zfs-builds-mm/zfs-2.0.0/module/os/linux/spl/spl-kmem-cache.c
2020-12-02 17:25:31 +01:00

1468 lines
40 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (C) 2007-2010 Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC.
* Copyright (C) 2007 The Regents of the University of California.
* Produced at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER).
* Written by Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>.
* UCRL-CODE-235197
*
* This file is part of the SPL, Solaris Porting Layer.
*
* The SPL is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
* Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your
* option) any later version.
*
* The SPL is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
* for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
* with the SPL. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include <linux/percpu_compat.h>
#include <sys/kmem.h>
#include <sys/kmem_cache.h>
#include <sys/taskq.h>
#include <sys/timer.h>
#include <sys/vmem.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include <linux/swap.h>
#include <linux/prefetch.h>
/*
* Within the scope of spl-kmem.c file the kmem_cache_* definitions
* are removed to allow access to the real Linux slab allocator.
*/
#undef kmem_cache_destroy
#undef kmem_cache_create
#undef kmem_cache_alloc
#undef kmem_cache_free
/*
* Linux 3.16 replaced smp_mb__{before,after}_{atomic,clear}_{dec,inc,bit}()
* with smp_mb__{before,after}_atomic() because they were redundant. This is
* only used inside our SLAB allocator, so we implement an internal wrapper
* here to give us smp_mb__{before,after}_atomic() on older kernels.
*/
#ifndef smp_mb__before_atomic
#define smp_mb__before_atomic(x) smp_mb__before_clear_bit(x)
#endif
#ifndef smp_mb__after_atomic
#define smp_mb__after_atomic(x) smp_mb__after_clear_bit(x)
#endif
/* BEGIN CSTYLED */
/*
* Cache magazines are an optimization designed to minimize the cost of
* allocating memory. They do this by keeping a per-cpu cache of recently
* freed objects, which can then be reallocated without taking a lock. This
* can improve performance on highly contended caches. However, because
* objects in magazines will prevent otherwise empty slabs from being
* immediately released this may not be ideal for low memory machines.
*
* For this reason spl_kmem_cache_magazine_size can be used to set a maximum
* magazine size. When this value is set to 0 the magazine size will be
* automatically determined based on the object size. Otherwise magazines
* will be limited to 2-256 objects per magazine (i.e per cpu). Magazines
* may never be entirely disabled in this implementation.
*/
unsigned int spl_kmem_cache_magazine_size = 0;
module_param(spl_kmem_cache_magazine_size, uint, 0444);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(spl_kmem_cache_magazine_size,
"Default magazine size (2-256), set automatically (0)");
/*
* The default behavior is to report the number of objects remaining in the
* cache. This allows the Linux VM to repeatedly reclaim objects from the
* cache when memory is low satisfy other memory allocations. Alternately,
* setting this value to KMC_RECLAIM_ONCE limits how aggressively the cache
* is reclaimed. This may increase the likelihood of out of memory events.
*/
unsigned int spl_kmem_cache_reclaim = 0 /* KMC_RECLAIM_ONCE */;
module_param(spl_kmem_cache_reclaim, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(spl_kmem_cache_reclaim, "Single reclaim pass (0x1)");
unsigned int spl_kmem_cache_obj_per_slab = SPL_KMEM_CACHE_OBJ_PER_SLAB;
module_param(spl_kmem_cache_obj_per_slab, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(spl_kmem_cache_obj_per_slab, "Number of objects per slab");
unsigned int spl_kmem_cache_max_size = SPL_KMEM_CACHE_MAX_SIZE;
module_param(spl_kmem_cache_max_size, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(spl_kmem_cache_max_size, "Maximum size of slab in MB");
/*
* For small objects the Linux slab allocator should be used to make the most
* efficient use of the memory. However, large objects are not supported by
* the Linux slab and therefore the SPL implementation is preferred. A cutoff
* of 16K was determined to be optimal for architectures using 4K pages.
*/
#if PAGE_SIZE == 4096
unsigned int spl_kmem_cache_slab_limit = 16384;
#else
unsigned int spl_kmem_cache_slab_limit = 0;
#endif
module_param(spl_kmem_cache_slab_limit, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(spl_kmem_cache_slab_limit,
"Objects less than N bytes use the Linux slab");
/*
* The number of threads available to allocate new slabs for caches. This
* should not need to be tuned but it is available for performance analysis.
*/
unsigned int spl_kmem_cache_kmem_threads = 4;
module_param(spl_kmem_cache_kmem_threads, uint, 0444);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(spl_kmem_cache_kmem_threads,
"Number of spl_kmem_cache threads");
/* END CSTYLED */
/*
* Slab allocation interfaces
*
* While the Linux slab implementation was inspired by the Solaris
* implementation I cannot use it to emulate the Solaris APIs. I
* require two features which are not provided by the Linux slab.
*
* 1) Constructors AND destructors. Recent versions of the Linux
* kernel have removed support for destructors. This is a deal
* breaker for the SPL which contains particularly expensive
* initializers for mutex's, condition variables, etc. We also
* require a minimal level of cleanup for these data types unlike
* many Linux data types which do need to be explicitly destroyed.
*
* 2) Virtual address space backed slab. Callers of the Solaris slab
* expect it to work well for both small are very large allocations.
* Because of memory fragmentation the Linux slab which is backed
* by kmalloc'ed memory performs very badly when confronted with
* large numbers of large allocations. Basing the slab on the
* virtual address space removes the need for contiguous pages
* and greatly improve performance for large allocations.
*
* For these reasons, the SPL has its own slab implementation with
* the needed features. It is not as highly optimized as either the
* Solaris or Linux slabs, but it should get me most of what is
* needed until it can be optimized or obsoleted by another approach.
