1 <chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" version="5.0"
2 xml:id="manual.ext.allocator.mt" xreflabel="mt allocator">
3 <?dbhtml filename="mt_allocator.html"?>
5 <info><title>The mt_allocator</title>
21 <section xml:id="allocator.mt.intro"><info><title>Intro</title></info>
25 The mt allocator [hereinafter referred to simply as "the allocator"]
26 is a fixed size (power of two) allocator that was initially
27 developed specifically to suit the needs of multi threaded
28 applications [hereinafter referred to as an MT application]. Over
29 time the allocator has evolved and been improved in many ways, in
30 particular it now also does a good job in single threaded
31 applications [hereinafter referred to as a ST application]. (Note:
32 In this document, when referring to single threaded applications
33 this also includes applications that are compiled with gcc without
34 thread support enabled. This is accomplished using ifdef's on
35 __GTHREADS). This allocator is tunable, very flexible, and capable
40 The aim of this document is to describe - from an application point of
41 view - the "inner workings" of the allocator.
47 <section xml:id="allocator.mt.design_issues"><info><title>Design Issues</title></info>
50 <section xml:id="allocator.mt.overview"><info><title>Overview</title></info>
54 <para> There are three general components to the allocator: a datum
55 describing the characteristics of the memory pool, a policy class
56 containing this pool that links instantiation types to common or
57 individual pools, and a class inheriting from the policy class that is
61 <para>The datum describing pools characteristics is
64 template<bool _Thread>
67 <para> This class is parametrized on thread support, and is explicitly
68 specialized for both multiple threads (with <code>bool==true</code>)
69 and single threads (via <code>bool==false</code>.) It is possible to
70 use a custom pool datum instead of the default class that is provided.
73 <para> There are two distinct policy classes, each of which can be used
74 with either type of underlying pool datum.
78 template<bool _Thread>
79 struct __common_pool_policy
81 template<typename _Tp, bool _Thread>
82 struct __per_type_pool_policy
85 <para> The first policy, <code>__common_pool_policy</code>, implements a
86 common pool. This means that allocators that are instantiated with
87 different types, say <code>char</code> and <code>long</code> will both
88 use the same pool. This is the default policy.
91 <para> The second policy, <code>__per_type_pool_policy</code>, implements
92 a separate pool for each instantiating type. Thus, <code>char</code>
93 and <code>long</code> will use separate pools. This allows per-type
97 <para> Putting this all together, the actual allocator class is
100 template<typename _Tp, typename _Poolp = __default_policy>
101 class __mt_alloc : public __mt_alloc_base<_Tp>, _Poolp
103 <para> This class has the interface required for standard library allocator
104 classes, namely member functions <code>allocate</code> and
105 <code>deallocate</code>, plus others.
111 <section xml:id="allocator.mt.impl"><info><title>Implementation</title></info>
115 <section xml:id="allocator.mt.tune"><info><title>Tunable Parameters</title></info>
118 <para>Certain allocation parameters can be modified, or tuned. There
119 exists a nested <code>struct __pool_base::_Tune</code> that contains all
120 these parameters, which include settings for
123 <listitem><para>Alignment</para></listitem>
124 <listitem><para>Maximum bytes before calling <code>::operator new</code> directly</para></listitem>
125 <listitem><para>Minimum bytes</para></listitem>
126 <listitem><para>Size of underlying global allocations</para></listitem>
127 <listitem><para>Maximum number of supported threads</para></listitem>
128 <listitem><para>Migration of deallocations to the global free list</para></listitem>
129 <listitem><para>Shunt for global <code>new</code> and <code>delete</code></para></listitem>
131 <para>Adjusting parameters for a given instance of an allocator can only
132 happen before any allocations take place, when the allocator itself is
133 initialized. For instance:
136 #include <ext/mt_allocator.h>
146 typedef pod value_type;
147 typedef __gnu_cxx::__mt_alloc<value_type> allocator_type;
148 typedef __gnu_cxx::__pool_base::_Tune tune_type;
151 tune_type t_opt(16, 5120, 32, 5120, 20, 10, false);
152 tune_type t_single(16, 5120, 32, 5120, 1, 10, false);
155 t = allocator_type::_M_get_options();
156 allocator_type::_M_set_options(t_opt);
157 t = allocator_type::_M_get_options();
160 allocator_type::pointer p1 = a.allocate(128);
161 allocator_type::pointer p2 = a.allocate(5128);
163 a.deallocate(p1, 128);
164 a.deallocate(p2, 5128);
172 <section xml:id="allocator.mt.init"><info><title>Initialization</title></info>
176 The static variables (pointers to freelists, tuning parameters etc)
177 are initialized as above, or are set to the global defaults.
