server-skynet-source-3rd-je.../include/jemalloc/internal/cache_bin.h
Qi Wang bf72188f80 Allow opt.tcache_max to accept small size classes.
Previously all the small size classes were cached.  However this has downsides
-- particularly when page size is greater than 4K (e.g. iOS), which will result
in much higher SMALL_MAXCLASS.

This change allows tcache_max to be set to lower values, to better control
resources taken by tcache.
2020-10-24 20:43:44 -07:00

460 lines
15 KiB
C

#ifndef JEMALLOC_INTERNAL_CACHE_BIN_H
#define JEMALLOC_INTERNAL_CACHE_BIN_H
#include "jemalloc/internal/ql.h"
#include "jemalloc/internal/sz.h"
/*
* The cache_bins are the mechanism that the tcache and the arena use to
* communicate. The tcache fills from and flushes to the arena by passing a
* cache_bin_t to fill/flush. When the arena needs to pull stats from the
* tcaches associated with it, it does so by iterating over its
* cache_bin_array_descriptor_t objects and reading out per-bin stats it
* contains. This makes it so that the arena need not know about the existence
* of the tcache at all.
*/
/*
* The size in bytes of each cache bin stack. We also use this to indicate
* *counts* of individual objects.
*/
typedef uint16_t cache_bin_sz_t;
/*
* Leave a noticeable mark pattern on the cache bin stack boundaries, in case a
* bug starts leaking those. Make it look like the junk pattern but be distinct
* from it.
*/
static const uintptr_t cache_bin_preceding_junk =
(uintptr_t)0x7a7a7a7a7a7a7a7aULL;
/* Note: a7 vs. 7a above -- this tells you which pointer leaked. */
static const uintptr_t cache_bin_trailing_junk =
(uintptr_t)0xa7a7a7a7a7a7a7a7ULL;
/*
* That implies the following value, for the maximum number of items in any
* individual bin. The cache bins track their bounds looking just at the low
* bits of a pointer, compared against a cache_bin_sz_t. So that's
* 1 << (sizeof(cache_bin_sz_t) * 8)
* bytes spread across pointer sized objects to get the maximum.
*/
#define CACHE_BIN_NCACHED_MAX (((size_t)1 << sizeof(cache_bin_sz_t) * 8) \
/ sizeof(void *) - 1)
/*
* This lives inside the cache_bin (for locality reasons), and is initialized
* alongside it, but is otherwise not modified by any cache bin operations.
* It's logically public and maintained by its callers.
*/
typedef struct cache_bin_stats_s cache_bin_stats_t;
struct cache_bin_stats_s {
/*
* Number of allocation requests that corresponded to the size of this
* bin.
*/
uint64_t nrequests;
};
/*
* Read-only information associated with each element of tcache_t's tbins array
* is stored separately, mainly to reduce memory usage.
*/
typedef struct cache_bin_info_s cache_bin_info_t;
struct cache_bin_info_s {
cache_bin_sz_t ncached_max;
};
/*
* Responsible for caching allocations associated with a single size.
*/
typedef struct cache_bin_s cache_bin_t;
struct cache_bin_s {
/*
* The stack grows down. Whenever the bin is nonempty, the head points
* to an array entry containing a valid allocation. When it is empty,
* the head points to one element past the owned array.
*/
void **stack_head;
/*
* cur_ptr and stats are both modified frequently. Let's keep them
* close so that they have a higher chance of being on the same
* cacheline, thus less write-backs.
*/
cache_bin_stats_t tstats;
/*
* The low bits of the address of the first item in the stack that
* hasn't been used since the last GC, to track the low water mark (min
* # of cached items).
*
* Since the stack grows down, this is a higher address than
* low_bits_full.
*/
uint16_t low_bits_low_water;
/*
* The low bits of the value that stack_head will take on when the array
* is full. (But remember that stack_head always points to a valid item
* when the array is nonempty -- this is in the array).
*
* Recall that since the stack grows down, this is the lowest address in
* the array.
*/
uint16_t low_bits_full;
/*
* The low bits of the value that stack_head will take on when the array
* is empty.
*
* The stack grows down -- this is one past the highest address in the
* array.
