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1 '\" t
2 .\" Title: JEMALLOC
3 .\" Author: Jason Evans
4 .\" Generator: DocBook XSL Stylesheets v1.76.1 <http://docbook.sf.net/>
5 .\" Date: 11/09/2012
6 .\" Manual: User Manual
7 .\" Source: jemalloc 3.2.0-0-g87499f6748ebe4817571e817e9f680ccb5bf54a9
8 .\" Language: English
9 .\"
10 .TH "JEMALLOC" "3" "11/09/2012" "jemalloc 3.2.0-0-g87499f6748eb" "User Manual"
11 .\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
12 .\" * Define some portability stuff
13 .\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
14 .\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
15 .\" http://bugs.debian.org/507673
16 .\" http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/groff/2009-02/msg00013.html
17 .\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
18 .ie \n(.g .ds Aq \(aq
19 .el .ds Aq '
20 .\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
21 .\" * set default formatting
22 .\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
23 .\" disable hyphenation
24 .nh
25 .\" disable justification (adjust text to left margin only)
26 .ad l
27 .\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
28 .\" * MAIN CONTENT STARTS HERE *
29 .\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
30 .SH "NAME"
31 jemalloc \- general purpose memory allocation functions
32 .SH "LIBRARY"
33 .PP
34 This manual describes jemalloc 3\&.2\&.0\-0\-g87499f6748ebe4817571e817e9f680ccb5bf54a9\&. More information can be found at the
35 \m[blue]\fBjemalloc website\fR\m[]\&\s-2\u[1]\d\s+2\&.
36 .SH "SYNOPSIS"
37 .sp
38 .ft B
39 .nf
40 #include <stdlib\&.h>
41 #include <jemalloc/jemalloc\&.h>
42 .fi
43 .ft
44 .SS "Standard API"
45 .HP \w'void\ *malloc('u
46 .BI "void *malloc(size_t\ " "size" ");"
47 .HP \w'void\ *calloc('u
48 .BI "void *calloc(size_t\ " "number" ", size_t\ " "size" ");"
49 .HP \w'int\ posix_memalign('u
50 .BI "int posix_memalign(void\ **" "ptr" ", size_t\ " "alignment" ", size_t\ " "size" ");"
51 .HP \w'void\ *aligned_alloc('u
52 .BI "void *aligned_alloc(size_t\ " "alignment" ", size_t\ " "size" ");"
53 .HP \w'void\ *realloc('u
54 .BI "void *realloc(void\ *" "ptr" ", size_t\ " "size" ");"
55 .HP \w'void\ free('u
56 .BI "void free(void\ *" "ptr" ");"
57 .SS "Non\-standard API"
58 .HP \w'size_t\ malloc_usable_size('u
59 .BI "size_t malloc_usable_size(const\ void\ *" "ptr" ");"
60 .HP \w'void\ malloc_stats_print('u
61 .BI "void malloc_stats_print(void\ " "(*write_cb)" "\ (void\ *,\ const\ char\ *), void\ *" "cbopaque" ", const\ char\ *" "opts" ");"
62 .HP \w'int\ mallctl('u
63 .BI "int mallctl(const\ char\ *" "name" ", void\ *" "oldp" ", size_t\ *" "oldlenp" ", void\ *" "newp" ", size_t\ " "newlen" ");"
64 .HP \w'int\ mallctlnametomib('u
65 .BI "int mallctlnametomib(const\ char\ *" "name" ", size_t\ *" "mibp" ", size_t\ *" "miblenp" ");"
66 .HP \w'int\ mallctlbymib('u
67 .BI "int mallctlbymib(const\ size_t\ *" "mib" ", size_t\ " "miblen" ", void\ *" "oldp" ", size_t\ *" "oldlenp" ", void\ *" "newp" ", size_t\ " "newlen" ");"
68 .HP \w'void\ (*malloc_message)('u
69 .BI "void (*malloc_message)(void\ *" "cbopaque" ", const\ char\ *" "s" ");"
70 .PP
71 const char *\fImalloc_conf\fR;
72 .SS "Experimental API"
73 .HP \w'int\ allocm('u
74 .BI "int allocm(void\ **" "ptr" ", size_t\ *" "rsize" ", size_t\ " "size" ", int\ " "flags" ");"
75 .HP \w'int\ rallocm('u
76 .BI "int rallocm(void\ **" "ptr" ", size_t\ *" "rsize" ", size_t\ " "size" ", size_t\ " "extra" ", int\ " "flags" ");"
77 .HP \w'int\ sallocm('u
78 .BI "int sallocm(const\ void\ *" "ptr" ", size_t\ *" "rsize" ", int\ " "flags" ");"
79 .HP \w'int\ dallocm('u
80 .BI "int dallocm(void\ *" "ptr" ", int\ " "flags" ");"
81 .HP \w'int\ nallocm('u
82 .BI "int nallocm(size_t\ *" "rsize" ", size_t\ " "size" ", int\ " "flags" ");"
83 .SH "DESCRIPTION"
84 .SS "Standard API"
85 .PP
86 The
87 \fBmalloc\fR\fB\fR
88 function allocates
89 \fIsize\fR
90 bytes of uninitialized memory\&. The allocated space is suitably aligned (after possible pointer coercion) for storage of any type of object\&.