181 The very first allocate() call will always call the
182 _S_initialize_once() function. In order to make sure that this
183 function is called exactly once we make use of a __gthread_once call
184 in MT applications and check a static bool (_S_init) in ST
189 The _S_initialize() function:
190 - If the GLIBCXX_FORCE_NEW environment variable is set, it sets the bool
191 _S_force_new to true and then returns. This will cause subsequent calls to
192 allocate() to return memory directly from a new() call, and deallocate will
193 only do a delete() call.
197 - If the GLIBCXX_FORCE_NEW environment variable is not set, both ST and MT
199 - Calculate the number of bins needed. A bin is a specific power of two size
200 of bytes. I.e., by default the allocator will deal with requests of up to
201 128 bytes (or whatever the value of _S_max_bytes is when _S_init() is
202 called). This means that there will be bins of the following sizes
203 (in bytes): 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128.
205 - Create the _S_binmap array. All requests are rounded up to the next
206 "large enough" bin. I.e., a request for 29 bytes will cause a block from
207 the "32 byte bin" to be returned to the application. The purpose of
208 _S_binmap is to speed up the process of finding out which bin to use.
209 I.e., the value of _S_binmap[ 29 ] is initialized to 5 (bin 5 = 32 bytes).
212 - Create the _S_bin array. This array consists of bin_records. There will be
213 as many bin_records in this array as the number of bins that we calculated
214 earlier. I.e., if _S_max_bytes = 128 there will be 8 entries.
215 Each bin_record is then initialized:
216 - bin_record->first = An array of pointers to block_records. There will be
217 as many block_records pointers as there are maximum number of threads
218 (in a ST application there is only 1 thread, in a MT application there
220 This holds the pointer to the first free block for each thread in this
221 bin. I.e., if we would like to know where the first free block of size 32
222 for thread number 3 is we would look this up by: _S_bin[ 5 ].first[ 3 ]
224 The above created block_record pointers members are now initialized to
225 their initial values. I.e. _S_bin[ n ].first[ n ] = NULL;
229 - Additionally a MT application will:
230 - Create a list of free thread id's. The pointer to the first entry
231 is stored in _S_thread_freelist_first. The reason for this approach is
232 that the __gthread_self() call will not return a value that corresponds to
233 the maximum number of threads allowed but rather a process id number or
234 something else. So what we do is that we create a list of thread_records.
235 This list is _S_max_threads long and each entry holds a size_t thread_id
236 which is initialized to 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and so on up to _S_max_threads.
237 Each time a thread calls allocate() or deallocate() we call
238 _S_get_thread_id() which looks at the value of _S_thread_key which is a
239 thread local storage pointer. If this is NULL we know that this is a newly
240 created thread and we pop the first entry from this list and saves the
241 pointer to this record in the _S_thread_key variable. The next time
242 we will get the pointer to the thread_record back and we use the
243 thread_record->thread_id as identification. I.e., the first thread that
244 calls allocate will get the first record in this list and thus be thread
245 number 1 and will then find the pointer to its first free 32 byte block
246 in _S_bin[ 5 ].first[ 1 ]
247 When we create the _S_thread_key we also define a destructor
248 (_S_thread_key_destr) which means that when the thread dies, this
249 thread_record is returned to the front of this list and the thread id
250 can then be reused if a new thread is created.
251 This list is protected by a mutex (_S_thread_freelist_mutex) which is only
252 locked when records are removed or added to the list.
255 - Initialize the free and used counters of each bin_record:
256 - bin_record->free = An array of size_t. This keeps track of the number
257 of blocks on a specific thread's freelist in each bin. I.e., if a thread
258 has 12 32-byte blocks on it's freelists and allocates one of these, this
259 counter would be decreased to 11.
261 - bin_record->used = An array of size_t. This keeps track of the number
262 of blocks currently in use of this size by this thread. I.e., if a thread
263 has made 678 requests (and no deallocations...) of 32-byte blocks this
264 counter will read 678.
