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Home/ Questions/Q 172401
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T13:09:34+00:00 2026-05-11T13:09:34+00:00

What limits the size of a memory-mapped file? I know it can’t be bigger

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What limits the size of a memory-mapped file? I know it can’t be bigger than the largest continuous chunk of unallocated address space, and that there should be enough free disk space. But are there other limits?

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  1. 2026-05-11T13:09:34+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 1:09 pm

    You’re being too conservative: A memory-mapped file can be larger than the address space. The view of the memory-mapped file is limited by OS memory constraints, but that’s only the part of the file you’re looking at at one time. (And I guess technically you could map multiple views of discontinuous parts of the file at once, so aside from overhead and page length constraints, it’s only the total # of bytes you’re looking at that poses a limit. You could look at bytes [0 to 1024] and bytes [240 to 240 + 1024] with two separate views.)

    In MS Windows, look at the MapViewOfFile function. It effectively takes a 64-bit file offset and a 32-bit length.

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