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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-16 19:19:13 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-16 19:19:13 +0000
commitccd992355df7192993c666236047820244914598 (patch)
treef00fea65147227b7743083c6148396f74cd66935 /src/runtime/mranges.go
parentInitial commit. (diff)
downloadgolang-1.21-ccd992355df7192993c666236047820244914598.tar.xz
golang-1.21-ccd992355df7192993c666236047820244914598.zip
Adding upstream version 1.21.8.upstream/1.21.8
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'src/runtime/mranges.go')
-rw-r--r--src/runtime/mranges.go460
1 files changed, 460 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/runtime/mranges.go b/src/runtime/mranges.go
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+// Copyright 2019 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
+// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
+// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
+
+// Address range data structure.
+//
+// This file contains an implementation of a data structure which
+// manages ordered address ranges.
+
+package runtime
+
+import (
+ "internal/goarch"
+ "runtime/internal/atomic"
+ "unsafe"
+)
+
+// addrRange represents a region of address space.
+//
+// An addrRange must never span a gap in the address space.
+type addrRange struct {
+ // base and limit together represent the region of address space
+ // [base, limit). That is, base is inclusive, limit is exclusive.
+ // These are address over an offset view of the address space on
+ // platforms with a segmented address space, that is, on platforms
+ // where arenaBaseOffset != 0.
+ base, limit offAddr
+}
+
+// makeAddrRange creates a new address range from two virtual addresses.
+//
+// Throws if the base and limit are not in the same memory segment.
+func makeAddrRange(base, limit uintptr) addrRange {
+ r := addrRange{offAddr{base}, offAddr{limit}}
+ if (base-arenaBaseOffset >= base) != (limit-arenaBaseOffset >= limit) {
+ throw("addr range base and limit are not in the same memory segment")
+ }
+ return r
+}
+
+// size returns the size of the range represented in bytes.
+func (a addrRange) size() uintptr {
+ if !a.base.lessThan(a.limit) {
+ return 0
+ }
+ // Subtraction is safe because limit and base must be in the same
+ // segment of the address space.
+ return a.limit.diff(a.base)
+}
+
+// contains returns whether or not the range contains a given address.
+func (a addrRange) contains(addr uintptr) bool {
+ return a.base.lessEqual(offAddr{addr}) && (offAddr{addr}).lessThan(a.limit)
+}
+
+// subtract takes the addrRange toPrune and cuts out any overlap with
+// from, then returns the new range. subtract assumes that a and b
+// either don't overlap at all, only overlap on one side, or are equal.
+// If b is strictly contained in a, thus forcing a split, it will throw.
+func (a addrRange) subtract(b addrRange) addrRange {
+ if b.base.lessEqual(a.base) && a.limit.lessEqual(b.limit) {
+ return addrRange{}
+ } else if a.base.lessThan(b.base) && b.limit.lessThan(a.limit) {
+ throw("bad prune")
+ } else if b.limit.lessThan(a.limit) && a.base.lessThan(b.limit) {
+ a.base = b.limit
+ } else if a.base.lessThan(b.base) && b.base.lessThan(a.limit) {
+ a.limit = b.base
+ }
+ return a
+}
+
+// takeFromFront takes len bytes from the front of the address range, aligning
+// the base to align first. On success, returns the aligned start of the region
+// taken and true.
+func (a *addrRange) takeFromFront(len uintptr, align uint8) (uintptr, bool) {
+ base := alignUp(a.base.addr(), uintptr(align)) + len
+ if base > a.limit.addr() {
+ return 0, false
+ }
+ a.base = offAddr{base}
+ return base - len, true
+}
+
+// takeFromBack takes len bytes from the end of the address range, aligning
+// the limit to align after subtracting len. On success, returns the aligned
+// start of the region taken and true.
+func (a *addrRange) takeFromBack(len uintptr, align uint8) (uintptr, bool) {
+ limit := alignDown(a.limit.addr()-len, uintptr(align))
+ if a.base.addr() > limit {
+ return 0, false
+ }
+ a.limit = offAddr{limit}
+ return limit, true
+}
+
+// removeGreaterEqual removes all addresses in a greater than or equal
+// to addr and returns the new range.
+func (a addrRange) removeGreaterEqual(addr uintptr) addrRange {
+ if (offAddr{addr}).lessEqual(a.base) {
+ return addrRange{}
+ }
+ if a.limit.lessEqual(offAddr{addr}) {
+ return a
+ }
+ return makeAddrRange(a.base.addr(), addr)
+}
+
+var (
+ // minOffAddr is the minimum address in the offset space, and
+ // it corresponds to the virtual address arenaBaseOffset.