91 .PP
92 The
93 \fBcalloc\fR\fB\fR
94 function allocates space for
95 \fInumber\fR
96 objects, each
97 \fIsize\fR
98 bytes in length\&. The result is identical to calling
99 \fBmalloc\fR\fB\fR
100 with an argument of
101 \fInumber\fR
102 *
103 \fIsize\fR, with the exception that the allocated memory is explicitly initialized to zero bytes\&.
104 .PP
105 The
106 \fBposix_memalign\fR\fB\fR
107 function allocates
108 \fIsize\fR
109 bytes of memory such that the allocation\*(Aqs base address is an even multiple of
110 \fIalignment\fR, and returns the allocation in the value pointed to by
111 \fIptr\fR\&. The requested
112 \fIalignment\fR
113 must be a power of 2 at least as large as
114 sizeof(\fBvoid *\fR)\&.
115 .PP
116 The
117 \fBaligned_alloc\fR\fB\fR
118 function allocates
119 \fIsize\fR
120 bytes of memory such that the allocation\*(Aqs base address is an even multiple of
121 \fIalignment\fR\&. The requested
122 \fIalignment\fR
123 must be a power of 2\&. Behavior is undefined if
124 \fIsize\fR
125 is not an integral multiple of
126 \fIalignment\fR\&.
127 .PP
128 The
129 \fBrealloc\fR\fB\fR
130 function changes the size of the previously allocated memory referenced by
131 \fIptr\fR
132 to
133 \fIsize\fR
134 bytes\&. The contents of the memory are unchanged up to the lesser of the new and old sizes\&. If the new size is larger, the contents of the newly allocated portion of the memory are undefined\&. Upon success, the memory referenced by
135 \fIptr\fR
136 is freed and a pointer to the newly allocated memory is returned\&. Note that
137 \fBrealloc\fR\fB\fR
138 may move the memory allocation, resulting in a different return value than
139 \fIptr\fR\&. If
140 \fIptr\fR
141 is
142 \fBNULL\fR, the
143 \fBrealloc\fR\fB\fR
144 function behaves identically to
145 \fBmalloc\fR\fB\fR
146 for the specified size\&.
147 .PP
148 The
149 \fBfree\fR\fB\fR
150 function causes the allocated memory referenced by
151 \fIptr\fR
152 to be made available for future allocations\&. If
153 \fIptr\fR
154 is
155 \fBNULL\fR, no action occurs\&.
156 .SS "Non\-standard API"
157 .PP
158 The
159 \fBmalloc_usable_size\fR\fB\fR
160 function returns the usable size of the allocation pointed to by
161 \fIptr\fR\&. The return value may be larger than the size that was requested during allocation\&. The
162 \fBmalloc_usable_size\fR\fB\fR
163 function is not a mechanism for in\-place
164 \fBrealloc\fR\fB\fR; rather it is provided solely as a tool for introspection purposes\&. Any discrepancy between the requested allocation size and the size reported by
165 \fBmalloc_usable_size\fR\fB\fR
166 should not be depended on, since such behavior is entirely implementation\-dependent\&.
