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| 9 | bondari | 1 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> |
| 11 | bondari | 2 | <chapter id="mm"> |
| 3 | <?dbhtml filename="mm.html"?> |
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| 9 | bondari | 4 | |
| 11 | bondari | 5 | <title>Memory management</title> |
| 9 | bondari | 6 | |
| 67 | jermar | 7 | <para>In previous chapters, this book described the scheduling subsystem as |
| 8 | the creator of the impression that threads execute in parallel. The memory |
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| 9 | management subsystem, on the other hand, creates the impression that there |
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| 10 | is enough physical memory for the kernel and that userspace tasks have the |
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| 11 | entire address space only for themselves.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 12 | |
| 26 | bondari | 13 | <section> |
| 64 | jermar | 14 | <title>Physical memory management</title> |
| 15 | |||
| 16 | <section id="zones_and_frames"> |
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| 17 | <title>Zones and frames</title> |
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| 18 | |||
| 67 | jermar | 19 | <para>HelenOS represents continuous areas of physical memory in |
| 20 | structures called frame zones (abbreviated as zones). Each zone contains |
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| 21 | information about the number of allocated and unallocated physical |
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| 22 | memory frames as well as the physical base address of the zone and |
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| 23 | number of frames contained in it. A zone also contains an array of frame |
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| 24 | structures describing each frame of the zone and, in the last, but not |
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| 25 | the least important, front, each zone is equipped with a buddy system |
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| 26 | that faciliates effective allocation of power-of-two sized block of |
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| 27 | frames.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 28 | |
| 67 | jermar | 29 | <para>This organization of physical memory provides good preconditions |
| 30 | for hot-plugging of more zones. There is also one currently unused zone |
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| 31 | attribute: <code>flags</code>. The attribute could be used to give a |
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| 32 | special meaning to some zones in the future.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 33 | |
| 67 | jermar | 34 | <para>The zones are linked in a doubly-linked list. This might seem a |
| 35 | bit ineffective because the zone list is walked everytime a frame is |
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| 36 | allocated or deallocated. However, this does not represent a significant |
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| 37 | performance problem as it is expected that the number of zones will be |
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| 38 | rather low. Moreover, most architectures merge all zones into |
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| 39 | one.</para> |
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| 40 | |||
| 76 | palkovsky | 41 | <para>Every physical memory frame in a zone, is described by a structure |
| 42 | that contains number of references and other data used by buddy |
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| 67 | jermar | 43 | system.</para> |
| 64 | jermar | 44 | </section> |
| 45 | |||
| 46 | <section id="frame_allocator"> |
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| 71 | bondari | 47 | <indexterm> |
| 48 | <primary>frame allocator</primary> |
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| 49 | </indexterm> |
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| 50 | |||
| 64 | jermar | 51 | <title>Frame allocator</title> |
| 52 | |||
| 67 | jermar | 53 | <para>The frame allocator satisfies kernel requests to allocate |
| 54 | power-of-two sized blocks of physical memory. Because of zonal |
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| 55 | organization of physical memory, the frame allocator is always working |
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| 76 | palkovsky | 56 | within a context of a particular frame zone. In order to carry out the |
| 67 | jermar | 57 | allocation requests, the frame allocator is tightly integrated with the |
| 58 | buddy system belonging to the zone. The frame allocator is also |
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| 59 | responsible for updating information about the number of free and busy |
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| 101 | bondari | 60 | frames in the zone. <figure float="1"> |
| 67 | jermar | 61 | <mediaobject id="frame_alloc"> |
| 97 | bondari | 62 | <imageobject role="pdf"> |
| 63 | <imagedata fileref="images.vector/frame_alloc.pdf" format="PDF" /> |
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| 77 | bondari | 64 | </imageobject> |
| 65 | |||
| 67 | jermar | 66 | <imageobject role="html"> |
| 67 | <imagedata fileref="images/frame_alloc.png" format="PNG" /> |
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| 68 | </imageobject> |
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| 64 | jermar | 69 | |
| 67 | jermar | 70 | <imageobject role="fop"> |
| 71 | <imagedata fileref="images.vector/frame_alloc.svg" format="SVG" /> |
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| 72 | </imageobject> |
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| 73 | </mediaobject> |
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| 64 | jermar | 74 | |
| 67 | jermar | 75 | <title>Frame allocator scheme.</title> |
| 76 | </figure></para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 77 | |
| 78 | <formalpara> |
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| 79 | <title>Allocation / deallocation</title> |
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| 80 | |||
| 82 | jermar | 81 | <para>Upon allocation request via function <code>frame_alloc()</code>, |
| 67 | jermar | 82 | the frame allocator first tries to find a zone that can satisfy the |
| 83 | request (i.e. has the required amount of free frames). Once a suitable |
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| 84 | zone is found, the frame allocator uses the buddy allocator on the |
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| 85 | zone's buddy system to perform the allocation. During deallocation, |
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| 82 | jermar | 86 | which is triggered by a call to <code>frame_free()</code>, the frame |
| 67 | jermar | 87 | allocator looks up the respective zone that contains the frame being |
| 88 | deallocated. Afterwards, it calls the buddy allocator again, this time |
