Hi Bram, 2014/4/29 Tue 22:04:23 UTC+9 Bram Moolenaar wrote: > Ken Takata wrote: > > > 2014/4/17 Thu 0:58:01 UTC+9 Adrian wrote: > > > 'm helping another user open a large, 3Gb, file. The standard windows > > > editors balk, so I recommended VIM. Unfortunately, even vim crashes > > > after scrolling some amount. For instance, he can't go straight to > > > the end of file. > > > > > > The work station is Windows 7, 64 bit, with 32Gb of RAM. Are there > > > any settings to modify to make vim more stable with large files, or is > > > there some Windows performance limitation and just out of luck? > > > > There is a related item in the todo.txt: > > > > | Win64: Seek error in swap file for a very big file (3 Gbyte). Check > > storing > > | pointer in long and seek offset in 64 bit var. > > > > I wrote some patches to fix this, but they seem to be still unstable. > > > > https://bitbucket.org/k_takata/vim-ktakata-mq/src/192069dac4356c186b89e0451a254599713d2309/support-largefiles-on-windows.patch?at=default > > https://bitbucket.org/k_takata/vim-ktakata-mq/src/192069dac4356c186b89e0451a254599713d2309/use-stat_T.patch?at=default > > Did you make progress on this?
I wrote "still unstable", but it seems that it was my mistake. Now I think that the patches are OK. Sometimes Vim (without the patches) freezes when I open a very big file (about 2 GB) and scroll up and down using scroll bar. After applying the patches, Vim sometimes takes very long time for scrolling up and down, but it wasn't a freeze. (I misunderstood that.) BTW, I found that 32-bit Vim couldn't handle a very big file properly when ":set noswapfile". In my understanding, this is an expected(?) behavior because Vim tries to load the whole file into the memory when 'swapfile' is off, and a 32-bit program can't allocate larger than 2-GiB memory. (Actually, a 32-bit program can get 3-GiB user space if /LARGEADDRESSAWARE option is specified for 'link'.) > Can we also add some tests to verify the fix? I'm thinking what is the best way to test this. Something like this? " Make sure that a line break is 1 byte. :set ff=unix :set undolevels=-1 " Input 99 'A's. The line becomes 100 bytes including a line break. 99iA<Esc> yy " Put 19,999,999 times. The file becomes 2,000,000,000 bytes. 19999999p " Moving around in the file randomly. G 10% 90% 50% gg ... " Edit some lines. ... " Extract some lines and write them to test.out. ... Regards, Ken Takata -- -- You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist. Do not top-post! Type your reply below the text you are replying to. For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "vim_use" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to vim_use+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.