server-skynet-source-3rd-je.../include/jemalloc/internal/emap.h
David T. Goldblatt 7013716aaa Emap: Take (and propagate) a zeroed parameter.
Rtree needs this, and we should really treat them similarly.
2020-02-18 11:22:09 -08:00

199 lines
7.6 KiB
C

#ifndef JEMALLOC_INTERNAL_EMAP_H
#define JEMALLOC_INTERNAL_EMAP_H
#include "jemalloc/internal/mutex_pool.h"
#include "jemalloc/internal/rtree.h"
typedef struct emap_s emap_t;
struct emap_s {
rtree_t rtree;
/* Keyed by the address of the edata_t being protected. */
mutex_pool_t mtx_pool;
};
/* Used to pass rtree lookup context down the path. */
typedef struct emap_alloc_ctx_t emap_alloc_ctx_t;
struct emap_alloc_ctx_t {
szind_t szind;
bool slab;
};
typedef struct emap_full_alloc_ctx_s emap_full_alloc_ctx_t;
struct emap_full_alloc_ctx_s {
szind_t szind;
bool slab;
edata_t *edata;
};
extern emap_t emap_global;
bool emap_init(emap_t *emap, bool zeroed);
/*
* Grab the lock or locks associated with the edata or edatas indicated (which
* is done just by simple address hashing). The hashing strategy means that
* it's never safe to grab locks incrementally -- you have to grab all the locks
* you'll need at once, and release them all at once.
*/
void emap_lock_edata(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, edata_t *edata);
void emap_unlock_edata(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, edata_t *edata);
void emap_lock_edata2(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, edata_t *edata1,
edata_t *edata2);
void emap_unlock_edata2(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, edata_t *edata1,
edata_t *edata2);
edata_t *emap_lock_edata_from_addr(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, void *addr,
bool inactive_only);
/*
* Associate the given edata with its beginning and end address, setting the
* szind and slab info appropriately.
* Returns true on error (i.e. resource exhaustion).
*/
bool emap_register_boundary(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, edata_t *edata,
szind_t szind, bool slab);
/*
* Does the same thing, but with the interior of the range, for slab
* allocations.
*
* You might wonder why we don't just have a single emap_register function that
* does both depending on the value of 'slab'. The answer is twofold:
* - As a practical matter, in places like the extract->split->commit pathway,
* we defer the interior operation until we're sure that the commit won't fail
* (but we have to register the split boundaries there).
* - In general, we're trying to move to a world where the page-specific
* allocator doesn't know as much about how the pages it allocates will be
* used, and passing a 'slab' parameter everywhere makes that more
* complicated.
*
* Unlike the boundary version, this function can't fail; this is because slabs
* can't get big enough to touch a new page that neither of the boundaries
* touched, so no allocation is necessary to fill the interior once the boundary
* has been touched.
*/
void emap_register_interior(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, edata_t *edata,
szind_t szind);
void emap_deregister_boundary(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, edata_t *edata);
void emap_deregister_interior(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, edata_t *edata);
typedef struct emap_prepare_s emap_prepare_t;
struct emap_prepare_s {
rtree_leaf_elm_t *lead_elm_a;
rtree_leaf_elm_t *lead_elm_b;
rtree_leaf_elm_t *trail_elm_a;
rtree_leaf_elm_t *trail_elm_b;
};
/**
* These functions do some of the metadata management for merging, splitting,
* and reusing extents. In particular, they set the boundary mappings from
* addresses to edatas and fill in the szind, size, and slab values for the
* output edata (and, for splitting, *all* values for the trail). If the result
* is going to be used as a slab, you still need to call emap_register_interior
* on it, though.
*
* Remap simply changes the szind and slab status of an extent's boundary
* mappings. If the extent is not a slab, it doesn't bother with updating the
* end mapping (since lookups only occur in the interior of an extent for
* slabs). Since the szind and slab status only make sense for active extents,
* this should only be called while activating or deactivating an extent.
*
* Split and merge have a "prepare" and a "commit" portion. The prepare portion
* does the operations that can be done without exclusive access to the extent
* in question, while the commit variant requires exclusive access to maintain
* the emap invariants. The only function that can fail is emap_split_prepare,
* and it returns true on failure (at which point the caller shouldn't commit).
*
* In all cases, "lead" refers to the lower-addressed extent, and trail to the
* higher-addressed one. Trail can contain garbage (except for its arena_ind
* and esn values) data for the split variants, and can be reused for any
* purpose by its given arena after a merge or a failed split.
