Epoch-Based Reclamation (EBR) and Quiescent-State-Based Reclamation (QSBR) are synchronisation mechanisms which can be used for efficient memory/object reclamation (garbage collection) in concurrent environment. Conceptually they are very similar to the read-copy-update (RCU) mechanism.
EBR and QSBR are simpler, more lightweight and often faster than RCU. However, each thread must register itself when using these mechanisms. EBR allows user to mark the critical code paths without the need to periodically indicate the quiescent state. It is slightly slower than QSBR due to the need to issue a memory barrier on the reader side. QSBR is more lightweight, but each thread must manually indicate the quiescent state i.e. threads must periodically pass a checkpoint where they call a dedicated function. In many applications, such approach can be practical.
A typical use case of the EBR or QSBR would be together with lock-free data structures. This library provides raw EBR and QSBR mechanisms as well as a higher level garbage collection (GC) interface based on EBR.
The implementation is written in C11 and distributed under the 2-clause BSD license.
References:
K. Fraser, Practical lock-freedom,
Technical Report UCAM-CL-TR-579, February 2004
https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/techreports/UCAM-CL-TR-579.pdf
T. E. Hart, P. E. McKenney, A.D. Brown,
Making Lockless Synchronization Fast: Performance Implications of Memory Reclamation.
Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium, April 2006.
http://csng.cs.toronto.edu/publication_files/0000/0165/ipdps06.pdf
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ebr_t *ebr_create(void)
- Construct a new EBR object.
-
void ebr_destroy(ebr_t *ebr)
- Destroy the EBR object.
-
int ebr_register(ebr_t *ebr)
- Register the current thread for EBR synchronisation. Returns 0 on
success and -1 on failure. Note: each reader thread (i.e. callers of
ebr_enter/ebr_exit
) must register.
- Register the current thread for EBR synchronisation. Returns 0 on
success and -1 on failure. Note: each reader thread (i.e. callers of
-
void ebr_unregister(ebr_t *ebr)
- Remove the current thread from the EBR synchronisation list. Each registered thread must leave the list before the exit (this may be not necessary if all threads exit together). It is the caller's responsibility to synchronise the thread exit, if needed.
-
void ebr_enter(ebr_t *ebr)
- Mark the entrance to the critical path. Typically, this would be used by the readers when accessing some shared data; reclamation of objects is guaranteed to not occur in the critical path.
- Note: the EBR mechanism is not limited to the concept of "objects". It can be any form of reference to the globally shared data.
-
void ebr_exit(ebr_t *ebr)
- Mark the exit of the critical path. Reclamation of the shared data may occur after this point.
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bool ebr_sync(ebr_t *ebr, unsigned *gc_epoch)
- Attempt to synchronise and announce a new epoch. Returns
true
if a new epoch is announced andfalse
otherwise. In either case, the epoch available for reclamation is returned. The number of epochs is defined by theEBR_EPOCHS
constant and the epoch value is0 <= epoch < EBR_EPOCHS
. - The synchronisation points must be serialised (e.g. if there are
multiple G/C workers or other writers). Generally, calls to
ebr_staging_epoch
andebr_gc_epoch
would be a part of the same serialised path.
- Attempt to synchronise and announce a new epoch. Returns
-
unsigned ebr_staging_epoch(ebr_t *ebr)
- Returns an epoch where objects can be staged for reclamation.
This can be used as a reference value for the pending queue/tag, used
to postpone the reclamation until this epoch becomes available for G/C.
Note that this function would normally be serialised together with
the
ebr_sync
calls.
- Returns an epoch where objects can be staged for reclamation.
This can be used as a reference value for the pending queue/tag, used
to postpone the reclamation until this epoch becomes available for G/C.
Note that this function would normally be serialised together with
the
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unsigned ebr_gc_epoch(ebr_t *ebr)
- Returns the epoch available for reclamation, i.e. the epoch where
it is guaranteed that the objects are safe to be reclaimed/destroyed.
The epoch value will be the same as returned by the last successful
ebr_sync
call. Note that these two functions would require the same form of serialisation.
- Returns the epoch available for reclamation, i.e. the epoch where
it is guaranteed that the objects are safe to be reclaimed/destroyed.
The epoch value will be the same as returned by the last successful
-
void ebr_full_sync(ebr_t *ebr, unsigned msec_retry)
- Perform full synchronisation ensuring that all objects which are no longer globally visible (and potentially staged for reclamation) at the time of calling this routine will be safe to reclaim/destroy after this synchronisation routine completes and returns. Note: the synchronisation may take across multiple epochs.
