freebsd-skq/sys/vm/vm_radix.c

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/*
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
* Copyright (c) 2013 EMC Corp.
* Copyright (c) 2011 Jeffrey Roberson <jeff@freebsd.org>
* Copyright (c) 2008 Mayur Shardul <mayur.shardul@gmail.com>
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*
*/
/*
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
* Path-compressed radix trie implementation.
* The following code is not generalized into a general purpose library
* because there are way too many parameters embedded that should really
* be decided by the library consumers. At the same time, consumers
* of this code must achieve highest possible performance.
*
* The implementation takes into account the following rationale:
* - Size of the nodes should be as small as possible but still big enough
* to avoid a large maximum depth for the trie. This is a balance
* between the necessity to not wire too much physical memory for the nodes
* and the necessity to avoid too much cache pollution during the trie
* operations.
* - There is not a huge bias toward the number of lookup operations over
* the number of insert and remove operations. This basically implies
* that optimizations supposedly helping one operation but hurting the
* other might be carefully evaluated.
* - On average not many nodes are expected to be fully populated, hence
* level compression may just complicate things.
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
#include "opt_ddb.h"
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/vmmeter.h>
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
#include <vm/uma.h>
#include <vm/vm.h>
#include <vm/vm_param.h>
#include <vm/vm_page.h>
#include <vm/vm_radix.h>
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
#ifdef DDB
#include <ddb/ddb.h>
#endif
/*
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* These widths should allow the pointers to a node's children to fit within
* a single cache line. The extra levels from a narrow width should not be
* a problem thanks to path compression.
*/
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
#ifdef __LP64__
#define VM_RADIX_WIDTH 4
#else
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
#define VM_RADIX_WIDTH 3
#endif
#define VM_RADIX_COUNT (1 << VM_RADIX_WIDTH)
#define VM_RADIX_MASK (VM_RADIX_COUNT - 1)
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
#define VM_RADIX_LIMIT \
(howmany((sizeof(vm_pindex_t) * NBBY), VM_RADIX_WIDTH) - 1)
/* Flag bits stored in node pointers. */
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
#define VM_RADIX_ISLEAF 0x1
#define VM_RADIX_FLAGS 0x1
#define VM_RADIX_PAD VM_RADIX_FLAGS
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
/* Returns one unit associated with specified level. */
#define VM_RADIX_UNITLEVEL(lev) \
((vm_pindex_t)1 << ((VM_RADIX_LIMIT - (lev)) * VM_RADIX_WIDTH))
struct vm_radix_node {
void *rn_child[VM_RADIX_COUNT]; /* Child nodes. */
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
vm_pindex_t rn_owner; /* Owner of record. */
uint16_t rn_count; /* Valid children. */
uint16_t rn_clev; /* Current level. */
};
static uma_zone_t vm_radix_node_zone;
/*
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* Allocate a radix node. Pre-allocation should ensure that the request
* will always be satisfied.
*/
static __inline struct vm_radix_node *
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
vm_radix_node_get(vm_pindex_t owner, uint16_t count, uint16_t clevel)
{
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
struct vm_radix_node *rnode;
rnode = uma_zalloc(vm_radix_node_zone, M_NOWAIT | M_ZERO);
/*
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* The required number of nodes should already be pre-allocated
* by vm_radix_prealloc(). However, UMA can hold a few nodes
* in per-CPU buckets, which will not be accessible by the
* current CPU. Thus, the allocation could return NULL when
* the pre-allocated pool is close to exhaustion. Anyway,
* in practice this should never occur because a new node
* is not always required for insert. Thus, the pre-allocated
* pool should have some extra pages that prevent this from
* becoming a problem.
*/
if (rnode == NULL)
panic("%s: uma_zalloc() returned NULL for a new node",
__func__);
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
rnode->rn_owner = owner;
rnode->rn_count = count;
rnode->rn_clev = clevel;
return (rnode);
}
/*
* Free radix node.
*/
static __inline void
vm_radix_node_put(struct vm_radix_node *rnode)
{
uma_zfree(vm_radix_node_zone, rnode);
}
/*
* Return the position in the array for a given level.
