196 lines
5.3 KiB
Go
196 lines
5.3 KiB
Go
// Copyright 2020 The LevelDB-Go and Pebble Authors. All rights reserved. Use
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// of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be found in
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// the LICENSE file.
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// +build jemalloc
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package z
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/*
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#cgo LDFLAGS: /usr/local/lib/libjemalloc.a -L/usr/local/lib -Wl,-rpath,/usr/local/lib -ljemalloc -lm -lstdc++ -pthread -ldl
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include <jemalloc/jemalloc.h>
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*/
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import "C"
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import (
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"bytes"
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"fmt"
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"runtime"
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"strconv"
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"strings"
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"sync"
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"sync/atomic"
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"unsafe"
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"github.com/dustin/go-humanize"
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)
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// The go:linkname directives provides backdoor access to private functions in
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// the runtime. Below we're accessing the throw function.
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//go:linkname throw runtime.throw
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func throw(s string)
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// New allocates a slice of size n. The returned slice is from manually managed
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// memory and MUST be released by calling Free. Failure to do so will result in
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// a memory leak.
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//
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// Compile jemalloc with ./configure --with-jemalloc-prefix="je_"
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// https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/jemalloc_new/+/6840b22e8e11cb68b493297a5cd757d6eaa0b406/TUNING.md
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// These two config options seems useful for frequent allocations and deallocations in
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// multi-threaded programs (like we have).
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// JE_MALLOC_CONF="background_thread:true,metadata_thp:auto"
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//
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// Compile Go program with `go build -tags=jemalloc` to enable this.
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type dalloc struct {
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f string
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no int
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sz int
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}
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// Enabled via 'leak' build flag.
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var dallocsMu sync.Mutex
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var dallocs map[unsafe.Pointer]*dalloc
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func init() {
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// By initializing dallocs, we can start tracking allocations and deallocations via z.Calloc.
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dallocs = make(map[unsafe.Pointer]*dalloc)
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}
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func Calloc(n int) []byte {
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if n == 0 {
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return make([]byte, 0)
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}
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// We need to be conscious of the Cgo pointer passing rules:
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//
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// https://golang.org/cmd/cgo/#hdr-Passing_pointers
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//
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// ...
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// Note: the current implementation has a bug. While Go code is permitted
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// to write nil or a C pointer (but not a Go pointer) to C memory, the
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// current implementation may sometimes cause a runtime error if the
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// contents of the C memory appear to be a Go pointer. Therefore, avoid
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// passing uninitialized C memory to Go code if the Go code is going to
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// store pointer values in it. Zero out the memory in C before passing it
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// to Go.
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ptr := C.je_calloc(C.size_t(n), 1)
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if ptr == nil {
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// NB: throw is like panic, except it guarantees the process will be
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// terminated. The call below is exactly what the Go runtime invokes when
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// it cannot allocate memory.
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throw("out of memory")
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}
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uptr := unsafe.Pointer(ptr)
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if dallocs != nil {
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// If leak detection is enabled.
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for i := 1; ; i++ {
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_, f, l, ok := runtime.Caller(i)
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if !ok {
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break
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}
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if strings.Contains(f, "/ristretto") {
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continue
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}
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dallocsMu.Lock()
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dallocs[uptr] = &dalloc{
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f: f,
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no: l,
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sz: n,
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}
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dallocsMu.Unlock()
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break
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}
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}
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atomic.AddInt64(&numBytes, int64(n))
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// Interpret the C pointer as a pointer to a Go array, then slice.
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return (*[MaxArrayLen]byte)(uptr)[:n:n]
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}
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// CallocNoRef does the exact same thing as Calloc with jemalloc enabled.
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func CallocNoRef(n int) []byte {
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return Calloc(n)
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}
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// Free frees the specified slice.
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func Free(b []byte) {
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if sz := cap(b); sz != 0 {
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b = b[:cap(b)]
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ptr := unsafe.Pointer(&b[0])
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C.je_free(ptr)
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atomic.AddInt64(&numBytes, -int64(sz))
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if dallocs != nil {
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// If leak detection is enabled.
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dallocsMu.Lock()
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delete(dallocs, ptr)
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dallocsMu.Unlock()
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}
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}
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}
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func Leaks() string {
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if dallocs == nil {
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return "Leak detection disabled. Enable with 'leak' build flag."
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}
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dallocsMu.Lock()
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defer dallocsMu.Unlock()
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if len(dallocs) == 0 {
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return "NO leaks found."
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}
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m := make(map[string]int)
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for _, da := range dallocs {
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m[da.f+":"+strconv.Itoa(da.no)] += da.sz
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}
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var buf bytes.Buffer
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fmt.Fprintf(&buf, "Allocations:\n")
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for f, sz := range m {
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fmt.Fprintf(&buf, "%s at file: %s\n", humanize.IBytes(uint64(sz)), f)
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}
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return buf.String()
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}
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// ReadMemStats populates stats with JE Malloc statistics.
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func ReadMemStats(stats *MemStats) {
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if stats == nil {
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return
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}
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// Call an epoch mallclt to refresh the stats data as mentioned in the docs.
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// http://jemalloc.net/jemalloc.3.html#epoch
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// Note: This epoch mallctl is as expensive as a malloc call. It takes up the
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// malloc_mutex_lock.
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epoch := 1
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sz := unsafe.Sizeof(&epoch)
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C.je_mallctl(
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(C.CString)("epoch"),
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unsafe.Pointer(&epoch),
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(*C.size_t)(unsafe.Pointer(&sz)),
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unsafe.Pointer(&epoch),
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(C.size_t)(unsafe.Sizeof(epoch)))
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stats.Allocated = fetchStat("stats.allocated")
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stats.Active = fetchStat("stats.active")
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stats.Resident = fetchStat("stats.resident")
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stats.Retained = fetchStat("stats.retained")
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}
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// fetchStat is used to read a specific attribute from je malloc stats using mallctl.
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func fetchStat(s string) uint64 {
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var out uint64
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sz := unsafe.Sizeof(&out)
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C.je_mallctl(
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(C.CString)(s), // Query: eg: stats.allocated, stats.resident, etc.
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unsafe.Pointer(&out), // Variable to store the output.
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(*C.size_t)(unsafe.Pointer(&sz)), // Size of the output variable.
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nil, // Input variable used to set a value.
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0) // Size of the input variable.
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return out
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}
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func StatsPrint() {
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opts := C.CString("mdablxe")
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C.je_malloc_stats_print(nil, nil, opts)
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C.free(unsafe.Pointer(opts))
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}
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