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| 89 | to take care of deallocation within the zone's buddy system.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 90 | </formalpara> |
| 91 | </section> |
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| 92 | |||
| 93 | <section id="buddy_allocator"> |
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| 71 | bondari | 94 | <indexterm> |
| 95 | <primary>buddy system</primary> |
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| 96 | </indexterm> |
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| 97 | |||
| 64 | jermar | 98 | <title>Buddy allocator</title> |
| 99 | |||
| 67 | jermar | 100 | <para>In the buddy system, the memory is broken down into power-of-two |
| 101 | sized naturally aligned blocks. These blocks are organized in an array |
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| 82 | jermar | 102 | of lists, in which the list with index <emphasis>i</emphasis> contains |
| 103 | all unallocated blocks of size |
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| 104 | <emphasis>2<superscript>i</superscript></emphasis>. The index |
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| 105 | <emphasis>i</emphasis> is called the order of block. Should there be two |
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| 106 | adjacent equally sized blocks in the list <emphasis>i</emphasis> (i.e. |
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| 107 | buddies), the buddy allocator would coalesce them and put the resulting |
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| 108 | block in list <emphasis>i + 1</emphasis>, provided that the resulting |
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| 109 | block would be naturally aligned. Similarily, when the allocator is |
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| 110 | asked to allocate a block of size |
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| 111 | <emphasis>2<superscript>i</superscript></emphasis>, it first tries to |
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| 112 | satisfy the request from the list with index <emphasis>i</emphasis>. If |
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| 113 | the request cannot be satisfied (i.e. the list <emphasis>i</emphasis> is |
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| 114 | empty), the buddy allocator will try to allocate and split a larger |
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| 115 | block from the list with index <emphasis>i + 1</emphasis>. Both of these |
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| 116 | algorithms are recursive. The recursion ends either when there are no |
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| 117 | blocks to coalesce in the former case or when there are no blocks that |
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| 118 | can be split in the latter case.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 119 | |
| 67 | jermar | 120 | <para>This approach greatly reduces external fragmentation of memory and |
| 121 | helps in allocating bigger continuous blocks of memory aligned to their |
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| 122 | size. On the other hand, the buddy allocator suffers increased internal |
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| 123 | fragmentation of memory and is not suitable for general kernel |
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| 124 | allocations. This purpose is better addressed by the <link |
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| 101 | bondari | 125 | linkend="slab">slab allocator</link>.<figure float="1"> |
| 64 | jermar | 126 | <mediaobject id="buddy_alloc"> |
| 97 | bondari | 127 | <imageobject role="pdf"> |
| 128 | <imagedata fileref="images.vector/buddy_alloc.pdf" format="PDF" /> |
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| 77 | bondari | 129 | </imageobject> |
| 130 | |||
| 64 | jermar | 131 | <imageobject role="html"> |
| 132 | <imagedata fileref="images/buddy_alloc.png" format="PNG" /> |
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| 133 | </imageobject> |
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| 134 | |||
| 135 | <imageobject role="fop"> |
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| 136 | <imagedata fileref="images.vector/buddy_alloc.svg" format="SVG" /> |
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| 137 | </imageobject> |
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| 138 | </mediaobject> |
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| 139 | |||
| 140 | <title>Buddy system scheme.</title> |
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| 67 | jermar | 141 | </figure></para> |
| 64 | jermar | 142 | |
| 143 | <section> |
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| 144 | <title>Implementation</title> |
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| 145 | |||
| 146 | <para>The buddy allocator is, in fact, an abstract framework wich can |
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| 147 | be easily specialized to serve one particular task. It knows nothing |
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| 148 | about the nature of memory it helps to allocate. In order to beat the |
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| 149 | lack of this knowledge, the buddy allocator exports an interface that |
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| 150 | each of its clients is required to implement. When supplied with an |
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| 151 | implementation of this interface, the buddy allocator can use |
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| 152 | specialized external functions to find a buddy for a block, split and |
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| 153 | coalesce blocks, manipulate block order and mark blocks busy or |
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| 67 | jermar | 154 | available.</para> |
| 64 | jermar | 155 | |
| 156 | <formalpara> |
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| 157 | <title>Data organization</title> |
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| 158 | |||
| 159 | <para>Each entity allocable by the buddy allocator is required to |
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| 160 | contain space for storing block order number and a link variable |
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| 161 | used to interconnect blocks within the same order.</para> |
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| 162 | |||
| 163 | <para>Whatever entities are allocated by the buddy allocator, the |
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| 164 | first entity within a block is used to represent the entire block. |
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| 165 | The first entity keeps the order of the whole block. Other entities |
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| 166 | within the block are assigned the magic value |
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| 167 | <constant>BUDDY_INNER_BLOCK</constant>. This is especially important |