167 .PP
168 The
169 \fBmalloc_stats_print\fR\fB\fR
170 function writes human\-readable summary statistics via the
171 \fIwrite_cb\fR
172 callback function pointer and
173 \fIcbopaque\fR
174 data passed to
175 \fIwrite_cb\fR, or
176 \fBmalloc_message\fR\fB\fR
177 if
178 \fIwrite_cb\fR
179 is
180 \fBNULL\fR\&. This function can be called repeatedly\&. General information that never changes during execution can be omitted by specifying "g" as a character within the
181 \fIopts\fR
182 string\&. Note that
183 \fBmalloc_message\fR\fB\fR
184 uses the
185 \fBmallctl*\fR\fB\fR
186 functions internally, so inconsistent statistics can be reported if multiple threads use these functions simultaneously\&. If
187 \fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR
188 is specified during configuration, \(lqm\(rq and \(lqa\(rq can be specified to omit merged arena and per arena statistics, respectively; \(lqb\(rq and \(lql\(rq can be specified to omit per size class statistics for bins and large objects, respectively\&. Unrecognized characters are silently ignored\&. Note that thread caching may prevent some statistics from being completely up to date, since extra locking would be required to merge counters that track thread cache operations\&.
189 .PP
190 The
191 \fBmallctl\fR\fB\fR
192 function provides a general interface for introspecting the memory allocator, as well as setting modifiable parameters and triggering actions\&. The period\-separated
193 \fIname\fR
194 argument specifies a location in a tree\-structured namespace; see the
195 MALLCTL NAMESPACE
196 section for documentation on the tree contents\&. To read a value, pass a pointer via
197 \fIoldp\fR
198 to adequate space to contain the value, and a pointer to its length via
199 \fIoldlenp\fR; otherwise pass
200 \fBNULL\fR
201 and
202 \fBNULL\fR\&. Similarly, to write a value, pass a pointer to the value via
203 \fInewp\fR, and its length via
204 \fInewlen\fR; otherwise pass
205 \fBNULL\fR
206 and
207 \fB0\fR\&.
208 .PP
209 The
210 \fBmallctlnametomib\fR\fB\fR
211 function provides a way to avoid repeated name lookups for applications that repeatedly query the same portion of the namespace, by translating a name to a \(lqManagement Information Base\(rq (MIB) that can be passed repeatedly to
212 \fBmallctlbymib\fR\fB\fR\&. Upon successful return from
213 \fBmallctlnametomib\fR\fB\fR,
214 \fImibp\fR
215 contains an array of
216 \fI*miblenp\fR
217 integers, where
218 \fI*miblenp\fR
219 is the lesser of the number of components in
220 \fIname\fR
221 and the input value of
222 \fI*miblenp\fR\&. Thus it is possible to pass a
223 \fI*miblenp\fR
224 that is smaller than the number of period\-separated name components, which results in a partial MIB that can be used as the basis for constructing a complete MIB\&. For name components that are integers (e\&.g\&. the 2 in
225 "arenas\&.bin\&.2\&.size"), the corresponding MIB component will always be that integer\&. Therefore, it is legitimate to construct code like the following:
226 .sp
227 .if n \{\
228 .RS 4
229 .\}
230 .nf
231 unsigned nbins, i;
232
233 int mib[4];
234 size_t len, miblen;
235
236 len = sizeof(nbins);
237 mallctl("arenas\&.nbins", &nbins, &len, NULL, 0);
238
239 miblen = 4;
240 mallnametomib("arenas\&.bin\&.0\&.size", mib, &miblen);
241 for (i = 0; i < nbins; i++) {
242 size_t bin_size;
243
244 mib[2] = i;
245 len = sizeof(bin_size);
246 mallctlbymib(mib, miblen, &bin_size, &len, NULL, 0);
247 /* Do something with bin_size\&.\&.\&. */
248 }
249 .fi
250 .if n \{\
251 .RE
252 .\}
253 .SS "Experimental API"
254 .PP
255 The experimental API is subject to change or removal without regard for backward compatibility\&. If
256 \fB\-\-disable\-experimental\fR
257 is specified during configuration, the experimental API is omitted\&.