*
* One serious concern I do have about this method is the relatively
* small virtual address space on 32bit arches. This will seriously
* constrain the size of the slab caches and their performance.
*/
struct list_head spl_kmem_cache_list; /* List of caches */
struct rw_semaphore spl_kmem_cache_sem; /* Cache list lock */
taskq_t *spl_kmem_cache_taskq; /* Task queue for aging / reclaim */
static void spl_cache_shrink(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, void *obj);
static void *
kv_alloc(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, int size, int flags)
{
gfp_t lflags = kmem_flags_convert(flags);
void *ptr;
ptr = spl_vmalloc(size, lflags | __GFP_HIGHMEM);
/* Resulting allocated memory will be page aligned */
ASSERT(IS_P2ALIGNED(ptr, PAGE_SIZE));
return (ptr);
}
static void
kv_free(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, void *ptr, int size)
{
ASSERT(IS_P2ALIGNED(ptr, PAGE_SIZE));
/*
* The Linux direct reclaim path uses this out of band value to
* determine if forward progress is being made. Normally this is
* incremented by kmem_freepages() which is part of the various
* Linux slab implementations. However, since we are using none
* of that infrastructure we are responsible for incrementing it.
*/
if (current->reclaim_state)
current->reclaim_state->reclaimed_slab += size >> PAGE_SHIFT;
vfree(ptr);
}
/*
* Required space for each aligned sks.
*/
static inline uint32_t
spl_sks_size(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc)
{
return (P2ROUNDUP_TYPED(sizeof (spl_kmem_slab_t),
skc->skc_obj_align, uint32_t));
}
/*
* Required space for each aligned object.
*/
static inline uint32_t
spl_obj_size(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc)
{
uint32_t align = skc->skc_obj_align;
return (P2ROUNDUP_TYPED(skc->skc_obj_size, align, uint32_t) +
P2ROUNDUP_TYPED(sizeof (spl_kmem_obj_t), align, uint32_t));
}
uint64_t
spl_kmem_cache_inuse(kmem_cache_t *cache)
{
return (cache->skc_obj_total);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(spl_kmem_cache_inuse);
uint64_t
spl_kmem_cache_entry_size(kmem_cache_t *cache)
{
return (cache->skc_obj_size);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(spl_kmem_cache_entry_size);
/*
* Lookup the spl_kmem_object_t for an object given that object.
*/
static inline spl_kmem_obj_t *
spl_sko_from_obj(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, void *obj)
{
return (obj + P2ROUNDUP_TYPED(skc->skc_obj_size,
skc->skc_obj_align, uint32_t));
}
/*
* It's important that we pack the spl_kmem_obj_t structure and the
* actual objects in to one large address space to minimize the number
* of calls to the allocator. It is far better to do a few large
* allocations and then subdivide it ourselves. Now which allocator
* we use requires balancing a few trade offs.
*
* For small objects we use kmem_alloc() because as long as you are
* only requesting a small number of pages (ideally just one) its cheap.
* However, when you start requesting multiple pages with kmem_alloc()
* it gets increasingly expensive since it requires contiguous pages.
* For this reason we shift to vmem_alloc() for slabs of large objects
* which removes the need for contiguous pages. We do not use
* vmem_alloc() in all cases because there is significant locking
* overhead in __get_vm_area_node(). This function takes a single
* global lock when acquiring an available virtual address range which
* serializes all vmem_alloc()'s for all slab caches. Using slightly
* different allocation functions for small and large objects should
* give us the best of both worlds.
*
* +------------------------+
* | spl_kmem_slab_t --+-+ |
* | skc_obj_size <-+ | |
* | spl_kmem_obj_t | |
* | skc_obj_size <---+ |
* | spl_kmem_obj_t | |
* | ... v |
* +------------------------+
*/
static spl_kmem_slab_t *
spl_slab_alloc(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, int flags)
{
spl_kmem_slab_t *sks;
void *base;
uint32_t obj_size;
base = kv_alloc(skc, skc->skc_slab_size, flags);
if (base == NULL)
return (NULL);
sks = (spl_kmem_slab_t *)base;
sks->sks_magic = SKS_MAGIC;
sks->sks_objs = skc->skc_slab_objs;
sks->sks_age = jiffies;
sks->sks_cache = skc;
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&sks->sks_list);
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&sks->sks_free_list);
sks->sks_ref = 0;
obj_size = spl_obj_size(skc);
for (int i = 0; i < sks->sks_objs; i++) {
void *obj = base + spl_sks_size(skc) + (i * obj_size);
ASSERT(IS_P2ALIGNED(obj, skc->skc_obj_align));
spl_kmem_obj_t *sko = spl_sko_from_obj(skc, obj);
sko->sko_addr = obj;
sko->sko_magic = SKO_MAGIC;
sko->sko_slab = sks;
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&sko->sko_list);
list_add_tail(&sko->sko_list, &sks->sks_free_list);
}
return (sks);
}
/*
* Remove a slab from complete or partial list, it must be called with
* the 'skc->skc_lock' held but the actual free must be performed
* outside the lock to prevent deadlocking on vmem addresses.
*/
static void
spl_slab_free(spl_kmem_slab_t *sks,
struct list_head *sks_list, struct list_head *sko_list)
{
spl_kmem_cache_t *skc;
ASSERT(sks->sks_magic == SKS_MAGIC);
ASSERT(sks->sks_ref == 0);
skc = sks->sks_cache;
ASSERT(skc->skc_magic == SKC_MAGIC);
/*
* Update slab/objects counters in the cache, then remove the
* slab from the skc->skc_partial_list. Finally add the slab
* and all its objects in to the private work lists where the
* destructors will be called and the memory freed to the system.