*/
static __inline int
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
vm_radix_slot(vm_pindex_t index, uint16_t level)
{
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
return ((index >> ((VM_RADIX_LIMIT - level) * VM_RADIX_WIDTH)) &
VM_RADIX_MASK);
}
/* Trims the key after the specified level. */
static __inline vm_pindex_t
vm_radix_trimkey(vm_pindex_t index, uint16_t level)
{
vm_pindex_t ret;
ret = index;
if (level < VM_RADIX_LIMIT) {
ret >>= (VM_RADIX_LIMIT - level) * VM_RADIX_WIDTH;
ret <<= (VM_RADIX_LIMIT - level) * VM_RADIX_WIDTH;
}
return (ret);
}
/*
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
* Get the root node for a radix tree.
*/
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
static __inline struct vm_radix_node *
vm_radix_getroot(struct vm_radix *rtree)
{
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
return ((struct vm_radix_node *)(rtree->rt_root & ~VM_RADIX_FLAGS));
}
/*
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
* Set the root node for a radix tree.
*/
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
static __inline void
vm_radix_setroot(struct vm_radix *rtree, struct vm_radix_node *rnode)
{
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
rtree->rt_root = (uintptr_t)rnode;
}
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
/*
* Returns the associated page extracted from rnode if available,
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* and NULL otherwise.
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
*/
static __inline vm_page_t
vm_radix_node_page(struct vm_radix_node *rnode)
{
return ((((uintptr_t)rnode & VM_RADIX_ISLEAF) != 0) ?
(vm_page_t)((uintptr_t)rnode & ~VM_RADIX_FLAGS) : NULL);
}
/*
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* Adds the page as a child of the provided node.
*/
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
static __inline void
vm_radix_addpage(struct vm_radix_node *rnode, vm_pindex_t index, uint16_t clev,
vm_page_t page)
{
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
int slot;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
slot = vm_radix_slot(index, clev);
rnode->rn_child[slot] = (void *)((uintptr_t)page | VM_RADIX_ISLEAF);
}
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
/*
* Returns the slot where two keys differ.
* It cannot accept 2 equal keys.
*/
static __inline uint16_t
vm_radix_keydiff(vm_pindex_t index1, vm_pindex_t index2)
{
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
uint16_t clev;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
KASSERT(index1 != index2, ("%s: passing the same key value %jx",
__func__, (uintmax_t)index1));
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
index1 ^= index2;
for (clev = 0; clev <= VM_RADIX_LIMIT ; clev++)
if (vm_radix_slot(index1, clev))
return (clev);
panic("%s: cannot reach this point", __func__);
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
return (0);
}
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
/*
* Returns TRUE if it can be determined that key does not belong to the
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* specified rnode. Otherwise, returns FALSE.
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
*/
static __inline boolean_t
vm_radix_keybarr(struct vm_radix_node *rnode, vm_pindex_t idx)
{
if (rnode->rn_clev > 0) {
idx = vm_radix_trimkey(idx, rnode->rn_clev - 1);
idx -= rnode->rn_owner;
if (idx != 0)
return (TRUE);
}
return (FALSE);
}
/*
* Adjusts the idx key to the first upper level available, based on a valid
* initial level and map of available levels.
* Returns a value bigger than 0 to signal that there are not valid levels
* available.
*/
static __inline int
vm_radix_addlev(vm_pindex_t *idx, boolean_t *levels, uint16_t ilev)
{
vm_pindex_t wrapidx;
for (; levels[ilev] == FALSE ||
vm_radix_slot(*idx, ilev) == (VM_RADIX_COUNT - 1); ilev--)
if (ilev == 0)
break;
KASSERT(ilev > 0 || levels[0],
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
("%s: levels back-scanning problem", __func__));
if (ilev == 0 && vm_radix_slot(*idx, ilev) == (VM_RADIX_COUNT - 1))
return (1);
wrapidx = *idx;
*idx = vm_radix_trimkey(*idx, ilev);
*idx += VM_RADIX_UNITLEVEL(ilev);
return (*idx < wrapidx);
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
}
/*
* Adjusts the idx key to the first lower level available, based on a valid
* initial level and map of available levels.
* Returns a value bigger than 0 to signal that there are not valid levels
* available.
*/
static __inline int
vm_radix_declev(vm_pindex_t *idx, boolean_t *levels, uint16_t ilev)
{
vm_pindex_t wrapidx;
for (; levels[ilev] == FALSE ||
vm_radix_slot(*idx, ilev) == 0; ilev--)
if (ilev == 0)
break;
KASSERT(ilev > 0 || levels[0],
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
("%s: levels back-scanning problem", __func__));
if (ilev == 0 && vm_radix_slot(*idx, ilev) == 0)
return (1);
wrapidx = *idx;
*idx = vm_radix_trimkey(*idx, ilev);
*idx |= VM_RADIX_UNITLEVEL(ilev) - 1;
*idx -= VM_RADIX_UNITLEVEL(ilev);
return (*idx > wrapidx);
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
}
/*
* Internal helper for vm_radix_reclaim_allnodes().