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| 168 | for effective identification of buddies in a one-dimensional array |
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| 169 | because the entity that represents a potential buddy cannot be |
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| 170 | associated with <constant>BUDDY_INNER_BLOCK</constant> (i.e. if it |
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| 171 | is associated with <constant>BUDDY_INNER_BLOCK</constant> then it is |
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| 172 | not a buddy).</para> |
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| 173 | </formalpara> |
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| 174 | </section> |
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| 175 | </section> |
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| 176 | |||
| 177 | <section id="slab"> |
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| 71 | bondari | 178 | <indexterm> |
| 179 | <primary>slab allocator</primary> |
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| 180 | </indexterm> |
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| 181 | |||
| 70 | jermar | 182 | <title>Slab allocator</title> |
| 64 | jermar | 183 | |
| 67 | jermar | 184 | <para>The majority of memory allocation requests in the kernel is for |
| 185 | small, frequently used data structures. The basic idea behind the slab |
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| 186 | allocator is that commonly used objects are preallocated in continuous |
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| 187 | areas of physical memory called slabs<footnote> |
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| 188 | <para>Slabs are in fact blocks of physical memory frames allocated |
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| 189 | from the frame allocator.</para> |
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| 190 | </footnote>. Whenever an object is to be allocated, the slab allocator |
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| 191 | returns the first available item from a suitable slab corresponding to |
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| 192 | the object type<footnote> |
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| 193 | <para>The mechanism is rather more complicated, see the next |
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| 194 | paragraph.</para> |
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| 195 | </footnote>. Due to the fact that the sizes of the requested and |
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| 196 | allocated object match, the slab allocator significantly reduces |
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| 197 | internal fragmentation.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 198 | |
| 71 | bondari | 199 | <indexterm> |
| 200 | <primary>slab allocator</primary> |
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| 201 | |||
| 72 | bondari | 202 | <secondary>- slab cache</secondary> |
| 71 | bondari | 203 | </indexterm> |
| 204 | |||
| 67 | jermar | 205 | <para>Slabs of one object type are organized in a structure called slab |
| 206 | cache. There are ususally more slabs in the slab cache, depending on |
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| 207 | previous allocations. If the the slab cache runs out of available slabs, |
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| 208 | new slabs are allocated. In order to exploit parallelism and to avoid |
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| 209 | locking of shared spinlocks, slab caches can have variants of |
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| 210 | processor-private slabs called magazines. On each processor, there is a |
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| 211 | two-magazine cache. Full magazines that are not part of any |
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| 212 | per-processor magazine cache are stored in a global list of full |
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| 213 | magazines.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 214 | |
| 71 | bondari | 215 | <indexterm> |
| 216 | <primary>slab allocator</primary> |
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| 217 | |||
| 72 | bondari | 218 | <secondary>- magazine</secondary> |
| 71 | bondari | 219 | </indexterm> |
| 220 | |||
| 67 | jermar | 221 | <para>Each object begins its life in a slab. When it is allocated from |
| 222 | there, the slab allocator calls a constructor that is registered in the |
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| 223 | respective slab cache. The constructor initializes and brings the object |
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| 224 | into a known state. The object is then used by the user. When the user |
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| 225 | later frees the object, the slab allocator puts it into a processor |
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| 71 | bondari | 226 | private <indexterm> |
| 227 | <primary>slab allocator</primary> |
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| 228 | |||
| 72 | bondari | 229 | <secondary>- magazine</secondary> |
| 71 | bondari | 230 | </indexterm>magazine cache, from where it can be precedently allocated |
| 67 | jermar | 231 | again. Note that allocations satisfied from a magazine are already |
| 232 | initialized by the constructor. When both of the processor cached |
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| 233 | magazines get full, the allocator will move one of the magazines to the |
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| 234 | list of full magazines. Similarily, when allocating from an empty |
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| 235 | processor magazine cache, the kernel will reload only one magazine from |
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| 236 | the list of full magazines. In other words, the slab allocator tries to |
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| 237 | keep the processor magazine cache only half-full in order to prevent |
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| 238 | thrashing when allocations and deallocations interleave on magazine |
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| 70 | jermar | 239 | boundaries. The advantage of this setup is that during most of the |
| 240 | allocations, no global spinlock needs to be held.</para> |
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| 65 | jermar | 241 | |
| 67 | jermar | 242 | <para>Should HelenOS run short of memory, it would start deallocating |
| 243 | objects from magazines, calling slab cache destructor on them and |
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| 244 | putting them back into slabs. When a slab contanins no allocated object, |
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| 245 | it is immediately freed.</para> |
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| 66 | bondari | 246 | |
| 71 | bondari | 247 | <para> |
| 101 | bondari | 248 | <figure float="1"> |
