github.com/likebike/go--@v0.0.0-20190911215757-0bd925d16e96/go/src/runtime/malloc.go (about) 1 // Copyright 2014 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. 2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style 3 // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. 4 5 // Memory allocator. 6 // 7 // This was originally based on tcmalloc, but has diverged quite a bit. 8 // http://goog-perftools.sourceforge.net/doc/tcmalloc.html 9 10 // The main allocator works in runs of pages. 11 // Small allocation sizes (up to and including 32 kB) are 12 // rounded to one of about 70 size classes, each of which 13 // has its own free set of objects of exactly that size. 14 // Any free page of memory can be split into a set of objects 15 // of one size class, which are then managed using a free bitmap. 16 // 17 // The allocator's data structures are: 18 // 19 // fixalloc: a free-list allocator for fixed-size off-heap objects, 20 // used to manage storage used by the allocator. 21 // mheap: the malloc heap, managed at page (8192-byte) granularity. 22 // mspan: a run of pages managed by the mheap. 23 // mcentral: collects all spans of a given size class. 24 // mcache: a per-P cache of mspans with free space. 25 // mstats: allocation statistics. 26 // 27 // Allocating a small object proceeds up a hierarchy of caches: 28 // 29 // 1. Round the size up to one of the small size classes 30 // and look in the corresponding mspan in this P's mcache. 31 // Scan the mspan's free bitmap to find a free slot. 32 // If there is a free slot, allocate it. 33 // This can all be done without acquiring a lock. 34 // 35 // 2. If the mspan has no free slots, obtain a new mspan 36 // from the mcentral's list of mspans of the required size 37 // class that have free space. 38 // Obtaining a whole span amortizes the cost of locking 39 // the mcentral. 40 // 41 // 3. If the mcentral's mspan list is empty, obtain a run 42 // of pages from the mheap to use for the mspan. 43 // 44 // 4. If the mheap is empty or has no page runs large enough, 45 // allocate a new group of pages (at least 1MB) from the 46 // operating system. Allocating a large run of pages 47 // amortizes the cost of talking to the operating system. 48 // 49 // Sweeping an mspan and freeing objects on it proceeds up a similar 50 // hierarchy: 51 // 52 // 1. If the mspan is being swept in response to allocation, it 53 // is returned to the mcache to satisfy the allocation. 54 // 55 // 2. Otherwise, if the mspan still has allocated objects in it, 56 // it is placed on the mcentral free list for the mspan's size 57 // class. 58 // 59 // 3. Otherwise, if all objects in the mspan are free, the mspan 60 // is now "idle", so it is returned to the mheap and no longer 61 // has a size class. 62 // This may coalesce it with adjacent idle mspans. 63 // 64 // 4. If an mspan remains idle for long enough, return its pages 65 // to the operating system. 66 // 67 // Allocating and freeing a large object uses the mheap 68 // directly, bypassing the mcache and mcentral. 69 // 70 // Free object slots in an mspan are zeroed only if mspan.needzero is 71 // false. If needzero is true, objects are zeroed as they are 72 // allocated. There are various benefits to delaying zeroing this way: 73 // 74 // 1. Stack frame allocation can avoid zeroing altogether. 75 // 76 // 2. It exhibits better temporal locality, since the program is 77 // probably about to write to the memory. 78 // 79 // 3. We don't zero pages that never get reused. 80 81 package runtime 82 83 import ( 84 "runtime/internal/sys" 85 "unsafe" 86 ) 87 88 const ( 89 debugMalloc = false 90 91 maxTinySize = _TinySize 92 tinySizeClass = _TinySizeClass 93 maxSmallSize = _MaxSmallSize 94 95 pageShift = _PageShift 96 pageSize = _PageSize 97 pageMask = _PageMask 98 // By construction, single page spans of the smallest object class 99 // have the most objects per span. 100 maxObjsPerSpan = pageSize / 8 101 102 mSpanInUse = _MSpanInUse 103 104 concurrentSweep = _ConcurrentSweep 105 106 _PageSize = 1 << _PageShift 107 _PageMask = _PageSize - 1 108 109 // _64bit = 1 on 64-bit systems, 0 on 32-bit systems 110 _64bit = 1 << (^uintptr(0) >> 63) / 2 111 112 // Tiny allocator parameters, see "Tiny allocator" comment in malloc.go. 113 _TinySize = 16 114 _TinySizeClass = int8(2) 115 116 _FixAllocChunk = 16 << 10 // Chunk size for FixAlloc 117 _MaxMHeapList = 1 << (20 - _PageShift) // Maximum page length for fixed-size list in MHeap. 