This is debug only and we keep it off the fast path. Moving it here simplifies
the internal logic.
This never tries to junk on regions that were shrunk via xallocx. I think this
is fine for two reasons:
- The shrunk-with-xallocx case is rare.
- We don't always do that anyway before this diff (it depends on the opt
settings and extent hooks in effect).
The small and large pathways share most of their logic, even if some of the
individual operations are different. We pull out the common logic into a
force-inlined function, and then specialize twice, once for each value of
"small".
The only time sharing an rtree context saves across extent operations isn't a
no-op is when tsd is unavailable. But this happens only in situations like
thread death or initialization, and we don't care about shaving off every
possible cycle in such scenarios.
Previously, tcache fill/flush (as well as small alloc/dalloc on the arena) may
potentially drop the bin lock for slab_alloc and slab_dalloc. This commit
refactors the logic so that the slab calls happen in the same function / level
as the bin lock / unlock. The main purpose is to be able to use flat combining
without having to keep track of stack state.
In the meantime, this change reduces the locking, especially for slab_dalloc
calls, where nothing happens after the call.
Check the is_head state before merging two extents. Disallow the merge if it's
crossing two separate mmap regions. This enforces first-fit (by not losing the
SN) at a very small cost.
Make the event module to accept two event types, and pass around the event
context. Use bytes-based events to trigger tcache GC on deallocation, and get
rid of the tcache ticker.
- NetBSD overcommits
- When mapping pages, use the maximum of the alignment requested and the
compiled-in PAGE constant which might be greater than the current kernel
pagesize, since we compile binaries with the maximum page size supported
by the architecture (so that they work with all kernels).
Add options stats_interval and stats_interval_opts to allow interval based stats
printing. This provides an easy way to collect stats without code changes,
because opt.stats_print may not work (some binaries never exit).