| 64 | jermar | 249 | <mediaobject id="slab_alloc"> |
| 97 | bondari | 250 | <imageobject role="pdf"> |
| 251 | <imagedata fileref="images.vector/slab_alloc.pdf" format="PDF" /> |
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| 77 | bondari | 252 | </imageobject> |
| 253 | |||
| 64 | jermar | 254 | <imageobject role="html"> |
| 255 | <imagedata fileref="images/slab_alloc.png" format="PNG" /> |
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| 256 | </imageobject> |
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| 77 | bondari | 257 | |
| 258 | <imageobject role="fop"> |
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| 259 | <imagedata fileref="images.vector/slab_alloc.svg" format="SVG" /> |
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| 260 | </imageobject> |
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| 64 | jermar | 261 | </mediaobject> |
| 262 | |||
| 263 | <title>Slab allocator scheme.</title> |
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| 71 | bondari | 264 | </figure> |
| 265 | </para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 266 | |
| 67 | jermar | 267 | <section> |
| 268 | <title>Implementation</title> |
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| 269 | |||
| 83 | jermar | 270 | <para>The slab allocator is closely modelled after <xref |
| 71 | bondari | 271 | linkend="Bonwick01" /> with the following exceptions:<itemizedlist> |
| 82 | jermar | 272 | <listitem> |
| 273 | <para>empty slabs are immediately deallocated and</para> |
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| 274 | </listitem> |
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| 66 | bondari | 275 | |
| 276 | <listitem> |
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| 70 | jermar | 277 | <para>empty magazines are deallocated when not needed.</para> |
| 66 | bondari | 278 | </listitem> |
| 70 | jermar | 279 | </itemizedlist>The following features are not currently supported |
| 280 | but would be easy to do: <itemizedlist> |
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| 71 | bondari | 281 | <listitem>cache coloring and</listitem> |
| 64 | jermar | 282 | |
| 71 | bondari | 283 | <listitem>dynamic magazine grow (different magazine sizes are |
| 284 | already supported, but the allocation strategy would need to be |
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| 285 | adjusted).</listitem> |
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| 64 | jermar | 286 | </itemizedlist></para> |
| 287 | |||
| 288 | <section> |
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| 289 | <title>Allocation/deallocation</title> |
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| 290 | |||
| 70 | jermar | 291 | <para>The following two paragraphs summarize and complete the |
| 292 | description of the slab allocator operation (i.e. |
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| 82 | jermar | 293 | <code>slab_alloc()</code> and <code>slab_free()</code> |
| 294 | functions).</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 295 | |
| 296 | <formalpara> |
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| 297 | <title>Allocation</title> |
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| 298 | |||
| 70 | jermar | 299 | <para><emphasis>Step 1.</emphasis> When an allocation request |
| 300 | comes, the slab allocator checks availability of memory in the |
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| 301 | current magazine of the local processor magazine cache. If the |
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| 76 | palkovsky | 302 | available memory is there, the allocator just pops the object from |
| 303 | magazine and returns it.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 304 | |
| 70 | jermar | 305 | <para><emphasis>Step 2.</emphasis> If the current magazine in the |
| 306 | processor magazine cache is empty, the allocator will attempt to |
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| 307 | swap it with the last magazine from the cache and return to the |
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| 308 | first step. If also the last magazine is empty, the algorithm will |
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| 309 | fall through to Step 3.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 310 | |
| 70 | jermar | 311 | <para><emphasis>Step 3.</emphasis> Now the allocator is in the |
| 312 | situation when both magazines in the processor magazine cache are |
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| 313 | empty. The allocator reloads one magazine from the shared list of |
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| 314 | full magazines. If the reload is successful (i.e. there are full |
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| 315 | magazines in the list), the algorithm continues with Step |
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| 316 | 1.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 317 | |
| 70 | jermar | 318 | <para><emphasis>Step 4.</emphasis> In this fail-safe step, an |
| 319 | object is allocated from the conventional slab layer and a pointer |
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| 320 | to it is returned. If also the last magazine is full,</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 321 | </formalpara> |
| 322 | |||
| 323 | <formalpara> |
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| 324 | <title>Deallocation</title> |
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| 325 | |||
| 70 | jermar | 326 | <para><emphasis>Step 1.</emphasis> During a deallocation request, |
| 327 | the slab allocator checks if the current magazine of the local |
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| 76 | palkovsky | 328 | processor magazine cache is not full. If it is, the pointer to the |
| 70 | jermar | 329 | objects is just pushed into the magazine and the algorithm |
| 330 | returns.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 331 | |
| 70 | jermar | 332 | <para><emphasis>Step 2.</emphasis> If the current magazine is |
| 333 | full, the allocator will attempt to swap it with the last magazine |
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| 334 | from the cache and return to the first step. If also the last |
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| 335 | magazine is empty, the algorithm will fall through to Step |
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| 336 | 3.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 337 | |
| 70 | jermar | 338 | <para><emphasis>Step 3.</emphasis> Now the allocator is in the |
| 339 | situation when both magazines in the processor magazine cache are |
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| 76 | palkovsky | 340 | full. The allocator tries to allocate a new empty magazine and |
| 341 | flush one of the full magazines to the shared list of full |
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| 342 | magazines. If it is successfull, the algoritm continues with Step |
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| 343 | 1.</para> |
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| 344 | |||