118 _HeapAllocChunk = 1 << 20 // Chunk size for heap growth 119 120 // Per-P, per order stack segment cache size. 121 _StackCacheSize = 32 * 1024 122 123 // Number of orders that get caching. Order 0 is FixedStack 124 // and each successive order is twice as large. 125 // We want to cache 2KB, 4KB, 8KB, and 16KB stacks. Larger stacks 126 // will be allocated directly. 127 // Since FixedStack is different on different systems, we 128 // must vary NumStackOrders to keep the same maximum cached size. 129 // OS | FixedStack | NumStackOrders 130 // -----------------+------------+--------------- 131 // linux/darwin/bsd | 2KB | 4 132 // windows/32 | 4KB | 3 133 // windows/64 | 8KB | 2 134 // plan9 | 4KB | 3 135 _NumStackOrders = 4 - sys.PtrSize/4*sys.GoosWindows - 1*sys.GoosPlan9 136 137 // Number of bits in page to span calculations (4k pages). 138 // On Windows 64-bit we limit the arena to 32GB or 35 bits. 139 // Windows counts memory used by page table into committed memory 140 // of the process, so we can't reserve too much memory. 141 // See https://golang.org/issue/5402 and https://golang.org/issue/5236. 142 // On other 64-bit platforms, we limit the arena to 512GB, or 39 bits. 143 // On 32-bit, we don't bother limiting anything, so we use the full 32-bit address. 144 // The only exception is mips32 which only has access to low 2GB of virtual memory. 145 // On Darwin/arm64, we cannot reserve more than ~5GB of virtual memory, 146 // but as most devices have less than 4GB of physical memory anyway, we 147 // try to be conservative here, and only ask for a 2GB heap. 148 _MHeapMap_TotalBits = (_64bit*sys.GoosWindows)*35 + (_64bit*(1-sys.GoosWindows)*(1-sys.GoosDarwin*sys.GoarchArm64))*39 + sys.GoosDarwin*sys.GoarchArm64*31 + (1-_64bit)*(32-(sys.GoarchMips+sys.GoarchMipsle)) 149 _MHeapMap_Bits = _MHeapMap_TotalBits - _PageShift 150 151 // _MaxMem is the maximum heap arena size minus 1. 152 // 153 // On 32-bit, this is also the maximum heap pointer value, 154 // since the arena starts at address 0. 155 _MaxMem = 1<<_MHeapMap_TotalBits - 1 156 157 // Max number of threads to run garbage collection. 158 // 2, 3, and 4 are all plausible maximums depending 159 // on the hardware details of the machine. The garbage 160 // collector scales well to 32 cpus. 161 _MaxGcproc = 32 162 163 // minLegalPointer is the smallest possible legal pointer. 164 // This is the smallest possible architectural page size, 165 // since we assume that the first page is never mapped. 166 // 167 // This should agree with minZeroPage in the compiler. 168 minLegalPointer uintptr = 4096 169 ) 170 171 // physPageSize is the size in bytes of the OS's physical pages. 172 // Mapping and unmapping operations must be done at multiples of 173 // physPageSize. 174 // 175 // This must be set by the OS init code (typically in osinit) before 176 // mallocinit. 177 var physPageSize uintptr 178 179 // OS-defined helpers: 180 // 181 // sysAlloc obtains a large chunk of zeroed memory from the 182 // operating system, typically on the order of a hundred kilobytes 183 // or a megabyte. 184 // NOTE: sysAlloc returns OS-aligned memory, but the heap allocator 185 // may use larger alignment, so the caller must be careful to realign the 186 // memory obtained by sysAlloc. 187 // 188 // SysUnused notifies the operating system that the contents 189 // of the memory region are no longer needed and can be reused 190 // for other purposes. 191 // SysUsed notifies the operating system that the contents 192 // of the memory region are needed again. 193 // 194 // SysFree returns it unconditionally; this is only used if 195 // an out-of-memory error has been detected midway through 196 // an allocation. It is okay if SysFree is a no-op. 197 // 198 // SysReserve reserves address space without allocating memory. 199 // If the pointer passed to it is non-nil, the caller wants the 200 // reservation there, but SysReserve can still choose another 201 // location if that one is unavailable. On some systems and in some 202 // cases SysReserve will simply check that the address space is 203 // available and not actually reserve it. If SysReserve returns 204 // non-nil, it sets *reserved to true if the address space is 205 // reserved, false if it has merely been checked. 206 // NOTE: SysReserve returns OS-aligned memory, but the heap allocator 207 // may use larger alignment, so the caller must be careful to realign the 208 // memory obtained by sysAlloc. 209 // 210 // SysMap maps previously reserved address space for use. 211 // The reserved argument is true if the address space was really 212 // reserved, not merely checked. 