Moves objects out of the most fragmented segment(s) in a generation, leaving them empty in 32-bit LispWorks.
try-move-in-generation generation-number time-threshold &optional fraction-threshold => result
0 for the most recent generation, 1 for the most recent two generations, and so on up to a maximum (usually 3). Numbers outside this range signal an error.
A real number.
A real number between 0 and 1, defining the minimum fragmentation to actually move. The default is 0.25.
try-move-in-generation
finds the most fragmented segment in the generation specified. If
time-threshold
is positive, it moves objects out of this segment, leaving it empty, and repeats this operation until time-threshold seconds have elapsed. At this point
try-move-in-generation
returns, with value
t
if at least one segment was moved and value
nil
otherwise. Because the operation cannot be stopped in the middle, the actual time taken will always be larger than time-threshold.
If fraction-threshold is 1,
try-move-in-generation
does nothing. If fraction-threshold is 0,
try-move-in-generation
will move all uncompacted segments (unless it runs out of time). With the default (0.25)
try-move-in-generation
moves only moderately fragmented segments.
If
time-threshold
is negative, then
try-move-in-generation
does not actually move any segments.
result
is a boolean indicating whether
try-move-in-generation
would actually try to move a segment if it were to be called with a positive
time-threshold
and the other arguments unchanged.
This function is typically used after a call to check-fragmentation. For more information, see Controlling Fragmentation.
try-move-in-generation
is implemented only in 32-bit LispWorks. It is not relevant to the Memory Management API in 64-bit implementations, where marking-gc with the
what-to-copy
argument offers similar functionality (although set-blocking-gen-num is intended to solve the problem of fragmentation automatically).
LispWorks User Guide and Reference Manual - 21 Dec 2011