*/
void emap_remap(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, edata_t *edata, szind_t szind,
bool slab);
bool emap_split_prepare(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, emap_prepare_t *prepare,
edata_t *edata, size_t size_a, szind_t szind_a, bool slab_a, edata_t *trail,
size_t size_b, szind_t szind_b, bool slab_b);
void emap_split_commit(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, emap_prepare_t *prepare,
edata_t *lead, size_t size_a, szind_t szind_a, bool slab_a, edata_t *trail,
size_t size_b, szind_t szind_b, bool slab_b);
void emap_merge_prepare(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, emap_prepare_t *prepare,
edata_t *lead, edata_t *trail);
void emap_merge_commit(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, emap_prepare_t *prepare,
edata_t *lead, edata_t *trail);
/* Assert that the emap's view of the given edata matches the edata's view. */
void emap_do_assert_mapped(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, edata_t *edata);
static inline void
emap_assert_mapped(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, edata_t *edata) {
if (config_debug) {
emap_do_assert_mapped(tsdn, emap, edata);
}
}
JEMALLOC_ALWAYS_INLINE edata_t *
emap_edata_lookup(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, const void *ptr) {
rtree_ctx_t rtree_ctx_fallback;
rtree_ctx_t *rtree_ctx = tsdn_rtree_ctx(tsdn, &rtree_ctx_fallback);
return rtree_edata_read(tsdn, &emap->rtree, rtree_ctx, (uintptr_t)ptr,
true);
}
/* Fills in alloc_ctx with the info in the map. */
JEMALLOC_ALWAYS_INLINE void
emap_alloc_ctx_lookup(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, const void *ptr,
emap_alloc_ctx_t *alloc_ctx) {
rtree_ctx_t rtree_ctx_fallback;
rtree_ctx_t *rtree_ctx = tsdn_rtree_ctx(tsdn, &rtree_ctx_fallback);
rtree_szind_slab_read(tsdn, &emap->rtree, rtree_ctx, (uintptr_t)ptr,
true, &alloc_ctx->szind, &alloc_ctx->slab);
}
/* The pointer must be mapped. */
JEMALLOC_ALWAYS_INLINE void
emap_full_alloc_ctx_lookup(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, const void *ptr,
emap_full_alloc_ctx_t *full_alloc_ctx) {
rtree_ctx_t rtree_ctx_fallback;
rtree_ctx_t *rtree_ctx = tsdn_rtree_ctx(tsdn, &rtree_ctx_fallback);
rtree_edata_szind_slab_read(tsdn, &emap->rtree, rtree_ctx,
(uintptr_t)ptr, true, &full_alloc_ctx->edata,
&full_alloc_ctx->szind, &full_alloc_ctx->slab);
}
/*
* The pointer is allowed to not be mapped.
*
* Returns true when the pointer is not present.
*/
JEMALLOC_ALWAYS_INLINE bool
emap_full_alloc_ctx_try_lookup(tsdn_t *tsdn, emap_t *emap, const void *ptr,
emap_full_alloc_ctx_t *full_alloc_ctx) {
rtree_ctx_t rtree_ctx_fallback;
rtree_ctx_t *rtree_ctx = tsdn_rtree_ctx(tsdn, &rtree_ctx_fallback);
return rtree_edata_szind_slab_read(tsdn, &emap->rtree, rtree_ctx,
(uintptr_t)ptr, false, &full_alloc_ctx->edata,
&full_alloc_ctx->szind, &full_alloc_ctx->slab);
}
/*
* Fills in alloc_ctx, but only if it can be done easily (i.e. with a hit in the
* L1 rtree cache.
*
* Returns whether or not alloc_ctx was filled in.
*/
JEMALLOC_ALWAYS_INLINE bool
emap_alloc_ctx_try_lookup_fast(tsd_t *tsd, emap_t *emap, const void *ptr,
emap_alloc_ctx_t *alloc_ctx) {
rtree_ctx_t *rtree_ctx = tsd_rtree_ctx(tsd);
bool res = rtree_szind_slab_read_fast(tsd_tsdn(tsd), &emap->rtree,
rtree_ctx, (uintptr_t)ptr, &alloc_ctx->szind, &alloc_ctx->slab);
return res;
}
#endif /* JEMALLOC_INTERNAL_EMAP_H */