*/
skc->skc_obj_total -= sks->sks_objs;
skc->skc_slab_total--;
list_del(&sks->sks_list);
list_add(&sks->sks_list, sks_list);
list_splice_init(&sks->sks_free_list, sko_list);
}
/*
* Reclaim empty slabs at the end of the partial list.
*/
static void
spl_slab_reclaim(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc)
{
spl_kmem_slab_t *sks = NULL, *m = NULL;
spl_kmem_obj_t *sko = NULL, *n = NULL;
LIST_HEAD(sks_list);
LIST_HEAD(sko_list);
/*
* Empty slabs and objects must be moved to a private list so they
* can be safely freed outside the spin lock. All empty slabs are
* at the end of skc->skc_partial_list, therefore once a non-empty
* slab is found we can stop scanning.
*/
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
list_for_each_entry_safe_reverse(sks, m,
&skc->skc_partial_list, sks_list) {
if (sks->sks_ref > 0)
break;
spl_slab_free(sks, &sks_list, &sko_list);
}
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
/*
* The following two loops ensure all the object destructors are run,
* and the slabs themselves are freed. This is all done outside the
* skc->skc_lock since this allows the destructor to sleep, and
* allows us to perform a conditional reschedule when a freeing a
* large number of objects and slabs back to the system.
*/
list_for_each_entry_safe(sko, n, &sko_list, sko_list) {
ASSERT(sko->sko_magic == SKO_MAGIC);
}
list_for_each_entry_safe(sks, m, &sks_list, sks_list) {
ASSERT(sks->sks_magic == SKS_MAGIC);
kv_free(skc, sks, skc->skc_slab_size);
}
}
static spl_kmem_emergency_t *
spl_emergency_search(struct rb_root *root, void *obj)
{
struct rb_node *node = root->rb_node;
spl_kmem_emergency_t *ske;
unsigned long address = (unsigned long)obj;
while (node) {
ske = container_of(node, spl_kmem_emergency_t, ske_node);
if (address < ske->ske_obj)
node = node->rb_left;
else if (address > ske->ske_obj)
node = node->rb_right;
else
return (ske);
}
return (NULL);
}
static int
spl_emergency_insert(struct rb_root *root, spl_kmem_emergency_t *ske)
{
struct rb_node **new = &(root->rb_node), *parent = NULL;
spl_kmem_emergency_t *ske_tmp;
unsigned long address = ske->ske_obj;
while (*new) {
ske_tmp = container_of(*new, spl_kmem_emergency_t, ske_node);
parent = *new;
if (address < ske_tmp->ske_obj)
new = &((*new)->rb_left);
else if (address > ske_tmp->ske_obj)
new = &((*new)->rb_right);
else
return (0);
}
rb_link_node(&ske->ske_node, parent, new);
rb_insert_color(&ske->ske_node, root);
return (1);
}
/*
* Allocate a single emergency object and track it in a red black tree.
*/
static int
spl_emergency_alloc(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, int flags, void **obj)
{
gfp_t lflags = kmem_flags_convert(flags);
spl_kmem_emergency_t *ske;
int order = get_order(skc->skc_obj_size);
int empty;
/* Last chance use a partial slab if one now exists */
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
empty = list_empty(&skc->skc_partial_list);
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
if (!empty)
return (-EEXIST);
ske = kmalloc(sizeof (*ske), lflags);
if (ske == NULL)
return (-ENOMEM);
ske->ske_obj = __get_free_pages(lflags, order);
if (ske->ske_obj == 0) {
kfree(ske);
return (-ENOMEM);
}
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
empty = spl_emergency_insert(&skc->skc_emergency_tree, ske);
if (likely(empty)) {
skc->skc_obj_total++;
skc->skc_obj_emergency++;
if (skc->skc_obj_emergency > skc->skc_obj_emergency_max)
skc->skc_obj_emergency_max = skc->skc_obj_emergency;
}
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
if (unlikely(!empty)) {
free_pages(ske->ske_obj, order);
kfree(ske);
return (-EINVAL);
}
*obj = (void *)ske->ske_obj;
return (0);
}
/*
* Locate the passed object in the red black tree and free it.
*/
static int
spl_emergency_free(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, void *obj)
{
spl_kmem_emergency_t *ske;
int order = get_order(skc->skc_obj_size);
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
ske = spl_emergency_search(&skc->skc_emergency_tree, obj);
if (ske) {
rb_erase(&ske->ske_node, &skc->skc_emergency_tree);
skc->skc_obj_emergency--;
skc->skc_obj_total--;
}
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
if (ske == NULL)
return (-ENOENT);
free_pages(ske->ske_obj, order);
kfree(ske);
return (0);
}
/*
* Release objects from the per-cpu magazine back to their slab. The flush
* argument contains the max number of entries to remove from the magazine.
*/
static void
spl_cache_flush(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, spl_kmem_magazine_t *skm, int flush)
{
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
ASSERT(skc->skc_magic == SKC_MAGIC);
ASSERT(skm->skm_magic == SKM_MAGIC);
int count = MIN(flush, skm->skm_avail);
for (int i = 0; i < count; i++)
spl_cache_shrink(skc, skm->skm_objs[i]);
skm->skm_avail -= count;
memmove(skm->skm_objs, &(skm->skm_objs[count]),
sizeof (void *) * skm->skm_avail);
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
}
/*
* Size a slab based on the size of each aligned object plus spl_kmem_obj_t.
* When on-slab we want to target spl_kmem_cache_obj_per_slab. However,
* for very small objects we may end up with more than this so as not
* to waste space in the minimal allocation of a single page. Also for
* very large objects we may use as few as spl_kmem_cache_obj_per_slab_min,
* lower than this and we will fail.