* This function is recursive.
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
*/
static void
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
vm_radix_reclaim_allnodes_int(struct vm_radix_node *rnode)
{
int slot;
for (slot = 0; slot < VM_RADIX_COUNT && rnode->rn_count != 0; slot++) {
if (rnode->rn_child[slot] == NULL)
continue;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
if (vm_radix_node_page(rnode->rn_child[slot]) == NULL)
vm_radix_reclaim_allnodes_int(rnode->rn_child[slot]);
rnode->rn_count--;
}
vm_radix_node_put(rnode);
}
#ifdef INVARIANTS
/*
* Radix node zone destructor.
*/
static void
vm_radix_node_zone_dtor(void *mem, int size __unused, void *arg __unused)
{
struct vm_radix_node *rnode;
rnode = mem;
KASSERT(rnode->rn_count == 0,
("vm_radix_node_put: Freeing node %p with %d children\n", mem,
rnode->rn_count));
}
#endif
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
/*
* Pre-allocate intermediate nodes from the UMA slab zone.
*/
static void
vm_radix_prealloc(void *arg __unused)
{
if (!uma_zone_reserve_kva(vm_radix_node_zone, cnt.v_page_count))
panic("%s: unable to create new zone", __func__);
uma_prealloc(vm_radix_node_zone, cnt.v_page_count);
}
SYSINIT(vm_radix_prealloc, SI_SUB_KMEM, SI_ORDER_SECOND, vm_radix_prealloc,
NULL);
/*
* Initialize the UMA slab zone.
* Until vm_radix_prealloc() is called, the zone will be served by the
* UMA boot-time pre-allocated pool of pages.
*/
void
vm_radix_init(void)
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
{
vm_radix_node_zone = uma_zcreate("RADIX NODE",
sizeof(struct vm_radix_node), NULL,
#ifdef INVARIANTS
vm_radix_node_zone_dtor,
#else
NULL,
#endif
NULL, NULL, VM_RADIX_PAD, UMA_ZONE_VM | UMA_ZONE_NOFREE);
}
/*
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* Inserts the key-value pair into the trie.
* Panics if the key already exists.
*/
void
vm_radix_insert(struct vm_radix *rtree, vm_pindex_t index, vm_page_t page)
{
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
vm_pindex_t newind;
struct vm_radix_node *rnode, *tmp, *tmp2;
vm_page_t m;
int slot;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
uint16_t clev;
KASSERT(index == page->pindex, ("%s: index != page->pindex",
__func__));
/*
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
* The owner of record for root is not really important because it
* will never be used.
*/
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
rnode = vm_radix_getroot(rtree);
if (rnode == NULL) {
rnode = vm_radix_node_get(0, 1, 0);
vm_radix_setroot(rtree, rnode);
vm_radix_addpage(rnode, index, 0, page);
return;
}
2013-02-14 15:24:13 +00:00
while (rnode != NULL) {
if (vm_radix_keybarr(rnode, index))
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
break;
slot = vm_radix_slot(index, rnode->rn_clev);
m = vm_radix_node_page(rnode->rn_child[slot]);
if (m != NULL) {
if (m->pindex == index)
panic("%s: key %jx is already present",
__func__, (uintmax_t)index);
clev = vm_radix_keydiff(m->pindex, index);
tmp = vm_radix_node_get(vm_radix_trimkey(index,
clev - 1), 2, clev);
rnode->rn_child[slot] = tmp;
vm_radix_addpage(tmp, index, clev, page);
vm_radix_addpage(tmp, m->pindex, clev, m);
return;
}
if (rnode->rn_child[slot] == NULL) {
rnode->rn_count++;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
vm_radix_addpage(rnode, index, rnode->rn_clev, page);
return;
}
rnode = rnode->rn_child[slot];
}
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
if (rnode == NULL)
panic("%s: path traversal ended unexpectedly", __func__);
/*
* Scan the trie from the top and find the parent to insert
* the new object.
