From f4e2d50cd7483a068c0a32e56b2d40f980cdea72 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andres Freund Date: Tue, 28 Feb 2017 10:36:29 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] Overhaul memory management README. The README was written as a "historical account", and that style hasn't aged particularly well. Rephrase it to describe the current situation, instead of having various version specific comments. This also updates the description of how allocated chunks are associated with their corresponding context, the method of which has changed in the preceding commit. Author: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170228074420.aazv4iw6k562mnxg@alap3.anarazel.de --- src/backend/utils/mmgr/README | 318 ++++++++++++++++------------------ 1 file changed, 145 insertions(+), 173 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/backend/utils/mmgr/README b/src/backend/utils/mmgr/README index f97d7653de..b83b29c268 100644 --- a/src/backend/utils/mmgr/README +++ b/src/backend/utils/mmgr/README @@ -1,15 +1,7 @@ src/backend/utils/mmgr/README -Notes About Memory Allocation Redesign -====================================== - -Up through version 7.0, Postgres had serious problems with memory leakage -during large queries that process a lot of pass-by-reference data. There -was no provision for recycling memory until end of query. This needed to be -fixed, even more so with the advent of TOAST which allows very large chunks -of data to be passed around in the system. This document describes the new -memory management system implemented in 7.1. - +Memory Context System Design Overview +===================================== Background ---------- @@ -38,10 +30,10 @@ to or get more memory from the same context the chunk was originally allocated in. At all times there is a "current" context denoted by the -CurrentMemoryContext global variable. The backend macro palloc() -implicitly allocates space in that context. The MemoryContextSwitchTo() -operation selects a new current context (and returns the previous context, -so that the caller can restore the previous context before exiting). +CurrentMemoryContext global variable. palloc() implicitly allocates space +in that context. The MemoryContextSwitchTo() operation selects a new current +context (and returns the previous context, so that the caller can restore the +previous context before exiting). The main advantage of memory contexts over plain use of malloc/free is that the entire contents of a memory context can be freed easily, without @@ -60,8 +52,10 @@ The behavior of palloc and friends is similar to the standard C library's malloc and friends, but there are some deliberate differences too. Here are some notes to clarify the behavior. -* If out of memory, palloc and repalloc exit via elog(ERROR). They never -return NULL, and it is not necessary or useful to test for such a result. +* If out of memory, palloc and repalloc exit via elog(ERROR). They +never return NULL, and it is not necessary or useful to test for such +a result. With palloc_extended() that behavior can be overridden +using the MCXT_ALLOC_NO_OOM flag. * palloc(0) is explicitly a valid operation. It does not return a NULL pointer, but a valid chunk of which no bytes may be used. However, the @@ -71,28 +65,18 @@ error. Similarly, repalloc allows realloc'ing to zero size. * pfree and repalloc do not accept a NULL pointer. This is intentional. -pfree/repalloc No Longer Depend On CurrentMemoryContext -------------------------------------------------------- - -Since Postgres 7.1, pfree() and repalloc() can be applied to any chunk -whether it belongs to CurrentMemoryContext or not --- the chunk's owning -context will be invoked to handle the operation, regardless. This is a -change from the old requirement that CurrentMemoryContext must be set -to the same context the memory was allocated from before one can use -pfree() or repalloc(). - -There was some consideration of getting rid of CurrentMemoryContext entirely, -instead requiring the target memory context for allocation to be specified -explicitly. But we decided that would be too much notational overhead --- -we'd have to pass an appropriate memory context to called routines in -many places. For example, the copyObject routines would need to be passed -a context, as would function execution routines that return a -pass-by-reference datatype. And what of routines that temporarily -allocate space internally, but don't return it to their caller? We -certainly don't want to clutter every call in the system with "here is -a context to use for any temporary memory allocation you might want to -do". So there'd still need to be a global variable specifying a suitable -temporary-allocation context. That might as well be CurrentMemoryContext. +The Current Memory Context +-------------------------- + +Because it would be too much notational overhead to always pass an +appropriate memory context to called routines, there