Byte((width * height * 4) - 1) {} Dim size As Long = (width * height * 4) - 1 ReDim buffer(size)
Upvotes: 5
Views: 3661
Reputation: 74260
You may have to use memory mapped files for this, take a look at the MapViewOfFile function.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 7549
I think the UnmanagedMemoryStream does what you need. MSDN doc for UnmanagedMemoryStream
I think it's a bad idea, to allocate a huge chunk of memory in a garbage collected environment, since most garbage collectors are optimized for small & short lived object. So using raw memory is generally a better and more performant solution for very large objects.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 2731
Apparently it is not possible to allocate more than 2GB even under 64 bit .net application running on a 64 bit OS.
I find this to be very disappointing and completely without regard for what 64 bit applications and OSs are made for. I am dealing with gigantic images and would like to be able to work with the raw bytes all in RAM at once. Now I have to implement paging algorithms to limit the chunks to 2GB.
Hey Microsoft, hows abouts you fix this in the coming .NET release? Yes, I said fix. That's because it's broken. How do you expect 64 bit applications to take off when you do stupid things like this. (Can you tell that I am annoyed.) Thanks for listening.
http://blogs.msdn.com/joshwil/archive/2005/08/10/450202.aspx
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 99869
The following works [in theory] (C# syntax):
Array.CreateInstance(typeof(int[]), 0L);
Edit: Make a type with a fixed-size allocated array of 1GB arrays. You can re-index in the Item property via a shift.
Upvotes: 0