+ minOffAddr = offAddr{arenaBaseOffset}
+
+ // maxOffAddr is the maximum address in the offset address
+ // space. It corresponds to the highest virtual address representable
+ // by the page alloc chunk and heap arena maps.
+ maxOffAddr = offAddr{(((1 << heapAddrBits) - 1) + arenaBaseOffset) & uintptrMask}
+)
+
+// offAddr represents an address in a contiguous view
+// of the address space on systems where the address space is
+// segmented. On other systems, it's just a normal address.
+type offAddr struct {
+ // a is just the virtual address, but should never be used
+ // directly. Call addr() to get this value instead.
+ a uintptr
+}
+
+// add adds a uintptr offset to the offAddr.
+func (l offAddr) add(bytes uintptr) offAddr {
+ return offAddr{a: l.a + bytes}
+}
+
+// sub subtracts a uintptr offset from the offAddr.
+func (l offAddr) sub(bytes uintptr) offAddr {
+ return offAddr{a: l.a - bytes}
+}
+
+// diff returns the amount of bytes in between the
+// two offAddrs.
+func (l1 offAddr) diff(l2 offAddr) uintptr {
+ return l1.a - l2.a
+}
+
+// lessThan returns true if l1 is less than l2 in the offset
+// address space.
+func (l1 offAddr) lessThan(l2 offAddr) bool {
+ return (l1.a - arenaBaseOffset) < (l2.a - arenaBaseOffset)
+}
+
+// lessEqual returns true if l1 is less than or equal to l2 in
+// the offset address space.
+func (l1 offAddr) lessEqual(l2 offAddr) bool {
+ return (l1.a - arenaBaseOffset) <= (l2.a - arenaBaseOffset)
+}
+
+// equal returns true if the two offAddr values are equal.
+func (l1 offAddr) equal(l2 offAddr) bool {
+ // No need to compare in the offset space, it
+ // means the same thing.
+ return l1 == l2
+}
+
+// addr returns the virtual address for this offset address.
+func (l offAddr) addr() uintptr {
+ return l.a
+}
+
+// atomicOffAddr is like offAddr, but operations on it are atomic.
+// It also contains operations to be able to store marked addresses
+// to ensure that they're not overridden until they've been seen.
+type atomicOffAddr struct {
+ // a contains the offset address, unlike offAddr.
+ a atomic.Int64
+}
+
+// Clear attempts to store minOffAddr in atomicOffAddr. It may fail
+// if a marked value is placed in the box in the meanwhile.
+func (b *atomicOffAddr) Clear() {
+ for {
+ old := b.a.Load()
+ if old < 0 {
+ return
+ }
+ if b.a.CompareAndSwap(old, int64(minOffAddr.addr()-arenaBaseOffset)) {
+ return
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+// StoreMin stores addr if it's less than the current value in the
+// offset address space if the current value is not marked.
+func (b *atomicOffAddr) StoreMin(addr uintptr) {
+ new := int64(addr - arenaBaseOffset)
+ for {
+ old := b.a.Load()
+ if old < new {
+ return
+ }
+ if b.a.CompareAndSwap(old, new) {
+ return
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+// StoreUnmark attempts to unmark the value in atomicOffAddr and
+// replace it with newAddr. markedAddr must be a marked address
+// returned by Load. This function will not store newAddr if the
+// box no longer contains markedAddr.
+func (b *atomicOffAddr) StoreUnmark(markedAddr, newAddr uintptr) {
+ b.a.CompareAndSwap(-int64(markedAddr-arenaBaseOffset), int64(newAddr-arenaBaseOffset))
+}
+
+// StoreMarked stores addr but first converted to the offset address
+// space and then negated.
+func (b *atomicOffAddr) StoreMarked(addr uintptr) {
+ b.a.Store(-int64(addr - arenaBaseOffset))
+}
+
+// Load returns the address in the box as a virtual address. It also
+// returns if the value was marked or not.
+func (b *atomicOffAddr) Load() (uintptr, bool) {
+ v := b.a.Load()
+ wasMarked := false
+ if v < 0 {
+ wasMarked = true
+ v = -v
+ }
+ return uintptr(v) + arenaBaseOffset, wasMarked
+}
+
+// addrRanges is a data structure holding a collection of ranges of
+// address space.
+//
+// The ranges are coalesced eagerly to reduce the
+// number ranges it holds.
+//
+// The slice backing store for this field is persistentalloc'd
+// and thus there is no way to free it.