213 // 214 // SysFault marks a (already sysAlloc'd) region to fault 215 // if accessed. Used only for debugging the runtime. 216 217 func mallocinit() { 218 if class_to_size[_TinySizeClass] != _TinySize { 219 throw("bad TinySizeClass") 220 } 221 222 testdefersizes() 223 224 // Copy class sizes out for statistics table. 225 for i := range class_to_size { 226 memstats.by_size[i].size = uint32(class_to_size[i]) 227 } 228 229 // Check physPageSize. 230 if physPageSize == 0 { 231 // The OS init code failed to fetch the physical page size. 232 throw("failed to get system page size") 233 } 234 if physPageSize < minPhysPageSize { 235 print("system page size (", physPageSize, ") is smaller than minimum page size (", minPhysPageSize, ")\n") 236 throw("bad system page size") 237 } 238 if physPageSize&(physPageSize-1) != 0 { 239 print("system page size (", physPageSize, ") must be a power of 2\n") 240 throw("bad system page size") 241 } 242 243 // The auxiliary regions start at p and are laid out in the 244 // following order: spans, bitmap, arena. 245 var p, pSize uintptr 246 var reserved bool 247 248 // The spans array holds one *mspan per _PageSize of arena. 249 var spansSize uintptr = (_MaxMem + 1) / _PageSize * sys.PtrSize 250 spansSize = round(spansSize, _PageSize) 251 // The bitmap holds 2 bits per word of arena. 252 var bitmapSize uintptr = (_MaxMem + 1) / (sys.PtrSize * 8 / 2) 253 bitmapSize = round(bitmapSize, _PageSize) 254 255 // Set up the allocation arena, a contiguous area of memory where 256 // allocated data will be found. 257 if sys.PtrSize == 8 { 258 // On a 64-bit machine, allocate from a single contiguous reservation. 259 // 512 GB (MaxMem) should be big enough for now. 260 // 261 // The code will work with the reservation at any address, but ask 262 // SysReserve to use 0x0000XXc000000000 if possible (XX=00...7f). 263 // Allocating a 512 GB region takes away 39 bits, and the amd64 264 // doesn't let us choose the top 17 bits, so that leaves the 9 bits 265 // in the middle of 0x00c0 for us to choose. Choosing 0x00c0 means 266 // that the valid memory addresses will begin 0x00c0, 0x00c1, ..., 0x00df. 267 // In little-endian, that's c0 00, c1 00, ..., df 00. None of those are valid 268 // UTF-8 sequences, and they are otherwise as far away from 269 // ff (likely a common byte) as possible. If that fails, we try other 0xXXc0 270 // addresses. An earlier attempt to use 0x11f8 caused out of memory errors 271 // on OS X during thread allocations. 0x00c0 causes conflicts with 272 // AddressSanitizer which reserves all memory up to 0x0100. 273 // These choices are both for debuggability and to reduce the 274 // odds of a conservative garbage collector (as is still used in gccgo) 275 // not collecting memory because some non-pointer block of memory 276 // had a bit pattern that matched a memory address. 277 // 278 // Actually we reserve 544 GB (because the bitmap ends up being 32 GB) 279 // but it hardly matters: e0 00 is not valid UTF-8 either. 280 // 281 // If this fails we fall back to the 32 bit memory mechanism 282 // 283 // However, on arm64, we ignore all this advice above and slam the 284 // allocation at 0x40 << 32 because when using 4k pages with 3-level 285 // translation buffers, the user address space is limited to 39 bits 286 // On darwin/arm64, the address space is even smaller. 287 arenaSize := round(_MaxMem, _PageSize) 288 pSize = bitmapSize + spansSize + arenaSize + _PageSize 289 for i := 0; i <= 0x7f; i++ { 290 switch { 291 case GOARCH == "arm64" && GOOS == "darwin": 292 p = uintptr(i)<<40 | uintptrMask&(0x0013<<28) 293 case GOARCH == "arm64": 294 p = uintptr(i)<<40 | uintptrMask&(0x0040<<32) 295 default: 296 p = uintptr(i)<<40 | uintptrMask&(0x00c0<<32) 297 } 298 p = uintptr(sysReserve(unsafe.Pointer(p), pSize, &reserved)) 299 if p != 0 { 300 break 301 } 302 } 303 } 304 305 if p == 0 { 306 // On a 32-bit machine, we can't typically get away 307 // with a giant virtual address space reservation. 308 // Instead we map the memory information bitmap 309 // immediately after the data segment, large enough 310 // to handle the entire 4GB address space (256 MB), 311 // along with a reservation for an initial arena. 312 // When that gets used up, we'll start asking the kernel 313 // for any memory anywhere. 314 315 // We want to start the arena low, but if we're linked 316 // against C code, it's possible global constructors 317 // have called malloc and adjusted the process' brk. 318 // Query the brk so we can avoid trying to map the 319 // arena over it (which will cause the kernel to put 320 // the arena somewhere else, likely at a high 321 // address). 