*/
uint16_t low_bits_empty;
};
/*
* The cache_bins live inside the tcache, but the arena (by design) isn't
* supposed to know much about tcache internals. To let the arena iterate over
* associated bins, we keep (with the tcache) a linked list of
* cache_bin_array_descriptor_ts that tell the arena how to find the bins.
*/
typedef struct cache_bin_array_descriptor_s cache_bin_array_descriptor_t;
struct cache_bin_array_descriptor_s {
/*
* The arena keeps a list of the cache bins associated with it, for
* stats collection.
*/
ql_elm(cache_bin_array_descriptor_t) link;
/* Pointers to the tcache bins. */
cache_bin_t *bins;
};
static inline void
cache_bin_array_descriptor_init(cache_bin_array_descriptor_t *descriptor,
cache_bin_t *bins) {
ql_elm_new(descriptor, link);
descriptor->bins = bins;
}
/* Returns ncached_max: Upper limit on ncached. */
static inline cache_bin_sz_t
cache_bin_info_ncached_max(cache_bin_info_t *info) {
return info->ncached_max;
}
/*
* Internal.
*
* Asserts that the pointer associated with earlier is <= the one associated
* with later.
*/
static inline void
cache_bin_assert_earlier(cache_bin_t *bin, uint16_t earlier, uint16_t later) {
if (earlier > later) {
assert(bin->low_bits_full > bin->low_bits_empty);
}
}
/*
* Internal.
*
* Does difference calculations that handle wraparound correctly. Earlier must
* be associated with the position earlier in memory.
*/
static inline uint16_t
cache_bin_diff(cache_bin_t *bin, uint16_t earlier, uint16_t later) {
cache_bin_assert_earlier(bin, earlier, later);
return later - earlier;
}
/* Number of items currently cached in the bin. */
static inline cache_bin_sz_t
cache_bin_ncached_get(cache_bin_t *bin, cache_bin_info_t *info) {
cache_bin_sz_t diff = cache_bin_diff(bin,
(uint16_t)(uintptr_t)bin->stack_head, bin->low_bits_empty);
cache_bin_sz_t n = diff / sizeof(void *);
assert(n <= cache_bin_info_ncached_max(info));
assert(n == 0 || *(bin->stack_head) != NULL);
return n;
}
/*
* Internal.
*
* A pointer to the position one past the end of the backing array.
*/
static inline void **
cache_bin_empty_position_get(cache_bin_t *bin, cache_bin_info_t *info) {
cache_bin_sz_t diff = cache_bin_diff(bin,
(uint16_t)(uintptr_t)bin->stack_head, bin->low_bits_empty);
uintptr_t empty_bits = (uintptr_t)bin->stack_head + diff;
void **ret = (void **)empty_bits;
assert(ret >= bin->stack_head);
return ret;
}
/*
* As the name implies. This is important since it's not correct to try to
* batch fill a nonempty cache bin.
*/
static inline void
cache_bin_assert_empty(cache_bin_t *bin, cache_bin_info_t *info) {
assert(cache_bin_ncached_get(bin, info) == 0);
assert(cache_bin_empty_position_get(bin, info) == bin->stack_head);
}
/*
* Get low water, but without any of the correctness checking we do for the
* caller-usable version, if we are temporarily breaking invariants (like
* ncached >= low_water during flush).
*/
static inline cache_bin_sz_t
cache_bin_low_water_get_internal(cache_bin_t *bin, cache_bin_info_t *info) {
return cache_bin_diff(bin, bin->low_bits_low_water,
bin->low_bits_empty) / sizeof(void *);
}
/* Returns the numeric value of low water in [0, ncached]. */
static inline cache_bin_sz_t
cache_bin_low_water_get(cache_bin_t *bin, cache_bin_info_t *info) {
cache_bin_sz_t low_water = cache_bin_low_water_get_internal(bin, info);
assert(low_water <= cache_bin_info_ncached_max(info));
assert(low_water <= cache_bin_ncached_get(bin, info));
cache_bin_assert_earlier(bin, (uint16_t)(uintptr_t)bin->stack_head,
bin->low_bits_low_water);
return low_water;
}
/*
* Indicates that the current cache bin position should be the low water mark
* going forward.