+//
+// addrRanges is not thread-safe.
+type addrRanges struct {
+ // ranges is a slice of ranges sorted by base.
+ ranges []addrRange
+
+ // totalBytes is the total amount of address space in bytes counted by
+ // this addrRanges.
+ totalBytes uintptr
+
+ // sysStat is the stat to track allocations by this type
+ sysStat *sysMemStat
+}
+
+func (a *addrRanges) init(sysStat *sysMemStat) {
+ ranges := (*notInHeapSlice)(unsafe.Pointer(&a.ranges))
+ ranges.len = 0
+ ranges.cap = 16
+ ranges.array = (*notInHeap)(persistentalloc(unsafe.Sizeof(addrRange{})*uintptr(ranges.cap), goarch.PtrSize, sysStat))
+ a.sysStat = sysStat
+ a.totalBytes = 0
+}
+
+// findSucc returns the first index in a such that addr is
+// less than the base of the addrRange at that index.
+func (a *addrRanges) findSucc(addr uintptr) int {
+ base := offAddr{addr}
+
+ // Narrow down the search space via a binary search
+ // for large addrRanges until we have at most iterMax
+ // candidates left.
+ const iterMax = 8
+ bot, top := 0, len(a.ranges)
+ for top-bot > iterMax {
+ i := ((top - bot) / 2) + bot
+ if a.ranges[i].contains(base.addr()) {
+ // a.ranges[i] contains base, so
+ // its successor is the next index.
+ return i + 1
+ }
+ if base.lessThan(a.ranges[i].base) {
+ // In this case i might actually be
+ // the successor, but we can't be sure
+ // until we check the ones before it.
+ top = i
+ } else {
+ // In this case we know base is
+ // greater than or equal to a.ranges[i].limit-1,
+ // so i is definitely not the successor.
+ // We already checked i, so pick the next
+ // one.
+ bot = i + 1
+ }
+ }
+ // There are top-bot candidates left, so
+ // iterate over them and find the first that
+ // base is strictly less than.
+ for i := bot; i < top; i++ {
+ if base.lessThan(a.ranges[i].base) {
+ return i
+ }
+ }
+ return top
+}
+
+// findAddrGreaterEqual returns the smallest address represented by a
+// that is >= addr. Thus, if the address is represented by a,
+// then it returns addr. The second return value indicates whether
+// such an address exists for addr in a. That is, if addr is larger than
+// any address known to a, the second return value will be false.
+func (a *addrRanges) findAddrGreaterEqual(addr uintptr) (uintptr, bool) {
+ i := a.findSucc(addr)
+ if i == 0 {
+ return a.ranges[0].base.addr(), true
+ }
+ if a.ranges[i-1].contains(addr) {
+ return addr, true
+ }
+ if i < len(a.ranges) {
+ return a.ranges[i].base.addr(), true
+ }
+ return 0, false
+}
+
+// contains returns true if a covers the address addr.
+func (a *addrRanges) contains(addr uintptr) bool {
+ i := a.findSucc(addr)
+ if i == 0 {
+ return false
+ }
+ return a.ranges[i-1].contains(addr)
+}
+
+// add inserts a new address range to a.
+//
+// r must not overlap with any address range in a and r.size() must be > 0.
+func (a *addrRanges) add(r addrRange) {
+ // The copies in this function are potentially expensive, but this data
+ // structure is meant to represent the Go heap. At worst, copying this
+ // would take ~160µs assuming a conservative copying rate of 25 GiB/s (the
+ // copy will almost never trigger a page fault) for a 1 TiB heap with 4 MiB
+ // arenas which is completely discontiguous. ~160µs is still a lot, but in
+ // practice most platforms have 64 MiB arenas (which cuts this by a factor
+ // of 16) and Go heaps are usually mostly contiguous, so the chance that
+ // an addrRanges even grows to that size is extremely low.
+
+ // An empty range has no effect on the set of addresses represented
+ // by a, but passing a zero-sized range is almost always a bug.
+ if r.size() == 0 {
+ print("runtime: range = {", hex(r.base.addr()), ", ", hex(r.limit.addr()), "}\n")
+ throw("attempted to add zero-sized address range")
+ }
+ // Because we assume r is not currently represented in a,
+ // findSucc gives us our insertion index.
+ i := a.findSucc(r.base.addr())
+ coalescesDown := i > 0 && a.ranges[i-1].limit.equal(r.base)
+ coalescesUp := i < len(a.ranges) && r.limit.equal(a.ranges[i].base)
+ if coalescesUp && coalescesDown {
+ // We have neighbors and they both border us.
