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prevents doing this in one pass.
188 lines
6.1 KiB
HTML
188 lines
6.1 KiB
HTML
<html>
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<head>
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<title>libsm : Resource Pools</title>
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</head>
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<body>
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<a href="index.html">Back to libsm overview</a>
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<center>
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<h1> libsm : Resource Pools </h1>
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<br> $Id: rpool.html,v 1.4 2000/12/07 17:33:09 dmoen Exp $
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</center>
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<h2> Introduction </h2>
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A resource pool is an object that owns a collection of objects
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that can be freed all at once.
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<p>
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Resource pools simplify storage management.
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<p>
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Resource pools also speed up memory management.
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For example, here are some memory allocation statistics from a
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run of <tt>`sendmail -q`</tt> that delivered 3 messages:
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<blockquote><pre>
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18 1 82 12 87 24 7 42 2 84
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3046 2 18 13 6 25 89 44 2 88
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728 3 15 14 2 26 14 48 1 91
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31 4 9 15 3 27 104 52 3 92
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103 5 394 16 80 28 8 56 2 96
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125 6 16 17 1 31 2 60 1 100
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45 7 14 18 59 32 10 64 9 108
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130 8 6 19 1 33 6 68 3 135
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40 9 111 20 7 34 1 72 10 140
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37 10 7 21 54 36 10 76
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34 11 4 22 38 40 5 80
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</pre></blockquote>
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The second number in each pair is the size of a memory block; the first
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number is the number of blocks of that size. We can see that sendmail
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allocates large numbers of 2 byte blocks. These memory blocks can be
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allocated and freed more quickly using resource pools, because:
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<ul>
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<li>
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When you allocate a small block from a resource pool, the rpool
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implementation carves off a chunk of a large preallocated block,
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and hands you a pointer to it.
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<li>
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When you free a resource pool, only a small number of large
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blocks need to be freed.
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</ul>
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<h2> Synopsis </h2>
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<pre>
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#include <sm/rpool.h>
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typedef void (*SM_RPOOL_RFREE_T)(void *rcontext);
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typedef struct sm_rpool SM_RPOOL_T;
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typedef ... SM_RPOOL_ATTACH_T;
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SM_RPOOL_T *
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sm_rpool_new_x(
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SM_RPOOL_T *parent);
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void
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sm_rpool_free(
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SM_RPOOL_T *rpool);
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void *
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sm_rpool_malloc_x(
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SM_RPOOL_T *rpool,
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size_t size);
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SM_RPOOL_ATTACH_T
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sm_rpool_attach_x(
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SM_RPOOL_T *rpool,
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SM_RPOOL_RFREE_T rfree,
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void *rcontext);
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void
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sm_rpool_detach(
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SM_RPOOL_ATTACH_T);
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void
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sm_rpool_setsizes(
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SM_RPOOL_T *rpool,
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size_t poolsize,
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size_t bigobjectsize);
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</pre>
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<h2> Description </h2>
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<dl>
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<dt>
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<tt> SM_RPOOL_T *sm_rpool_new_x(SM_RPOOL_T *parent) </tt>
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<dd>
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Create a new resource pool object.
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Raise an exception if there is insufficient heap space.
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Initially, no memory is allocated for memory pools or resource lists.
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<p>
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If parent != NULL then the new rpool will be added as a resource
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to the specified parent rpool, so that when the parent is freed,
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the child is also freed. However, even if a parent is specified,
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you can free the rpool at any time, and it will be automatically
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disconnected from the parent.
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<p>
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<dt>
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<tt> void *sm_rpool_malloc_x(SM_RPOOL_T *rpool, size_t size) </tt>
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<dd>
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Allocate a block of memory from a memory pool owned by the rpool.
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Raise an exception if there is insufficient heap space.
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A series of small allocation requests can be satisfied allocating
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them from the same memory pool, which reduces the number of calls
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to malloc.
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All of the memory allocated by sm_rpool_malloc_x is freed when
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the rpool is freed, and not before then.
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<p>
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<dt>
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<tt> void sm_rpool_setsizes(SM_RPOOL_T *rpool, size_t poolsize, size_t bigobjectsize) </tt>
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<dd>
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Set memory pool parameters.
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You can safely call this function at any time, but an especially
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good time to call it is immediately after creating the rpool,
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before any pooled objects have been allocated using sm_rpool_malloc_x.
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<p>
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<tt>poolsize</tt> is the number of bytes of pool memory
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that will be available in the next pool object to be allocated.
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If you happen to know the total number of bytes of memory that
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you will allocate from an rpool using sm_rpool_malloc_x
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(including alignment padding), then you can pass that value
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as the poolsize, and only a single pool will be allocated
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during the lifetime of the rpool.
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<tt>poolsize</tt> is an optimization, not a hard limit:
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if you allocate more than this number of bytes from the rpool,
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then more than one memory pool may be allocated by the rpool
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to satisfy your requests.
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<p>
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<tt>bigobjectsize</tt> is a value <= <tt>poolsize</tt>.
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It is used when an <tt>sm_rpool_malloc_x</tt> request exceeds
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the number of bytes available in the current pool.
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If the request is > <tt>bigobjectsize</tt> then the request
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will be satisfied by allocating a new block just for this specific
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request, and the current pool is not affected.
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If the request is <= <tt>bigobjectsize</tt> then the current
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pool is closed and a new memory pool is allocated, from which the
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request is satisfied.
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Consequently, no more than <tt>bigobjectsize-1</tt> bytes will
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ever be wasted at the end of a given pool.
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<p>
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If poolsize or bigobjectsize are 0, then suitable default values
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are chosen.
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<p>
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<dt>
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<tt> SM_RPOOL_ATTACH_T sm_rpool_attach_x(SM_RPOOL_T *rpool, SM_RPOOL_RFREE_T rfree, void *rcontext) </tt>
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<dd>
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Attach an object to a resource pool, along with its free function.
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When the rpool is freed, the specified object will also be freed.
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Raise an exception if there is insufficient heap space.
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<p>
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The return value is a magic cookie which, if passed to
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sm_rpool_detach, disconnects the object from the resource pool,
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which prevents the object's free function from being called when
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the rpool is freed.
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<p>
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<dt>
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<tt> void sm_rpool_detach(SM_RPOOL_ATTACH_T a) </tt>
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<dd>
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The argument is a magic cookie returned by <tt>sm_rpool_attach_t</tt>,
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and refers to the object that was attached to an rpool by a specific
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call to <tt>sm_rpool_attach_t</tt>.
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Disconnect the object from the resource pool,
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which prevents the object's free function from being called when
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the rpool is freed.
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<p>
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<dt>
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<tt> void sm_rpool_free(SM_RPOOL_T *rpool) </tt>
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<dd>
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Free an rpool object.
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All memory allocated using sm_rpool_malloc_x
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and all objects attached using sm_rpool_attach_x
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are freed at this time.
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If the rpool has a parent rpool, it is detached from its parent.
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</dl>
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</body>
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</html>
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