322 procBrk := sbrk0() 323 324 // If we fail to allocate, try again with a smaller arena. 325 // This is necessary on Android L where we share a process 326 // with ART, which reserves virtual memory aggressively. 327 // In the worst case, fall back to a 0-sized initial arena, 328 // in the hope that subsequent reservations will succeed. 329 arenaSizes := []uintptr{ 330 512 << 20, 331 256 << 20, 332 128 << 20, 333 0, 334 } 335 336 for _, arenaSize := range arenaSizes { 337 // SysReserve treats the address we ask for, end, as a hint, 338 // not as an absolute requirement. If we ask for the end 339 // of the data segment but the operating system requires 340 // a little more space before we can start allocating, it will 341 // give out a slightly higher pointer. Except QEMU, which 342 // is buggy, as usual: it won't adjust the pointer upward. 343 // So adjust it upward a little bit ourselves: 1/4 MB to get 344 // away from the running binary image and then round up 345 // to a MB boundary. 346 p = round(firstmoduledata.end+(1<<18), 1<<20) 347 pSize = bitmapSize + spansSize + arenaSize + _PageSize 348 if p <= procBrk && procBrk < p+pSize { 349 // Move the start above the brk, 350 // leaving some room for future brk 351 // expansion. 352 p = round(procBrk+(1<<20), 1<<20) 353 } 354 p = uintptr(sysReserve(unsafe.Pointer(p), pSize, &reserved)) 355 if p != 0 { 356 break 357 } 358 } 359 if p == 0 { 360 throw("runtime: cannot reserve arena virtual address space") 361 } 362 } 363 364 // PageSize can be larger than OS definition of page size, 365 // so SysReserve can give us a PageSize-unaligned pointer. 366 // To overcome this we ask for PageSize more and round up the pointer. 367 p1 := round(p, _PageSize) 368 pSize -= p1 - p 369 370 spansStart := p1 371 p1 += spansSize 372 mheap_.bitmap = p1 + bitmapSize 373 p1 += bitmapSize 374 if sys.PtrSize == 4 { 375 // Set arena_start such that we can accept memory 376 // reservations located anywhere in the 4GB virtual space. 377 mheap_.arena_start = 0 378 } else { 379 mheap_.arena_start = p1 380 } 381 mheap_.arena_end = p + pSize 382 mheap_.arena_used = p1 383 mheap_.arena_alloc = p1 384 mheap_.arena_reserved = reserved 385 386 if mheap_.arena_start&(_PageSize-1) != 0 { 387 println("bad pagesize", hex(p), hex(p1), hex(spansSize), hex(bitmapSize), hex(_PageSize), "start", hex(mheap_.arena_start)) 388 throw("misrounded allocation in mallocinit") 389 } 390 391 // Initialize the rest of the allocator. 392 mheap_.init(spansStart, spansSize) 393 _g_ := getg() 394 _g_.m.mcache = allocmcache() 395 } 396 397 // sysAlloc allocates the next n bytes from the heap arena. The 398 // returned pointer is always _PageSize aligned and between 399 // h.arena_start and h.arena_end. sysAlloc returns nil on failure. 400 // There is no corresponding free function. 401 func (h *mheap) sysAlloc(n uintptr) unsafe.Pointer { 402 // strandLimit is the maximum number of bytes to strand from 403 // the current arena block. If we would need to strand more 404 // than this, we fall back to sysAlloc'ing just enough for 405 // this allocation. 406 const strandLimit = 16 << 20 407 408 if n > h.arena_end-h.arena_alloc { 409 // If we haven't grown the arena to _MaxMem yet, try 410 // to reserve some more address space. 411 p_size := round(n+_PageSize, 256<<20) 412 new_end := h.arena_end + p_size // Careful: can overflow 413 if h.arena_end <= new_end && new_end-h.arena_start-1 <= _MaxMem { 414 // TODO: It would be bad if part of the arena 415 // is reserved and part is not. 416 var reserved bool 417 p := uintptr(sysReserve(unsafe.Pointer(h.arena_end), p_size, &reserved)) 418 if p == 0 { 419 // TODO: Try smaller reservation 420 // growths in case we're in a crowded 421 // 32-bit address space. 422 goto reservationFailed 423 } 424 // p can be just about anywhere in the address 425 // space, including before arena_end. 426 if p == h.arena_end { 427 // The new block is contiguous with 428 // the current block. Extend the 429 // current arena block. 430 h.arena_end = new_end 431 h.arena_reserved = reserved 432 } else if h.arena_start <= p && p+p_size-h.arena_start-1 <= _MaxMem && h.arena_end-h.arena_alloc < strandLimit { 433 // We were able to reserve more memory 434 // within the arena space, but it's 435 // not contiguous with our previous 436 // reservation. It could be before or 437 // after our current arena_used. 438 // 439 // Keep everything page-aligned. 440 // Our pages are bigger than hardware pages. 