summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authordaan <daanl@outlook.com>2020-09-23 20:00:37 -0700
committerdaan <daanl@outlook.com>2020-09-23 20:00:37 -0700
commit46239cf0c27d7711abff84f1718c22a9b73e66c0 (patch)
treefe1bd60619616e1a7516ddb745b3df111fba6f5d
parent64a3d24dcdf702aa7c1fc36c03e6cc8e8d4a49c2 (diff)
parent5cd5423108604569c3dbc6c51a78bd86a574ab3a (diff)
Merge branch 'master' into dev
-rw-r--r--readme.md30
1 files changed, 19 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/readme.md b/readme.md
index d8c9411..3ce2953 100644
--- a/readme.md
+++ b/readme.md
@@ -18,19 +18,27 @@ without code changes, for example, on dynamically linked ELF-based systems (Linu
```
> LD_PRELOAD=/usr/bin/libmimalloc.so myprogram
```
-It also has an easy way to override the allocator in [Windows](#override_on_windows). Notable aspects of the design include:
+It also has an easy way to override the default allocator in [Windows](#override_on_windows). Notable aspects of the design include:
-- __small and consistent__: the library is about 6k LOC using simple and
+- __small and consistent__: the library is about 8k LOC using simple and
consistent data structures. This makes it very suitable
to integrate and adapt in other projects. For runtime systems it
provides hooks for a monotonic _heartbeat_ and deferred freeing (for
bounded worst-case times with reference counting).
-- __free list sharding__: the big idea: instead of one big free list (per size class) we have
- many smaller lists per memory "page" which both reduces fragmentation
- and increases locality --
+- __free list sharding__: instead of one big free list (per size class) we have
+ many smaller lists per "mimalloc page" which reduces fragmentation and
+ increases locality --
things that are allocated close in time get allocated close in memory.
- (A memory "page" in _mimalloc_ contains blocks of one size class and is
- usually 64KiB on a 64-bit system).
+ (A mimalloc page contains blocks of one size class and is usually 64KiB on a 64-bit system).
+- __free list multi-sharding__: the big idea! Not only do we shard the free list
+ per mimalloc page, but for each page we have multiple free lists. In particular, there
+ is one list for thread-local `free` operatinons, and another separate one for concurrent `free`
+ operations. Free-ing from another thread can now be a single CAS without needing
+ a sophisticated data structure to coordinate between threads. Since there will be
+ thousands of separate free lists, contention is naturally distributed over the heap,
+ and the chance of contending on a single location will be low -- this is quite
+ similar to randomized algorithms like skip lists where adding
+ a random oracle removes the need for a more complex algorithm.
- __eager page reset__: when a "page" becomes empty (with increased chance
due to free list sharding) the memory is marked to the OS as unused ("reset" or "purged")
reducing (real) memory pressure and fragmentation, especially in long running
@@ -215,7 +223,7 @@ completely and redirect all calls to the _mimalloc_ library instead .
## Environment Options
You can set further options either programmatically (using [`mi_option_set`](https://microsoft.github.io/mimalloc/group__options.html)),
-or via environment variables.
+or via environment variables:
- `MIMALLOC_SHOW_STATS=1`: show statistics when the program terminates.
- `MIMALLOC_VERBOSE=1`: show verbose messages.
@@ -265,11 +273,11 @@ _mimalloc_ can be build in secure mode by using the `-DMI_SECURE=ON` flags in `c
to make mimalloc more robust against exploits. In particular:
- All internal mimalloc pages are surrounded by guard pages and the heap metadata is behind a guard page as well (so a buffer overflow
- exploit cannot reach into the metadata),
+ exploit cannot reach into the metadata).
- All free list pointers are
[encoded](https://github.com/microsoft/mimalloc/blob/783e3377f79ee82af43a0793910a9f2d01ac7863/include/mimalloc-internal.h#L396)
- with per-page keys which is used both to prevent overwrites with a known pointer, as well as to detect heap corruption,
-- Double free's are detected (and ignored),
+ with per-page keys which is used both to prevent overwrites with a known pointer, as well as to detect heap corruption.
+- Double free's are detected (and ignored).
- The free lists are initialized in a random order and allocation randomly chooses between extension and reuse within a page to
mitigate against attacks that rely on a predicable allocation order. Similarly, the larger heap blocks allocated by mimalloc
from the OS are also address randomized.