*/
newind = rnode->rn_owner;
clev = vm_radix_keydiff(newind, index);
slot = VM_RADIX_COUNT;
for (rnode = vm_radix_getroot(rtree); ; rnode = tmp) {
KASSERT(rnode != NULL, ("%s: edge cannot be NULL in the scan",
__func__));
KASSERT(clev >= rnode->rn_clev,
("%s: unexpected trie depth: clev: %d, rnode->rn_clev: %d",
__func__, clev, rnode->rn_clev));
slot = vm_radix_slot(index, rnode->rn_clev);
tmp = rnode->rn_child[slot];
KASSERT(tmp != NULL && vm_radix_node_page(tmp) == NULL,
("%s: unexpected lookup interruption", __func__));
if (tmp->rn_clev > clev)
break;
}
KASSERT(rnode != NULL && tmp != NULL && slot < VM_RADIX_COUNT,
("%s: invalid scan parameters rnode: %p, tmp: %p, slot: %d",
__func__, (void *)rnode, (void *)tmp, slot));
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
/*
* A new node is needed because the right insertion level is reached.
* Setup the new intermediate node and add the 2 children: the
* new object and the older edge.
*/
tmp2 = vm_radix_node_get(vm_radix_trimkey(index, clev - 1), 2,
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
clev);
rnode->rn_child[slot] = tmp2;
vm_radix_addpage(tmp2, index, clev, page);
slot = vm_radix_slot(newind, clev);
tmp2->rn_child[slot] = tmp;
}
/*
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* Returns the value stored at the index. If the index is not present,
* NULL is returned.
*/
vm_page_t
vm_radix_lookup(struct vm_radix *rtree, vm_pindex_t index)
{
struct vm_radix_node *rnode;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
vm_page_t m;
int slot;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
rnode = vm_radix_getroot(rtree);
2013-02-14 15:24:13 +00:00
while (rnode != NULL) {
if (vm_radix_keybarr(rnode, index))
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
return (NULL);
slot = vm_radix_slot(index, rnode->rn_clev);
rnode = rnode->rn_child[slot];
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
m = vm_radix_node_page(rnode);
if (m != NULL) {
if (m->pindex == index)
return (m);
else
return (NULL);
}
}
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
return (NULL);
}
/*
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* Look up the nearest entry at a position bigger than or equal to index.
*/
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
vm_page_t
vm_radix_lookup_ge(struct vm_radix *rtree, vm_pindex_t index)
{
vm_pindex_t inc;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
vm_page_t m;
struct vm_radix_node *rnode;
int slot;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
uint16_t difflev;
boolean_t maplevels[VM_RADIX_LIMIT + 1];
#ifdef INVARIANTS
int loops = 0;
#endif
restart:
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
KASSERT(++loops < 1000, ("%s: too many loops", __func__));
for (difflev = 0; difflev < (VM_RADIX_LIMIT + 1); difflev++)
maplevels[difflev] = FALSE;
rnode = vm_radix_getroot(rtree);
2013-02-14 15:24:13 +00:00
while (rnode != NULL) {
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
maplevels[rnode->rn_clev] = TRUE;
/*
* If the keys differ before the current bisection node
* the search key might rollback to the earlierst
* available bisection node, or to the smaller value
* in the current domain (if the owner is bigger than the
* search key).
* The maplevels array records any node has been seen
* at a given level. This aids the search for a valid
* bisection node.
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
*/
if (vm_radix_keybarr(rnode, index)) {
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
difflev = vm_radix_keydiff(index, rnode->rn_owner);
if (index > rnode->rn_owner) {
if (vm_radix_addlev(&index, maplevels,
difflev) > 0)
break;
} else
index = vm_radix_trimkey(rnode->rn_owner,
difflev);
goto restart;
}
slot = vm_radix_slot(index, rnode->rn_clev);
m = vm_radix_node_page(rnode->rn_child[slot]);
if (m != NULL && m->pindex >= index)
return (m);
if (rnode->rn_child[slot] != NULL && m == NULL) {
rnode = rnode->rn_child[slot];
continue;
}
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
/*
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
* Look for an available edge or page within the current
* bisection node.
*/
if (slot < (VM_RADIX_COUNT - 1)) {
inc = VM_RADIX_UNITLEVEL(rnode->rn_clev);
index = vm_radix_trimkey(index, rnode->rn_clev);
index += inc;
slot++;
for (;; index += inc, slot++) {
m = vm_radix_node_page(rnode->rn_child[slot]);
if (m != NULL && m->pindex >= index)
return (m);
if ((rnode->rn_child[slot] != NULL &&
m == NULL) || slot == (VM_RADIX_COUNT - 1))
break;
}
}
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
/*
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* If a valid page or edge bigger than the search slot is
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
* found in the traversal, skip to the next higher-level key.
