HUGEPAGE could be larger on some platforms (e.g. 512M on aarch64 w/ 64K pages),
in which case it would cause grow_retained / exp_grow to over-reserve VMs.
Similarly, make sure the base alloc has a const 2M alignment.
When using metadata_thp, allocate tcache bin stacks from base0, which means they
will be placed on huge pages along with other metadata, instead of mixed with
other regular allocations.
In order to do so, modified the base allocator to support limited reuse: freed
tcached stacks (from thread termination) will be returned to base0 and made
available for reuse, but no merging will be attempted since they were bump
allocated out of base blocks. These reused base extents are managed using
separately allocated base edata_t -- they are cached in base->edata_avail when
the extent is all allocated.
One tricky part is, stats updating must be skipped for such reused extents
(since they were accounted for already, and there is no purging for base). This
requires tracking the "if is reused" state explicitly and bypass the stats
updates when allocating from them.
Following from PR #2481, we replace all integer-to-pointer casts [which
hide pointer provenance information (and thus inhibit
optimizations)](https://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/performance/no-int-to-ptr.html)
with equivalent operations that preserve this information. I have
enabled the corresponding clang-tidy check in our static analysis CI so
that we do not get bitten by this again in the future.
For better or worse, Jemalloc has a significant number of global
variables. Making all eligible global variables `static` and/or `const`
at least makes it slightly easier to reason about them, as these
qualifications communicate to the programmer restrictions on their use
without having to `grep` the whole codebase.
This mallctl accepts an arena_config_t structure which
can be used to customize the behavior of the arena.
Right now it contains extent_hooks and a new option,
metadata_use_hooks, which controls whether the extent
hooks are also used for metadata allocation.
The medata_use_hooks option has two main use cases:
1. In heterogeneous memory systems, to avoid metadata
being placed on potentially slower memory.
2. Avoiding virtual memory from being leaked as a result
of metadata allocation failure originating in an extent hook.
The global data is mostly only used at initialization, or for easy access to
values we could compute statically. Instead of consuming that space (and
risking TLB misses), we can just pass around a pointer to stack data during
bootstrapping.
This class removes almost all the dependencies on size_classes.h, accessing the
data there only via the new module sc.h, which does not depend on any
configuration options.
In a subsequent commit, we'll remove the configure-time size class computations,
doing them at boot time, instead.
"always" marks all user mappings as MADV_HUGEPAGE; while "never" marks all
mappings as MADV_NOHUGEPAGE. The default setting "default" does not change any
settings. Note that all the madvise calls are part of the default extent hooks
by design, so that customized extent hooks have complete control over the
mappings including hugepage settings.
We observed that arena 0 can have much more metadata allocated comparing to
other arenas. Tune the auto mode to only switch to huge page on the 5th block
(instead of 3 previously) for a0.
Since we allocate rtree nodes from a0's base, it's pushed to over 1 block on
initialization right away, which makes the auto thp mode less effective on a0.
We change a0 to make the switch on the 3rd block instead.
To avoid the high RSS caused by THP + low usage arena (i.e. THP becomes a
significant percentage), added a new "auto" option which will only start using
THP after a base allocator used up the first THP region. Starting from the
second hugepage (in a single arena), "auto" behaves the same as "always",
i.e. madvise hugepage right away.
Drop the base mutex while allocating new base blocks, because extent
allocation can enter code that prohibits holding non-core mutexes, e.g.
the extent_[d]alloc() and extent_purge_forced_wrapper() calls in
extent_alloc_dss().
This partially resolves#802.
This lets us specify whether and how mutexes of the same rank are allowed to be
acquired. Currently, we only allow two polices (only a single mutex at a given
rank at a time, and mutexes acquired in ascending order), but we can plausibly
allow more (e.g. the "release uncontended mutexes before blocking").