On 06/03/2011 02:36 PM, Dmitry Timoshkov wrote:
Adam Martinsonamartinson@codeweavers.com wrote:
The issue is that Dragon NaturallySpeaking 7 setup doesn't have the IMAGE_FILE_LARGE_ADDRESS_AWARE flag set, but it uses InstallShield 6 as a child process, which does have it set. IS6 calls GlobalMemoryStatus() and passes the data back to DNS7 setup, and if you have more than 2GB RAM DNS7 setup thinks you have negative memory. Windows figures this out and rounds to 2GB, Wine does not.
I'd suggest to write some tests and try to understand what does Windows and at which step.
I don't know of any way to do this with the current testing framework, and I think the apps that require it (DNS7 is the only one I know of) give us a clear enough picture. If there are other apps that need specific things out of this kind of behavior then I'll try to figure out some way to incorporate it in the tests.
Start with writing a simple Windows app that replicates what DNS/IS6 are doing.
Alright, I'll see what I can come up with over the weekend.
Ah, I thought you were talking about http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa366912%28v=vs.85%29.aspx, so I was trying to figure out how to exclude system processes if it was called by an app process, etc, which seems like a reasonable thing to do. Attached is a version which should appropriately limit the scope.
You don't understand, it doesn't matter what DLLs are loaded in other processes, that shouldn't have any influence on address space limitations in current process.
No, I mean the process tree was something like wine-preloader -> DNS7 setup -> IS6. No point in checking system processes here, tho I think all of Wine's binaries set IMAGE_FILE_LARGE_ADDRESS_AWARE. What you're saying is correct, but we're talking about different things.