+ // Merge a.ranges[i-1], r, and a.ranges[i] together into a.ranges[i-1].
+ a.ranges[i-1].limit = a.ranges[i].limit
+
+ // Delete a.ranges[i].
+ copy(a.ranges[i:], a.ranges[i+1:])
+ a.ranges = a.ranges[:len(a.ranges)-1]
+ } else if coalescesDown {
+ // We have a neighbor at a lower address only and it borders us.
+ // Merge the new space into a.ranges[i-1].
+ a.ranges[i-1].limit = r.limit
+ } else if coalescesUp {
+ // We have a neighbor at a higher address only and it borders us.
+ // Merge the new space into a.ranges[i].
+ a.ranges[i].base = r.base
+ } else {
+ // We may or may not have neighbors which don't border us.
+ // Add the new range.
+ if len(a.ranges)+1 > cap(a.ranges) {
+ // Grow the array. Note that this leaks the old array, but since
+ // we're doubling we have at most 2x waste. For a 1 TiB heap and
+ // 4 MiB arenas which are all discontiguous (both very conservative
+ // assumptions), this would waste at most 4 MiB of memory.
+ oldRanges := a.ranges
+ ranges := (*notInHeapSlice)(unsafe.Pointer(&a.ranges))
+ ranges.len = len(oldRanges) + 1
+ ranges.cap = cap(oldRanges) * 2
+ ranges.array = (*notInHeap)(persistentalloc(unsafe.Sizeof(addrRange{})*uintptr(ranges.cap), goarch.PtrSize, a.sysStat))
+
+ // Copy in the old array, but make space for the new range.
+ copy(a.ranges[:i], oldRanges[:i])
+ copy(a.ranges[i+1:], oldRanges[i:])
+ } else {
+ a.ranges = a.ranges[:len(a.ranges)+1]
+ copy(a.ranges[i+1:], a.ranges[i:])
+ }
+ a.ranges[i] = r
+ }
+ a.totalBytes += r.size()
+}
+
+// removeLast removes and returns the highest-addressed contiguous range
+// of a, or the last nBytes of that range, whichever is smaller. If a is
+// empty, it returns an empty range.
+func (a *addrRanges) removeLast(nBytes uintptr) addrRange {
+ if len(a.ranges) == 0 {
+ return addrRange{}
+ }
+ r := a.ranges[len(a.ranges)-1]
+ size := r.size()
+ if size > nBytes {
+ newEnd := r.limit.sub(nBytes)
+ a.ranges[len(a.ranges)-1].limit = newEnd
+ a.totalBytes -= nBytes
+ return addrRange{newEnd, r.limit}
+ }
+ a.ranges = a.ranges[:len(a.ranges)-1]
+ a.totalBytes -= size
+ return r
+}
+
+// removeGreaterEqual removes the ranges of a which are above addr, and additionally
+// splits any range containing addr.
+func (a *addrRanges) removeGreaterEqual(addr uintptr) {
+ pivot := a.findSucc(addr)
+ if pivot == 0 {
+ // addr is before all ranges in a.
+ a.totalBytes = 0
+ a.ranges = a.ranges[:0]
+ return
+ }
+ removed := uintptr(0)
+ for _, r := range a.ranges[pivot:] {
+ removed += r.size()
+ }
+ if r := a.ranges[pivot-1]; r.contains(addr) {
+ removed += r.size()
+ r = r.removeGreaterEqual(addr)
+ if r.size() == 0 {
+ pivot--
+ } else {
+ removed -= r.size()
+ a.ranges[pivot-1] = r
+ }
+ }
+ a.ranges = a.ranges[:pivot]
+ a.totalBytes -= removed
+}
+
+// cloneInto makes a deep clone of a's state into b, re-using
+// b's ranges if able.
+func (a *addrRanges) cloneInto(b *addrRanges) {
+ if len(a.ranges) > cap(b.ranges) {
+ // Grow the array.
+ ranges := (*notInHeapSlice)(unsafe.Pointer(&b.ranges))
+ ranges.len = 0
+ ranges.cap = cap(a.ranges)
+ ranges.array = (*notInHeap)(persistentalloc(unsafe.Sizeof(addrRange{})*uintptr(ranges.cap), goarch.PtrSize, b.sysStat))
+ }
+ b.ranges = b.ranges[:len(a.ranges)]
+ b.totalBytes = a.totalBytes
+ copy(b.ranges, a.ranges)
+}