always exists the +notion of the current memory context CurrentMemoryContext. Without it, +for example, the copyObject routines would need to be passed a context, as +would function execution routines that return a pass-by-reference +datatype. Similarly for routines that temporarily allocate space +internally, but don't return it to their caller? We certainly don't +want to clutter every call in the system with "here is a context to +use for any temporary memory allocation you might want to do". The upshot of that reasoning, though, is that CurrentMemoryContext should generally point at a short-lifespan context if at all possible. During @@ -102,42 +86,83 @@ context having greater than transaction lifespan, since doing so risks permanent memory leaks. -Additions to the Memory-Context Mechanism ------------------------------------------ - -Before 7.1 memory contexts were all independent, but it was too hard to -keep track of them; with lots of contexts there needs to be explicit -mechanism for that. - -We solved this by creating a tree of "parent" and "child" contexts. When -creating a memory context, the new context can be specified to be a child -of some existing context. A context can have many children, but only one -parent. In this way the contexts form a forest (not necessarily a single -tree, since there could be more than one top-level context; although in -current practice there is only one top context, TopMemoryContext). - -We then say that resetting or deleting any particular context resets or -deletes all its direct and indirect children as well. This feature allows -us to manage a lot of contexts without fear that some will be leaked; we -only need to keep track of one top-level context that we are going to -delete at transaction end, and make sure that any shorter-lived contexts -we create are descendants of that context. Since the tree can have -multiple levels, we can deal easily with nested lifetimes of storage, -such as per-transaction, per-statement, per-scan, per-tuple. Storage -lifetimes that only partially overlap can be handled by allocating -from different trees of the context forest (there are some examples -in the next section). - -Actually, it turns out that resetting a given context should almost -always imply deleting, not just resetting, any child contexts it has. -So MemoryContextReset() means that, and if you really do want a tree of -empty contexts you need to call MemoryContextResetOnly() plus -MemoryContextResetChildren(). +pfree/repalloc Do Not Depend On CurrentMemoryContext +---------------------------------------------------- + +pfree() and repalloc() can be applied to any chunk whether it belongs +to CurrentMemoryContext or not --- the chunk's owning context will be +invoked to handle the operation, regardless. + + +"Parent" and "Child" Contexts +----------------------------- + +If all contexts were independent, it'd be hard to keep track of them, +especially in error cases. That is solved this by creating a tree of +"parent" and "child" contexts. When creating a memory context, the +new context can be specified to be a child of some existing context. +A context can have many children, but only one parent. In this way +the contexts form a forest (not necessarily a single tree, since there +could be more than one top-level context; although in current practice +there is only one top context, TopMemoryContext). + +Deleting a context deletes all its direct and indirect children as +well. When resetting a context it's almost always more useful to +delete child contexts, thus MemoryContextReset() means that, and if +you really do want a tree of empty contexts you need to call +MemoryContextResetOnly() plus MemoryContextResetChildren(). + +These features allow us to manage a lot of contexts without fear that +some will be leaked; we only need to keep track of one top-level +context that we are going to delete at transaction end, and make sure +that any shorter-lived contexts we create are descendants of that +context. Since the tree can have multiple levels, we can deal easily +with nested lifetimes of storage, such as per-transaction, +per-statement, per-scan, per-tuple. Storage lifetimes that only +partially overlap can be handled by allocating from different trees of +the context forest (there are some examples in the next section). For convenience we also provide operations like "reset/delete all children of a given context, but don't reset or delete that context itself". +Memory Context Reset/Delete Callbacks +------------------------------------- + +A feature introduced in Postgres 9.5 allows memory contexts to be used +for managing more resources than just plain palloc'd memory. This is +done by registering a "reset callback function" for a memory context. +Such a function will be called, once, just before the context is next +reset or deleted. It can be used to give up resources that are in some +sense associated with an object allocated within