server-skynet-source-3rd-je.../include/jemalloc/internal/sec.h

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#ifndef JEMALLOC_INTERNAL_SEC_H
#define JEMALLOC_INTERNAL_SEC_H
#include "jemalloc/internal/atomic.h"
#include "jemalloc/internal/pai.h"
/*
* Small extent cache.
*
* This includes some utilities to cache small extents. We have a per-pszind
* bin with its own lock and edata heap (including only extents of that size).
* We don't try to do any coalescing of extents (since it would require
* cross-bin locks). As a result, we need to be careful about fragmentation.
* As a gesture in that direction, we limit the size of caches, apply first-fit
* within the bins, and, when flushing a bin, flush all of its extents rather
* than just those up to some threshold. When we allocate again, we'll get a
* chance to move to better ones.
*/
/*
* This is a *small* extent cache, after all. Assuming 4k pages and an ngroup
* of 4, this allows caching of sizes up to 128k.
*/
#define SEC_NPSIZES 16
/*
* For now, we put a cap on the number of SECs an arena can have. There's no
* reason it can't be dynamic; it's just inconvenient. This number of shards
* are embedded in the arenas, so there's a space / configurability tradeoff
* here. Eventually, we should probably dynamically allocate only however many
* we require.
*/
#define SEC_NSHARDS_MAX 8
/*
* For now, this is just one field; eventually, we'll probably want to get more
* fine-grained data out (like per-size class statistics).
*/
typedef struct sec_stats_s sec_stats_t;
struct sec_stats_s {
/* Sum of bytes_cur across all shards. */
size_t bytes;
};
static inline void
sec_stats_accum(sec_stats_t *dst, sec_stats_t *src) {
dst->bytes += src->bytes;
}
typedef struct sec_shard_s sec_shard_t;
struct sec_shard_s {
/*
* We don't keep per-bin mutexes, even though that would allow more
* sharding; this allows global cache-eviction, which in turn allows for
* better balancing across free lists.
*/
malloc_mutex_t mtx;
/*
* A SEC may need to be shut down (i.e. flushed of its contents and
* prevented from further caching). To avoid tricky synchronization
* issues, we just track enabled-status in each shard, guarded by a
* mutex. In practice, this is only ever checked during brief races,
* since the arena-level atomic boolean tracking HPA enabled-ness means
* that we won't go down these pathways very often after custom extent
* hooks are installed.
*/
bool enabled;
edata_list_active_t freelist[SEC_NPSIZES];
size_t bytes_cur;
};
typedef struct sec_s sec_t;
struct sec_s {
pai_t pai;
pai_t *fallback;
/*
* We'll automatically refuse to cache any objects in this sec if
* they're larger than alloc_max bytes.
*/
size_t alloc_max;
/*
* Exceeding this amount of cached extents in a shard causes *all* of
* the shards in that bin to be flushed.
*/
size_t bytes_max;
/*
* We don't necessarily always use all the shards; requests are
* distributed across shards [0, nshards - 1).
*/
size_t nshards;
sec_shard_t shards[SEC_NSHARDS_MAX];
};
bool sec_init(sec_t *sec, pai_t *fallback, size_t nshards, size_t alloc_max,
size_t bytes_max);
void sec_flush(tsdn_t *tsdn, sec_t *sec);
void sec_disable(tsdn_t *tsdn, sec_t *sec);
/*
* Morally, these two stats methods probably ought to be a single one (and the
* mutex_prof_data ought to live in the sec_stats_t. But splitting them apart
* lets them fit easily into the pa_shard stats framework (which also has this
* split), which simplifies the stats management.
*/
void sec_stats_merge(tsdn_t *tsdn, sec_t *sec, sec_stats_t *stats);
void sec_mutex_stats_read(tsdn_t *tsdn, sec_t *sec,
mutex_prof_data_t *mutex_prof_data);
/*
* We use the arena lock ordering; these are acquired in phase 2 of forking, but
* should be acquired before the underlying allocator mutexes.
*/
void sec_prefork2(tsdn_t *tsdn, sec_t *sec);
void sec_postfork_parent(tsdn_t *tsdn, sec_t *sec);
void sec_postfork_child(tsdn_t *tsdn, sec_t *sec);
#endif /* JEMALLOC_INTERNAL_SEC_H */