441 h.arena_end = p + p_size 442 p = round(p, _PageSize) 443 h.arena_alloc = p 444 h.arena_reserved = reserved 445 } else { 446 // We got a mapping, but either 447 // 448 // 1) It's not in the arena, so we 449 // can't use it. (This should never 450 // happen on 32-bit.) 451 // 452 // 2) We would need to discard too 453 // much of our current arena block to 454 // use it. 455 // 456 // We haven't added this allocation to 457 // the stats, so subtract it from a 458 // fake stat (but avoid underflow). 459 // 460 // We'll fall back to a small sysAlloc. 461 stat := uint64(p_size) 462 sysFree(unsafe.Pointer(p), p_size, &stat) 463 } 464 } 465 } 466 467 if n <= h.arena_end-h.arena_alloc { 468 // Keep taking from our reservation. 469 p := h.arena_alloc 470 sysMap(unsafe.Pointer(p), n, h.arena_reserved, &memstats.heap_sys) 471 h.arena_alloc += n 472 if h.arena_alloc > h.arena_used { 473 h.setArenaUsed(h.arena_alloc, true) 474 } 475 476 if p&(_PageSize-1) != 0 { 477 throw("misrounded allocation in MHeap_SysAlloc") 478 } 479 return unsafe.Pointer(p) 480 } 481 482 reservationFailed: 483 // If using 64-bit, our reservation is all we have. 484 if sys.PtrSize != 4 { 485 return nil 486 } 487 488 // On 32-bit, once the reservation is gone we can 489 // try to get memory at a location chosen by the OS. 490 p_size := round(n, _PageSize) + _PageSize 491 p := uintptr(sysAlloc(p_size, &memstats.heap_sys)) 492 if p == 0 { 493 return nil 494 } 495 496 if p < h.arena_start || p+p_size-h.arena_start > _MaxMem { 497 // This shouldn't be possible because _MaxMem is the 498 // whole address space on 32-bit. 499 top := uint64(h.arena_start) + _MaxMem 500 print("runtime: memory allocated by OS (", hex(p), ") not in usable range [", hex(h.arena_start), ",", hex(top), ")\n") 501 sysFree(unsafe.Pointer(p), p_size, &memstats.heap_sys) 502 return nil 503 } 504 505 p += -p & (_PageSize - 1) 506 if p+n > h.arena_used { 507 h.setArenaUsed(p+n, true) 508 } 509 510 if p&(_PageSize-1) != 0 { 511 throw("misrounded allocation in MHeap_SysAlloc") 512 } 513 return unsafe.Pointer(p) 514 } 515 516 // base address for all 0-byte allocations 517 var zerobase uintptr 518 519 // nextFreeFast returns the next free object if one is quickly available. 520 // Otherwise it returns 0. 521 func nextFreeFast(s *mspan) gclinkptr { 522 theBit := sys.Ctz64(s.allocCache) // Is there a free object in the allocCache? 523 if theBit < 64 { 524 result := s.freeindex + uintptr(theBit) 525 if result < s.nelems { 526 freeidx := result + 1 527 if freeidx%64 == 0 && freeidx != s.nelems { 528 return 0 529 } 530 s.allocCache >>= uint(theBit + 1) 531 s.freeindex = freeidx 532 s.allocCount++ 533 return gclinkptr(result*s.elemsize + s.base()) 534 } 535 } 536 return 0 537 } 538 539 // nextFree returns the next free object from the cached span if one is available. 540 // Otherwise it refills the cache with a span with an available object and 541 // returns that object along with a flag indicating that this was a heavy 542 // weight allocation. If it is a heavy weight allocation the caller must 543 // determine whether a new GC cycle needs to be started or if the GC is active 544 // whether this goroutine needs to assist the GC. 545 func (c *mcache) nextFree(spc spanClass) (v gclinkptr, s *mspan, shouldhelpgc bool) { 546 s = c.alloc[spc] 547 shouldhelpgc = false 548 freeIndex := s.nextFreeIndex() 549 if freeIndex == s.nelems { 550 // The span is full. 551 if uintptr(s.allocCount) != s.nelems { 552 println("runtime: s.allocCount=", s.allocCount, "s.nelems=", s.nelems) 553 throw("s.allocCount != s.nelems && freeIndex == s.nelems") 554 } 555 systemstack(func() { 556 c.refill(spc) 557 }) 558 shouldhelpgc = true 559 s = c.alloc[spc] 560 561 freeIndex = s.nextFreeIndex() 562 } 563 564 if freeIndex >= s.nelems { 565 throw("freeIndex is not valid") 566 } 567 568 v = gclinkptr(freeIndex*s.elemsize + s.base()) 569 s.allocCount++ 570 if uintptr(s.allocCount) > s.nelems { 571 println("s.allocCount=", s.allocCount, "s.nelems=", s.nelems) 572 throw("s.allocCount > s.nelems") 573 } 574 return 575 } 576 577 // Allocate an object of size bytes. 578 // Small objects are allocated from the per-P cache's free lists. 579 // Large objects (> 32 kB) are allocated straight from the heap. 580 func mallocgc(size uintptr, typ *_type, needzero bool) unsafe.Pointer { 581 if gcphase == _GCmarktermination { 582 throw("mallocgc called with gcphase == _GCmarktermination") 583 } 584 585 if size == 0 { 586 return unsafe.Pointer(&zerobase) 587 } 588 589 if debug.sbrk != 0 { 590 align := uintptr(16) 591 if typ != nil { 592 align = uintptr(typ.align) 593 } 594 return persistentalloc(size, align, &memstats.other_sys) 595 } 596 597 // assistG is the G to charge for this allocation, or nil if 598 // GC is not currently active. 