*/
static int
spl_slab_size(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, uint32_t *objs, uint32_t *size)
{
uint32_t sks_size, obj_size, max_size, tgt_size, tgt_objs;
sks_size = spl_sks_size(skc);
obj_size = spl_obj_size(skc);
max_size = (spl_kmem_cache_max_size * 1024 * 1024);
tgt_size = (spl_kmem_cache_obj_per_slab * obj_size + sks_size);
if (tgt_size <= max_size) {
tgt_objs = (tgt_size - sks_size) / obj_size;
} else {
tgt_objs = (max_size - sks_size) / obj_size;
tgt_size = (tgt_objs * obj_size) + sks_size;
}
if (tgt_objs == 0)
return (-ENOSPC);
*objs = tgt_objs;
*size = tgt_size;
return (0);
}
/*
* Make a guess at reasonable per-cpu magazine size based on the size of
* each object and the cost of caching N of them in each magazine. Long
* term this should really adapt based on an observed usage heuristic.
*/
static int
spl_magazine_size(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc)
{
uint32_t obj_size = spl_obj_size(skc);
int size;
if (spl_kmem_cache_magazine_size > 0)
return (MAX(MIN(spl_kmem_cache_magazine_size, 256), 2));
/* Per-magazine sizes below assume a 4Kib page size */
if (obj_size > (PAGE_SIZE * 256))
size = 4; /* Minimum 4Mib per-magazine */
else if (obj_size > (PAGE_SIZE * 32))
size = 16; /* Minimum 2Mib per-magazine */
else if (obj_size > (PAGE_SIZE))
size = 64; /* Minimum 256Kib per-magazine */
else if (obj_size > (PAGE_SIZE / 4))
size = 128; /* Minimum 128Kib per-magazine */
else
size = 256;
return (size);
}
/*
* Allocate a per-cpu magazine to associate with a specific core.
*/
static spl_kmem_magazine_t *
spl_magazine_alloc(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, int cpu)
{
spl_kmem_magazine_t *skm;
int size = sizeof (spl_kmem_magazine_t) +
sizeof (void *) * skc->skc_mag_size;
skm = kmalloc_node(size, GFP_KERNEL, cpu_to_node(cpu));
if (skm) {
skm->skm_magic = SKM_MAGIC;
skm->skm_avail = 0;
skm->skm_size = skc->skc_mag_size;
skm->skm_refill = skc->skc_mag_refill;
skm->skm_cache = skc;
skm->skm_cpu = cpu;
}
return (skm);
}
/*
* Free a per-cpu magazine associated with a specific core.
*/
static void
spl_magazine_free(spl_kmem_magazine_t *skm)
{
ASSERT(skm->skm_magic == SKM_MAGIC);
ASSERT(skm->skm_avail == 0);
kfree(skm);
}
/*
* Create all pre-cpu magazines of reasonable sizes.
*/
static int
spl_magazine_create(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc)
{
int i = 0;
ASSERT((skc->skc_flags & KMC_SLAB) == 0);
skc->skc_mag = kzalloc(sizeof (spl_kmem_magazine_t *) *
num_possible_cpus(), kmem_flags_convert(KM_SLEEP));
skc->skc_mag_size = spl_magazine_size(skc);
skc->skc_mag_refill = (skc->skc_mag_size + 1) / 2;
for_each_possible_cpu(i) {
skc->skc_mag[i] = spl_magazine_alloc(skc, i);
if (!skc->skc_mag[i]) {
for (i--; i >= 0; i--)
spl_magazine_free(skc->skc_mag[i]);
kfree(skc->skc_mag);
return (-ENOMEM);
}
}
return (0);
}
/*
* Destroy all pre-cpu magazines.
*/
static void
spl_magazine_destroy(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc)
{
spl_kmem_magazine_t *skm;
int i = 0;
ASSERT((skc->skc_flags & KMC_SLAB) == 0);
for_each_possible_cpu(i) {
skm = skc->skc_mag[i];
spl_cache_flush(skc, skm, skm->skm_avail);
spl_magazine_free(skm);
}
kfree(skc->skc_mag);
}
/*
* Create a object cache based on the following arguments:
* name cache name
* size cache object size
* align cache object alignment
* ctor cache object constructor
* dtor cache object destructor
* reclaim cache object reclaim
* priv cache private data for ctor/dtor/reclaim
* vmp unused must be NULL
* flags
* KMC_KVMEM Force kvmem backed SPL cache
* KMC_SLAB Force Linux slab backed cache
* KMC_NODEBUG Disable debugging (unsupported)
*/
spl_kmem_cache_t *
spl_kmem_cache_create(char *name, size_t size, size_t align,
spl_kmem_ctor_t ctor, spl_kmem_dtor_t dtor, void *reclaim,
void *priv, void *vmp, int flags)
{
gfp_t lflags = kmem_flags_convert(KM_SLEEP);
spl_kmem_cache_t *skc;
int rc;
/*
* Unsupported flags
*/
ASSERT(vmp == NULL);
ASSERT(reclaim == NULL);
might_sleep();
skc = kzalloc(sizeof (*skc), lflags);
if (skc == NULL)
return (NULL);
skc->skc_magic = SKC_MAGIC;
skc->skc_name_size = strlen(name) + 1;
skc->skc_name = (char *)kmalloc(skc->skc_name_size, lflags);
if (skc->skc_name == NULL) {
kfree(skc);
return (NULL);
}
strncpy(skc->skc_name, name, skc->skc_name_size);
skc->skc_ctor = ctor;
skc->skc_dtor = dtor;
skc->skc_private = priv;
skc->skc_vmp = vmp;
skc->skc_linux_cache = NULL;
skc->skc_flags = flags;
skc->skc_obj_size = size;
skc->skc_obj_align = SPL_KMEM_CACHE_ALIGN;
atomic_set(&skc->skc_ref, 0);
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&skc->skc_list);
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&skc->skc_complete_list);
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&skc->skc_partial_list);
skc->skc_emergency_tree = RB_ROOT;
spin_lock_init(&skc->skc_lock);
init_waitqueue_head(&skc->skc_waitq);
skc->skc_slab_fail = 0;
skc->skc_slab_create = 0;
skc->skc_slab_destroy = 0;
skc->skc_slab_total = 0;
skc->skc_slab_alloc = 0;
skc->skc_slab_max = 0;
skc->skc_obj_total = 0;
skc->skc_obj_alloc = 0;
skc->skc_obj_max = 0;
skc->skc_obj_deadlock = 0;
skc->skc_obj_emergency = 0;
skc->skc_obj_emergency_max = 0;
rc = percpu_counter_init_common(&skc->skc_linux_alloc, 0,
GFP_KERNEL);
if (rc != 0) {
kfree(skc);
return (NULL);
}
/*
* Verify the requested alignment restriction is sane.
*/
if (align) {
VERIFY(ISP2(align));
VERIFY3U(align, >=, SPL_KMEM_CACHE_ALIGN);
VERIFY3U(align, <=, PAGE_SIZE);
skc->skc_obj_align = align;
}
/*
* When no specific type of slab is requested (kmem, vmem, or
* linuxslab) then select a cache type based on the object size
* and default tunables.
*/
if (!(skc->skc_flags & (KMC_SLAB | KMC_KVMEM))) {
if (spl_kmem_cache_slab_limit &&
size <= (size_t)spl_kmem_cache_slab_limit) {
/*
* Objects smaller than spl_kmem_cache_slab_limit can
* use the Linux slab for better space-efficiency.
*/
skc->skc_flags |= KMC_SLAB;
} else {
/*
* All other objects are considered large and are
* placed on kvmem backed slabs.
*/
skc->skc_flags |= KMC_KVMEM;
}
}
/*
* Given the type of slab allocate the required resources.
*/
if (skc->skc_flags & KMC_KVMEM) {
rc = spl_slab_size(skc,
&skc->skc_slab_objs, &skc->skc_slab_size);
if (rc)
goto out;
rc = spl_magazine_create(skc);
if (rc)
goto out;
} else {
unsigned long slabflags = 0;
if (size > (SPL_MAX_KMEM_ORDER_NR_PAGES * PAGE_SIZE)) {
rc = EINVAL;
goto out;
}
#if defined(SLAB_USERCOPY)
/*
* Required for PAX-enabled kernels if the slab is to be
* used for copying between user and kernel space.
*/
slabflags |= SLAB_USERCOPY;
#endif
#if defined(HAVE_KMEM_CACHE_CREATE_USERCOPY)
/*
* Newer grsec patchset uses kmem_cache_create_usercopy()
* instead of SLAB_USERCOPY flag
*/
skc->skc_linux_cache = kmem_cache_create_usercopy(
skc->skc_name, size, align, slabflags, 0, size, NULL);
#else
skc->skc_linux_cache = kmem_cache_create(
skc->skc_name, size, align, slabflags, NULL);
#endif
if (skc->skc_linux_cache == NULL) {
rc = ENOMEM;
goto out;
}
}
down_write(&spl_kmem_cache_sem);
list_add_tail(&skc->skc_list, &spl_kmem_cache_list);
up_write(&spl_kmem_cache_sem);
return (skc);
out:
kfree(skc->skc_name);
percpu_counter_destroy(&skc->skc_linux_alloc);
kfree(skc);
return (NULL);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(spl_kmem_cache_create);
/*
* Register a move callback for cache defragmentation.
* XXX: Unimplemented but harmless to stub out for now.
*/
void
spl_kmem_cache_set_move(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc,
kmem_cbrc_t (move)(void *, void *, size_t, void *))
{
ASSERT(move != NULL);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(spl_kmem_cache_set_move);
/*
* Destroy a cache and all objects associated with the cache.
*/
void
spl_kmem_cache_destroy(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc)
{
DECLARE_WAIT_QUEUE_HEAD(wq);
taskqid_t id;
ASSERT(skc->skc_magic == SKC_MAGIC);
ASSERT(skc->skc_flags & (KMC_KVMEM | KMC_SLAB));
down_write(&spl_kmem_cache_sem);
list_del_init(&skc->skc_list);
up_write(&spl_kmem_cache_sem);
/* Cancel any and wait for any pending delayed tasks */
VERIFY(!test_and_set_bit(KMC_BIT_DESTROY, &skc->skc_flags));
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
id = skc->skc_taskqid;
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
taskq_cancel_id(spl_kmem_cache_taskq, id);
/*
* Wait until all current callers complete, this is mainly
* to catch the case where a low memory situation triggers a
* cache reaping action which races with this destroy.
*/
wait_event(wq, atomic_read(&skc->skc_ref) == 0);
if (skc->skc_flags & KMC_KVMEM) {
spl_magazine_destroy(skc);
spl_slab_reclaim(skc);
} else {
ASSERT(skc->skc_flags & KMC_SLAB);
kmem_cache_destroy(skc->skc_linux_cache);
}
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
/*
* Validate there are no objects in use and free all the
* spl_kmem_slab_t, spl_kmem_obj_t, and object buffers.
*/
ASSERT3U(skc->skc_slab_alloc, ==, 0);
ASSERT3U(skc->skc_obj_alloc, ==, 0);
ASSERT3U(skc->skc_slab_total, ==, 0);
ASSERT3U(skc->skc_obj_total, ==, 0);
ASSERT3U(skc->skc_obj_emergency, ==, 0);
ASSERT(list_empty(&skc->skc_complete_list));
ASSERT3U(percpu_counter_sum(&skc->skc_linux_alloc), ==, 0);
percpu_counter_destroy(&skc->skc_linux_alloc);
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
kfree(skc->skc_name);
kfree(skc);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(spl_kmem_cache_destroy);
/*
* Allocate an object from a slab attached to the cache. This is used to
* repopulate the per-cpu magazine caches in batches when they run low.
*/
static void *
spl_cache_obj(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, spl_kmem_slab_t *sks)
{
spl_kmem_obj_t *sko;
ASSERT(skc->skc_magic == SKC_MAGIC);
ASSERT(sks->sks_magic == SKS_MAGIC);
sko = list_entry(sks->sks_free_list.next, spl_kmem_obj_t, sko_list);
ASSERT(sko->sko_magic == SKO_MAGIC);
ASSERT(sko->sko_addr != NULL);
/* Remove from sks_free_list */
list_del_init(&sko->sko_list);
sks->sks_age = jiffies;
sks->sks_ref++;
skc->skc_obj_alloc++;
/* Track max obj usage statistics */
if (skc->skc_obj_alloc > skc->skc_obj_max)
skc->skc_obj_max = skc->skc_obj_alloc;
/* Track max slab usage statistics */
if (sks->sks_ref == 1) {
skc->skc_slab_alloc++;
if (skc->skc_slab_alloc > skc->skc_slab_max)
skc->skc_slab_max = skc->skc_slab_alloc;
}
return (sko->sko_addr);
}
/*
* Generic slab allocation function to run by the global work queues.
* It is responsible for allocating a new slab, linking it in to the list
* of partial slabs, and then waking any waiters.
*/
static int
__spl_cache_grow(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, int flags)
{
spl_kmem_slab_t *sks;
fstrans_cookie_t cookie = spl_fstrans_mark();
sks = spl_slab_alloc(skc, flags);
spl_fstrans_unmark(cookie);
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
if (sks) {
skc->skc_slab_total++;
skc->skc_obj_total += sks->sks_objs;
list_add_tail(&sks->sks_list, &skc->skc_partial_list);
smp_mb__before_atomic();
clear_bit(KMC_BIT_DEADLOCKED, &skc->skc_flags);
smp_mb__after_atomic();
}
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
return (sks == NULL ? -ENOMEM : 0);
}
static void
spl_cache_grow_work(void *data)
{
spl_kmem_alloc_t *ska = (spl_kmem_alloc_t *)data;
spl_kmem_cache_t *skc = ska->ska_cache;
int error = __spl_cache_grow(skc, ska->ska_flags);
atomic_dec(&skc->skc_ref);
smp_mb__before_atomic();
clear_bit(KMC_BIT_GROWING, &skc->skc_flags);
smp_mb__after_atomic();
if (error == 0)
wake_up_all(&skc->skc_waitq);
kfree(ska);
}
/*
* Returns non-zero when a new slab should be available.
*/
static int
spl_cache_grow_wait(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc)
{
return (!test_bit(KMC_BIT_GROWING, &skc->skc_flags));
}
/*
* No available objects on any slabs, create a new slab. Note that this
* functionality is disabled for KMC_SLAB caches which are backed by the
* Linux slab.
*/
static int
spl_cache_grow(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, int flags, void **obj)
{
int remaining, rc = 0;
ASSERT0(flags & ~KM_PUBLIC_MASK);
ASSERT(skc->skc_magic == SKC_MAGIC);
ASSERT((skc->skc_flags & KMC_SLAB) == 0);
might_sleep();
*obj = NULL;
/*
* Before allocating a new slab wait for any reaping to complete and
* then return so the local magazine can be rechecked for new objects.
*/
if (test_bit(KMC_BIT_REAPING, &skc->skc_flags)) {
rc = spl_wait_on_bit(&skc->skc_flags, KMC_BIT_REAPING,
TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE);
return (rc ? rc : -EAGAIN);
}
/*
* Note: It would be nice to reduce the overhead of context switch
* and improve NUMA locality, by trying to allocate a new slab in the
* current process context with KM_NOSLEEP flag.
*
* However, this can't be applied to vmem/kvmem due to a bug that
* spl_vmalloc() doesn't honor gfp flags in page table allocation.
*/
/*
* This is handled by dispatching a work request to the global work
* queue. This allows us to asynchronously allocate a new slab while
* retaining the ability to safely fall back to a smaller synchronous
* allocations to ensure forward progress is always maintained.
*/
if (test_and_set_bit(KMC_BIT_GROWING, &skc->skc_flags) == 0) {
spl_kmem_alloc_t *ska;
ska = kmalloc(sizeof (*ska), kmem_flags_convert(flags));
if (ska == NULL) {
clear_bit_unlock(KMC_BIT_GROWING, &skc->skc_flags);
smp_mb__after_atomic();
wake_up_all(&skc->skc_waitq);
return (-ENOMEM);
}
atomic_inc(&skc->skc_ref);
ska->ska_cache = skc;
ska->ska_flags = flags;
taskq_init_ent(&ska->ska_tqe);
taskq_dispatch_ent(spl_kmem_cache_taskq,
spl_cache_grow_work, ska, 0, &ska->ska_tqe);
}
/*
* The goal here is to only detect the rare case where a virtual slab
* allocation has deadlocked. We must be careful to minimize the use
* of emergency objects which are more expensive to track. Therefore,
* we set a very long timeout for the asynchronous allocation and if
* the timeout is reached the cache is flagged as deadlocked. From
* this point only new emergency objects will be allocated until the
* asynchronous allocation completes and clears the deadlocked flag.
*/
if (test_bit(KMC_BIT_DEADLOCKED, &skc->skc_flags)) {
rc = spl_emergency_alloc(skc, flags, obj);
} else {
remaining = wait_event_timeout(skc->skc_waitq,
spl_cache_grow_wait(skc), HZ / 10);
if (!remaining) {
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
if (test_bit(KMC_BIT_GROWING, &skc->skc_flags)) {
set_bit(KMC_BIT_DEADLOCKED, &skc->skc_flags);
skc->skc_obj_deadlock++;
}
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
}
rc = -ENOMEM;
}
return (rc);
}
/*
* Refill a per-cpu magazine with objects from the slabs for this cache.
* Ideally the magazine can be repopulated using existing objects which have
* been released, however if we are unable to locate enough free objects new
* slabs of objects will be created. On success NULL is returned, otherwise
* the address of a single emergency object is returned for use by the caller.
*/
static void *
spl_cache_refill(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, spl_kmem_magazine_t *skm, int flags)
{
spl_kmem_slab_t *sks;
int count = 0, rc, refill;
void *obj = NULL;
ASSERT(skc->skc_magic == SKC_MAGIC);
ASSERT(skm->skm_magic == SKM_MAGIC);
refill = MIN(skm->skm_refill, skm->skm_size - skm->skm_avail);
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
while (refill > 0) {
/* No slabs available we may need to grow the cache */
if (list_empty(&skc->skc_partial_list)) {
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
local_irq_enable();
rc = spl_cache_grow(skc, flags, &obj);
local_irq_disable();
/* Emergency object for immediate use by caller */
if (rc == 0 && obj != NULL)
return (obj);
if (rc)
goto out;
/* Rescheduled to different CPU skm is not local */
if (skm != skc->skc_mag[smp_processor_id()])
goto out;
/*
* Potentially rescheduled to the same CPU but
* allocations may have occurred from this CPU while
* we were sleeping so recalculate max refill.
*/
refill = MIN(refill, skm->skm_size - skm->skm_avail);
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
continue;
}
/* Grab the next available slab */
sks = list_entry((&skc->skc_partial_list)->next,
spl_kmem_slab_t, sks_list);
ASSERT(sks->sks_magic == SKS_MAGIC);
ASSERT(sks->sks_ref < sks->sks_objs);
ASSERT(!list_empty(&sks->sks_free_list));
/*
* Consume as many objects as needed to refill the requested
* cache. We must also be careful not to overfill it.
*/
while (sks->sks_ref < sks->sks_objs && refill-- > 0 &&
++count) {
ASSERT(skm->skm_avail < skm->skm_size);
ASSERT(count < skm->skm_size);
skm->skm_objs[skm->skm_avail++] =
spl_cache_obj(skc, sks);
}
/* Move slab to skc_complete_list when full */
if (sks->sks_ref == sks->sks_objs) {
list_del(&sks->sks_list);
list_add(&sks->sks_list, &skc->skc_complete_list);
}
}
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
out:
return (NULL);
}
/*
* Release an object back to the slab from which it came.
*/
static void
spl_cache_shrink(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, void *obj)
{
spl_kmem_slab_t *sks = NULL;
spl_kmem_obj_t *sko = NULL;
ASSERT(skc->skc_magic == SKC_MAGIC);
sko = spl_sko_from_obj(skc, obj);
ASSERT(sko->sko_magic == SKO_MAGIC);
sks = sko->sko_slab;
ASSERT(sks->sks_magic == SKS_MAGIC);
ASSERT(sks->sks_cache == skc);
list_add(&sko->sko_list, &sks->sks_free_list);
sks->sks_age = jiffies;
sks->sks_ref--;
skc->skc_obj_alloc--;
/*
* Move slab to skc_partial_list when no longer full. Slabs
* are added to the head to keep the partial list is quasi-full
* sorted order. Fuller at the head, emptier at the tail.
*/
if (sks->sks_ref == (sks->sks_objs - 1)) {
list_del(&sks->sks_list);
list_add(&sks->sks_list, &skc->skc_partial_list);
}
/*
* Move empty slabs to the end of the partial list so
* they can be easily found and freed during reclamation.
*/
if (sks->sks_ref == 0) {
list_del(&sks->sks_list);
list_add_tail(&sks->sks_list, &skc->skc_partial_list);
skc->skc_slab_alloc--;
}
}
/*
* Allocate an object from the per-cpu magazine, or if the magazine
* is empty directly allocate from a slab and repopulate the magazine.
*/
void *
spl_kmem_cache_alloc(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, int flags)
{
spl_kmem_magazine_t *skm;
void *obj = NULL;
ASSERT0(flags & ~KM_PUBLIC_MASK);
ASSERT(skc->skc_magic == SKC_MAGIC);
ASSERT(!test_bit(KMC_BIT_DESTROY, &skc->skc_flags));
/*
* Allocate directly from a Linux slab. All optimizations are left
* to the underlying cache we only need to guarantee that KM_SLEEP
* callers will never fail.
*/
if (skc->skc_flags & KMC_SLAB) {
struct kmem_cache *slc = skc->skc_linux_cache;
do {
obj = kmem_cache_alloc(slc, kmem_flags_convert(flags));
} while ((obj == NULL) && !(flags & KM_NOSLEEP));
if (obj != NULL) {
/*
* Even though we leave everything up to the
* underlying cache we still keep track of
* how many objects we've allocated in it for
* better debuggability.
*/
percpu_counter_inc(&skc->skc_linux_alloc);
}
goto ret;
}
local_irq_disable();
restart:
/*
* Safe to update per-cpu structure without lock, but
* in the restart case we must be careful to reacquire
* the local magazine since this may have changed
* when we need to grow the cache.
*/
skm = skc->skc_mag[smp_processor_id()];
ASSERT(skm->skm_magic == SKM_MAGIC);
if (likely(skm->skm_avail)) {
/* Object available in CPU cache, use it */
obj = skm->skm_objs[--skm->skm_avail];
} else {
obj = spl_cache_refill(skc, skm, flags);
if ((obj == NULL) && !(flags & KM_NOSLEEP))
goto restart;
local_irq_enable();
goto ret;
}
local_irq_enable();
ASSERT(obj);
ASSERT(IS_P2ALIGNED(obj, skc->skc_obj_align));
ret:
/* Pre-emptively migrate object to CPU L1 cache */
if (obj) {
if (obj && skc->skc_ctor)
skc->skc_ctor(obj, skc->skc_private, flags);
else
prefetchw(obj);
}
return (obj);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(spl_kmem_cache_alloc);
/*
* Free an object back to the local per-cpu magazine, there is no
* guarantee that this is the same magazine the object was originally
* allocated from. We may need to flush entire from the magazine
* back to the slabs to make space.
*/
void
spl_kmem_cache_free(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc, void *obj)
{
spl_kmem_magazine_t *skm;
unsigned long flags;
int do_reclaim = 0;
int do_emergency = 0;
ASSERT(skc->skc_magic == SKC_MAGIC);
ASSERT(!test_bit(KMC_BIT_DESTROY, &skc->skc_flags));
/*
* Run the destructor
*/
if (skc->skc_dtor)
skc->skc_dtor(obj, skc->skc_private);
/*
* Free the object from the Linux underlying Linux slab.
*/
if (skc->skc_flags & KMC_SLAB) {
kmem_cache_free(skc->skc_linux_cache, obj);
percpu_counter_dec(&skc->skc_linux_alloc);
return;
}
/*
* While a cache has outstanding emergency objects all freed objects
* must be checked. However, since emergency objects will never use
* a virtual address these objects can be safely excluded as an
* optimization.
*/
if (!is_vmalloc_addr(obj)) {
spin_lock(&skc->skc_lock);
do_emergency = (skc->skc_obj_emergency > 0);
spin_unlock(&skc->skc_lock);
if (do_emergency && (spl_emergency_free(skc, obj) == 0))
return;
}
local_irq_save(flags);
/*
* Safe to update per-cpu structure without lock, but
* no remote memory allocation tracking is being performed
* it is entirely possible to allocate an object from one
* CPU cache and return it to another.
*/
skm = skc->skc_mag[smp_processor_id()];
ASSERT(skm->skm_magic == SKM_MAGIC);
/*
* Per-CPU cache full, flush it to make space for this object,
* this may result in an empty slab which can be reclaimed once
* interrupts are re-enabled.
*/
if (unlikely(skm->skm_avail >= skm->skm_size)) {
spl_cache_flush(skc, skm, skm->skm_refill);
do_reclaim = 1;
}
/* Available space in cache, use it */
skm->skm_objs[skm->skm_avail++] = obj;
local_irq_restore(flags);
if (do_reclaim)
spl_slab_reclaim(skc);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(spl_kmem_cache_free);
/*
* Depending on how many and which objects are released it may simply
* repopulate the local magazine which will then need to age-out. Objects
* which cannot fit in the magazine will be released back to their slabs
* which will also need to age out before being released. This is all just
* best effort and we do not want to thrash creating and destroying slabs.
*/
void
spl_kmem_cache_reap_now(spl_kmem_cache_t *skc)
{
ASSERT(skc->skc_magic == SKC_MAGIC);
ASSERT(!test_bit(KMC_BIT_DESTROY, &skc->skc_flags));
if (skc->skc_flags & KMC_SLAB)
return;
atomic_inc(&skc->skc_ref);
/*
* Prevent concurrent cache reaping when contended.
*/
if (test_and_set_bit(KMC_BIT_REAPING, &skc->skc_flags))
goto out;
/* Reclaim from the magazine and free all now empty slabs. */
unsigned long irq_flags;
local_irq_save(irq_flags);
spl_kmem_magazine_t *skm = skc->skc_mag[smp_processor_id()];
spl_cache_flush(skc, skm, skm->skm_avail);
local_irq_restore(irq_flags);
spl_slab_reclaim(skc);
clear_bit_unlock(KMC_BIT_REAPING, &skc->skc_flags);
smp_mb__after_atomic();
wake_up_bit(&skc->skc_flags, KMC_BIT_REAPING);
out:
atomic_dec(&skc->skc_ref);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(spl_kmem_cache_reap_now);
/*
* This is stubbed out for code consistency with other platforms. There
* is existing logic to prevent concurrent reaping so while this is ugly
* it should do no harm.
*/
int
spl_kmem_cache_reap_active()
{
return (0);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(spl_kmem_cache_reap_active);
/*
* Reap all free slabs from all registered caches.
*/
void
spl_kmem_reap(void)
{
spl_kmem_cache_t *skc = NULL;
down_read(&spl_kmem_cache_sem);
list_for_each_entry(skc, &spl_kmem_cache_list, skc_list) {
spl_kmem_cache_reap_now(skc);
}
up_read(&spl_kmem_cache_sem);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(spl_kmem_reap);
int
spl_kmem_cache_init(void)
{
init_rwsem(&spl_kmem_cache_sem);
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&spl_kmem_cache_list);
spl_kmem_cache_taskq = taskq_create("spl_kmem_cache",
spl_kmem_cache_kmem_threads, maxclsyspri,
spl_kmem_cache_kmem_threads * 8, INT_MAX,
TASKQ_PREPOPULATE | TASKQ_DYNAMIC);
return (0);
}
void
spl_kmem_cache_fini(void)
{
taskq_destroy(spl_kmem_cache_taskq);
}