*/
if (slot == (VM_RADIX_COUNT - 1) &&
(rnode->rn_child[slot] == NULL || m != NULL)) {
if (rnode->rn_clev == 0 || vm_radix_addlev(&index,
maplevels, rnode->rn_clev - 1) > 0)
break;
goto restart;
}
rnode = rnode->rn_child[slot];
}
return (NULL);
}
/*
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* Look up the nearest entry at a position less than or equal to index.
*/
vm_page_t
vm_radix_lookup_le(struct vm_radix *rtree, vm_pindex_t index)
{
vm_pindex_t inc;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
vm_page_t m;
struct vm_radix_node *rnode;
int slot;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
uint16_t difflev;
boolean_t maplevels[VM_RADIX_LIMIT + 1];
#ifdef INVARIANTS
int loops = 0;
#endif
restart:
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
KASSERT(++loops < 1000, ("%s: too many loops", __func__));
for (difflev = 0; difflev < (VM_RADIX_LIMIT + 1); difflev++)
maplevels[difflev] = FALSE;
rnode = vm_radix_getroot(rtree);
2013-02-14 15:24:13 +00:00
while (rnode != NULL) {
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
maplevels[rnode->rn_clev] = TRUE;
/*
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
* If the keys differ before the current bisection node
* the search key might rollback to the earlierst
* available bisection node, or to the higher value
* in the current domain (if the owner is smaller than the
* search key).
* The maplevels array records any node has been seen
* at a given level. This aids the search for a valid
* bisection node.
*/
if (vm_radix_keybarr(rnode, index)) {
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
difflev = vm_radix_keydiff(index, rnode->rn_owner);
if (index > rnode->rn_owner) {
index = vm_radix_trimkey(rnode->rn_owner,
difflev);
index |= VM_RADIX_UNITLEVEL(difflev) - 1;
} else if (vm_radix_declev(&index, maplevels,
difflev) > 0)
break;
goto restart;
}
slot = vm_radix_slot(index, rnode->rn_clev);
m = vm_radix_node_page(rnode->rn_child[slot]);
if (m != NULL && m->pindex <= index)
return (m);
if (rnode->rn_child[slot] != NULL && m == NULL) {
rnode = rnode->rn_child[slot];
continue;
}
/*
* Look for an available edge or page within the current
* bisection node.
*/
if (slot > 0) {
inc = VM_RADIX_UNITLEVEL(rnode->rn_clev);
index = vm_radix_trimkey(index, rnode->rn_clev);
index |= inc - 1;
index -= inc;
slot--;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
for (;; index -= inc, slot--) {
m = vm_radix_node_page(rnode->rn_child[slot]);
if (m != NULL && m->pindex <= index)
return (m);
if ((rnode->rn_child[slot] != NULL &&
m == NULL) || slot == 0)
break;
}
}
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
/*
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* If a valid page or edge smaller than the search slot is
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
* found in the traversal, skip to the next higher-level key.
*/
if (slot == 0 && (rnode->rn_child[slot] == NULL || m != NULL)) {
if (rnode->rn_clev == 0 || vm_radix_declev(&index,
maplevels, rnode->rn_clev - 1) > 0)
break;
goto restart;
}
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
rnode = rnode->rn_child[slot];
}
return (NULL);
}
/*
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
* Remove the specified index from the tree.
* Panics if the key is not present.
*/
void
vm_radix_remove(struct vm_radix *rtree, vm_pindex_t index)
{
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
struct vm_radix_node *rnode, *parent;
vm_page_t m;
int i, slot;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
parent = NULL;
rnode = vm_radix_getroot(rtree);
for (;;) {
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
if (rnode == NULL)
panic("vm_radix_remove: impossible to locate the key");
slot = vm_radix_slot(index, rnode->rn_clev);
m = vm_radix_node_page(rnode->rn_child[slot]);
if (m != NULL && m->pindex == index) {
rnode->rn_child[slot] = NULL;
rnode->rn_count--;
if (rnode->rn_count > 1)
break;
if (parent == NULL) {
if (rnode->rn_count == 0) {
vm_radix_node_put(rnode);
vm_radix_setroot(rtree, NULL);
}
break;
}
for (i = 0; i < VM_RADIX_COUNT; i++)
if (rnode->rn_child[i] != NULL)
break;
KASSERT(i != VM_RADIX_COUNT,
("%s: invalid node configuration", __func__));
slot = vm_radix_slot(index, parent->rn_clev);
KASSERT(parent->rn_child[slot] == rnode,
("%s: invalid child value", __func__));
parent->rn_child[slot] = rnode->rn_child[i];
rnode->rn_count--;
rnode->rn_child[i] = NULL;
vm_radix_node_put(rnode);
break;
}
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
if (m != NULL && m->pindex != index)
panic("%s: invalid key found", __func__);
parent = rnode;
rnode = rnode->rn_child[slot];
}
}
/*
* Remove and free all the nodes from the radix tree.