the context. Possible +use-cases include +* closing open files associated with a tuplesort object; +* releasing reference counts on long-lived cache objects that are held + by some object within the context being reset; +* freeing malloc-managed memory associated with some palloc'd object. +That last case would just represent bad programming practice for pure +Postgres code; better to have made all the allocations using palloc, +in the target context or some child context. However, it could well +come in handy for code that interfaces to non-Postgres libraries. + +Any number of reset callbacks can be established for a memory context; +they are called in reverse order of registration. Also, callbacks +attached to child contexts are called before callbacks attached to +parent contexts, if a tree of contexts is being reset or deleted. + +The API for this requires the caller to provide a MemoryContextCallback +memory chunk to hold the state for a callback. Typically this should be +allocated in the same context it is logically attached to, so that it +will be released automatically after use. The reason for asking the +caller to provide this memory is that in most usage scenarios, the caller +will be creating some larger struct within the target context, and the +MemoryContextCallback struct can be made "for free" without a separate +palloc() call by including it in this larger struct. + + +Memory Contexts in Practice +=========================== + Globally Known Contexts ----------------------- @@ -325,83 +350,64 @@ copy step. Mechanisms to Allow Multiple Types of Contexts ---------------------------------------------- -We may want several different types of memory contexts with different -allocation policies but similar external behavior. To handle this, -memory allocation functions will be accessed via function pointers, -and we will require all context types to obey the conventions given here. -(As of 2015, there's actually still just one context type; but interest in -creating other types has never gone away entirely, so we retain this API.) - -A memory context is represented by an object like - -typedef struct MemoryContextData -{ - NodeTag type; /* identifies exact kind of context */ - MemoryContextMethods methods; - MemoryContextData *parent; /* NULL if no parent (toplevel context) */ - MemoryContextData *firstchild; /* head of linked list of children */ - MemoryContextData *nextchild; /* next child of same parent */ - char *name; /* context name (just for debugging) */ -} MemoryContextData, *MemoryContext; - -This is essentially an abstract superclass, and the "methods" pointer is -its virtual function table. Specific memory context types will use +To efficiently allow for different allocation patterns, and for +experimentation, we allow for different types of memory contexts with +different allocation policies but similar external behavior. To +handle this, memory allocation functions are accessed via function +pointers, and we require all context types to obey the conventions +given here. + +A memory context is represented by struct MemoryContextData (see +memnodes.h). This struct identifies the exact type of the context, and +contains information common between the different types of +MemoryContext like the parent and child contexts, and the name of the +context. + +This is essentially an abstract superclass, and the behavior is +determined by the "methods" pointer is its virtual function table +(struct MemoryContextMethods). Specific memory context types will use derived structs having these fields as their first fields. All the -contexts of a specific type will have methods pointers that point to the -same static table of function pointers, which look like - -typedef struct MemoryContextMethodsData -{ - Pointer (*alloc) (MemoryContext c, Size size); - void (*free_p) (Pointer chunk); - Pointer (*realloc) (Pointer chunk, Size newsize); - void (*reset) (MemoryContext c); - void (*delete) (MemoryContext c); -} MemoryContextMethodsData, *MemoryContextMethods; - -Alloc, reset, and delete requests will take a MemoryContext pointer -as parameter, so they'll have no trouble finding the method pointer -to call. Free and realloc are trickier. To make those work, we -require all memory context types to produce allocated chunks that -are immediately preceded by a standard chunk header, which has the -layout - -typedef struct StandardChunkHeader -{ - MemoryContext mycontext; /* Link to owning context object */ - Size size; /* Allocated size of chunk */ -}; - -It turns out that the pre-existing aset.c memory context type did this -already, and probably any other kind of context would need to have the -same data available to support realloc, so this is not really creating -any additional overhead. (Note that if a context type needs more per- -allocated-chunk information than this, it can make an additional -nonstandard header that precedes the standard header. So we're not -constraining