How do you determine the amount of Linux system RAM in C++?

半城伤御伤魂 提交于 2019-11-27 19:05:30

On Linux, you can use the function sysinfo which sets values in the following struct:

   #include <sys/sysinfo.h>

   int sysinfo(struct sysinfo *info);

   struct sysinfo {
       long uptime;             /* Seconds since boot */
       unsigned long loads[3];  /* 1, 5, and 15 minute load averages */
       unsigned long totalram;  /* Total usable main memory size */
       unsigned long freeram;   /* Available memory size */
       unsigned long sharedram; /* Amount of shared memory */
       unsigned long bufferram; /* Memory used by buffers */
       unsigned long totalswap; /* Total swap space size */
       unsigned long freeswap;  /* swap space still available */
       unsigned short procs;    /* Number of current processes */
       unsigned long totalhigh; /* Total high memory size */
       unsigned long freehigh;  /* Available high memory size */
       unsigned int mem_unit;   /* Memory unit size in bytes */
       char _f[20-2*sizeof(long)-sizeof(int)]; /* Padding for libc5 */
   };

If you want to do it solely using functions of C++ (i would stick to sysinfo), i recommend taking a C++ approach using std::ifstream and std::string:

unsigned long get_mem_total() {
    std::string token;
    std::ifstream file("/proc/meminfo");
    while(file >> token) {
        if(token == "MemTotal:") {
            unsigned long mem;
            if(file >> mem) {
                return mem;
            } else {
                return 0;       
            }
        }
        // ignore rest of the line
        file.ignore(std::numeric_limits<std::streamsize>::max(), '\n');
    }
    return 0; // nothing found
}

There's no need to use popen(), you can just read the file yourself. Also, if there first line isn't what you're looking for, you'll fail, since head -n1 only reads the first line and then exits. I'm not sure why you're mixing C and C++ I/O like that; it's perfectly OK, but you should probably opt to go all C or all C++. I'd probably do it something like this:

int GetRamInKB(void)
{
    FILE *meminfo = fopen("/proc/meminfo", "r");
    if(meminfo == NULL)
        ... // handle error

    char line[256];
    while(fgets(line, sizeof(line), meminfo))
    {
        int ram;
        if(sscanf(line, "MemTotal: %d kB", &ram) == 1)
        {
            fclose(meminfo);
            return ram;
        }
    }

    // If we got here, then we couldn't find the proper line in the meminfo file:
    // do something appropriate like return an error code, throw an exception, etc.
    fclose(meminfo);
    return -1;
}

Remember /proc/meminfo is just a file. Open the file, read the first line, close the file. Voilá!

Even top (from procps) parses /proc/meminfo, see here.

标签
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!