File kmem/kmem.md artifact 9a7772ee1a part of check-in 860229e8ce
kmem
kmem is a libk module that contains various functions for memory allocation and deallocation. it uses the short naming convention with the glyph m.
module functions
kmem supplies two module-level functions, used to interact with the kmptr container type.
kmfree(kmptr) → void- free, downref, or ignore the pasted object as appropriatekmshred(kmptr) → void- free, downref, or ignore the pasted object as appropriate. if deallocating, zero its contentskmstat(void*) → kmptr- convenience function to wrap a pointer to a non-managed object in akmptrstruct, so it can be passed to functions that accept arbitrary objects.kmptr p = kmstat(raw)is equivalent tokmptr p = { kmkind_none, raw, NULL }.kmtaint(&kmptr) → void- "taints" akmptrobject by setting it to be shredded when freed. this may be desirable if the object pointed to contains privileged information.
types
kmem defines the following types:
enum kmkind- enumerates allocation strategiesstruct kmptr- abstract pointer objectstruct kmcell- abstract memory cellstruct kmref- a reference-counted cellstruct kmnode- a node in an allocation treestruct kmpool- a memory pool
kmptr and kmcell are both very similar. the difference is that a kmptr points to a region in memory and can be passed around freely. a kmcell is the actual in-memory representation of an allocation cell. a kmcell cannot be usefully instantiated; rather, it is downcast from an actual cell type (e.g. kmnode n; kmcell* s = (kmcell*)(&n))
kmkind
kmkind is an enum that specifies an allocation function.
kmkind_none- no allocationkmkind_heap- heap allocationkmkind_pool- pool allocationkmkind_ref- reference-counting allocationkmkind_tree- tree allocation
kmptr
kmem functions can operate on both raw pointers and the kmptr struct type. kmptr is a generic struct that can contain any kind of pointer. this is useful if you wish to allocate different objects in different manners, but pass them on into a single interface.
memory pointed at by kmptr pointers can be freed either with the usual specialized function, or by passing the kmptr structure itself to the generic function kmfree, which will handle it appropriately, even if it's a pointer to a garbage-collected object or to a static region of memory.
a kmptr has the following layout:
kmkind kind- codes the type of pointer;kmkind_noneindicates a non-allocated pointer to a static (global or on-stack) object.kmshred shred- an enum. ifkmshred_yes, the value will be zeroed or otherwise made unreadable on free. if no,kmfreewill consultsrcfor shred policy if it is not NULL.void* ref- the raw pointer enclosed bycellkmcell* cell- a pointer to an object enclosure, typically either a memory pool or a referencing-counting object. NULL if not needed.
the convenience function kmstat(void*) → kmptr wraps a pointer to a static object in a kmptr struct.
kmcell
kmcell is a stub struct used to disambiguate between source types.a "source" is an object that can hold an allocated object, such as the heap, a memory pool, a fixed-length array on stack, or a fixed-length global array. all values produced by a kmem allocation function point to within a kmcell.
kmptr_kind kind- kind of cellsize_t sz- kind of cell (data plus all fields)kmshred shred- shredding flag
kmref
kmref is a struct that constitutes the in-memory representation of a reference-counted cell.
kmkind kind = kmkind_ref- kind of cellsize_t sz- size of cell (data plus all fields)kmshred shred- shredding flagsize_t refs- number of active referenceskmcell* src- source, if anychar data[]- content of cell
kmnode
kmnode is a struct that constitutes the in-memory representation of a tree node.
kmkind kind = kmkind_tree- kind of cellsize_t sz- size of cell (data plus all fields)kmshred shred- shredding flagkmnode* parent- parent nodekmnode* child- first child nodekmnode* lastchild- last child nodekmnode* prev- previous sibling, NULL if firstkmnode* next- next sibling, NULL if lastchar data[]- content of cell
kmpool
kmkind kind = kmkind_pool- indicates the kind of sourcesize_t sz- size of cell (data plus all fields)kmshred shred- shredding flagsize_t cellsz- size of individual pool cellskmpoolcell* top- pointer to most recently allocated pool cellkmpoolcell* bottom- pointer to most recently freed pool cellkmpoolcell data[]- content of cell
kmpoolcell
kmpoolcell* last- pointer to last element allocated before this onechar data[]- pool data
kmshred
kmshred is an enum used to indicate whether an object should be "shredded" (written over) in memory when it's deleted. this is a useful means to ensure that privileged information is not accidentally left in memory after use. if the shredding mechanism is not useful, compile libk with the flag KFmem_noshred to exclude its functions and fields.
