+
+#ifdef __OpenBSD__
+void
+openbsd_init()
+{
+ struct rlimit rl;
+
+ /* OpenBSD, like NetBSD, counts mmap()ed space against the
+ * process's data size limit. If the soft limit is lower than the
+ * hard limit then try to yank it up, this lets users in the
+ * "staff" login class run sbcl with a default /etc/login.conf
+ */
+ getrlimit (RLIMIT_DATA, &rl);
+ if (rl.rlim_cur < rl.rlim_max) {
+ rl.rlim_cur = rl.rlim_max;
+ if (setrlimit (RLIMIT_DATA, &rl) < 0) {
+ fprintf (stderr,
+ "RUNTIME WARNING: unable to raise process data size limit:\n\
+ %s.\n\
+The system may fail to start.\n",
+ strerror(errno));
+ }
+ }
+
+ /* Display a (hopefully) helpful warning if it looks like we won't
+ * be able to allocate enough memory. In testing I found that on
+ * my system at least, a minimum of 25M on top of the three space
+ * sizes was needed to start SBCL. Show a warning below 32M so as
+ * to leave a little breathing room.
+ */
+ getrlimit (RLIMIT_DATA, &rl);
+ if (dynamic_space_size + READ_ONLY_SPACE_SIZE + STATIC_SPACE_SIZE +
+ LINKAGE_TABLE_SPACE_SIZE + (32*1024*1024) > rl.rlim_cur)
+ fprintf (stderr,
+ "RUNTIME WARNING: data size resource limit may be too low,\n"
+ " try decreasing the dynamic space size with --dynamic-space-size\n");
+}
+
+/* OpenBSD's dlsym() relies on the gcc bulitin
+ * __builtin_return_address(0) returning an address in the
+ * executable's text segment, but when called from lisp it will return
+ * an address in the dynamic space. Work around this by calling this
+ * wrapper function instead. Note that tail-call optimization will
+ * defeat this, disable it by saving the dlsym() return value in a
+ * volatile variable.
+*/
+void *
+os_dlsym(void *handle, const char *symbol)
+{
+ void * volatile ret = dlsym(handle, symbol);
+ return ret;
+}
+
+#endif