kern_mtxpool.c revision 184214
1/*- 2 * Copyright (c) 2001 Matthew Dillon. All Rights Reserved. 3 * 4 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 5 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 6 * are met: 7 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 8 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 9 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 10 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 11 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 12 * 13 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 14 * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 15 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 16 * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 17 * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 18 * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 19 * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 20 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 21 * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 22 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 23 * SUCH DAMAGE. 24 */ 25 26/* Mutex pool routines. These routines are designed to be used as short 27 * term leaf mutexes (e.g. the last mutex you might acquire other then 28 * calling msleep()). They operate using a shared pool. A mutex is chosen 29 * from the pool based on the supplied pointer (which may or may not be 30 * valid). 31 * 32 * Advantages: 33 * - no structural overhead. Mutexes can be associated with structures 34 * without adding bloat to the structures. 35 * - mutexes can be obtained for invalid pointers, useful when uses 36 * mutexes to interlock destructor ops. 37 * - no initialization/destructor overhead. 38 * - can be used with msleep. 39 * 40 * Disadvantages: 41 * - should generally only be used as leaf mutexes. 42 * - pool/pool dependancy ordering cannot be depended on. 43 * - possible L1 cache mastersip contention between cpus. 44 */ 45 46#include <sys/cdefs.h> 47__FBSDID("$FreeBSD: head/sys/kern/kern_mtxpool.c 184214 2008-10-23 20:26:15Z des $"); 48 49#include <sys/param.h> 50#include <sys/proc.h> 51#include <sys/kernel.h> 52#include <sys/ktr.h> 53#include <sys/lock.h> 54#include <sys/malloc.h> 55#include <sys/mutex.h> 56#include <sys/systm.h> 57 58 59static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_MTXPOOL, "mtx_pool", "mutex pool"); 60 61/* Pool sizes must be a power of two */ 62#ifndef MTX_POOL_LOCKBUILDER_SIZE 63#define MTX_POOL_LOCKBUILDER_SIZE 128 64#endif 65#ifndef MTX_POOL_SLEEP_SIZE 66#define MTX_POOL_SLEEP_SIZE 128 67#endif 68 69struct mtxpool_header { 70 int mtxpool_size; 71 int mtxpool_mask; 72 int mtxpool_shift; 73 int mtxpool_next; 74}; 75 76struct mtx_pool { 77 struct mtxpool_header mtx_pool_header; 78 struct mtx mtx_pool_ary[1]; 79}; 80 81static struct mtx_pool_lockbuilder { 82 struct mtxpool_header mtx_pool_header; 83 struct mtx mtx_pool_ary[MTX_POOL_LOCKBUILDER_SIZE]; 84} lockbuilder_pool; 85 86#define mtx_pool_size mtx_pool_header.mtxpool_size 87#define mtx_pool_mask mtx_pool_header.mtxpool_mask 88#define mtx_pool_shift mtx_pool_header.mtxpool_shift 89#define mtx_pool_next mtx_pool_header.mtxpool_next 90 91struct mtx_pool *mtxpool_sleep; 92struct mtx_pool *mtxpool_lockbuilder; 93 94#if UINTPTR_MAX == UINT64_MAX /* 64 bits */ 95# define POINTER_BITS 64 96# define HASH_MULTIPLIER 11400714819323198485u /* (2^64)*(sqrt(5)-1)/2 */ 97#else /* assume 32 bits */ 98# define POINTER_BITS 32 99# define HASH_MULTIPLIER 2654435769u /* (2^32)*(sqrt(5)-1)/2 */ 100#endif 101 102/* 103 * Return the (shared) pool mutex associated with the specified address. 