| 345 | <para><emphasis>Step 4. </emphasis>In case of low memory condition |
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| 346 | when the allocation of empty magazine fails, the object is moved |
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| 347 | directly into slab. In the worst case object deallocation does not |
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| 348 | need to allocate any additional memory.</para> |
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| 64 | jermar | 349 | </formalpara> |
| 350 | </section> |
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| 351 | </section> |
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| 352 | </section> |
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| 353 | </section> |
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| 354 | |||
| 355 | <section> |
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| 67 | jermar | 356 | <title>Virtual memory management</title> |
| 9 | bondari | 357 | |
| 82 | jermar | 358 | <para>Virtual memory is essential for an operating system because it makes |
| 359 | several things possible. First, it helps to isolate tasks from each other |
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| 360 | by encapsulating them in their private address spaces. Second, virtual |
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| 361 | memory can give tasks the feeling of more memory available than is |
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| 362 | actually possible. And third, by using virtual memory, there might be |
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| 363 | multiple copies of the same program, linked to the same addresses, running |
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| 364 | in the system. There are at least two known mechanisms for implementing |
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| 365 | virtual memory: segmentation and paging. Even though some processor |
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| 366 | architectures supported by HelenOS<footnote> |
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| 367 | <para>ia32 has full-fledged segmentation.</para> |
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| 368 | </footnote> provide both mechanism, the kernel makes use solely of |
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| 369 | paging.</para> |
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| 67 | jermar | 370 | |
| 82 | jermar | 371 | <section id="paging"> |
| 372 | <title>VAT subsystem</title> |
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| 67 | jermar | 373 | |
| 82 | jermar | 374 | <para>In a paged virtual memory, the entire virtual address space is |
| 375 | divided into small power-of-two sized naturally aligned blocks called |
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| 376 | pages. The processor implements a translation mechanism, that allows the |
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| 377 | operating system to manage mappings between set of pages and set of |
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| 378 | indentically sized and identically aligned pieces of physical memory |
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| 379 | called frames. In a result, references to continuous virtual memory |
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| 380 | areas don't necessarily need to reference continuos area of physical |
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| 381 | memory. Supported page sizes usually range from several kilobytes to |
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| 382 | several megabytes. Each page that takes part in the mapping is |
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| 383 | associated with certain attributes that further desribe the mapping |
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| 384 | (e.g. access rights, dirty and accessed bits and present bit).</para> |
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| 67 | jermar | 385 | |
| 82 | jermar | 386 | <para>When the processor accesses a page that is not present (i.e. its |
| 387 | present bit is not set), the operating system is notified through a |
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| 388 | special exception called page fault. It is then up to the operating |
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| 389 | system to service the page fault. In HelenOS, some page faults are fatal |
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| 390 | and result in either task termination or, in the worse case, kernel |
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| 391 | panic<footnote> |
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| 392 | <para>Such a condition would be either caused by a hardware failure |
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| 393 | or a bug in the kernel.</para> |
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| 394 | </footnote>, while other page faults are used to load memory on demand |
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| 395 | or to notify the kernel about certain events.</para> |
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| 67 | jermar | 396 | |
| 82 | jermar | 397 | <indexterm> |
| 398 | <primary>page tables</primary> |
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| 399 | </indexterm> |
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| 67 | jermar | 400 | |
| 82 | jermar | 401 | <para>The set of all page mappings is stored in a memory structure |
| 402 | called page tables. Some architectures have no hardware support for page |
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| 403 | tables<footnote> |
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| 404 | <para>On mips32, TLB-only model is used and the operating system is |
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| 405 | responsible for managing software defined page tables.</para> |
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| 406 | </footnote> while other processor architectures<footnote> |
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| 407 | <para>Like amd64 and ia32.</para> |
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| 408 | </footnote> understand the whole memory format thereof. Despite all |
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| 409 | the possible differences in page table formats, the HelenOS VAT |
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| 410 | subsystem<footnote> |
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| 411 | <para>Virtual Address Translation subsystem.</para> |
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| 412 | </footnote> unifies the page table operations under one programming |
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| 413 | interface. For all parts of the kernel, three basic functions are |
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| 414 | provided:</para> |
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| 415 | |||
| 416 | <itemizedlist> |
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| 417 | <listitem> |