266 The above created arrays are now initialized with their initial values.
267 I.e. _S_bin[ n ].free[ n ] = 0;
270 - Initialize the mutex of each bin_record: The bin_record->mutex
271 is used to protect the global freelist. This concept of a global
272 freelist is explained in more detail in the section "A multi
273 threaded example", but basically this mutex is locked whenever a
274 block of memory is retrieved or returned to the global freelist
275 for this specific bin. This only occurs when a number of blocks
276 are grabbed from the global list to a thread specific list or when
277 a thread decides to return some blocks to the global freelist.
282 <section xml:id="allocator.mt.deallocation"><info><title>Deallocation Notes</title></info>
285 <para> Notes about deallocation. This allocator does not explicitly
286 release memory. Because of this, memory debugging programs like
287 valgrind or purify may notice leaks: sorry about this
288 inconvenience. Operating systems will reclaim allocated memory at
289 program termination anyway. If sidestepping this kind of noise is
290 desired, there are three options: use an allocator, like
291 <code>new_allocator</code> that releases memory while debugging, use
292 GLIBCXX_FORCE_NEW to bypass the allocator's internal pools, or use a
293 custom pool datum that releases resources on destruction.
297 On systems with the function <code>__cxa_atexit</code>, the
298 allocator can be forced to free all memory allocated before program
299 termination with the member function
300 <code>__pool_type::_M_destroy</code>. However, because this member
301 function relies on the precise and exactly-conforming ordering of
302 static destructors, including those of a static local
303 <code>__pool</code> object, it should not be used, ever, on systems
304 that don't have the necessary underlying support. In addition, in
305 practice, forcing deallocation can be tricky, as it requires the
306 <code>__pool</code> object to be fully-constructed before the object
307 that uses it is fully constructed. For most (but not all) STL
308 containers, this works, as an instance of the allocator is constructed
309 as part of a container's constructor. However, this assumption is
310 implementation-specific, and subject to change. For an example of a
311 pool that frees memory, see the following
312 <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://gcc.gnu.org/viewcvs/trunk/libstdc++-v3/testsuite/ext/mt_allocator/deallocate_local-6.cc?view=markup">
320 <section xml:id="allocator.mt.example_single"><info><title>Single Thread Example</title></info>
324 Let's start by describing how the data on a freelist is laid out in memory.
325 This is the first two blocks in freelist for thread id 3 in bin 3 (8 bytes):
329 | next* ---------|--+ (_S_bin[ 3 ].first[ 3 ] points here)
339 | DATA | | (A pointer to here is what is returned to the
340 | | | the application when needed)
349 | next* |<-+ (If next == NULL it's the last one on the list)
371 With this in mind we simplify things a bit for a while and say that there is
372 only one thread (a ST application). In this case all operations are made to
373 what is referred to as the global pool - thread id 0 (No thread may be
374 assigned this id since they span from 1 to _S_max_threads in a MT application).
377 When the application requests memory (calling allocate()) we first look at the
378 requested size and if this is > _S_max_bytes we call new() directly and return.
381 If the requested size is within limits we start by finding out from which
382 bin we should serve this request by looking in _S_binmap.
385 A quick look at _S_bin[ bin ].first[ 0 ] tells us if there are any blocks of
386 this size on the freelist (0). If this is not NULL - fine, just remove the
387 block that _S_bin[ bin ].first[ 0 ] points to from the list,
388 update _S_bin[ bin ].first[ 0 ] and return a pointer to that blocks data.
391 If the freelist is empty (the pointer is NULL) we must get memory from the
392 system and build us a freelist within this memory. All requests for new memory
393 is made in chunks of _S_chunk_size. Knowing the size of a block_record and
394 the bytes that this bin stores we then calculate how many blocks we can create
395 within this chunk, build the list, remove the first block, update the pointer
396 (_S_bin[ bin ].first[ 0 ]) and return a pointer to that blocks data.
400 Deallocation is equally simple; the pointer is casted back to a block_record
401 pointer, lookup which bin to use based on the size, add the block to the front
402 of the global freelist and update the pointer as needed
403 (_S_bin[ bin ].first[ 0 ]).
407 The decision to add deallocated blocks to the front of the freelist was made
408 after a set of performance measurements that showed that this is roughly 10%
409 faster than maintaining a set of "last pointers" as well.