2013-03-04 07:11:10 +00:00
* This function is recursive but there is a tight control on it as the
* maximum depth of the tree is fixed.
*/
void
vm_radix_reclaim_allnodes(struct vm_radix *rtree)
{
struct vm_radix_node *root;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
root = vm_radix_getroot(rtree);
if (root == NULL)
return;
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
vm_radix_reclaim_allnodes_int(root);
vm_radix_setroot(rtree, NULL);
}
#ifdef DDB
/*
2013-02-15 14:54:09 +00:00
* Show details about the given radix node.
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
*/
DB_SHOW_COMMAND(radixnode, db_show_radixnode)
{
struct vm_radix_node *rnode;
int i;
if (!have_addr)
return;
rnode = (struct vm_radix_node *)addr;
db_printf("radixnode %p, owner %jx, children count %u, level %u:\n",
(void *)rnode, (uintmax_t)rnode->rn_owner, rnode->rn_count,
rnode->rn_clev);
for (i = 0; i < VM_RADIX_COUNT; i++)
if (rnode->rn_child[i] != NULL)
db_printf("slot: %d, val: %p, page: %p, clev: %d\n",
i, (void *)rnode->rn_child[i],
(void *)vm_radix_node_page(rnode->rn_child[i]),
rnode->rn_clev);
}
Implement a new algorithm for managing the radix trie which also includes path-compression. This greatly helps with sparsely populated tries, where an uncompressed trie may end up by having a lot of intermediate nodes for very little leaves. The new algorithm introduces 2 main concepts: the node level and the node owner. Every node represents a branch point where the leaves share the key up to the level specified in the node-level (current level excluded, of course). Such key partly shared is the one contained in the owner. Of course, the root branch is exempted to keep a valid owner, because theoretically all the keys are contained in the space designed by the root branch node. The search algorithm seems very intuitive and that is where one should start reading to understand the full approach. In the end, the algorithm ends up by demanding only one node per insert and this is not necessary in all the cases. To stay safe, we basically preallocate as many nodes as the number of physical pages are in the system, using uma_preallocate(). However, this raises 2 concerns: * As pmap_init() needs to kmem_alloc(), the nodes must be pre-allocated when vm_radix_init() is currently called, which is much before UMA is fully initialized. This means that uma_prealloc() will dig into the UMA_BOOT_PAGES pool of pages, which is often not enough to keep track of such large allocations. In order to fix this, change a bit the concept of UMA_BOOT_PAGES and vm.boot_pages. More specifically make the UMA_BOOT_PAGES an initial "value" as long as vm.boot_pages and extend the boot_pages physical area by as many bytes as needed with the information returned by vm_radix_allocphys_size(). * A small amount of pages will be held in per-cpu buckets and won't be accessible from curcpu, so the vm_radix_node_get() could really panic when the pre-allocation pool is close to be exhausted. In theory we could pre-allocate more pages than the number of physical frames to satisfy such request, but as many insert would happen without a node allocation anyway, I think it is safe to assume that the over-allocation is already compensating for such problem. On the field testing can stand me correct, of course. This could be further helped by the case where we allow a single-page insert to not require a complete root node. The use of pre-allocation gets rid all the non-direct mapping trickery and introduced lock recursion allowance for vm_page_free_queue. The nodes children are reduced in number from 32 -> 16 and from 16 -> 8 (for respectively 64 bits and 32 bits architectures). This would make the children to fit into cacheline for amd64 case, for example, and in general spawn less cacheline, which may be helpful in lookup_ge() case. Also, path-compression cames to help in cases where there are many levels, making the fallouts of such change less hurting. Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division Reviewed by: jeff (partially) Tested by: flo
2013-02-13 01:19:31 +00:00
#endif /* DDB */