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-<HTML>
-<HEAD>
- <TITLE> Two-Level Tree Structure for Fast Pointer Lookup</TITLE>
- <AUTHOR> Hans-J. Boehm, Silicon Graphics (now at HP)</author>
-</HEAD>
-<BODY>
-<H1>Two-Level Tree Structure for Fast Pointer Lookup</h1>
-<P>
-The conservative garbage collector described
-<A HREF="http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Hans_Boehm/gc/">here</a>
-uses a 2-level tree
-data structure to aid in fast pointer identification.
-This data structure is described in a bit more detail here, since
-<OL>
-<LI> Variations of the data structure are more generally useful.
-<LI> It appears to be hard to understand by reading the code.
-<LI> Some other collectors appear to use inferior data structures to
-solve the same problem.
-<LI> It is central to fast collector operation.
-</ol>
-A candidate pointer is divided into three sections, the <I>high</i>,
-<I>middle</i>, and <I>low</i> bits. The exact division between these
-three groups of bits is dependent on the detailed collector configuration.
-<P>
-The high and middle bits are used to look up an entry in the table described
-here. The resulting table entry consists of either a block descriptor
-(<TT>struct hblkhdr *</tt> or <TT>hdr *</tt>)
-identifying the layout of objects in the block, or an indication that this
-address range corresponds to the middle of a large block, together with a
-hint for locating the actual block descriptor. Such a hint consist
-of a displacement that can be subtracted from the middle bits of the candidate
-pointer without leaving the object.
-<P>
-In either case, the block descriptor (<TT>struct hblkhdr</tt>)
-refers to a table of object starting addresses (the <TT>hb_map</tt> field).
-The starting address table is indexed by the low bits if the candidate pointer.
-The resulting entry contains a displacement to the beginning of the object,
-or an indication that this cannot be a valid object pointer.
-(If all interior pointer are recognized, pointers into large objects
-are handled specially, as appropriate.)
-
-<H2>The Tree</h2>
-<P>
-The rest of this discussion focuses on the two level data structure
-used to map the high and middle bits to the block descriptor.
-<P>
-The high bits are used as an index into the <TT>GC_top_index</tt> (really
-<TT>GC_arrays._top_index</tt>) array. Each entry points to a
-<TT>bottom_index</tt> data structure. This structure in turn consists
-mostly of an array <TT>index</tt> indexed by the middle bits of
-the candidate pointer. The <TT>index</tt> array contains the actual
-<TT>hdr</tt> pointers.
-<P>
-Thus a pointer lookup consists primarily of a handful of memory references,
-and can be quite fast:
-<OL>
-<LI> The appropriate <TT>bottom_index</tt> pointer is looked up in
-<TT>GC_top_index</tt>, based on the high bits of the candidate pointer.
-<LI> The appropriate <TT>hdr</tt> pointer is looked up in the
-<TT>bottom_index</tt> structure, based on the middle bits.
-<LI> The block layout map pointer is retrieved from the <TT>hdr</tt>
-structure. (This memory reference is necessary since we try to share
-block layout maps.)
-<LI> The displacement to the beginning of the object is retrieved from the
-above map.
-</ol>
-<P>
-In order to conserve space, not all <TT>GC_top_index</tt> entries in fact
-point to distinct <TT>bottom_index</tt> structures. If no address with
-the corresponding high bits is part of the heap, then the entry points
-to <TT>GC_all_nils</tt>, a single <TT>bottom_index</tt> structure consisting
-only of NULL <TT>hdr</tt> pointers.
-<P>
-<TT>Bottom_index</tt> structures contain slightly more information than
-just <TT>hdr</tt> pointers. The <TT>asc_link</tt> field is used to link
-all <TT>bottom_index</tt> structures in ascending order for fast traversal.
-This list is pointed to be <TT>GC_all_bottom_indices</tt>.
-It is maintained with the aid of <TT>key</tt> field that contains the
-high bits corresponding to the <TT>bottom_index</tt>.
-
-<H2>64 bit addresses</h2>
-<P>
-In the case of 64 bit addresses, this picture is complicated slightly
-by the fact that one of the index structures would have to be huge to
-cover the entire address space with a two level tree. We deal with this
-by turning <TT>GC_top_index</tt> into a chained hash table, instead of
-a simple array. This adds a <TT>hash_link</tt> field to the
-<TT>bottom_index</tt> structure.
-<P>
-The "hash function" consists of dropping the high bits. This is cheap to
-compute, and guarantees that there will be no collisions if the heap
-is contiguous and not excessively large.
-
-<H2>A picture</h2>
-<P>
-The following is an ASCII diagram of the data structure.
