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Home/ Questions/Q 6370973
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 25, 20262026-05-25T00:59:59+00:00 2026-05-25T00:59:59+00:00

Rather a theoretical question — would anyone know how it were possible to make

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Rather a theoretical question — would anyone know how it were possible to make sure a 64-bit process is allocated no more than 2GB of continuous memory.

This came up during the porting of a 32-bit C++ application that does pointer arithmetic (bad!) and relies on subtraction results to fit on a 32-bit integer. Before fixing the pointer arithmetic to correctly handle >2GB ptrdiff_t values, enforcing a 2GB memory space for a process might prove to be be a quick fix.

NOTE: Targeted platforms include Solaris 10, Linux, and Windows.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-25T01:00:00+00:00Added an answer on May 25, 2026 at 1:00 am

    The C and C++ standards do not require calls to malloc() or operator new to return memory that is contiguous with previously-returned memory, and few modern systems would given how virtual memory is doled out in a process.

    You may be SOL on that front unless you can tell us which platform you’re targetting (there may be a platform-specific solution.)

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