104 * The returned mutex is a leaf level mutex, meaning that if you obtain it 105 * you cannot obtain any other mutexes until you release it. You can 106 * legally msleep() on the mutex. 107 */ 108struct mtx * 109mtx_pool_find(struct mtx_pool *pool, void *ptr) 110{ 111 int p; 112 113 KASSERT(pool != NULL, ("_mtx_pool_find(): null pool")); 114 /* 115 * Fibonacci hash, see Knuth's 116 * _Art of Computer Programming, Volume 3 / Sorting and Searching_ 117 */ 118 p = ((HASH_MULTIPLIER * (uintptr_t)ptr) >> pool->mtx_pool_shift) & 119 pool->mtx_pool_mask; 120 return (&pool->mtx_pool_ary[p]); 121} 122 123static void 124mtx_pool_initialize(struct mtx_pool *pool, const char *mtx_name, int pool_size, 125 int opts) 126{ 127 int i, maskbits; 128 129 pool->mtx_pool_size = pool_size; 130 pool->mtx_pool_mask = pool_size - 1; 131 for (i = 1, maskbits = 0; (i & pool_size) == 0; i = i << 1) 132 maskbits++; 133 pool->mtx_pool_shift = POINTER_BITS - maskbits; 134 pool->mtx_pool_next = 0; 135 for (i = 0; i < pool_size; ++i) 136 mtx_init(&pool->mtx_pool_ary[i], mtx_name, NULL, opts); 137} 138 139struct mtx_pool * 140mtx_pool_create(const char *mtx_name, int pool_size, int opts) 141{ 142 struct mtx_pool *pool; 143 144 if (pool_size <= 0 || !powerof2(pool_size)) { 145 printf("WARNING: %s pool size is not a power of 2.\n", 146 mtx_name); 147 pool_size = 128; 148 } 149 pool = malloc(sizeof (struct mtx_pool) + 150 ((pool_size - 1) * sizeof (struct mtx)), 151 M_MTXPOOL, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO); 152 mtx_pool_initialize(pool, mtx_name, pool_size, opts); 153 return pool; 154} 155 156void 157mtx_pool_destroy(struct mtx_pool **poolp) 158{ 159 int i; 160 struct mtx_pool *pool = *poolp; 161 162 for (i = pool->mtx_pool_size - 1; i >= 0; --i) 163 mtx_destroy(&pool->mtx_pool_ary[i]); 164 free(pool, M_MTXPOOL); 165 *poolp = NULL; 166} 167 168static void 169mtx_pool_setup_static(void *dummy __unused) 170{ 171 mtx_pool_initialize((struct mtx_pool *)&lockbuilder_pool, 172 "lockbuilder mtxpool", MTX_POOL_LOCKBUILDER_SIZE, 173 MTX_DEF | MTX_NOWITNESS | MTX_QUIET); 174 mtxpool_lockbuilder = (struct mtx_pool *)&lockbuilder_pool; 175} 176 177static void 178mtx_pool_setup_dynamic(void *dummy __unused) 179{ 180 mtxpool_sleep = mtx_pool_create("sleep mtxpool", 181 MTX_POOL_SLEEP_SIZE, MTX_DEF); 182} 183 184/* 185 * Obtain a (shared) mutex from the pool. The returned mutex is a leaf 186 * level mutex, meaning that if you obtain it you cannot obtain any other 187 * mutexes until you release it. You can legally msleep() on the mutex. 188 */ 189struct mtx * 190mtx_pool_alloc(struct mtx_pool *pool) 191{ 192 int i; 193 194 KASSERT(pool != NULL, ("mtx_pool_alloc(): null pool")); 195 /* 196 * mtx_pool_next is unprotected against multiple accesses, 197 * but simultaneous access by two CPUs should not be very 198 * harmful. 199 */ 200 i = pool->mtx_pool_next; 201 pool->mtx_pool_next = (i + 1) & pool->mtx_pool_mask; 202 return (&pool->mtx_pool_ary[i]); 203} 204 205/* 206 * The lockbuilder pool must be initialized early because the lockmgr 207 * and sx locks depend on it. The sx locks are used in the kernel 208 * memory allocator. The lockmgr subsystem is initialized by 209 * SYSINIT(..., SI_SUB_LOCKMGR, ...). 210 * 211 * We can't call malloc() to dynamically allocate the sleep pool 212 * until after kmeminit() has been called, which is done by 213 * SYSINIT(..., SI_SUB_KMEM, ...). 214 */ 215SYSINIT(mtxpooli1, SI_SUB_MTX_POOL_STATIC, SI_ORDER_FIRST, 216 mtx_pool_setup_static, NULL); 217SYSINIT(mtxpooli2, SI_SUB_MTX_POOL_DYNAMIC, SI_ORDER_FIRST, 218 mtx_pool_setup_dynamic, NULL); 219