414 <section xml:id="allocator.mt.example_multi"><info><title>Multiple Thread Example</title></info>
418 In the ST example we never used the thread_id variable present in each block.
419 Let's start by explaining the purpose of this in a MT application.
423 The concept of "ownership" was introduced since many MT applications
424 allocate and deallocate memory to shared containers from different
425 threads (such as a cache shared amongst all threads). This introduces
426 a problem if the allocator only returns memory to the current threads
427 freelist (I.e., there might be one thread doing all the allocation and
428 thus obtaining ever more memory from the system and another thread
429 that is getting a longer and longer freelist - this will in the end
430 consume all available memory).
434 Each time a block is moved from the global list (where ownership is
435 irrelevant), to a threads freelist (or when a new freelist is built
436 from a chunk directly onto a threads freelist or when a deallocation
437 occurs on a block which was not allocated by the same thread id as the
438 one doing the deallocation) the thread id is set to the current one.
442 What's the use? Well, when a deallocation occurs we can now look at
443 the thread id and find out if it was allocated by another thread id
444 and decrease the used counter of that thread instead, thus keeping the
445 free and used counters correct. And keeping the free and used counters
446 corrects is very important since the relationship between these two
447 variables decides if memory should be returned to the global pool or
448 not when a deallocation occurs.
452 When the application requests memory (calling allocate()) we first
453 look at the requested size and if this is >_S_max_bytes we call new()
458 If the requested size is within limits we start by finding out from which
459 bin we should serve this request by looking in _S_binmap.
463 A call to _S_get_thread_id() returns the thread id for the calling thread
464 (and if no value has been set in _S_thread_key, a new id is assigned and
469 A quick look at _S_bin[ bin ].first[ thread_id ] tells us if there are
470 any blocks of this size on the current threads freelist. If this is
471 not NULL - fine, just remove the block that _S_bin[ bin ].first[
472 thread_id ] points to from the list, update _S_bin[ bin ].first[
473 thread_id ], update the free and used counters and return a pointer to
478 If the freelist is empty (the pointer is NULL) we start by looking at
479 the global freelist (0). If there are blocks available on the global
480 freelist we lock this bins mutex and move up to block_count (the
481 number of blocks of this bins size that will fit into a _S_chunk_size)
482 or until end of list - whatever comes first - to the current threads
483 freelist and at the same time change the thread_id ownership and
484 update the counters and pointers. When the bins mutex has been
485 unlocked, we remove the block that _S_bin[ bin ].first[ thread_id ]
486 points to from the list, update _S_bin[ bin ].first[ thread_id ],
487 update the free and used counters, and return a pointer to that blocks
492 The reason that the number of blocks moved to the current threads
493 freelist is limited to block_count is to minimize the chance that a
494 subsequent deallocate() call will return the excess blocks to the
495 global freelist (based on the _S_freelist_headroom calculation, see
500 However if there isn't any memory on the global pool we need to get
501 memory from the system - this is done in exactly the same way as in a
502 single threaded application with one major difference; the list built
503 in the newly allocated memory (of _S_chunk_size size) is added to the
504 current threads freelist instead of to the global.
508 The basic process of a deallocation call is simple: always add the
509 block to the front of the current threads freelist and update the
510 counters and pointers (as described earlier with the specific check of
511 ownership that causes the used counter of the thread that originally
512 allocated the block to be decreased instead of the current threads
517 And here comes the free and used counters to service. Each time a
518 deallocation() call is made, the length of the current threads
519 freelist is compared to the amount memory in use by this thread.
523 Let's go back to the example of an application that has one thread
524 that does all the allocations and one that deallocates. Both these
525 threads use say 516 32-byte blocks that was allocated during thread
526 creation for example. Their used counters will both say 516 at this
527 point. The allocation thread now grabs 1000 32-byte blocks and puts
528 them in a shared container. The used counter for this thread is now
533 The deallocation thread now deallocates 500 of these blocks. For each
534 deallocation made the used counter of the allocating thread is
535 decreased and the freelist of the deallocation thread gets longer and
536 longer. But the calculation made in deallocate() will limit the length
537 of the freelist in the deallocation thread to _S_freelist_headroom %
538 of it's used counter. In this case, when the freelist (given that the
539 _S_freelist_headroom is at it's default value of 10%) exceeds 52
540 (516/10) blocks will be returned to the global pool where the
541 allocating thread may pick them up and reuse them.
545 In order to reduce lock contention (since this requires this bins
546 mutex to be locked) this operation is also made in chunks of blocks
547 (just like when chunks of blocks are moved from the global freelist to
548 a threads freelist mentioned above). The "formula" used can probably
549 be improved to further reduce the risk of blocks being "bounced back
550 and forth" between freelists.