kmshred_yes- marks an object to shred on freekmshred_no- marks an object not to shred on free
naming convention
kmem function names are based on the method of allocation and the action being performed. methods are listed in the section below. kmem defines a number of standardized actions, though not every method uses every action. the character listed in brackets is suffixed to the name of the method to produce a function name: for instance, kmheapa will allocate memory on the heap, while kmrefd will decrement the reference count of its argument.
- initialize [i] - initializes a memory store on the heap
- initialize fixed [if] - initialize a memory store on the stack or in a fixed-size global
- allocate [a] - return a raw pointer to a new region of memory of the given size, ready to write, or NULL if not possible. contents of that region undefined. takes parameter (size_t sz).
- allocate pointer object [ao] - like allocate, but returns a
kmptrinstead of a rawvoid*. - zero [z] - allocate a new region of memory and zero it before returning it for writing.
- zero pointer object [zo] - like zero, but returns a
kmptrinstead of a rawvoid*. - free [f] - free a section of memory, either decrementing a reference count or returning it to whatever pool it came from.
- shred [s] - destroy whatever was in the segment of memory, then return it to the pool it came from.
- destroy [x] - tears down a memory store
- upref [u] - increments a reference counter
methods
kmem currently supports the following methods of memory management, along with which methods are defined for it. (note that a implies z and f implies s). a method may be excluded from a libk binary by defining the flag KFmem_no[name], e.g. KFmem_noheap
heap[af] - standard heap allocationkmheapa(size_t) → void*- allocatekmheapz(size_t) → void*- zero-allocatekmheapao(size_t) → kmptr- allocate pointer objectkmheapzo(size_t) → kmptr- zero-allocate pointer objectkmheapf(void*) → void- freekmheaps(void*) → void- shred
ref[afu] - reference-counted heap objectkmrefa(kmcell*, size_t) → void*- allocatekmrefz(kmcell*, size_t) → void*- zero-allocatekmrefao(kmcell*, size_t) → void*- allocate pointer objectkmrefzo(kmcell*, size_t) → void*- zero-allocate pointer objectkmreff(void*) → void- downref; free if last refkmrefs(void*) → void- downref and mark for shred on last ref
pool[ixaf] - memory poolkmpooli(kmcell*, size_t sz, size_t n) → kmpool*- initialize a fixed memory pool (a pool ofncells of lengthsz)kmpoolx(kmpool*) → void- tear down a memory poolkmpoola(kmpool*) → void*- allocate from poolkmpoolz(kmpool*, size_t) → void*- zero-allocate from poolkmpoolao(kmpool*, size_t) → void*- allocate pointer objectkmpoolzo(kmpool*, size_t) → void*- zero-allocate pointer objectkmpoolf(void*) → void- downref; free if last refkmpools(void*) → void- downref and mark for shred on last ref
tree[af] - uses a node-child strategy. when a node is freed, all of its children are automatically freed as well.kmtreea(kmcell* src, void* parent, size_t) → void*- create a tree node. ifparentis NULL, the node will the top of a new tree. if src is null, allocate on-heap.kmtreez(kmcell* src, void* parent, size_t) → void*- likekmtreeabut zeroedkmtreeao(kmcell* src, void* parent, size_t) → kmptr- likekmtreeabut returns akmptrkmtreezo(kmcell* src, void* parent, size_t) → kmptr- likekmtreezbut returns akmptrkmtreef(void*) → kmptr- frees a node and all its children
macros
kmem defines the following macros.
Kmsz(array)- a convenience macro to return the number of elements in a static array. inserts the text( sizeof (array) / sizeof (array) [0] )