document extended size classes
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README.md
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README.md
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@ -168,6 +168,10 @@ for the chosen values are not written yet, so use them at your own peril:
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* `CONFIG_STATS`: `false` (default) to control whether stats on allocation /
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deallocation count and active allocations are tracked. This is currently only
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exposed via the mallinfo APIs on Android.
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* `CONFIG_EXTENDED_SIZE_CLASSES`: `true` (default) to control whether small
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size class go up to 64k instead of the minimum requirement for avoiding
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memory waste of 16k. The option to extend it even further will be offered in
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the future when better support for larger slab allocations is added.
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* `CONFIG_LARGE_SIZE_CLASSES`: `true` (default) to control whether large
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allocations use the slab allocation size class scheme instead of page size
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granularity (see the section on size classes below)
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@ -398,11 +402,33 @@ preliminary set of values.
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| 14336 | 14.278738839285708% | 4 | 57344 | 0.0% |
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| 16384 | 12.493896484375% | 4 | 65536 | 0.0% |
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The slab allocation size classes currently end at 16384 since that's the final
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size for 2048 byte spacing and the next spacing class matches the page size of
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4096 bytes on the target platforms. This is the minimum set of small size
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classes required to avoid substantial waste from rounding. Further slab
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allocation size classes may be offered as an option in the future.
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The slab allocation size classes end at 16384 since that's the final size for
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2048 byte spacing and the next spacing class matches the page size of 4096
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bytes on the target platforms. This is the minimum set of small size classes
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required to avoid substantial waste from rounding.
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The `CONFIG_EXTENDED_SIZE_CLASSES` option extends the size classes up to 65536,
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with a final spacing class of 16384. This offers improved performance compared
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to the minimum set of size classes. The security story is complicated, since
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the slab allocation has both advantages like size class isolation completely
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avoiding reuse of any of the address space for any other size classes or other
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data. It also has disadvantages like caching a small number of empty slabs and
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deterministic guard sizes. The cache will be configurable in the future, making
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it possible to disable slab caching for the largest slab allocation sizes, to
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force unmapping them immediately and putting them in the slab quarantine, which
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eliminates most of the security disadvantage at the expense of also giving up
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most of the performance advantage, but while retaining the isolation.
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| size class | worst case internal fragmentation | slab slots | slab size | internal fragmentation for slabs |
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| - | - | - | - | - |
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| 20480 | 19.9951171875% | 2 | 40960 | 0.0% |
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| 24576 | 16.66259765625% | 2 | 49152 | 0.0% |
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| 28672 | 14.2822265625% | 2 | 57344 | 0.0% |
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| 32768 | 12.4969482421875% | 2 | 65536 | 0.0% |
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| 40960 | 19.99755859375% | 2 | 81920 | 0.0% |
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| 49152 | 16.664632161458343% | 2 | 98304 | 0.0% |
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| 57344 | 14.283970424107139% | 2 | 114688 | 0.0% |
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| 65536 | 12.49847412109375% | 2 | 131072 | 0.0% |
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The `CONFIG_LARGE_SIZE_CLASSES` option controls whether large allocations use
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the same size class scheme providing 4 size classes for every doubling of size.
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@ -10,7 +10,9 @@ size_classes = [
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1280, 1536, 1792, 2048,
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2560, 3072, 3584, 4096,
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5120, 6144, 7168, 8192,
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10240, 12288, 14336, 16384
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10240, 12288, 14336, 16384,
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20480, 24576, 28672, 32768,
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40960, 49152, 57344, 65536
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]
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size_class_slots = [
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@ -21,7 +23,9 @@ size_class_slots = [
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16, 16, 16, 16,
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8, 8, 8, 8,
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8, 8, 8, 8,
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6, 5, 4, 4
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6, 5, 4, 4,
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2, 2, 2, 2,
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2, 2, 2, 2
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]
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fragmentation = [100 - 1 / 16 * 100]
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