.. Sources:
``_
.. index::
single: MVT pool class
single: pool class; MVT
.. _pool-mvt:
MVT (Manual Variable Temporal)
==============================
**MVT** :term:`manually manages `
variable-sized, unformatted objects. It uses the :dfn:`temporal fit`
:term:`allocation policy`.
.. index::
pair: MVT pool class; temporal fit
single: allocation policy; temporal fit
Temporal fit
------------
Temporal fit attempts to place consecutive allocations next to each
other. It relies on delaying re-use as long as possible to permit freed
blocks to :term:`coalesce`, thus maximizing the number of consecutive
allocations that can be co-located. Temporal fit permits a very fast
allocator and a deallocator competitive in speed with all other known
policies.
Temporal fit is intended to take advantage of knowledge of object
:term:`lifetimes`: either *a priori* knowledge, or knowledge acquired
by profiling. The best performance will be achieved by allocating
objects with similar expected death times together.
A simple policy can be implemented to take advantage of MVT. Object
size is typically well-correlated with object life-expectancy, and
birth time plus lifetime gives death time, so allocating objects of
similar size sequentially from the same pool instance should result in
objects allocated close to each other dying at about the same time.
An application that has several classes of objects of widely differing
life expectancy will best be served by creating a different MVT pool
instance for each life-expectancy class. A more sophisticated policy
can use either the programmer's knowledge of the expected lifetime of
an object, or any characteristic of objects that correlates with
lifetime, to choose an appropriate pool to allocate in.
Allocating objects with unknown or very different death times together
will pessimize the space performance of MVT.
.. index::
single: MVT pool class; properties
MVT properties
--------------
* Does not support allocation via :c:func:`mps_alloc`.
* Supports allocation via :term:`allocation points` only. If an
allocation point is created in an MVT pool, the call to
:c:func:`mps_ap_create_k` takes no keyword arguments.
* Supports deallocation via :c:func:`mps_free`.
* Supports :term:`allocation frames` but does not use them to improve
the efficiency of stack-like allocation.
* Does not support :term:`segregated allocation caches`.
* There are no garbage collections in this pool.
* Blocks may not contain :term:`references` to blocks in automatically
managed pools (unless these are registered as :term:`roots`).
* Allocations may be variable in size.
* The :term:`alignment` of blocks is configurable, but may not be
smaller than ``sizeof(void *)``.
* Blocks do not have :term:`dependent objects`.
* Blocks are not automatically :term:`reclaimed`.
* Blocks are not :term:`scanned `.
* Blocks are not protected by :term:`barriers (1)`.
* Blocks do not :term:`move `.
* Blocks may not be registered for :term:`finalization`.
* Blocks must not belong to an :term:`object format`.
.. index::
single: MVT pool class; interface
MVT interface
-------------
::
#include "mpscmvt.h"
.. c:function:: mps_pool_class_t mps_class_mvt(void)
Return the :term:`pool class` for an MVT (Manual Variable
Temporal) :term:`pool`.
When creating an MVT pool, :c:func:`mps_pool_create_k` accepts six
optional :term:`keyword arguments`:
* :c:macro:`MPS_KEY_ALIGN` (type :c:type:`mps_align_t`, default is
:c:macro:`MPS_PF_ALIGN`) is the :term:`alignment` of the
addresses allocated (and freed) in the pool. The minimum
alignment supported by pools of this class is ``sizeof(void *)``
and the maximum is the arena grain size
(see :c:macro:`MPS_KEY_ARENA_GRAIN_SIZE`).
* :c:macro:`MPS_KEY_MIN_SIZE` (type :c:type:`size_t`, default is
:c:macro:`MPS_PF_ALIGN`) is the
predicted minimum size of blocks that will be allocated from the
pool.
* :c:macro:`MPS_KEY_MEAN_SIZE` (type :c:type:`size_t`, default 32) is the
predicted mean size of blocks that will be allocated from the
pool.
* :c:macro:`MPS_KEY_MAX_SIZE` (type :c:type:`size_t`, default 8192) is the
predicted maximum size of blocks that will be allocated from the
pool. Partial freeing is not supported for blocks larger than
this; doing so will result in the storage of the block never
being reused.
The three ``SIZE`` arguments above are *hints* to the MPS: the
pool will be less efficient if they are wrong, but the only thing
that will break is the partial freeing of large blocks.
* :c:macro:`MPS_KEY_MVT_RESERVE_DEPTH` (type
:c:type:`mps_word_t`, default 1024) is the expected hysteresis
of the population of the pool. When blocks are freed, the pool
will retain sufficient storage to allocate this many blocks of the
mean size for near term allocations (rather than immediately
making that storage available to other pools).
If a pool has a stable population, or one which only grows over
the lifetime of the pool, or one which grows steadily and then
shrinks steadily, use a reserve depth of 0.
It is always safe to use a reserve depth of 0, but if the
population typically fluctuates in a range (for example, the
client program repeatedly creates and destroys a subset of
blocks in a loop), it is more efficient for the pool to retain
enough storage to satisfy that fluctuation. For example, if a
pool has an object population that typically fluctuates between
8,000 and 10,000, use a reserve depth of 2,000.
The reserve will not normally be available to other pools for
allocation, even when it is not used by the pool. If this is
undesirable, a reserve depth of 0 may be used for a pool whose
object population does vary, at a slight cost in efficiency. The
reserve does not guarantee any particular amount of allocation.
* :c:macro:`MPS_KEY_MVT_FRAG_LIMIT` (type ``double``, default 0.3)
may range from 0.0 to 1.0 (inclusive). It sets an upper limit on
the space overhead of an MVT pool, in case block death times and
allocations do not correlate well. If the free space managed by
the pool as a ratio of all the space managed by the pool exceeds
the fragmentation limit, the pool falls back to a first fit
allocation policy, exploiting space more efficiently at a cost
in time efficiency. A fragmentation limit of 0.0 would cause the
pool to operate as a first-fit pool, at a significant cost in
time efficiency: therefore this is not permitted.
A fragmentation limit of 1.0 causes the pool to always use
temporal fit (unless resources are exhausted). If the objects
allocated in the pool have similar lifetime expectancies, this
mode will have the best time- and space-efficiency. If the
objects have widely varying lifetime expectancies, this mode
will be time-efficient, but may be space-inefficient. An
intermediate setting can be used to limit the space-inefficiency
of temporal fit due to varying object life expectancies.
For example::
MPS_ARGS_BEGIN(args) {
MPS_ARGS_ADD(args, MPS_KEY_MIN_SIZE, 4);
MPS_ARGS_ADD(args, MPS_KEY_MEAN_SIZE, 32);
MPS_ARGS_ADD(args, MPS_KEY_MAX_SIZE, 1024);
MPS_ARGS_ADD(args, MPS_KEY_MVT_RESERVE_DEPTH, 256);
MPS_ARGS_ADD(args, MPS_KEY_MVT_FRAG_LIMIT, 0.5);
res = mps_pool_create_k(&pool, arena, mps_class_mvt(), args);
} MPS_ARGS_END(args);