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| 418 | <para><code>page_mapping_insert()</code>,</para> |
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| 419 | </listitem> |
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| 420 | |||
| 421 | <listitem> |
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| 422 | <para><code>page_mapping_find()</code> and</para> |
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| 423 | </listitem> |
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| 424 | |||
| 425 | <listitem> |
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| 426 | <para><code>page_mapping_remove()</code>.</para> |
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| 427 | </listitem> |
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| 428 | </itemizedlist> |
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| 429 | |||
| 430 | <para>The <code>page_mapping_insert()</code> function is used to |
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| 431 | introduce a mapping for one virtual memory page belonging to a |
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| 432 | particular address space into the page tables. Once the mapping is in |
||
| 433 | the page tables, it can be searched by <code>page_mapping_find()</code> |
||
| 434 | and removed by <code>page_mapping_remove()</code>. All of these |
||
| 435 | functions internally select the page table mechanism specific functions |
||
| 436 | that carry out the self operation.</para> |
||
| 437 | |||
| 438 | <para>There are currently two supported mechanisms: generic 4-level |
||
| 439 | hierarchical page tables and global page hash table. Both of the |
||
| 440 | mechanisms are generic as they cover several hardware platforms. For |
||
| 441 | instance, the 4-level hierarchical page table mechanism is used by |
||
| 442 | amd64, ia32, mips32 and ppc32, respectively. These architectures have |
||
| 443 | the following page table format: 4-level, 2-level, TLB-only and hardware |
||
| 444 | hash table, respectively. On the other hand, the global page hash table |
||
| 445 | is used on ia64 that can be TLB-only or use a hardware hash table. |
||
| 446 | Although only two mechanisms are currently implemented, other mechanisms |
||
| 447 | (e.g. B+tree) can be easily added.</para> |
||
| 448 | |||
| 449 | <section id="page_tables"> |
||
| 450 | <indexterm> |
||
| 451 | <primary>page tables</primary> |
||
| 452 | |||
| 453 | <secondary>- hierarchical</secondary> |
||
| 454 | </indexterm> |
||
| 455 | |||
| 456 | <title>Hierarchical 4-level page tables</title> |
||
| 457 | |||
| 458 | <para>Hierarchical 4-level page tables are generalization of the |
||
| 459 | frequently used hierarchical model of page tables. In this mechanism, |
||
| 460 | each address space has its own page tables. To avoid confusion in |
||
| 461 | terminology used by hardware vendors, in HelenOS, the root level page |
||
| 462 | table is called PTL0, the two middle levels are called PTL1 and PTL2, |
||
| 463 | and, finally, the leaf level is called PTL3. All architectures using |
||
| 464 | this mechanism are required to use PTL0 and PTL3. However, the middle |
||
| 465 | levels can be left out, depending on the hardware hierachy or |
||
| 466 | structure of software-only page tables. The genericity is achieved |
||
| 467 | through a set of macros that define transitions from one level to |
||
| 468 | another. Unused levels are optimised out by the compiler.</para> |
||
| 469 | </section> |
||
| 470 | |||
| 471 | <section> |
||
| 472 | <indexterm> |
||
| 473 | <primary>page tables</primary> |
||
| 474 | |||
| 475 | <secondary>- hashing</secondary> |
||
| 476 | </indexterm> |
||
| 477 | |||
| 478 | <title>Global page hash table</title> |
||
| 479 | |||
| 480 | <para>Implementation of the global page hash table was encouraged by |
||
| 481 | 64-bit architectures that can have rather sparse address spaces. The |
||
| 482 | hash table contains valid mappings only. Each entry of the hash table |
||
| 483 | contains an address space pointer, virtual memory page number (VPN), |
||
| 484 | physical memory frame number (PFN) and a set of flags. The pair of the |
||
| 485 | address space pointer and the virtual memory page number is used as a |
||
| 486 | key for the hash table. One of the major differences between the |
||
| 487 | global page hash table and hierarchical 4-level page tables is that |
||
| 488 | there is only a single global page hash table in the system while |
||
| 489 | hierarchical page tables exist per address space. Thus, the global |
||
| 490 | page hash table contains information about mappings of all address |
||
| 83 | jermar | 491 | spaces in the system.</para> |
| 82 | jermar | 492 | |
| 493 | <para>The global page hash table mechanism uses the generic hash table |
||
| 83 | jermar | 494 | type as described in the chapter dedicated to <link |
| 495 | linkend="hashtables">data structures</link> earlier in this |
||
| 496 | book.</para> |
||
| 82 | jermar | 497 | </section> |
| 67 | jermar | 498 | </section> |
| 82 | jermar | 499 | </section> |
| 67 | jermar | 500 | |
| 82 | jermar | 501 | <section id="tlb"> |
| 502 | <indexterm> |
||
| 503 | <primary>TLB</primary> |
||
| 504 | </indexterm> |
||
| 505 | |||
| 506 | <title>Translation Lookaside buffer</title> |
||
| 507 | |||
| 83 | jermar | 508 | <para>Due to the extensive overhead of several extra memory accesses |
| 509 | during page table lookup that are necessary on every instruction, modern |
||
| 510 | architectures deploy fast assotiative cache of recelntly used page |
||
| 511 | mappings. This cache is called TLB - Translation Lookaside Buffer - and is |
||
| 512 | present on every processor in the system. As it has been already pointed |
||
| 513 | out, TLB is the only page translation mechanism for some |
||
| 514 | architectures.</para> |
||
| 82 | jermar | 515 | |
| 516 | <section id="tlb_shootdown"> |
||
| 517 | <indexterm> |
||
| 518 | <primary>TLB</primary> |
||
| 519 | |||
| 520 | <secondary>- TLB shootdown</secondary> |
||
| 521 | </indexterm> |
||
| 522 | |||
| 83 | jermar | 523 | <title>TLB consistency</title> |
| 82 | jermar | 524 | |
| 83 | jermar | 525 | <para>The operating system is responsible for keeping TLB consistent |
| 526 | with the page tables. Whenever mappings are modified or purged from the |
||
| 527 | page tables, or when an address space identifier is reused, the kernel |
||
| 528 | needs to invalidate the respective contents of TLB. Some TLB types |
||
| 529 | support partial invalidation of their content (e.g. ranges of pages or |
||
| 530 | address spaces) while other types can be invalidated only entirely. The |
||
| 531 | invalidation must be done on all processors for there is one TLB per |
||
| 532 | processor. Maintaining TLB consistency on multiprocessor configurations |
||
| 533 | is not as trivial as it might look from the first glance.</para> |
||
| 82 | jermar | 534 | |
| 83 | jermar | 535 | <para>The remote TLB invalidation is called TLB shootdown. HelenOS uses |
| 536 | a simplified variant of the algorithm described in <xref |
||
| 84 | jermar | 537 | linkend="Black89" />.</para> |
| 82 | jermar | 538 | |
