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__UCLIBC_UCLINUX_BROKEN_MUNMAP__ (which is currently not defined anywhere).
  This makes other cases a tiny bit less efficient too.
* Move the malloc lock into the heap structure (locking is still done
  at the malloc level though, not by the heap functions).
* Initialize the malloc heap to contain a tiny initial static free-area so
  that programs that only do a very little allocation won't ever call mmap.
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(__malloc_likely, __malloc_unlikely): Macros removed.
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(MALLOC_SET_SIZE): Take the base-address of the block, not the user-address.
(MALLOC_ADDR): Macro removed.
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Enable debugging if MALLOC_DEBUGGING is defined.
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(MALLOC_BASE, MALLOC_ADDR): Use it.
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the malloc/free level, not within the heap abstraction, and there's a
separate lock to control sbrk access.
Also, get rid of the separate `unmap_free_area' function in free.c, and
just put the code in the `free' function directly, which saves a bunch
of space (even compared to using an inline function) for some reason.
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* Instead of using mmap/munmap directly for large allocations, just use
  the heap for everything (this is reasonable now that heap memory can
  be unmapped).
* Use sbrk instead of mmap/munmap on systems with an MMU.
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smarter than the old "malloc-simple", and actually works, unlike
the old "malloc".  So kill the old "malloc-simple" and the old
"malloc" and replace them with Miles' new malloc implementation.
Update Config files to match.  Thanks Miles!
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