SWI-Prolog has a number of memory areas which are only enlarged to a certain limit. The internal data representation limits the local, global and trail stack to 128 MB on 32-bit processors, or more generally to 2 ** bits-per-pointer - 5 bytes. Considering that almost all modern hardware can deal with this amount of memory with ease, the default limits are set to their maximum on 32-bit hardware. The representation limits can easily exceed physical memory on 64-bit hardware. The default limits on 64-bit hardware are double that of 32-bit hardware, which allows for storing the same amount of (Prolog) data.
The limits can be changed from the command line as well as at runtime
using set_prolog_stack/2.
The table below shows these areas. The first column gives the option
name to modify the size of the area. The option character is immediately
followed by a number and optionally by a
k
or m
. With k
or no unit
indicator, the value is interpreted in Kbytes (1024 bytes); with m
,
the value is interpreted in Mbytes (1024 × 1024 bytes).
The PrologScript facility described in section
2.10.2.1 provides a mechanism for specifying options with the load
file. On Windows the default stack sizes are controlled using the
Windows registry on the key HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\SWI\Prolog
using the names localSize
, globalSize
and trailSize
.
The value is a DWORD
expressing the default stack size in
Kbytes. A GUI for modifying these values is provided using the XPCE
package. To use this, start the XPCE manual tools using manpce/0,
after which you find Preferences in the File menu.
Considering portability, applications that need to modify the default limits are advised to do so using set_prolog_stack/2.
Option | Default | Area name | Description |
-L | 128M | local stack | The local stack is used to store the execution environments of procedure invocations. The space for an environment is reclaimed when it fails, exits without leaving choice points, the alternatives are cut off with the !/0 predicate or no choice points have been created since the invocation and the last subclause is started (last call optimisation). |
-G | 128M | global stack | The global stack is used to store terms created during Prolog's execution. Terms on this stack will be reclaimed by backtracking to a point before the term was created or by garbage collection (provided the term is no longer referenced). |
-T | 128M | trail stack | The trail stack is used to store assignments during execution. Entries on this stack remain alive until backtracking before the point of creation or the garbage collector determines they are no longer needed. |
With the heap, we refer to the memory area used by malloc() and friends. SWI-Prolog uses the area to store atoms, functors, predicates and their clauses, records and other dynamic data. No limits are imposed on the addresses returned by malloc() and friends.
The number of atoms is limited to 16777216 (16M) on 32-bit machines. On 64-bit machines this is virtually unlimited. See also section 10.4.2.1.
resource_error
. On systems that lack GMP, integers are
64-bit on 32- as well as 64-bit machines.
Integers up to the value of the max_tagged_integer Prolog flag are represented more efficiently on the stack. For integers that appear in clauses, the value (below max_tagged_integer or not) has little impact on the size of the clause.
The boot compiler (see -b option) does not support
the module system. As large parts of the system are written in Prolog
itself we need some way to avoid name clashes with the user's
predicates, database keys, etc. Like Edinburgh C-Prolog Pereira,
1986 all predicates, database keys, etc., that should be
hidden from the user start with a dollar ($
) sign.