Memory management

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Memory management is an important aspect of any operating system. As such, Embedded Xinu makes use of some aspects of the underlying hardware to build up a simple-to-understand memory management system.

Memory Allocators

Embedded Xinu maintains two memory allocators that work in tandem to provide dynamic memory to both kernel and user software. The first allocator is the kernel allocator which allocates small chunks of memory from the global memory heap as needed by the kernel. The second allocator is a user allocator, that allocates memory from a per-thread memory heap as needed by user processes.

Kernel Allocator

The most basic memory allocator in the system is the kernel allocator which uses the memget and memfree functions. This operates on the global kernel heap that uses the memlist global variable. In this allocator the kernel developer is trusted to keep track of the accounting information for memory blocks. This makes a rather straightforward API.

void *memptr = memget(nbytes);
memfree(memptr, nbytes);

As can be seen in the above API, the allocation function takes a single parameter (nbytes) which is the number of bytes requested. The deallocation function takes two parameters (memptr and nbytes), where memptr is the memory address allocated via the memget function and nbytes is the number of bytes requested with the original call.

User Allocator

Unlike the kernel allocator, the user allocator does not trust the programmer to remember the amount of memory requested and instead stores the accounting information immediately before the allocated memory. To the programmer the API for user memory is simply:

void *memptr = malloc(nbytes);
free(memptr);

This allocator works on a per-thread memory list of free memory, this allows memory to be owned by the calling thread and prevents other threads from having access to the memory. This forms the basis of memory protection.

When a request for memory comes in to the allocator, it attempts to satisfy the request with free memory that has already been allocated to thread. If that fails, the allocator will then attempt to acquire memory from the region allocator (described below). Since the region allocator works at page granularity, any excess memory is inserted into the thread's free memory list for future requests. When a block of memory is free'd, the memory is returned to the thread's free memory list.

It is not until the thread is killed that the memory is removed from the thread's protection domain and made available to the region allocator.

Region Allocator

The region allocator works beneath the user allocator and is initialized during the boot process. During system boot Embedded Xinu uses UHEAP_SIZE as defined in xinu.conf to allocate memory for the user heap. This memory is allocated via the kernel memget() function and is then passed to the memRegionInit() function. Once the region allocator is initialized, the only user level interface to the region allocator is hidden behind the malloc and free routines.

Memory Protection

Since Embedded Xinu has limited resources to work with it does not provide a virtual memory system. It does take advantage of separate address spaces for each user thread running in the system, which provides simple memory protection for low overhead costs. As such, when allocating pages to the thread via the user allocator those pages will be mapped to the protection domain of the currently running thread. These protection domains are inserted into a single global page table, that hold all the page table entries and the address space identifier of the protected page.

In the memory protection subsystem, the default behaviour is to map all the kernel pages (i.e. pages that are not in the user heap), to every thread in the system as read only. This allows all threads to read from kernel data, but prevents overwriting of that data.

Translation Lookaside Buffer

To facilitate memory protection, Embedded Xinu uses the translation lookaside buffer (TLB) built into the MIPS processors of the WRT54GL series of routers. When a piece of software attempts to access memory in the user segment, a TLB load or store exception will occur. When this occurs the processor jumps to a specific exception handler which allows the kernel to look up the page table entry, check if the faulting thread is in the same memory space as the entry, and load the entry into the TLB. If there is no mapping or the thread is not in the same address space, a memory protection violation occurs and the thread is killed.