599 var assistG *g 600 if gcBlackenEnabled != 0 { 601 // Charge the current user G for this allocation. 602 assistG = getg() 603 if assistG.m.curg != nil { 604 assistG = assistG.m.curg 605 } 606 // Charge the allocation against the G. We'll account 607 // for internal fragmentation at the end of mallocgc. 608 assistG.gcAssistBytes -= int64(size) 609 610 if assistG.gcAssistBytes < 0 { 611 // This G is in debt. Assist the GC to correct 612 // this before allocating. This must happen 613 // before disabling preemption. 614 gcAssistAlloc(assistG) 615 } 616 } 617 618 // Set mp.mallocing to keep from being preempted by GC. 619 mp := acquirem() 620 if mp.mallocing != 0 { 621 throw("malloc deadlock") 622 } 623 if mp.gsignal == getg() { 624 throw("malloc during signal") 625 } 626 mp.mallocing = 1 627 628 shouldhelpgc := false 629 dataSize := size 630 c := gomcache() 631 var x unsafe.Pointer 632 noscan := typ == nil || typ.kind&kindNoPointers != 0 633 if size <= maxSmallSize { 634 if noscan && size < maxTinySize { 635 // Tiny allocator. 636 // 637 // Tiny allocator combines several tiny allocation requests 638 // into a single memory block. The resulting memory block 639 // is freed when all subobjects are unreachable. The subobjects 640 // must be noscan (don't have pointers), this ensures that 641 // the amount of potentially wasted memory is bounded. 642 // 643 // Size of the memory block used for combining (maxTinySize) is tunable. 644 // Current setting is 16 bytes, which relates to 2x worst case memory 645 // wastage (when all but one subobjects are unreachable). 646 // 8 bytes would result in no wastage at all, but provides less 647 // opportunities for combining. 648 // 32 bytes provides more opportunities for combining, 649 // but can lead to 4x worst case wastage. 650 // The best case winning is 8x regardless of block size. 651 // 652 // Objects obtained from tiny allocator must not be freed explicitly. 653 // So when an object will be freed explicitly, we ensure that 654 // its size >= maxTinySize. 655 // 656 // SetFinalizer has a special case for objects potentially coming 657 // from tiny allocator, it such case it allows to set finalizers 658 // for an inner byte of a memory block. 659 // 660 // The main targets of tiny allocator are small strings and 661 // standalone escaping variables. On a json benchmark 662 // the allocator reduces number of allocations by ~12% and 663 // reduces heap size by ~20%. 664 off := c.tinyoffset 665 // Align tiny pointer for required (conservative) alignment. 666 if size&7 == 0 { 667 off = round(off, 8) 668 } else if size&3 == 0 { 669 off = round(off, 4) 670 } else if size&1 == 0 { 671 off = round(off, 2) 672 } 673 if off+size <= maxTinySize && c.tiny != 0 { 674 // The object fits into existing tiny block. 675 x = unsafe.Pointer(c.tiny + off) 676 c.tinyoffset = off + size 677 c.local_tinyallocs++ 678 mp.mallocing = 0 679 releasem(mp) 680 return x 681 } 682 // Allocate a new maxTinySize block. 683 span := c.alloc[tinySpanClass] 684 v := nextFreeFast(span) 685 if v == 0 { 686 v, _, shouldhelpgc = c.nextFree(tinySpanClass) 687 } 688 x = unsafe.Pointer(v) 689 (*[2]uint64)(x)[0] = 0 690 (*[2]uint64)(x)[1] = 0 691 // See if we need to replace the existing tiny block with the new one 692 // based on amount of remaining free space. 693 if size < c.tinyoffset || c.tiny == 0 { 694 c.tiny = uintptr(x) 695 c.tinyoffset = size 696 } 697 size = maxTinySize 698 } else { 699 var sizeclass uint8 700 if size <= smallSizeMax-8 { 701 sizeclass = size_to_class8[(size+smallSizeDiv-1)/smallSizeDiv] 702 } else { 703 sizeclass = size_to_class128[(size-smallSizeMax+largeSizeDiv-1)/largeSizeDiv] 704 } 705 size = uintptr(class_to_size[sizeclass]) 706 spc := makeSpanClass(sizeclass, noscan) 707 span := c.alloc[spc] 708 v := nextFreeFast(span) 709 if v == 0 { 710 v, span, shouldhelpgc = c.nextFree(spc) 711 } 712 x = unsafe.Pointer(v) 713 if needzero && span.needzero != 0 { 714 memclrNoHeapPointers(unsafe.Pointer(v), size) 715 } 716 } 717 } else { 718 var s *mspan 719 shouldhelpgc = true 720 systemstack(func() { 721 s = largeAlloc(size, needzero, noscan) 722 }) 723 s.freeindex = 1 724 s.allocCount = 1 725 x = unsafe.Pointer(s.base()) 726 size = s.elemsize 727 } 728 729 var scanSize uintptr 730 if !noscan { 731 // If allocating a defer+arg block, now that we've picked a malloc size 732 // large enough to hold everything, cut the "asked for" size down to 733 // just the defer header, so that the GC bitmap will record the arg block 734 // as containing nothing at all (as if it were unused space at the end of 735 // a malloc block caused by size rounding). 