-This was contributed by Dave Barrett several years ago.
-<PRE>
-
- Data Structure used by GC_base in gc3.7:
- 21-Apr-94
-
-
-
-
- 63 LOG_TOP_SZ[11] LOG_BOTTOM_SZ[10] LOG_HBLKSIZE[13]
- +------------------+----------------+------------------+------------------+
- p:| | TL_HASH(hi) | | HBLKDISPL(p) |
- +------------------+----------------+------------------+------------------+
- \-----------------------HBLKPTR(p)-------------------/
- \------------hi-------------------/
- \______ ________/ \________ _______/ \________ _______/
- V V V
- | | |
- GC_top_index[] | | |
- --- +--------------+ | | |
- ^ | | | | |
- | | | | | |
- TOP +--------------+<--+ | |
- _SZ +-<| [] | * | |
-(items)| +--------------+ if 0 < bi< HBLKSIZE | |
- | | | | then large object | |
- | | | | starts at the bi'th | |
- v | | | HBLK before p. | i |
- --- | +--------------+ | (word- |
- v | aligned) |
- bi= |GET_BI(p){->hash_link}->key==hi | |
- v | |
- | (bottom_index) \ scratch_alloc'd | |
- | ( struct bi ) / by get_index() | |
- --- +->+--------------+ | |
- ^ | | | |
- ^ | | | |
- BOTTOM | | ha=GET_HDR_ADDR(p) | |
-_SZ(items)+--------------+<----------------------+ +-------+
- | +--<| index[] | |
- | | +--------------+ GC_obj_map: v
- | | | | from / +-+-+-----+-+-+-+-+ ---
- v | | | GC_add < 0| | | | | | | | ^
- --- | +--------------+ _map_entry \ +-+-+-----+-+-+-+-+ |
- | | asc_link | +-+-+-----+-+-+-+-+ MAXOBJSZ
- | +--------------+ +-->| | | j | | | | | +1
- | | key | | +-+-+-----+-+-+-+-+ |
- | +--------------+ | +-+-+-----+-+-+-+-+ |
- | | hash_link | | | | | | | | | | v
- | +--------------+ | +-+-+-----+-+-+-+-+ ---
- | | |<--MAX_OFFSET--->|
- | | (bytes)
-HDR(p)| GC_find_header(p) | |<--MAP_ENTRIES-->|
- | \ from | =HBLKSIZE/WORDSZ
- | (hdr) (struct hblkhdr) / alloc_hdr() | (1024 on Alpha)
- +-->+----------------------+ | (8/16 bits each)
-GET_HDR(p)| word hb_sz (words) | |
- +----------------------+ |
- | struct hblk *hb_next | |
- +----------------------+ |
- |mark_proc hb_mark_proc| |
- +----------------------+ |
- | char * hb_map |>-------------+
- +----------------------+
- | ushort hb_obj_kind |
- +----------------------+
- | hb_last_reclaimed |
- --- +----------------------+
- ^ | |
- MARK_BITS| hb_marks[] | *if hdr is free, hb_sz + DISCARD_WORDS
-_SZ(words)| | is the size of a heap chunk (struct hblk)
- v | | of at least MININCR*HBLKSIZE bytes (below),
- --- +----------------------+ otherwise, size of each object in chunk.
-
-Dynamic data structures above are interleaved throughout the heap in blocks of
-size MININCR * HBLKSIZE bytes as done by gc_scratch_alloc which cannot be
-freed; free lists are used (e.g. alloc_hdr). HBLK's below are collected.
-
- (struct hblk)
- --- +----------------------+ < HBLKSIZE --- --- DISCARD_
- ^ |garbage[DISCARD_WORDS]| aligned ^ ^ HDR_BYTES WORDS
- | | | | v (bytes) (words)
- | +-----hb_body----------+ < WORDSZ | --- ---
- | | | aligned | ^ ^
- | | Object 0 | | hb_sz |
- | | | i |(word- (words)|
- | | | (bytes)|aligned) v |
- | + - - - - - - - - - - -+ --- | --- |
- | | | ^ | ^ |
- n * | | j (words) | hb_sz BODY_SZ
- HBLKSIZE | Object 1 | v v | (words)
- (bytes) | |--------------- v MAX_OFFSET
- | + - - - - - - - - - - -+ --- (bytes)
- | | | !All_INTERIOR_PTRS ^ |
- | | | sets j only for hb_sz |
- | | Object N | valid object offsets. | |
- v | | All objects WORDSZ v v
- --- +----------------------+ aligned. --- ---
-
-DISCARD_WORDS is normally zero. Indeed the collector has not been tested
-with another value in ages.
-</pre>
-</body>