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52 | jermar | 1 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> |
59 | jermar | 2 | <chapter id="ds"> |
3 | <?dbhtml filename="ds.html"?> |
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52 | jermar | 4 | |
133 | jermar | 5 | <title>Data Structures</title> |
52 | jermar | 6 | |
139 | palkovsky | 7 | <para>There is a lot of data that either flows through various HelenOS |
59 | jermar | 8 | subsystems or is stored directly by them. Each subsystem uses its own data |
9 | structures to represent the data. These data structures need to be kept |
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10 | somewhere. In order to work efficiently, HelenOS, and especially its kernel, |
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139 | palkovsky | 11 | deploys several house keeping data types that are designed to facilitate |
59 | jermar | 12 | managing other data structures. Most of them serve like generic |
13 | containers.</para> |
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52 | jermar | 14 | |
59 | jermar | 15 | <section> |
16 | <title>Lists</title> |
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52 | jermar | 17 | |
73 | bondari | 18 | <indexterm> |
19 | <primary>linked list</primary> |
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20 | </indexterm> |
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21 | |||
59 | jermar | 22 | <para>HelenOS uses doubly-circularly-linked lists to bind related data |
23 | together. Lists are composed of an independent sentinel node called head |
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24 | and links that are always part of the object that is to be put into the |
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25 | list. Adding items to a list thus doesn't require any further memory |
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26 | allocations. Head and each link then contains forward and backward |
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27 | pointer. An empty list is composed of a sole head whose both pointers |
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28 | reference the head itself. The expense of two times bigger memory |
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29 | consumption as compared to memory consumption of singly linked lists is |
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30 | justified by constant insertion and removal times at random positions |
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31 | within the list.</para> |
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52 | jermar | 32 | |
59 | jermar | 33 | <para>Lists are frequently used to implement FIFO behaviour (e.g. |
34 | scheduler run queues or synchronization wait queues). Contrary to the FIFO |
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35 | type, which is also supported by HelenOS, they don't take up any unused |
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36 | space and are more general. On the other hand, they are slower than |
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37 | in-array FIFOs and can be hardly used to implement buffers.</para> |
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95 | bondari | 38 | |
101 | bondari | 39 | <figure float="1"> |
95 | bondari | 40 | <mediaobject id="list" xreflabel=""> |
41 | <imageobject role="pdf"> |
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105 | bondari | 42 | <imagedata fileref="images/list.pdf" format="PDF" /> |
95 | bondari | 43 | </imageobject> |
44 | |||
45 | <imageobject role="html"> |
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46 | <imagedata fileref="images/list.png" format="PNG" /> |
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47 | </imageobject> |
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48 | |||
49 | <imageobject role="fop"> |
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105 | bondari | 50 | <imagedata fileref="images/list.svg" format="SVG" /> |
95 | bondari | 51 | </imageobject> |
52 | </mediaobject> |
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53 | |||
54 | <title>Doubly-circularly-linked list</title> |
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55 | </figure> |
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59 | jermar | 56 | </section> |
57 | |||
58 | <section> |
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131 | jermar | 59 | <title>FIFO Queues</title> |
59 | jermar | 60 | |
73 | bondari | 61 | <indexterm> |
62 | <primary>FIFO queue</primary> |
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63 | </indexterm> |
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64 | |||
59 | jermar | 65 | <para>FIFO queues are implemented as either statically or dynamically |
66 | allocated arrays<footnote> |
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67 | <para>Depending on the array size.</para> |
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68 | </footnote> of some generic type with two indices. The first index |
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69 | points to the head of the FIFO queue and the other points to the tail |
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70 | thereof. There can be as many items in the FIFO as is the number of |
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71 | elements in the array and no more. The indices are taken modulo size of |
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72 | the queue because as a consequence of insertions and deletions, the tail |
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73 | can have numericaly lower index than the head.</para> |
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74 | |||
75 | <para>FIFO queues are used, for example, in ASID management code to store |
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76 | inactive ASIDs or in userspace keyboard driver to buffer read |
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77 | characters.</para> |
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61 | jermar | 78 | |
101 | bondari | 79 | <figure float="1"> |
73 | bondari | 80 | <mediaobject id="fifo" xreflabel=""> |
87 | bondari | 81 | <imageobject role="pdf"> |