736 // The defer arg areas are scanned as part of scanstack. 737 if typ == deferType { 738 dataSize = unsafe.Sizeof(_defer{}) 739 } 740 heapBitsSetType(uintptr(x), size, dataSize, typ) 741 if dataSize > typ.size { 742 // Array allocation. If there are any 743 // pointers, GC has to scan to the last 744 // element. 745 if typ.ptrdata != 0 { 746 scanSize = dataSize - typ.size + typ.ptrdata 747 } 748 } else { 749 scanSize = typ.ptrdata 750 } 751 c.local_scan += scanSize 752 } 753 754 // Ensure that the stores above that initialize x to 755 // type-safe memory and set the heap bits occur before 756 // the caller can make x observable to the garbage 757 // collector. Otherwise, on weakly ordered machines, 758 // the garbage collector could follow a pointer to x, 759 // but see uninitialized memory or stale heap bits. 760 publicationBarrier() 761 762 // Allocate black during GC. 763 // All slots hold nil so no scanning is needed. 764 // This may be racing with GC so do it atomically if there can be 765 // a race marking the bit. 766 if gcphase != _GCoff { 767 gcmarknewobject(uintptr(x), size, scanSize) 768 } 769 770 if raceenabled { 771 racemalloc(x, size) 772 } 773 774 if msanenabled { 775 msanmalloc(x, size) 776 } 777 778 mp.mallocing = 0 779 releasem(mp) 780 781 if debug.allocfreetrace != 0 { 782 tracealloc(x, size, typ) 783 } 784 785 if rate := MemProfileRate; rate > 0 { 786 if size < uintptr(rate) && int32(size) < c.next_sample { 787 c.next_sample -= int32(size) 788 } else { 789 mp := acquirem() 790 profilealloc(mp, x, size) 791 releasem(mp) 792 } 793 } 794 795 if assistG != nil { 796 // Account for internal fragmentation in the assist 797 // debt now that we know it. 798 assistG.gcAssistBytes -= int64(size - dataSize) 799 } 800 801 if shouldhelpgc { 802 if t := (gcTrigger{kind: gcTriggerHeap}); t.test() { 803 gcStart(gcBackgroundMode, t) 804 } 805 } 806 807 return x 808 } 809 810 func largeAlloc(size uintptr, needzero bool, noscan bool) *mspan { 811 // print("largeAlloc size=", size, "\n") 812 813 if size+_PageSize < size { 814 throw("out of memory") 815 } 816 npages := size >> _PageShift 817 if size&_PageMask != 0 { 818 npages++ 819 } 820 821 // Deduct credit for this span allocation and sweep if 822 // necessary. mHeap_Alloc will also sweep npages, so this only 823 // pays the debt down to npage pages. 824 deductSweepCredit(npages*_PageSize, npages) 825 826 s := mheap_.alloc(npages, makeSpanClass(0, noscan), true, needzero) 827 if s == nil { 828 throw("out of memory") 829 } 830 s.limit = s.base() + size 831 heapBitsForSpan(s.base()).initSpan(s) 832 return s 833 } 834 835 // implementation of new builtin 836 // compiler (both frontend and SSA backend) knows the signature 837 // of this function 838 func newobject(typ *_type) unsafe.Pointer { 839 return mallocgc(typ.size, typ, true) 840 } 841 842 //go:linkname reflect_unsafe_New reflect.unsafe_New 843 func reflect_unsafe_New(typ *_type) unsafe.Pointer { 844 return newobject(typ) 845 } 846 847 // newarray allocates an array of n elements of type typ. 848 func newarray(typ *_type, n int) unsafe.Pointer { 849 if n == 1 { 850 return mallocgc(typ.size, typ, true) 851 } 852 if n < 0 || uintptr(n) > maxSliceCap(typ.size) { 853 panic(plainError("runtime: allocation size out of range")) 854 } 855 return mallocgc(typ.size*uintptr(n), typ, true) 856 } 857 858 //go:linkname reflect_unsafe_NewArray reflect.unsafe_NewArray 859 func reflect_unsafe_NewArray(typ *_type, n int) unsafe.Pointer { 860 return newarray(typ, n) 861 } 862 863 func profilealloc(mp *m, x unsafe.Pointer, size uintptr) { 864 mp.mcache.next_sample = nextSample() 865 mProf_Malloc(x, size) 866 } 867 868 // nextSample returns the next sampling point for heap profiling. The goal is 869 // to sample allocations on average every MemProfileRate bytes, but with a 870 // completely random distribution over the allocation timeline; this 871 // corresponds to a Poisson process with parameter MemProfileRate. In Poisson 872 // processes, the distance between two samples follows the exponential 873 // distribution (exp(MemProfileRate)), so the best return value is a random 874 // number taken from an exponential distribution whose mean is MemProfileRate. 875 func nextSample() int32 { 876 if GOOS == "plan9" { 877 // Plan 9 doesn't support floating point in note handler. 