/* * Copyright (c) 2019 Intel Corporation * * SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 */ #ifndef ZEPHYR_INCLUDE_SYS_SYS_HEAP_H_ #define ZEPHYR_INCLUDE_SYS_SYS_HEAP_H_ #include #include #include /* Simple, fast heap implementation. * * A more or less conventional segregated fit allocator with * power-of-two buckets. * * Excellent space efficiency. Chunks can be split arbitrarily in 8 * byte units. Overhead is only four bytes per allocated chunk (eight * bytes for heaps >256kb or on 64 bit systems), plus a log2-sized * array of 2-word bucket headers. No coarse alignment restrictions * on blocks, they can be split and merged (in units of 8 bytes) * arbitrarily. * * Simple API. Initialize at runtime with any blob of memory and not * a macro-generated, carefully aligned static array. Allocate and * free by user pointer and not an opaque block handle. * * Good fragmentation resistance. Freed blocks are always immediately * merged with adjacent free blocks. Allocations are attempted from a * sample of the smallest bucket that might fit, falling back rapidly * to the smallest block guaranteed to fit. Split memory remaining in * the chunk is always returned immediately to the heap for other * allocation. * * Excellent performance with firmly bounded runtime. All operations * are constant time (though there is a search of the smallest bucket * that has a compile-time-configurable upper bound, setting this to * extreme values results in an effectively linear search of the * list), objectively fast (~hundred instructions) and and amenable to * locked operation. */ /* Note: the init_mem/bytes fields are for the static initializer to * have somewhere to put the arguments. The actual heap metadata at * runtime lives in the heap memory itself and this struct simply * functions as an opaque pointer. Would be good to clean this up and * put the two values somewhere else, though it would make * SYS_HEAP_DEFINE a little hairy to write. */ struct sys_heap { struct z_heap *heap; void *init_mem; size_t init_bytes; }; struct z_heap_stress_result { uint32_t total_allocs; uint32_t successful_allocs; uint32_t total_frees; uint64_t accumulated_in_use_bytes; }; /** @brief Initialize sys_heap * * Initializes a sys_heap struct to manage the specified memory. * * @param heap Heap to initialize * @param mem Untyped pointer to unused memory * @param bytes Size of region pointed to by @a mem */ void sys_heap_init(struct sys_heap *heap, void *mem, size_t bytes); /** @brief Allocate memory from a sys_heap * * Returns a pointer to a block of unused memory in the heap. This * memory will not otherwise be used until it is freed with * sys_heap_free(). If no memory can be allocated, NULL will be * returned. The allocated memory is guaranteed to have a starting * address which is a multiple of sizeof(void *). If a bigger alignment * is necessary then sys_heap_aligned_alloc() should be used instead. * * @note The sys_heap implementation is not internally synchronized. * No two sys_heap functions should operate on the same heap at the * same time. All locking must be provided by the user. * * @param heap Heap from which to allocate * @param bytes Number of bytes requested * @return Pointer to memory the caller can now use */ void *sys_heap_alloc(struct sys_heap *heap, size_t bytes); /** @brief Allocate aligned memory from a sys_heap * * Behaves in all ways like sys_heap_alloc(), except that the returned * memory (if available) will have a starting address in memory which * is a multiple of the specified power-of-two alignment value in * bytes. With align=0 this behaves exactly like sys_heap_alloc(). * The resulting memory can be returned to the heap using sys_heap_free(). * * @param heap Heap from which to allocate * @param align Alignment in bytes, must be a power of two * @param bytes Number of bytes requested * @return Pointer to memory the caller can now use */ void *sys_heap_aligned_alloc(struct sys_heap *heap, size_t align, size_t bytes); /** @brief Free memory into a sys_heap * * De-allocates a pointer to memory previously returned from * sys_heap_alloc such that it can be used for other purposes. The * caller must not use the memory region after entry to this function. * * @note The sys_heap implementation is not internally synchronized. * No two sys_heap functions should operate on the same heap at the * same time. All locking must be provided by the user. * * @param heap Heap to which to return the memory * @param mem A pointer previously returned from sys_heap_alloc() */ void sys_heap_free(struct sys_heap *heap, void *mem); /** @brief Expand the size of an existing allocation * * Returns a pointer to a new memory region with the same contents, * but a different allocated size. If the new allocation can be * expanded in place, the pointer returned will be identical. * Otherwise the data will be copies to a new block and the old one * will be freed as per sys_heap_free(). If the specified size is * smaller than the original, the block will be truncated in place and * the remaining memory returned to the heap. If the allocation of a * new block fails, then NULL will be returned and the old block will * not be freed or modified. * * @note The return of a NULL on failure is a different behavior than * POSIX realloc(), which specifies that the original pointer will be * returned (i.e. it is not possible to safely detect realloc() * failure in POSIX, but it is here). * * @param heap Heap from which to allocate * @param ptr Original pointer returned from a previous allocation * @param align Alignment in bytes, must be a power of two * @param bytes Number of bytes requested for the new block * @return Pointer to memory the caller can now use, or NULL */ void *sys_heap_aligned_realloc(struct sys_heap *heap, void *ptr, size_t align, size_t bytes); #define sys_heap_realloc(heap, ptr, bytes) \ sys_heap_aligned_realloc(heap, ptr, 0, bytes) /** @brief Validate heap integrity * * Validates the internal integrity of a sys_heap. Intended for unit * test and validation code, though potentially useful as a user API * for applications with complicated runtime reliability requirements. * Note: this cannot catch every possible error, but if it returns * true then the heap is in a consistent state and can correctly * handle any sys_heap_alloc() request and free any live pointer * returned from a previou allocation. * * @param heap Heap to validate * @return true, if the heap is valid, otherwise false */ bool sys_heap_validate(struct sys_heap *heap); /** @brief sys_heap stress test rig * * Test rig for heap allocation validation. This will loop for @a * op_count cycles, in each iteration making a random choice to * allocate or free a pointer of randomized (power law) size based on * heuristics designed to keep the heap in a state where it is near @a * target_percent full. Allocation and free operations are provided * by the caller as callbacks (i.e. this can in theory test any heap). * Results, including counts of frees and successful/unsuccessful * allocations, are returnewd via the @result struct. * * @param alloc_fn Callback to perform an allocation. Passes back the @a * arg parameter as a context handle. * @param free_fn Callback to perform a free of a pointer returned from * @a alloc. Passes back the @a arg parameter as a * context handle. * @param arg Context handle to pass back to the callbacks * @param total_bytes Size of the byte array the heap was initialized in * @param op_count How many iterations to test * @param scratch_mem A pointer to scratch memory to be used by the * test. Should be about 1/2 the size of the heap * for tests that need to stress fragmentation. * @param scratch_bytes Size of the memory pointed to by @a scratch_mem * @param target_percent Percentage fill value (1-100) to which the * random allocation choices will seek. High * values will result in significant allocation * failures and a very fragmented heap. * @param result Struct into which to store test results. */ void sys_heap_stress(void *(*alloc_fn)(void *arg, size_t bytes), void (*free_fn)(void *arg, void *p), void *arg, size_t total_bytes, uint32_t op_count, void *scratch_mem, size_t scratch_bytes, int target_percent, struct z_heap_stress_result *result); /** @brief Print heap internal structure information to the console * * Print information on the heap structure such as its size, chunk buckets, * chunk list and some statistics for debugging purpose. * * @param heap Heap to print information about * @param dump_chunks True to print the entire heap chunk list */ void sys_heap_print_info(struct sys_heap *heap, bool dump_chunks); #endif /* ZEPHYR_INCLUDE_SYS_SYS_HEAP_H_ */