*/
static inline void
cache_bin_low_water_set(cache_bin_t *bin) {
bin->low_bits_low_water = (uint16_t)(uintptr_t)bin->stack_head;
}
JEMALLOC_ALWAYS_INLINE void *
cache_bin_alloc_impl(cache_bin_t *bin, bool *success, bool adjust_low_water) {
/*
* success (instead of ret) should be checked upon the return of this
* function. We avoid checking (ret == NULL) because there is never a
* null stored on the avail stack (which is unknown to the compiler),
* and eagerly checking ret would cause pipeline stall (waiting for the
* cacheline).
*/
/*
* This may read from the empty position; however the loaded value won't
* be used. It's safe because the stack has one more slot reserved.
*/
void *ret = *bin->stack_head;
uint16_t low_bits = (uint16_t)(uintptr_t)bin->stack_head;
void **new_head = bin->stack_head + 1;
/*
* Note that the low water mark is at most empty; if we pass this check,
* we know we're non-empty.
*/
if (likely(low_bits != bin->low_bits_low_water)) {
bin->stack_head = new_head;
*success = true;
return ret;
}
if (!adjust_low_water) {
*success = false;
return NULL;
}
/*
* In the fast-path case where we call alloc_easy and then alloc, the
* previous checking and computation is optimized away -- we didn't
* actually commit any of our operations.
*/
if (likely(low_bits != bin->low_bits_empty)) {
bin->stack_head = new_head;
bin->low_bits_low_water = (uint16_t)(uintptr_t)new_head;
*success = true;
return ret;
}
*success = false;
return NULL;
}
/*
* Allocate an item out of the bin, failing if we're at the low-water mark.
*/
JEMALLOC_ALWAYS_INLINE void *
cache_bin_alloc_easy(cache_bin_t *bin, bool *success) {
/* We don't look at info if we're not adjusting low-water. */
return cache_bin_alloc_impl(bin, success, false);
}
/*
* Allocate an item out of the bin, even if we're currently at the low-water
* mark (and failing only if the bin is empty).
*/
JEMALLOC_ALWAYS_INLINE void *
cache_bin_alloc(cache_bin_t *bin, bool *success) {
return cache_bin_alloc_impl(bin, success, true);
}
/*
* Free an object into the given bin. Fails only if the bin is full.
*/
JEMALLOC_ALWAYS_INLINE bool
cache_bin_dalloc_easy(cache_bin_t *bin, void *ptr) {
uint16_t low_bits = (uint16_t)(uintptr_t)bin->stack_head;
if (unlikely(low_bits == bin->low_bits_full)) {
return false;
}
bin->stack_head--;
*bin->stack_head = ptr;
cache_bin_assert_earlier(bin, bin->low_bits_full,
(uint16_t)(uintptr_t)bin->stack_head);
return true;
}
/**
* Filling and flushing are done in batch, on arrays of void *s. For filling,
* the arrays go forward, and can be accessed with ordinary array arithmetic.
* For flushing, we work from the end backwards, and so need to use special
* accessors that invert the usual ordering.
*
* This is important for maintaining first-fit; the arena code fills with
* earliest objects first, and so those are the ones we should return first for
* cache_bin_alloc calls. When flushing, we should flush the objects that we
* wish to return later; those at the end of the array. This is better for the
* first-fit heuristic as well as for cache locality; the most recently freed
* objects are the ones most likely to still be in cache.
*
* This all sounds very hand-wavey and theoretical, but reverting the ordering
* on one or the other pathway leads to measurable slowdowns.
*/
typedef struct cache_bin_ptr_array_s cache_bin_ptr_array_t;
struct cache_bin_ptr_array_s {
cache_bin_sz_t n;
void **ptr;
};
/*
* Declare a cache_bin_ptr_array_t sufficient for nval items.
*
* In the current implementation, this could be just part of a
* cache_bin_ptr_array_init_... call, since we reuse the cache bin stack memory.
* Indirecting behind a macro, though, means experimenting with linked-list
* representations is easy (since they'll require an alloca in the calling
* frame).
*/
#define CACHE_BIN_PTR_ARRAY_DECLARE(name, nval) \
cache_bin_ptr_array_t name; \
name.n = (nval)
/*
* Start a fill. The bin must be empty, and This must be followed by a
* finish_fill call before doing any alloc/dalloc operations on the bin.
