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System.AllocMemCount Variable

Represents the total number of allocated memory blocks in a Delphi application.

Pascal
AllocMemCount: Integer deprecated;
C++
Integer deprecated AllocMemCount;

System

Note: On Windows, AllocMemCount is the number of currently allocated blocks of memory that were requested by the user. AllocMemCount is incremented each time a block of memory is allocated and is decremented each time a block of memory is freed. Use AllocMemCount to find out how many unfreed blocks of memory remain.
Note: On Linux, the AllocMemCount variable is not maintained by default. Unless it is updated by a third-party memory manager, this variable always has a value of zero.
Warning: Caution:Because AllocMemCount is a global variable declared in the System unit, it is not always safe to access it directly. In situations where modules are statically linked to the RTL, each module will have a different instance of AllocMemCount. The following table is a summary. Note that applications that use runtime packages are dynamically linked to the RTL, whereas applications that do not are statically linked.

Application type 
Accessibility of AllocMemCount 
EXE  
Applications that do not use packages or Delphi DLLs can safely access this global variable directly because there is only one instance of it.  
EXE with packages and no Delphi DLLs  
Applications that use runtime packages and do not use any statically linked libraries can safely access AllocMemCount directly. In this situation all modules are dynamically linked to the RTL and there is only one instance of the variable. Unlike standard DLLs, packages allow access to global variables.  
EXE with statically linked DLLs  
If an application is statically linked to the RTL and also uses libraries that are statically linked to the RTL, then the AllocMemCount variable should never be accessed directly, since the EXE and each library will have its own instance of it. Instead, use the GetAllocMemCount function, implemented in BorlandMM, which returns the instance of the AllocMemCount global variable in the BorlandMM DLL. This DLL manages the memory allocation for all modules that include the ShareMem unit as the first unit in the application or library's uses clause. It is, therefore, this instance of the variable that contains the correct value. A function is used to access AllocMemCount in this situation because global variables in a DLL are private to the DLL.  
EXE with packages and statically linked DLLs  
It is not advisable to create applications that mix runtime packages with statically linked libraries. In this circumstance, use caution when allocating, freeing, and accessing memory. Be aware that each version of the RTL contains an instance of AllocMemCount that references memory that is allocated and freed only by that particular module.  

 

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