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Jakob Gruber authored
The regexp parser historically has tried to gracefully detect and bail out from excess zone allocations, where 'excess' was determined to be an arbitrary limit of 256MB. This leads to issues now that the regexp parser may run from within the JS parser - the JS parser doesn't observe this arbitrary limit and happily keeps allocating until the underlying allocator actually runs out of memory; this way, the JS parser can handle very large JS files, and it's now counterproductive if the regexp parser (which reuses the JS parser zone) bails out on excess allocations. This CL simply removes the excess_allocation mechanism. Bug: chromium:1264014 Change-Id: I8d93a1e52aa65bb0ea6c2aab3b68b479ce79a1f6 Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/v8/v8/+/3401580Reviewed-by: Toon Verwaest <verwaest@chromium.org> Commit-Queue: Jakob Gruber <jgruber@chromium.org> Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main@{#78991}
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