Source File
mpagealloc_64bit.go
Belonging Package
runtime
// Copyright 2019 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.// +build amd64 !ios,arm64 mips64 mips64le ppc64 ppc64le riscv64 s390x// See mpagealloc_32bit.go for why ios/arm64 is excluded here.package runtimeimportconst (// The number of levels in the radix tree.summaryLevels = 5// Constants for testing.pageAlloc32Bit = 0pageAlloc64Bit = 1// Number of bits needed to represent all indices into the L1 of the// chunks map.//// See (*pageAlloc).chunks for more details. Update the documentation// there should this number change.pallocChunksL1Bits = 13)// levelBits is the number of bits in the radix for a given level in the super summary// structure.//// The sum of all the entries of levelBits should equal heapAddrBits.var levelBits = [summaryLevels]uint{summaryL0Bits,summaryLevelBits,summaryLevelBits,summaryLevelBits,summaryLevelBits,}// levelShift is the number of bits to shift to acquire the radix for a given level// in the super summary structure.//// With levelShift, one can compute the index of the summary at level l related to a// pointer p by doing:// p >> levelShift[l]var levelShift = [summaryLevels]uint{heapAddrBits - summaryL0Bits,heapAddrBits - summaryL0Bits - 1*summaryLevelBits,heapAddrBits - summaryL0Bits - 2*summaryLevelBits,heapAddrBits - summaryL0Bits - 3*summaryLevelBits,heapAddrBits - summaryL0Bits - 4*summaryLevelBits,}// levelLogPages is log2 the maximum number of runtime pages in the address space// a summary in the given level represents.//// The leaf level always represents exactly log2 of 1 chunk's worth of pages.var levelLogPages = [summaryLevels]uint{logPallocChunkPages + 4*summaryLevelBits,logPallocChunkPages + 3*summaryLevelBits,logPallocChunkPages + 2*summaryLevelBits,logPallocChunkPages + 1*summaryLevelBits,logPallocChunkPages,}// sysInit performs architecture-dependent initialization of fields// in pageAlloc. pageAlloc should be uninitialized except for sysStat// if any runtime statistic should be updated.func ( *pageAlloc) () {// Reserve memory for each level. This will get mapped in// as R/W by setArenas.for , := range levelShift {:= 1 << (heapAddrBits - )// Reserve b bytes of memory anywhere in the address space.:= alignUp(uintptr()*pallocSumBytes, physPageSize):= sysReserve(nil, )if == nil {throw("failed to reserve page summary memory")}// Put this reservation into a slice.:= notInHeapSlice{(*notInHeap)(), 0, }.summary[] = *(*[]pallocSum)(unsafe.Pointer(&))}}// sysGrow performs architecture-dependent operations on heap// growth for the page allocator, such as mapping in new memory// for summaries. It also updates the length of the slices in// [.summary.//// base is the base of the newly-added heap memory and limit is// the first address past the end of the newly-added heap memory.// Both must be aligned to pallocChunkBytes.//// The caller must update p.start and p.end after calling sysGrow.func ( *pageAlloc) (, uintptr) {if %pallocChunkBytes != 0 || %pallocChunkBytes != 0 {print("runtime: base = ", hex(), ", limit = ", hex(), "\n")throw("sysGrow bounds not aligned to pallocChunkBytes")}// addrRangeToSummaryRange converts a range of addresses into a range// of summary indices which must be mapped to support those addresses// in the summary range.:= func( int, addrRange) (int, int) {, := addrsToSummaryRange(, .base.addr(), .limit.addr())return blockAlignSummaryRange(, , )}// summaryRangeToSumAddrRange converts a range of indices in any// level of p.summary into page-aligned addresses which cover that// range of indices.:= func(, , int) addrRange {:= alignDown(uintptr()*pallocSumBytes, physPageSize):= alignUp(uintptr()*pallocSumBytes, physPageSize):= unsafe.Pointer(&.summary[][0])return addrRange{offAddr{uintptr(add(, ))},offAddr{uintptr(add(, ))},}}// addrRangeToSumAddrRange is a convienience function that converts// an address range r to the address range of the given summary level// that stores the summaries for r.:= func( int, addrRange) addrRange {, := (, )return (, , )}// Find the first inUse index which is strictly greater than base.//// Because this function will never be asked remap the same memory// twice, this index is effectively the index at which we would insert// this new growth, and base will never overlap/be contained within// any existing range.//// This will be used to look at what memory in the summary array is already// mapped before and after this new range.:= .inUse.findSucc()// Walk up the radix tree and map summaries in as needed.for := range .summary {// Figure out what part of the summary array this new address space needs., := (, makeAddrRange(, ))// Update the summary slices with a new upper-bound. This ensures// we get tight bounds checks on at least the top bound.//// We must do this regardless of whether we map new memory.if > len(.summary[]) {.summary[] = .summary[][:]}// Compute the needed address range in the summary array for level l.:= (, , )// Prune need down to what needs to be newly mapped. Some parts of it may// already be mapped by what inUse describes due to page alignment requirements// for mapping. prune's invariants are guaranteed by the fact that this// function will never be asked to remap the same memory twice.if > 0 {= .subtract((, .inUse.ranges[-1]))}if < len(.inUse.ranges) {= .subtract((, .inUse.ranges[]))}// It's possible that after our pruning above, there's nothing new to map.if .size() == 0 {continue}// Map and commit need.sysMap(unsafe.Pointer(.base.addr()), .size(), .sysStat)sysUsed(unsafe.Pointer(.base.addr()), .size())}}