105 | bondari | 82 | <imagedata fileref="images/fifo.pdf" format="PDF" /> |
77 | bondari | 83 | </imageobject> |
84 | |||
73 | bondari | 85 | <imageobject role="html"> |
86 | <imagedata fileref="images/fifo.png" format="PNG" /> |
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87 | </imageobject> |
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88 | |||
89 | <imageobject role="fop"> |
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105 | bondari | 90 | <imagedata fileref="images/fifo.svg" format="SVG" /> |
73 | bondari | 91 | </imageobject> |
92 | </mediaobject> |
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93 | |||
94 | <title>FIFO queue showing the wrap around the end of the array.</title> |
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62 | jermar | 95 | </figure> |
59 | jermar | 96 | </section> |
97 | |||
74 | bondari | 98 | <section id="hashtables"> |
131 | jermar | 99 | <title>Hash Tables</title> |
59 | jermar | 100 | |
73 | bondari | 101 | <indexterm> |
102 | <primary>hash table</primary> |
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103 | </indexterm> |
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104 | |||
59 | jermar | 105 | <para>The kernel, as well as userspace, provides hash table data type |
106 | which uses separate chaining. The hash table type is very generic in that |
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107 | it forces the user to supply methods for computing the hash index, |
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108 | comparing items against a set of keys and the item removal callback |
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109 | function. Besides these virtual operations, the hash table is composed of |
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110 | a dynamically allocated array of list heads that represent each chain, |
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111 | number of chains and the maximal number of keys.</para> |
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95 | bondari | 112 | |
101 | bondari | 113 | <figure float="1"> |
95 | bondari | 114 | <mediaobject id="hash" xreflabel=""> |
115 | <imageobject role="pdf"> |
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105 | bondari | 116 | <imagedata fileref="images/hash.pdf" format="PDF" /> |
95 | bondari | 117 | </imageobject> |
118 | |||
119 | <imageobject role="html"> |
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120 | <imagedata fileref="images/hash.png" format="PNG" /> |
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121 | </imageobject> |
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122 | |||
123 | <imageobject role="fop"> |
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105 | bondari | 124 | <imagedata fileref="images/hash.svg" format="SVG" /> |
95 | bondari | 125 | </imageobject> |
126 | </mediaobject> |
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127 | |||
128 | <title>Generic hash table.</title> |
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129 | </figure> |
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59 | jermar | 130 | </section> |
131 | |||
132 | <section> |
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133 | <title>Bitmaps</title> |
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134 | |||
73 | bondari | 135 | <indexterm> |
136 | <primary>bitmap</primary> |
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137 | </indexterm> |
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138 | |||
59 | jermar | 139 | <para>Several bitmap operations such as clearing or setting consecutive |
140 | bit sequences as well as copying portions of one bitmap into another one |
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141 | are supported.</para> |
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142 | </section> |
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143 | |||
144 | <section> |
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145 | <title>B+trees</title> |
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146 | |||
73 | bondari | 147 | <indexterm> |
98 | bondari | 148 | <primary>B-trees</primary> |
131 | jermar | 149 | |
150 | <secondary>- B+tree</secondary> |
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73 | bondari | 151 | </indexterm> |
152 | |||
59 | jermar | 153 | <para>HelenOS makes use of a variant of B-tree called B+tree. B+trees, in |
154 | HelenOS implementation, are 3-4-5 balanced trees. They are characteristic |
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155 | by the fact that values are kept only in the leaf-level nodes and that |
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156 | these nodes are linked together in a list. This data structure has |
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157 | logaritmic search, insertion and deletion times and, thanks to the |
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158 | leaf-level list, provides fantastic means of walking the nodes containing |
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159 | data. Moreover, B+trees can be used for easy storing, resizing and merging |
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160 | of disjunctive intervals.</para> |
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60 | jermar | 161 | |
101 | bondari | 162 | <figure float="1"> |
73 | bondari | 163 | <mediaobject id="btree" xreflabel=""> |
87 | bondari | 164 | <imageobject role="pdf"> |
105 | bondari | 165 | <imagedata fileref="images/btree.pdf" format="PDF" /> |
77 | bondari | 166 | </imageobject> |
167 | |||
73 | bondari | 168 | <imageobject role="html"> |
169 | <imagedata fileref="images/btree.png" format="PNG" /> |
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170 | </imageobject> |
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62 | jermar | 171 | |
73 | bondari | 172 | <imageobject role="fop"> |
105 | bondari | 173 | <imagedata fileref="images/btree.svg" format="SVG" /> |
73 | bondari | 174 | </imageobject> |
175 | </mediaobject> |
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176 | |||
177 | <title>B+tree containing keys ranging from 1 to 12.</title> |
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62 | jermar | 178 | </figure> |
59 | jermar | 179 | </section> |
180 | </chapter> |