878 if g := getg(); g == g.m.gsignal { 879 return nextSampleNoFP() 880 } 881 } 882 883 return fastexprand(MemProfileRate) 884 } 885 886 // fastexprand returns a random number from an exponential distribution with 887 // the specified mean. 888 func fastexprand(mean int) int32 { 889 // Avoid overflow. Maximum possible step is 890 // -ln(1/(1<<randomBitCount)) * mean, approximately 20 * mean. 891 switch { 892 case mean > 0x7000000: 893 mean = 0x7000000 894 case mean == 0: 895 return 0 896 } 897 898 // Take a random sample of the exponential distribution exp(-mean*x). 899 // The probability distribution function is mean*exp(-mean*x), so the CDF is 900 // p = 1 - exp(-mean*x), so 901 // q = 1 - p == exp(-mean*x) 902 // log_e(q) = -mean*x 903 // -log_e(q)/mean = x 904 // x = -log_e(q) * mean 905 // x = log_2(q) * (-log_e(2)) * mean ; Using log_2 for efficiency 906 const randomBitCount = 26 907 q := fastrand()%(1<<randomBitCount) + 1 908 qlog := fastlog2(float64(q)) - randomBitCount 909 if qlog > 0 { 910 qlog = 0 911 } 912 const minusLog2 = -0.6931471805599453 // -ln(2) 913 return int32(qlog*(minusLog2*float64(mean))) + 1 914 } 915 916 // nextSampleNoFP is similar to nextSample, but uses older, 917 // simpler code to avoid floating point. 918 func nextSampleNoFP() int32 { 919 // Set first allocation sample size. 920 rate := MemProfileRate 921 if rate > 0x3fffffff { // make 2*rate not overflow 922 rate = 0x3fffffff 923 } 924 if rate != 0 { 925 return int32(fastrand() % uint32(2*rate)) 926 } 927 return 0 928 } 929 930 type persistentAlloc struct { 931 base *notInHeap 932 off uintptr 933 } 934 935 var globalAlloc struct { 936 mutex 937 persistentAlloc 938 } 939 940 // Wrapper around sysAlloc that can allocate small chunks. 941 // There is no associated free operation. 942 // Intended for things like function/type/debug-related persistent data. 943 // If align is 0, uses default align (currently 8). 944 // The returned memory will be zeroed. 945 // 946 // Consider marking persistentalloc'd types go:notinheap. 947 func persistentalloc(size, align uintptr, sysStat *uint64) unsafe.Pointer { 948 var p *notInHeap 949 systemstack(func() { 950 p = persistentalloc1(size, align, sysStat) 951 }) 952 return unsafe.Pointer(p) 953 } 954 955 // Must run on system stack because stack growth can (re)invoke it. 956 // See issue 9174. 957 //go:systemstack 958 func persistentalloc1(size, align uintptr, sysStat *uint64) *notInHeap { 959 const ( 960 chunk = 256 << 10 961 maxBlock = 64 << 10 // VM reservation granularity is 64K on windows 962 ) 963 964 if size == 0 { 965 throw("persistentalloc: size == 0") 966 } 967 if align != 0 { 968 if align&(align-1) != 0 { 969 throw("persistentalloc: align is not a power of 2") 970 } 971 if align > _PageSize { 972 throw("persistentalloc: align is too large") 973 } 974 } else { 975 align = 8 976 } 977 978 if size >= maxBlock { 979 return (*notInHeap)(sysAlloc(size, sysStat)) 980 } 981 982 mp := acquirem() 983 var persistent *persistentAlloc 984 if mp != nil && mp.p != 0 { 985 persistent = &mp.p.ptr().palloc 986 } else { 987 lock(&globalAlloc.mutex) 988 persistent = &globalAlloc.persistentAlloc 989 } 990 persistent.off = round(persistent.off, align) 991 if persistent.off+size > chunk || persistent.base == nil { 992 persistent.base = (*notInHeap)(sysAlloc(chunk, &memstats.other_sys)) 993 if persistent.base == nil { 994 if persistent == &globalAlloc.persistentAlloc { 995 unlock(&globalAlloc.mutex) 996 } 997 throw("runtime: cannot allocate memory") 998 } 999 persistent.off = 0 1000 } 1001 p := persistent.base.add(persistent.off) 1002 persistent.off += size 1003 releasem(mp) 1004 if persistent == &globalAlloc.persistentAlloc { 1005 unlock(&globalAlloc.mutex) 1006 } 1007 1008 if sysStat != &memstats.other_sys { 1009 mSysStatInc(sysStat, size) 1010 mSysStatDec(&memstats.other_sys, size) 1011 } 1012 return p 1013 } 1014 1015 // notInHeap is off-heap memory allocated by a lower-level allocator 1016 // like sysAlloc or persistentAlloc. 1017 // 1018 // In general, it's better to use real types marked as go:notinheap, 1019 // but this serves as a generic type for situations where that isn't 1020 // possible (like in the allocators). 1021 // 1022 // TODO: Use this as the return type of sysAlloc, persistentAlloc, etc? 1023 // 1024 //go:notinheap 1025 type notInHeap struct{} 1026 1027 func (p *notInHeap) add(bytes uintptr) *notInHeap { 1028 return (*notInHeap)(unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(p)) + bytes)) 1029 }