*/
static inline void
cache_bin_init_ptr_array_for_fill(cache_bin_t *bin, cache_bin_info_t *info,
cache_bin_ptr_array_t *arr, cache_bin_sz_t nfill) {
assert(cache_bin_ncached_get(bin, info) == 0);
arr->ptr = cache_bin_empty_position_get(bin, info) - nfill;
}
/*
* While nfill in cache_bin_init_ptr_array_for_fill is the number we *intend* to
* fill, nfilled here is the number we actually filled (which may be less, in
* case of OOM.
*/
static inline void
cache_bin_finish_fill(cache_bin_t *bin, cache_bin_info_t *info,
cache_bin_ptr_array_t *arr, cache_bin_sz_t nfilled) {
assert(cache_bin_ncached_get(bin, info) == 0);
void **empty_position = cache_bin_empty_position_get(bin, info);
if (nfilled < arr->n) {
memmove(empty_position - nfilled, empty_position - arr->n,
nfilled * sizeof(void *));
}
bin->stack_head = empty_position - nfilled;
}
/* Same deal, but with flush. */
static inline void
cache_bin_init_ptr_array_for_flush(cache_bin_t *bin, cache_bin_info_t *info,
cache_bin_ptr_array_t *arr, cache_bin_sz_t nflush) {
arr->ptr = cache_bin_empty_position_get(bin, info) - 1;
assert(cache_bin_ncached_get(bin, info) == 0
|| *arr->ptr != NULL);
}
/*
* These accessors are used by the flush pathways -- they reverse ordinary array
* ordering. See the note above.
*/
JEMALLOC_ALWAYS_INLINE void *
cache_bin_ptr_array_get(cache_bin_ptr_array_t *arr, cache_bin_sz_t n) {
return *(arr->ptr - n);
}
JEMALLOC_ALWAYS_INLINE void
cache_bin_ptr_array_set(cache_bin_ptr_array_t *arr, cache_bin_sz_t n, void *p) {
*(arr->ptr - n) = p;
}
static inline void
cache_bin_finish_flush(cache_bin_t *bin, cache_bin_info_t *info,
cache_bin_ptr_array_t *arr, cache_bin_sz_t nflushed) {
unsigned rem = cache_bin_ncached_get(bin, info) - nflushed;
memmove(bin->stack_head + nflushed, bin->stack_head,
rem * sizeof(void *));
bin->stack_head = bin->stack_head + nflushed;
if (cache_bin_ncached_get(bin, info)
< cache_bin_low_water_get_internal(bin, info)) {
bin->low_bits_low_water = (uint16_t)(uintptr_t)bin->stack_head;
}
}
/*
* Initialize a cache_bin_info to represent up to the given number of items in
* the cache_bins it is associated with.
*/
void cache_bin_info_init(cache_bin_info_t *bin_info,
cache_bin_sz_t ncached_max);
/*
* Given an array of initialized cache_bin_info_ts, determine how big an
* allocation is required to initialize a full set of cache_bin_ts.
*/
void cache_bin_info_compute_alloc(cache_bin_info_t *infos, szind_t ninfos,
size_t *size, size_t *alignment);
/*
* Actually initialize some cache bins. Callers should allocate the backing
* memory indicated by a call to cache_bin_compute_alloc. They should then
* preincrement, call init once for each bin and info, and then call
* cache_bin_postincrement. *alloc_cur will then point immediately past the end
* of the allocation.
*/
void cache_bin_preincrement(cache_bin_info_t *infos, szind_t ninfos,
void *alloc, size_t *cur_offset);
void cache_bin_postincrement(cache_bin_info_t *infos, szind_t ninfos,
void *alloc, size_t *cur_offset);
void cache_bin_init(cache_bin_t *bin, cache_bin_info_t *info, void *alloc,
size_t *cur_offset);
/*
* If a cache bin was zero initialized (either because it lives in static or
* thread-local storage, or was memset to 0), this function indicates whether or
* not cache_bin_init was called on it.
*/
bool cache_bin_still_zero_initialized(cache_bin_t *bin);
#endif /* JEMALLOC_INTERNAL_CACHE_BIN_H */