Implementation of malloc library
For this assignment, you will implement your own version of several memory allocation functions from the C standard library (actually you will have the chance to implement and study several different versions as described below). Your implementation is to be done in C code.
The C standard library includes 4 malloc-related library functions: malloc(), free(), calloc(), and realloc(). In this assignment, you only need to implement versions of malloc() and free():
void *malloc(size_t size); void free(void *ptr);
Please refer to the man pages for full descriptions of the expected operation for these functions. Essentially, malloc() takes in a size (number of bytes) for a memory allocation, locates an address in the programs data region where there is enough space to fit the specified number of bytes, and returns this address for use by the calling program. The free() function takes an address (that was returned by a previous malloc operation) and marks that data region as available again for use.
The submission instructions at the end of this assignment description provide specific details about what code files to create, what to name your new versions of the malloc functions, etc.
As you work through implementing malloc() and free(), you will discover that as memory allocations and deallocations happen, you will sometimes free a region of memory that is adjacent to other also free memory region(s). Your implementation is required to coalesce in this situation by merging the adjacent free regions into a single free region of memory.
Hint: For implementing malloc(), you should become familiar with the sbrk() system call. This system call is useful for: 1) returning the address that represents the current end of the processes data segment (called program break), and 2) growing the size of the processes data segment by the amount specified by increment.
void *sbrk(intptr_t increment);
Hint: A common way to implement malloc() / free() and manage the memory space is to keep a data structure that represents list of free memory regions. This collection of free memory ranges would change as malloc() and free() are called to allocate and release regions of memory in the process data segment. You may design and implement your malloc and free using structures and state tracking as you see best fit.
In this assignment, you will develop a malloc implementation and study different allocation policies. In Homework 2, you will make this implementation thread-safe.
Study of Memory Allocation Policies
Your task is to implement 2 versions of malloc and free, each based on a different strategy for determining the memory region to allocate. The two strategies are:
- First Fit: Examine the free space tracker (e.g. free list), and allocate an address from the first free region with enough space to fit the requested allocation size.
- Best Fit: Examine all of the free space information, and allocate an address from the free region which has the smallest number of bytes greater than or equal to the requested allocation size.
The following picture illustrates how each strategy would operate (assuming free regions are traversed in a left to right order) for a malloc() request of 2 bytes:
Requirement: Malloc implementations
To implement your allocation strategies, you will create 4 functions:
//First Fit malloc/free void *ff_malloc(size_t size); void ff_free(void *ptr);
//Best Fit malloc/free void *bf_malloc(size_t size); void bf_free(void *ptr);
Note, that in all cases, a policy to minimize the size of the processs data segment should be used. In other words, if there is no free space that fits an allocation request, then sbrk() should be used to create that space. However, you do not need to perform any type of garbage collection (e.g. reducing the size of the processs data segment, even if allocations at the top of the data segment have been freed).
On free(), your implementation is required to merge the newly freed region with any currently free adjacent regions. In other words, your bookkeeping data structure should not contain multiple adjacent free regions, as this would lead to poor region selection during malloc.
Requirement: Performance study report
In addition to implementing these malloc functions, you are tasked to conduct a performance study of the malloc() performance with different allocation policies. Several programs for experimentation will be provided that perform malloc() and free() requests with different patterns (e.g. frequencies, sizes). The metrics of interest will be: 1) the run-time of the program as the implementation of different allocation policies may result in different amounts of memory allocation overhead, and 2) fragmentation (i.e. the amount of allocated data segment space divided by total data segment space). In order to capture #2, you should also implement two additional library functions:
unsigned long get_data_segment_size(); //in bytes unsigned long get_data_segment_free_space_size(); //in bytes
The functions must include the spaced used for metadata also.
get_data_segment_size() = entire heap memory (this includes memory used to save metadata) get_free_space_segment_size() = size of the free list = actual usable free space + space occupied by metadata(unusable)[1]
Then, using these functions, you can use the included test programs as well as test programs of your own creation to evaluate and compare the algorithms.
The Starter Kit
A starter kit is included in a file on the web: homework1-kit.tgz
This archive can be retrieved on the command-line using wget and extracted using
tar xvzf homework1-kit.tgz.
The kit includes:
- Makefile: A sample Makefile for libmymalloc.so.
- general_tests/: General correctness test, see README.txt for details.
- alloc_policy_tests/: Allocation policy test cases, see README.txt for details.
- alloc_policy_tests_osx/: Same thing adapted for MacOS.
NOTE: Mac OS is not the grading platform; these files are provided as a convenience. Additionally, you may need to change #include time.h to #include sys/time.h
Testing your system
Code is provided for minimal testing, but the provided materials will not exhaustively evaluate the correctness of your implementation. It is recommended to create your own test software that uses your library, both to aid during development and to ensure correctness in a variety of situations. If youd like a general introduction to developing test cases, see Software Testing by Sarah Heckman.
Detailed Submission Instructions
- A written report called pdf that includes an overview of how you implemented the allocation policies, results from your performance experiments, and an analysis of the results (e.g. why do you believe you observed the results that you did for different policies with different malloc/free patterns, do you have recommendations for which policy seems most effective, etc.).
- All source code in a directory named my_malloc
- There should be a header file name h with the function definitions for all *_malloc() and *_free() functions.
- You may implement these functions in c. If you would like to use different C source files, please describe what those are in the report.
- There should be a Makefile which contains at least two targets: 1) all should build your code into a shared library named libmymalloc.so, and 2) clean should remove all files except for the source code files. The provided Makefile may be used as-is, expanded upon, or replaced entirely. If you have not compiled code into a shared library before, you should be able to find plenty of information online, or just talk to the instructor or TA for guidance!
With this Makefile infrastructure, the test programs will be able to: 1) #include my_malloc.h and 2) link against libmymalloc.so (-lmymalloc), and then have access to the new malloc functions. Just like that, you will have created your own version of the malloc routines in the C standard library!
[1] Updated 2020-01-15
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