>>>>> luke-tierney >>>>> on Tue, 8 Sep 2020 09:42:43 -0500 (CDT) writes:
> On Tue, 8 Sep 2020, Martin Maechler wrote: >>>>>>> Martin Maechler >>>>>>> on Tue, 8 Sep 2020 10:40:24 +0200 writes: >> >>>>>>> Hugh Parsonage >>>>>>> on Tue, 8 Sep 2020 18:08:11 +1000 writes: >> >> >> I can only reproduce on Windows, but reliably (both 4.0.0 and 4.0.2): >> >> >> $> R --vanilla >> >> x <- c(0L, -2e9:2e9) >> >> >> # > Segmentation fault >> >> >> Tried to reproduce on Linux but the above worked as expected. Not an >> >> issue merely with the length of the vector; for example, x <- >> >> rep_len(1:10, 1e10) works, though the altrep vector must be long to >> >> reproduce: >> >> >> x <- c(0L, -1e9:1e9) #ok >> >> >> Segmentation faults occur with the following too: >> >> >> x <- (-2e9:2e9) + 1L >> >> > Your operation would "need" (not in theory, but in practice) >> > to go from altrep to regular vectors. >> > I guess the segfault occurs because of something like this : >> >> > R asks Windows to hand it a huge amount of memory and Windows replies >> > "ok, here is the memory pointer" >> > and then R tries to write to there, but illegally (because >> > Windows should have told R that it does not really have enough >> > memory for that ..). >> >> > I cannot reproduce the segmentation fault .. but I can confirm >> > there is a bug there that shows for me on Windows but not on >> > Linux: >> >> > "My" Windows is on a terminalserver not with too many GB of memory >> > (but then in a version of Windows that recognizes that it cannot >> > get so much memory): >> >> > ------------------------- Here some transcript (thanks to >> > using Emacs w/ ESS also on Windows) ------------------ >> >> > R Under development (unstable) (2020-08-24 r79074) -- "Unsuffered Consequences" >> > Copyright (C) 2020 The R Foundation for Statistical Computing >> > Platform: x86_64-w64-mingw32/x64 (64-bit) >> >> > R ist freie Software und kommt OHNE JEGLICHE GARANTIE. >> > Sie sind eingeladen, es unter bestimmten Bedingungen weiter zu verbreiten. >> > Tippen Sie 'license()' or 'licence()' für Details dazu. >> >> > R ist ein Gemeinschaftsprojekt mit vielen Beitragenden. >> > Tippen Sie 'contributors()' für mehr Information und 'citation()', >> > um zu erfahren, wie R oder R packages in Publikationen zitiert werden können. >> >> > Tippen Sie 'demo()' für einige Demos, 'help()' für on-line Hilfe, oder >> > 'help.start()' für eine HTML Browserschnittstelle zur Hilfe. >> > Tippen Sie 'q()', um R zu verlassen. >> >> >> x <- (-2e9:2e9) + 1L >> > Fehler: kann Vektor der Größe 14.9 GB nicht allozieren >> >> y <- c(0L, -2e9:2e9) >> > Fehler: kann Vektor der Größe 14.9 GB nicht allozieren >> >> Sys.setenv(LANGUAGE="en") >> >> y <- c(0L, -2e9:2e9) >> > Error: cannot allocate vector of size 14.9 Gb >> >> y <- -1e9:4e9 >> >> .Internal(inspect(y)) >> > @0x00000000195a6808 14 REALSXP g0c0 [REF(65535)] -1000000000 : -294967296 (compact) >> >> .Machine$integer.max / 1e9 >> > [1] 2.147484 >> >> y <- -1e6:2.2e9 >> >> .Internal(inspect(y)) >> > @0x000000000a11a5d8 14 REALSXP g0c0 [REF(65535)] -1000000 : -2094967296 (compact) >> >> y <- -1e6:2e9 >> >> .Internal(inspect(y)) >> > @0x000000000a13adf0 13 INTSXP g0c0 [REF(65535)] -1000000 : 2000000000 (compact) >> >> >> > ------------------------- end of transcript ----------------------------------- >> >> > So indeed, no seg.fault, R notices that it can't get 15 GB of >> > memory. >> >> > But the bug is bad news: We have *silent* integer overflow happening >> > according to what .Internal(inspect(y)) shows... >> >> > .... less bad new: Probably the bug is only in the 'internal inspect' code >> > where a format specifier is used in C's printf() that does not work >> > correctly on Windows, at least the way it is currently compiled .. >> >> >> > On (64-bit) Linux, I get >> >> >> y <- -1e9:4e9 ; .Internal(inspect(y)) >> > @7d86388 14 REALSXP g0c0 [REF(65535)] -1000000000 : 4000000000 (compact) >> >> >> y <- c(0L, y) >> > Error: cannot allocate vector of size 37.3 Gb >> >> > which seems much better ... until I do find a bug, may again >> > only in the C code underlying .Internal(inspect(.)) : >> >> >> y <- -1e9:2e9 ; .Internal(inspect(y)) >> > @7d86ac0 13 INTSXP g0c0 [REF(65535)] Error: long vectors not supported yet: ../../../R/src/main/altclasses.c:139 >> >> >> >> Indeed, the purported "integer overflow" (above) does not >> happen. >> It is "only" a 'printf' related bug inside .Internal(inspect(.)) on Windows. >> >> *interestingly*, the above bug I've noticed on (64-bit) Linux >> does *not* show on Windows (64-bit), at least not for that case: >> >> On Windows, things are fine as long as they remain (compacted >> aka 'ALTREP') INTSXP: >> >> > y <- -1e3:2e9 ;.Internal(inspect(y)) >> @0x000000000a285648 13 INTSXP g0c0 [REF(65535)] -1000 : 2000000000 (compact) >> > y <- -1e3:2.1e9 ;.Internal(inspect(y)) >> @0x0000000019925930 13 INTSXP g0c0 [REF(65535)] -1000 : 2100000000 (compact) >> >> and here, y is correct, just the printing from >> .Internal(inspect(y)) is bugous (probably prints the double as an integer): > It's a '%ld' that probably needs to be '%lld' for Windows. Will fix > sometime soon. > Best, > luke I had guessed at something like that .. but "interestingly" it was quite different: Our code use int n = LENGTH(.); and the error message above was triggered there. I've committed a fix to both R-devel and R-patched (and added a regression test), but I still wonder why the above error had not triggered on Windows... Martin >> >> > y <- -1e3:2.2e9 ; .Internal(inspect(y)) >> @0x00000000195c0178 14 REALSXP g0c0 [REF(65535)] -1000 : -2094967296 (compact) >> > length(y) >> [1] 2200001001 >> > tail(y) >> [1] 2.2e+09 2.2e+09 2.2e+09 2.2e+09 2.2e+09 2.2e+09 >> > tail(y) - 2.2e9 >> [1] -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 >> > >> >> ______________________________________________ >> R-devel@r-project.org mailing list >> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel >> > -- > Luke Tierney > Ralph E. Wareham Professor of Mathematical Sciences > University of Iowa Phone: 319-335-3386 > Department of Statistics and Fax: 319-335-3017 > Actuarial Science > 241 Schaeffer Hall email: luke-tier...@uiowa.edu > Iowa City, IA 52242 WWW: http://www.stat.uiowa.edu ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel