| Index: base/trace_event/memory_profiler_allocation_register.h
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| diff --git a/base/trace_event/memory_profiler_allocation_register.h b/base/trace_event/memory_profiler_allocation_register.h
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| deleted file mode 100644
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| index db8eb03c7fa5fd2f31f9668151a10bf9effd30b2..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
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| --- a/base/trace_event/memory_profiler_allocation_register.h
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| +++ /dev/null
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| @@ -1,159 +0,0 @@
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| -// Copyright 2015 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
|
| -// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
|
| -// found in the LICENSE file.
|
| -
|
| -#ifndef BASE_TRACE_EVENT_MEMORY_PROFILER_ALLOCATION_REGISTER_H_
|
| -#define BASE_TRACE_EVENT_MEMORY_PROFILER_ALLOCATION_REGISTER_H_
|
| -
|
| -#include <stdint.h>
|
| -
|
| -#include "base/logging.h"
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| -#include "base/trace_event/memory_profiler_allocation_context.h"
|
| -
|
| -namespace base {
|
| -namespace trace_event {
|
| -
|
| -// The allocation register keeps track of all allocations that have not been
|
| -// freed. It is a memory map-backed hash table that stores size and context
|
| -// indexed by address. The hash table is tailored specifically for this use
|
| -// case. The common case is that an entry is inserted and removed after a
|
| -// while, lookup without modifying the table is not an intended use case. The
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| -// hash table is implemented as an array of linked lists. The size of this
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| -// array is fixed, but it does not limit the amount of entries that can be
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| -// stored.
|
| -//
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| -// Replaying a recording of Chrome's allocations and frees against this hash
|
| -// table takes about 15% of the time that it takes to replay them against
|
| -// |std::map|.
|
| -class BASE_EXPORT AllocationRegister {
|
| - public:
|
| - // The data stored in the hash table;
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| - // contains the details about an allocation.
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| - struct Allocation {
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| - void* address;
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| - size_t size;
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| - AllocationContext context;
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| - };
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| -
|
| - // An iterator that iterates entries in the hash table efficiently, but in no
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| - // particular order. It can do this by iterating the cells and ignoring the
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| - // linked lists altogether. Instead of checking whether a cell is in the free
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| - // list to see if it should be skipped, a null address is used to indicate
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| - // that a cell is free.
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| - class BASE_EXPORT ConstIterator {
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| - public:
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| - void operator++();
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| - bool operator!=(const ConstIterator& other) const;
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| - const Allocation& operator*() const;
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| -
|
| - private:
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| - friend class AllocationRegister;
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| - using CellIndex = uint32_t;
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| -
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| - ConstIterator(const AllocationRegister& alloc_register, CellIndex index);
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| -
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| - const AllocationRegister& register_;
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| - CellIndex index_;
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| - };
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| -
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| - AllocationRegister();
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| - ~AllocationRegister();
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| -
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| - // Inserts allocation details into the table. If the address was present
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| - // already, its details are updated. |address| must not be null. (This is
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| - // because null is used to mark free cells, to allow efficient iteration of
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| - // the hash table.)
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| - void Insert(void* address, size_t size, AllocationContext context);
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| -
|
| - // Removes the address from the table if it is present. It is ok to call this
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| - // with a null pointer.
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| - void Remove(void* address);
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| -
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| - ConstIterator begin() const;
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| - ConstIterator end() const;
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| -
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| - private:
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| - friend class AllocationRegisterTest;
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| - using CellIndex = uint32_t;
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| -
|
| - // A cell can store allocation details (size and context) by address. Cells
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| - // are part of a linked list via the |next| member. This list is either the
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| - // list for a particular hash, or the free list. All cells are contiguous in
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| - // memory in one big array. Therefore, on 64-bit systems, space can be saved
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| - // by storing 32-bit indices instead of pointers as links. Index 0 is used as
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| - // the list terminator.
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| - struct Cell {
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| - CellIndex next;
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| - Allocation allocation;
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| - };
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| -
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| - // The number of buckets, 2^18, approximately 260 000, has been tuned for
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| - // Chrome's typical number of outstanding allocations. (This number varies
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| - // between processes. Most processes have a sustained load of ~30k unfreed
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| - // allocations, but some processes have peeks around 100k-400k allocations.)
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| - // Because of the size of the table, it is likely that every |buckets_|
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| - // access and every |cells_| access will incur a cache miss. Microbenchmarks
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| - // suggest that it is worthwile to use more memory for the table to avoid
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| - // chasing down the linked list, until the size is 2^18. The number of buckets
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| - // is a power of two so modular indexing can be done with bitwise and.
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| - static const uint32_t kNumBuckets = 0x40000;
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| - static const uint32_t kNumBucketsMask = kNumBuckets - 1;
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| -
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| - // Reserve address space to store at most this number of entries. High
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| - // capacity does not imply high memory usage due to the access pattern. The
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| - // only constraint on the number of cells is that on 32-bit systems address
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| - // space is scarce (i.e. reserving 2GiB of address space for the entries is
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| - // not an option). A value of ~3M entries is large enough to handle spikes in
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| - // the number of allocations, and modest enough to require no more than a few
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| - // dozens of MiB of address space.
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| - static const uint32_t kNumCells = kNumBuckets * 10;
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| -
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| - // Returns a value in the range [0, kNumBuckets - 1] (inclusive).
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| - static uint32_t Hash(void* address);
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| -
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| - // Allocates a region of virtual address space of |min_size| rounded up to the
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| - // system page size. The memory is zeroed by the system. A guard page is added
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| - // after the end.
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| - static void* AllocateVirtualMemory(size_t size);
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| -
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| - // Frees a region of virtual address space allocated by a call to
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| - // |AllocateVirtualMemory|.
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| - static void FreeVirtualMemory(void* address, size_t allocated_size);
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| -
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| - // Returns a pointer to the variable that contains or should contain the
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| - // index of the cell that stores the entry for |address|. The pointer may
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| - // point at an element of |buckets_| or at the |next| member of an element of
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| - // |cells_|. If the value pointed at is 0, |address| is not in the table.
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| - CellIndex* Lookup(void* address);
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| -
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| - // Takes a cell that is not being used to store an entry (either by recycling
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| - // from the free list or by taking a fresh cell) and returns its index.
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| - CellIndex GetFreeCell();
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| -
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| - // The array of cells. This array is backed by mmapped memory. Lower indices
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| - // are accessed first, higher indices are only accessed when required. In
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| - // this way, even if a huge amount of address space has been mmapped, only
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| - // the cells that are actually used will be backed by physical memory.
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| - Cell* const cells_;
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| -
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| - // The array of indices into |cells_|. |buckets_[Hash(address)]| will contain
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| - // the index of the head of the linked list for |Hash(key)|. A value of 0
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| - // indicates an empty list. This array is backed by mmapped memory.
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| - CellIndex* const buckets_;
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| -
|
| - // The head of the free list. This is the index of the cell. A value of 0
|
| - // means that the free list is empty.
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| - CellIndex free_list_;
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| -
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| - // The index of the first element of |cells_| that has not been used before.
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| - // If the free list is empty and a new cell is needed, the cell at this index
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| - // is used. This is the high water mark for the number of entries stored.
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| - CellIndex next_unused_cell_;
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| -
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| - DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(AllocationRegister);
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| -};
|
| -
|
| -} // namespace trace_event
|
| -} // namespace base
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| -
|
| -#endif // BASE_TRACE_EVENT_MEMORY_PROFILER_ALLOCATION_REGISTER_H_
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|
|