context-type designers very much.) - -Given this, the pfree routine looks something like - - StandardChunkHeader * header = - (StandardChunkHeader *) ((char *) p - sizeof(StandardChunkHeader)); - - (*header->mycontext->methods->free_p) (p); +contexts of a specific type will have methods pointers that point to +the same static table of function pointers. + +While operations like allocating from and resetting a context take the +relevant MemoryContext as a parameter, operations like free and +realloc are trickier. To make those work, we require all memory +context types to produce allocated chunks that are immediately, +without any padding, preceded by a pointer to the corresponding +MemoryContext. + +If a type of allocator needs additional information about its chunks, +like e.g. the size of the allocation, that information can in turn +precede the MemoryContext. This means the only overhead implied by +the memory context mechanism is a pointer to its context, so we're not +constraining context-type designers very much. + +Given this, routines like pfree their corresponding context with an +operation like (although that is usually encapsulated in +GetMemoryChunkContext()) + + MemoryContext context = *(MemoryContext*) (((char *) pointer) - sizeof(void *)); + +and then invoke the corresponding method for the context + + (*context->methods->free_p) (p); More Control Over aset.c Behavior --------------------------------- -Previously, aset.c always allocated an 8K block upon the first allocation -in a context, and doubled that size for each successive block request. -That's good behavior for a context that might hold *lots* of data, and -the overhead wasn't bad when we had only a few contexts in existence. -With dozens if not hundreds of smaller contexts in the system, we need -to be able to fine-tune things a little better. +By default aset.c always allocates an 8K block upon the first +allocation in a context, and doubles that size for each successive +block request. That's good behavior for a context that might hold +*lots* of data. But if there are dozens if not hundreds of smaller +contexts in the system, we need to be able to fine-tune things a +little better. -The creator of a context is now able to specify an initial block size -and a maximum block size. Selecting smaller values can prevent wastage -of space in contexts that aren't expected to hold very much (an example is -the relcache's per-relation contexts). +The creator of a context is able to specify an initial block size and +a maximum block size. Selecting smaller values can prevent wastage of +space in contexts that aren't expected to hold very much (an example +is the relcache's per-relation contexts). Also, it is possible to specify a minimum context size. If this value is greater than zero then a block of that size will be grabbed @@ -414,37 +420,3 @@ will not allocate very much space per tuple cycle. To make this usage pattern cheap, the first block allocated in a context is not given back to malloc() during reset, but just cleared. This avoids malloc thrashing. - - -Memory Context Reset/Delete Callbacks -------------------------------------- - -A feature introduced in Postgres 9.5 allows memory contexts to be used -for managing more resources than just plain palloc'd memory. This is -done by registering a "reset callback function" for a memory context. -Such a function will be called, once, just before the context is next -reset or deleted. It can be used to give up resources that are in some -sense associated with an object allocated within the context. Possible -use-cases include -* closing open files associated with a tuplesort object; -* releasing reference counts on long-lived cache objects that are held - by some object within the context being reset; -* freeing malloc-managed memory associated with some palloc'd object. -That last case would just represent bad programming practice for pure -Postgres code; better to have made all the allocations using palloc, -in the target context or some child context. However, it could well -come in handy for code that interfaces to non-Postgres libraries. - -Any number of reset callbacks can be established for a memory context; -they are called in reverse order of registration. Also, callbacks -attached to child contexts are called before callbacks attached to -parent contexts, if a tree of contexts is being reset or deleted. - -The API for this requires the caller to provide a MemoryContextCallback -memory chunk to hold the state for a callback. Typically this should be -allocated in the same context it is logically attached to, so that it -will be released automatically after use. The reason for asking the -caller to provide this memory is that in most usage scenarios, the caller -will be creating some larger struct within the target context, and the -MemoryContextCallback struct can be made "for free" without a separate -palloc() call by including it in this larger struct. -- 2.40.0