| 83 | jermar | 539 | <para>TLB shootdown is performed in three phases.</para> |
| 82 | jermar | 540 | |
| 541 | <formalpara> |
||
| 542 | <title>Phase 1.</title> |
||
| 543 | |||
| 83 | jermar | 544 | <para>The initiator clears its TLB flag and locks the global TLB |
| 545 | spinlock. The request is then enqueued into all other processors' TLB |
||
| 546 | shootdown message queues. When the TLB shootdown message queue is full |
||
| 547 | on any processor, the queue is purged and a single request to |
||
| 548 | invalidate the entire TLB is stored there. Once all the TLB shootdown |
||
| 549 | messages were dispatched, the initiator sends all other processors an |
||
| 550 | interrupt to notify them about the incoming TLB shootdown message. It |
||
| 551 | then spins until all processors accept the interrupt and clear their |
||
| 552 | TLB flags.</para> |
||
| 82 | jermar | 553 | </formalpara> |
| 554 | |||
| 555 | <formalpara> |
||
| 556 | <title>Phase 2.</title> |
||
| 557 | |||
| 83 | jermar | 558 | <para>Except for the initiator, all other processors are spining on |
| 559 | the TLB spinlock. The initiator is now free to modify the page tables |
||
| 560 | and purge its own TLB. The initiator then unlocks the global TLB |
||
| 561 | spinlock and sets its TLB flag.</para> |
||
| 82 | jermar | 562 | </formalpara> |
| 83 | jermar | 563 | |
| 564 | <formalpara> |
||
| 565 | <title>Phase 3.</title> |
||
| 566 | |||
| 567 | <para>When the spinlock is unlocked by the initiator, other processors |
||
| 568 | are sequentially granted the spinlock. However, once they manage to |
||
| 569 | lock it, they immediately release it. Each processor invalidates its |
||
| 570 | TLB according to messages found in its TLB shootdown message queue. In |
||
| 571 | the end, each processor sets its TLB flag and resumes its previous |
||
| 572 | operation.</para> |
||
| 573 | </formalpara> |
||
| 82 | jermar | 574 | </section> |
| 84 | jermar | 575 | </section> |
| 82 | jermar | 576 | |
| 84 | jermar | 577 | <section> |
| 578 | <title>Address spaces</title> |
||
| 70 | jermar | 579 | |
| 96 | jermar | 580 | <para>In HelenOS, address spaces are objects that encapsulate the |
| 581 | following items:</para> |
||
| 70 | jermar | 582 | |
| 96 | jermar | 583 | <itemizedlist> |
| 584 | <listitem> |
||
| 585 | <para>address space identifier,</para> |
||
| 586 | </listitem> |
||
| 587 | |||
| 588 | <listitem> |
||
| 589 | <para>page table PTL0 pointer and</para> |
||
| 590 | </listitem> |
||
| 591 | |||
| 592 | <listitem> |
||
| 593 | <para>a set of mutually disjunctive address space areas.</para> |
||
| 594 | </listitem> |
||
| 595 | </itemizedlist> |
||
| 596 | |||
| 597 | <para>Address space identifiers will be discussed later in this section. |
||
| 598 | The address space contains a pointer to PTL0, provided that the |
||
| 599 | architecture uses per address space page tables such as the hierarchical |
||
| 600 | 4-level page tables. The most interesting component is the B+tree of |
||
| 601 | address space areas belonging to the address space.</para> |
||
| 602 | |||
| 84 | jermar | 603 | <section> |
| 96 | jermar | 604 | <title>Address space areas</title> |
| 605 | |||
| 606 | <para>Because an address space can be composed of heterogenous mappings |
||
| 607 | such as userspace code, data, read-only data and kernel memory, it is |
||
| 608 | further broken down into smaller homogenous units called address space |
||
| 609 | areas. An address space area represents a continuous piece of userspace |
||
| 610 | virtual memory associated with common flags. Kernel memory mappings do |
||
| 611 | not take part in address space areas because they are hardwired either |
||
| 612 | into TLBs or page tables and are thus shared by all address spaces. The |
||
| 613 | flags are a combination of:</para> |
||
| 614 | |||
| 615 | <itemizedlist> |
||
| 616 | <listitem> |
||
| 617 | <para><constant>AS_AREA_READ</constant>,</para> |
||
| 618 | </listitem> |
||
| 619 | |||
| 620 | <listitem> |
||
| 621 | <para><constant>AS_AREA_WRITE</constant>,</para> |
||
| 622 | </listitem> |
||
| 623 | |||
| 624 | <listitem> |
||
| 625 | <para><constant>AS_AREA_EXEC</constant> and</para> |
||
| 626 | </listitem> |
||
| 627 | |||
| 628 | <listitem> |
||
| 629 | <para><constant>AS_AREA_CACHEABLE</constant>.</para> |
||
| 630 | </listitem> |
||
| 631 | </itemizedlist> |
||
| 632 | |||
| 633 | <para>The <constant>AS_AREA_READ</constant> flag is implicit and cannot |
||
| 634 | be removed. The <constant>AS_AREA_WRITE</constant> flag denotes a |
||
| 635 | writable address space area and the <constant>AS_AREA_EXEC</constant> is |
||
| 636 | used for areas containing code. The combination of |
||
| 637 | <constant>AS_AREA_WRITE</constant> and <constant>AS_AREA_EXEC</constant> |
||
| 638 | is not allowed. Some architectures don't differentiate between |
||
| 639 | executable and non-executable mappings. In that case, the |
||
| 640 | <constant>AS_AREA_EXEC</constant> has no effect on mappings created for |
||
| 641 | the address space area in the page tables. If the flags don't have |
||
| 642 | <constant>AS_AREA_CACHEABLE</constant> set, the page tables content of |
||
| 643 | the area is created with caching disabled. This is useful for address |
||
| 644 | space areas containing memory of some memory mapped device.</para> |
||
| 645 | |||
| 646 | <para>Address space areas can be backed by a backend that provides |
||
| 647 | virtual functions for servicing page faults that occur within the |
||
| 648 | address space area, releasing memory allocated by the area and sharing |
||
| 649 | the area. Currently, there are three backends supported by HelenOS: |
||
| 650 | anonymous memory backend, ELF image backend and physical memory |
||
| 651 | backend.</para> |
||
| 652 | |||
| 653 | <formalpara> |
||
| 654 | <title>Anonymous memory backend</title> |
||
| 655 | |||
| 656 | <para>Anonymous memory is memory that has no predefined contents such |
||
| 657 | as userspace stack or heap. Anonymous address space areas are backed |
||
| 658 | by memory allocated from the frame allocator. Areas backed by this |
||
| 659 | backend can be resized as long as they are not shared.</para> |
||
| 660 | </formalpara> |
||
| 661 | |||
| 662 | <formalpara> |
||
| 663 | <title>ELF image backend</title> |
||
| 664 | |||
| 665 | <para>Areas backed by the ELF backend are composed of memory that can |
||
| 666 | be either initialized, partially initialized or completely anonymous. |
||
| 667 | Initialized portions of ELF backend address space areas are those that |
||
| 668 | are entirely physically present in the executable image (e.g. code and |
||
| 669 | initialized data). Anonymous portions are those pages of the |
||
| 670 | <emphasis>bss</emphasis> section that exist entirely outside the |
||
| 671 | executable image. Lastly, pages that don't fit into the previous two |
||
| 672 | categories are partially initialized as they are both part of the |
||
| 673 | image and the <emphasis>bss</emphasis> section. The initialized |
||
| 674 | portion does not need any memory from the allocator unless it is |
||
| 675 | writable. In that case, pages are duplicated on demand during page |
||