- This function will block for
msec_retry
milliseconds before trying again if there are objects which cannot be reclaimed immediately. If this value is zero, then it will invokesched_yield(2)
before retrying.
-
bool ebr_incrit_p(ebr_t *ebr)
- Returns
true
if the current worker is in the critical path, i.e. calledebr_enter()
; otherwise, returnsfalse
. This routine should generally only be used for diagnostic asserts.
- Returns
-
gc_t *gc_create(unsigned entry_off, gc_func_t reclaim, void *arg)
- Construct a new G/C management object. The
entry_off
argument is an offset of thegc_entry_t
structure, which must be embedded in the object; typically, this value would beoffsetof(struct obj, gc_entry)
. The entry structure may also be embedded at the beginning of the object structure (offset being zero), should the caller need to support different object types. - A custom reclamation function can be used for object destruction.
This function must process a list of objects, since a chain of objects
may be passed for reclamation; the user can iterate the chain using
the
gc_entry_t::next
member. If reclaim is NULL, then the default logic invoked by the G/C mechanism will be calling the systemfree(3)
for each object. An arbitrary user pointer, specified byarg
, can be passed to the reclamation function.
- Construct a new G/C management object. The
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void gc_destroy(gc_t *gc)
- Destroy the G/C management object.
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void gc_register(gc_t *gc)
- Register the current thread as a user of the G/C mechanism. All threads having critical paths to reference the objects must register.
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void gc_crit_enter(gc_t *gc)
- Enter the critical path where objects may be actively referenced. This prevents the G/C mechanism from reclaiming (destroying) the object.
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void gc_crit_exit(gc_t *gc)
- Exit the critical path, indicating that the target objects no longer have active references and the G/C mechanism may consider them for reclamation.
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void gc_limbo(gc_t *gc, void *obj)
- Insert the object into a "limbo" list, staging it for reclamation (destruction). This is a request to reclaim the object once it is guaranteed that there are no threads referencing it in the critical path.
-
void gc_cycle(gc_t *gc)
- Run a G/C cycle attempting to reclaim some objects which were added to the limbo list. The objects which are no longer referenced are not guaranteed to be reclaimed immediately after one cycle. This function does not block and is expected to be called periodically for an incremental object reclamation.
-
void gc_full(gc_t *gc, unsigned msec_retry)
- Run a full G/C in order to ensure that all staged objects have been
reclaimed. This function will block for
msec_retry
milliseconds before trying again, if there are objects which cannot be reclaimed immediately.
- Run a full G/C in order to ensure that all staged objects have been
reclaimed. This function will block for
The implementation was extensively tested on a 24-core x86 machine, see the stress test for the details on the technique.
The G/C mechanism should be created by some master thread.
typedef struct {
...
gc_entry_t gc_entry;
} obj_t;
static gc_t * gc;
void
some_sysinit(void)
{
gc = gc_create(offsetof(obj_t, gc_entry), NULL, NULL);
assert(gc != NULL);
...
}
An example code fragment of a reader thread:
gc_register(gc);
while (!exit) {
/*
* Some processing which references the object(s).
* The readers must indicate the critical path where
* they actively reference objects.
*/
gc_crit_enter(gc);
obj = object_lookup();
process_object(obj);
gc_crit_exit(gc);
}
Here is an example code fragment in a writer thread which illustrates how the object would be staged for destruction (reclamation):
/*
* Remove the object from the lock-free container. The
* object is no longer globally visible. Not it can be
* staged for destruction -- add it to the limbo list.
*/
obj = lockfree_remove(container, key);
gc_limbo(gc, obj);
...
/*
* Checkpoint: run a G/C cycle attempting to reclaim *some*
* objects previously added to the limbo list. This should be
* called periodically for incremental object reclamation.
*
* WARNING: All gc_cycle() calls must be serialised (using a
* mutex or by running in a single-threaded manner).
*/
gc_cycle(gc);
...
/*
* Eventually, a full G/C might have to be performed to ensure
* that all objects have been reclaimed. This call can block.
*/
gc_full(gc, 1); // sleep for 1 msec before re-checking
Just build the package, install it and link the library using the
-lqsbr
flag.
- RPM (tested on RHEL/CentOS 7):
cd pkg && make rpm
- DEB (tested on Debian 9):
cd pkg && make deb