robocar-led/vendor/periph.io/x/periph/host/pmem/alloc.go

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2019-12-14 10:56:22 +00:00
// Copyright 2016 The Periph Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed under the Apache License, Version 2.0
// that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package pmem
import (
"bytes"
"io"
"io/ioutil"
"reflect"
"sync"
"unsafe"
)
const pageSize = 4096
// Mem represents a section of memory that is usable by the DMA controller.
//
// Since this is physically allocated memory, that could potentially have been
// allocated in spite of OS consent, for example by asking the GPU directly, it
// is important to call Close() before process exit.
type Mem interface {
io.Closer
// Bytes returns the user space memory mapped buffer address as a slice of
// bytes.
//
// It is the raw view of the memory from this process.
Bytes() []byte
// AsPOD initializes a pointer to a POD (plain old data) to point to the
// memory mapped region.
//
// pp must be a pointer to:
//
// - pointer to a base size type (uint8, int64, float32, etc)
// - struct
// - array of the above
// - slice of the above
//
// and the value must be nil. Returns an error otherwise.
//
// If a pointer to a slice is passed in, it is initialized to the length and
// capacity set to the maximum number of elements this slice can represent.
//
// The pointer initialized points to the same address as Bytes().
AsPOD(pp interface{}) error
// PhysAddr is the physical address. It can be either 32 bits or 64 bits,
// depending on the bitness of the OS kernel, not on the user mode build,
// e.g. you could have compiled on a 32 bits Go toolchain but running on a
// 64 bits kernel.
PhysAddr() uint64
}
// MemAlloc represents contiguous physically locked memory that was allocated.
//
// The memory is mapped in user space.
//
// MemAlloc implements Mem.
type MemAlloc struct {
View
}
// Close unmaps the physical memory allocation.
func (m *MemAlloc) Close() error {
if err := munlock(m.orig); err != nil {
return err
}
return munmap(m.orig)
}
// Alloc allocates a continuous chunk of physical memory.
//
// Size must be rounded to 4Kb. Allocations of 4Kb will normally succeed.
// Allocations larger than 64Kb will likely fail due to kernel memory
// fragmentation; rebooting the host or reducing the number of running programs
// may help.
//
// The allocated memory is uncached.
func Alloc(size int) (*MemAlloc, error) {
if size == 0 || size&(pageSize-1) != 0 {
return nil, wrapf("allocated memory must be rounded to %d bytes", pageSize)
}
if isLinux && !isWSL() {
return allocLinux(size)
}
return nil, wrapf("memory allocation is not supported on this platform")
}
//
var (
wslOnce sync.Once
isWSLValue bool
)
// uallocMemLocked allocates user space memory and requests the OS to have the
// chunk to be locked into physical memory.
func uallocMemLocked(size int) ([]byte, error) {
// It is important to write to the memory so it is forced to be present.
b, err := uallocMem(size)
if err == nil {
for i := range b {
b[i] = 0
}
if err := mlock(b); err != nil {
// Ignore the unmap error.
_ = munmap(b)
return nil, wrapf("locking %d bytes failed: %v", size, err)
}
}
return b, err
}
// allocLinux allocates physical memory and returns a user view to it.
func allocLinux(size int) (*MemAlloc, error) {
// TODO(maruel): Implement the "shotgun approach". Allocate a ton of 4Kb
// pages and lock them. Then look at their physical pages and only keep the
// one useful. Then create a linear mapping in memory to simplify the user
// mode with a single linear user space virtual address but keep the
// individual page alive with their initial allocation. When done release
// each individual page.
if size > pageSize {
return nil, wrapf("large allocation is not yet implemented")
}
// First allocate a chunk of user space memory.
b, err := uallocMemLocked(size)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
pages := make([]uint64, (size+pageSize-1)/pageSize)
// Figure out the physical memory addresses.
for i := range pages {
pages[i], err = virtToPhys(toRaw(b[pageSize*i:]))
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
if pages[i] == 0 {
return nil, wrapf("failed to read page %d", i)
}
}
for i := 1; i < len(pages); i++ {
// Fail if the memory is not contiguous.
if pages[i] != pages[i-1]+pageSize {
return nil, wrapf("failed to allocate %d bytes of continugous physical memory; page %d =0x%x; page %d=0x%x", size, i, pages[i], i-1, pages[i-1])
}
}
return &MemAlloc{View{Slice: b, phys: pages[0], orig: b}}, nil
}
// virtToPhys returns the physical memory address backing a virtual
// memory address.
func virtToPhys(virt uintptr) (uint64, error) {
physPage, err := ReadPageMap(virt)
if err != nil {
return 0, err
}
if physPage&(1<<63) == 0 {
// If high bit is not set, the page doesn't exist.
return 0, wrapf("0x%08x has no physical address", virt)
}
// Strip flags. See linux documentation on kernel.org for more details.
physPage &^= 0x1FF << 55
return physPage * pageSize, nil
}
func toRaw(b []byte) uintptr {
header := *(*reflect.SliceHeader)(unsafe.Pointer(&b))
return header.Data
}
// isWSL returns true if running under Windows Subsystem for Linux.
func isWSL() bool {
wslOnce.Do(func() {
if c, err := ioutil.ReadFile("/proc/sys/kernel/osrelease"); err == nil {
isWSLValue = bytes.Contains(c, []byte("Microsoft"))
}
})
return isWSLValue
}
var _ Mem = &MemAlloc{}