The virtual address space of a process begins with the text
, data
and bss
segments of the process. After this heap allocations are placed, thus heap grows towards larger memory addresses. However, before using a portion of the heap a memory block has to be allocated (valloc
and the like) otherwise a segfault
occurs (or should occur).
The stack grows from an initial large address in virtual address space toward smaller values. As far as I know this works without virtual memory allocation. How is it possible to use the stack without prior memory allocation when in the case of the heap this is not possible? (Its the same linear virtual address space.)
As far a i know alloca
is implemented just as sub esp, <size>
. But the region of virtual address space the stack is using must have been allocated somehow prior to this, right?