| 676 | fault and memory for the copy is allocated from the frame allocator. |
||
| 677 | The remaining two parts of the ELF always require memory from the |
||
| 678 | frame allocator. Non-shared address space areas backed by the ELF |
||
| 679 | image backend can be resized.</para> |
||
| 680 | </formalpara> |
||
| 681 | |||
| 682 | <formalpara> |
||
| 683 | <title>Physical memory backend</title> |
||
| 684 | |||
| 685 | <para>Physical memory backend is used by the device drivers to access |
||
| 686 | physical memory. No additional memory needs to be allocated on a page |
||
| 687 | fault in this area and when sharing this area. Areas backed by this |
||
| 688 | backend cannot be resized.</para> |
||
| 689 | </formalpara> |
||
| 690 | |||
| 691 | <section> |
||
| 692 | <title>Memory sharing</title> |
||
| 693 | |||
| 694 | <para>Address space areas can be shared provided that their backend |
||
| 695 | supports sharing<footnote> |
||
| 696 | <para>Which is the case for all currently supported |
||
| 697 | backends.</para> |
||
| 698 | </footnote>. When the kernel calls <code>as_area_share()</code>, a |
||
| 699 | check is made to see whether the area is already being shared. If the |
||
| 700 | area is already shared, it contains a pointer to the share info |
||
| 701 | structure. The pointer is then simply copied into the new address |
||
| 702 | space area and a reference count in the share info structure is |
||
| 703 | incremented. Otherwise a new address space share info structure needs |
||
| 704 | to be created. The backend is then called to duplicate the mapping of |
||
| 705 | pages for which a frame is allocated. The duplicated mapping is stored |
||
| 706 | in the share info structure B+tree called <varname>pagemap</varname>. |
||
| 707 | Note that the reference count of the frames put into the |
||
| 708 | <varname>pagemap</varname> must be incremented to prevent .</para> |
||
| 709 | </section> |
||
| 710 | |||
| 711 | <section> |
||
| 712 | <title>Page faults</title> |
||
| 713 | |||
| 714 | <para>When a page fault is encountered in the address space area, the |
||
| 715 | address space page fault handler, <code>as_page_fault()</code>, |
||
| 716 | invokes the corresponding backend page fault handler to resolve the |
||
| 717 | situation. The backend might either confirm the page fault or perform |
||
| 718 | a remedy. In the non-shared case, depending on the backend, the page |
||
| 719 | fault can be remedied usually by allocating some memory on demand or |
||
| 720 | by looking up the frame for the faulting translation in the ELF |
||
| 721 | image.</para> |
||
| 722 | |||
| 723 | <para>Shared address space areas need to consider the |
||
| 724 | <varname>pagemap</varname> B+tree. First they need to make sure |
||
| 725 | whether to mapping is not present in the <varname>pagemap</varname>. |
||
| 726 | If it is there, then the frame reference count is increased and the |
||
| 727 | page fault is resolved. Otherwise the handler proceeds similarily to |
||
| 728 | the non-shared case. If it allocates a physical memory frame, it must |
||
| 729 | increment its reference count and add it to the |
||
| 730 | <varname>pagemap</varname>.</para> |
||
| 731 | </section> |
||
| 732 | </section> |
||
| 733 | |||
| 734 | <section> |
||
| 84 | jermar | 735 | <indexterm> |
| 736 | <primary>address space</primary> |
||
| 70 | jermar | 737 | |
| 84 | jermar | 738 | <secondary>- ASID</secondary> |
| 739 | </indexterm> |
||
| 67 | jermar | 740 | |
| 84 | jermar | 741 | <title>Address Space ID (ASID)</title> |
| 67 | jermar | 742 | |
| 84 | jermar | 743 | <para>Modern processor architectures optimize TLB utilization by |
| 744 | associating TLB entries with address spaces through assigning |
||
| 745 | identification numbers to them. In HelenOS, the term ASID, originally |
||
| 746 | taken from the mips32 terminology, is used to refer to the address space |
||
| 747 | identification number. The advantage of having ASIDs is that TLB does |
||
| 748 | not have to be invalidated on thread context switch as long as ASIDs are |
||
| 749 | unique. Unfotunatelly, architectures supported by HelenOS use all |
||
| 750 | different widths of ASID numbers<footnote> |
||
| 751 | <para>amd64 and ia32 don't use similar abstraction at all, mips32 |
||
| 752 | has 8-bit ASIDs and ia64 can have ASIDs between 18 to 24 bits |
||
| 753 | wide.</para> |
||
| 754 | </footnote> out of which none is sufficient. The amd64 and ia32 |
||
| 755 | architectures cannot make use of ASIDs as their TLB doesn't recognize |
||
| 756 | such an abstraction. Other architectures have support for ASIDs, but for |
||
| 757 | instance ppc32 doesn't make use of them in the current version of |
||
| 758 | HelenOS. The rest of the architectures does use ASIDs. However, even on |
||
| 759 | the ia64 architecture, the minimal supported width of ASID<footnote> |
||
| 760 | <para>RID in ia64 terminology.</para> |
||
| 761 | </footnote> is insufficient to provide a unique integer identifier to |
||
| 762 | all address spaces that might hypothetically coexist in the running |
||
| 763 | system. The situation on mips32 is even worse: the architecture has only |
||
| 764 | 256 unique identifiers.</para> |
||
| 67 | jermar | 765 | |
| 84 | jermar | 766 | <indexterm> |
| 767 | <primary>address space</primary> |
||
| 67 | jermar | 768 | |
| 84 | jermar | 769 | <secondary>- ASID stealing</secondary> |
| 770 | </indexterm> |
||
| 67 | jermar | 771 | |
| 84 | jermar | 772 | <para>To mitigate the shortage of ASIDs, HelenOS uses the following |
| 773 | strategy. When the system initializes, a FIFO queue<footnote> |
||
| 774 | <para>Note that architecture-specific measures are taken to avoid |
||
| 775 | too large FIFO queue. For instance, seven consecutive ia64 RIDs are |
||
| 776 | grouped to form one HelenOS ASID.</para> |
||
| 777 | </footnote> is created and filled with all available ASIDs. Moreover, |
||
| 778 | every address space remembers the number of processors on which it is |
||
| 779 | active. Address spaces that have a valid ASID and that are not active on |
||
| 780 | any processor are appended to the list of inactive address spaces with |
||
| 781 | valid ASID. When an address space needs to be assigned a valid ASID, it |
||
| 782 | first checks the FIFO queue. If it contains at least one ASID, the ASID |
||
| 783 | is allocated. If the queue is empty, an ASID is simply stolen from the |
||
| 784 | first address space in the list. In that case, the address space that |
||
| 785 | loses the ASID in favor of another address space, is removed from the |
||
| 786 | list. After the new ASID is purged from all TLBs, it can be used by the |
||
| 787 | address space. Note that this approach works due to the fact that the |
||
| 788 | number of ASIDs is greater than the maximal number of processors |
||
| 789 | supported by HelenOS and that there can be only one active address space |
||
| 790 | per processor. In other words, when the FIFO queue is empty, there must |
||
| 791 | be address spaces that are not active on any processor.</para> |
||
| 67 | jermar | 792 | </section> |
| 26 | bondari | 793 | </section> |
| 11 | bondari | 794 | </chapter> |