258 .PP
259 The
260 \fBallocm\fR\fB\fR,
261 \fBrallocm\fR\fB\fR,
262 \fBsallocm\fR\fB\fR,
263 \fBdallocm\fR\fB\fR, and
264 \fBnallocm\fR\fB\fR
265 functions all have a
266 \fIflags\fR
267 argument that can be used to specify options\&. The functions only check the options that are contextually relevant\&. Use bitwise or (|) operations to specify one or more of the following:
268 .PP
269 \fBALLOCM_LG_ALIGN(\fR\fB\fIla\fR\fR\fB) \fR
270 .RS 4
271 Align the memory allocation to start at an address that is a multiple of
272 (1 << \fIla\fR)\&. This macro does not validate that
273 \fIla\fR
274 is within the valid range\&.
275 .RE
276 .PP
277 \fBALLOCM_ALIGN(\fR\fB\fIa\fR\fR\fB) \fR
278 .RS 4
279 Align the memory allocation to start at an address that is a multiple of
280 \fIa\fR, where
281 \fIa\fR
282 is a power of two\&. This macro does not validate that
283 \fIa\fR
284 is a power of 2\&.
285 .RE
286 .PP
287 \fBALLOCM_ZERO\fR
288 .RS 4
289 Initialize newly allocated memory to contain zero bytes\&. In the growing reallocation case, the real size prior to reallocation defines the boundary between untouched bytes and those that are initialized to contain zero bytes\&. If this option is absent, newly allocated memory is uninitialized\&.
290 .RE
291 .PP
292 \fBALLOCM_NO_MOVE\fR
293 .RS 4
294 For reallocation, fail rather than moving the object\&. This constraint can apply to both growth and shrinkage\&.
295 .RE
296 .PP
297 \fBALLOCM_ARENA(\fR\fB\fIa\fR\fR\fB) \fR
298 .RS 4
299 Use the arena specified by the index
300 \fIa\fR\&. This macro does not validate that
301 \fIa\fR
302 specifies an arena in the valid range\&.
303 .RE
304 .PP
305 The
306 \fBallocm\fR\fB\fR
307 function allocates at least
308 \fIsize\fR
309 bytes of memory, sets
310 \fI*ptr\fR
311 to the base address of the allocation, and sets
312 \fI*rsize\fR
313 to the real size of the allocation if
314 \fIrsize\fR
315 is not
316 \fBNULL\fR\&. Behavior is undefined if
317 \fIsize\fR
318 is
319 \fB0\fR\&.
320 .PP
321 The
322 \fBrallocm\fR\fB\fR
323 function resizes the allocation at
324 \fI*ptr\fR
325 to be at least
326 \fIsize\fR
327 bytes, sets
328 \fI*ptr\fR
329 to the base address of the allocation if it moved, and sets
330 \fI*rsize\fR
331 to the real size of the allocation if
332 \fIrsize\fR
333 is not
334 \fBNULL\fR\&. If
335 \fIextra\fR
336 is non\-zero, an attempt is made to resize the allocation to be at least
337 \fIsize\fR + \fIextra\fR)
338 bytes, though inability to allocate the extra byte(s) will not by itself result in failure\&. Behavior is undefined if
339 \fIsize\fR
340 is
341 \fB0\fR, or if
342 (\fIsize\fR + \fIextra\fR > \fBSIZE_T_MAX\fR)\&.
343 .PP
344 The
345 \fBsallocm\fR\fB\fR
346 function sets
347 \fI*rsize\fR
348 to the real size of the allocation\&.
349 .PP
350 The
351 \fBdallocm\fR\fB\fR
352 function causes the memory referenced by
353 \fIptr\fR
354 to be made available for future allocations\&.
355 .PP
356 The
357 \fBnallocm\fR\fB\fR
358 function allocates no memory, but it performs the same size computation as the
359 \fBallocm\fR\fB\fR
360 function, and if
361 \fIrsize\fR
362 is not
363 \fBNULL\fR
364 it sets
365 \fI*rsize\fR
366 to the real size of the allocation that would result from the equivalent
367 \fBallocm\fR\fB\fR
368 function call\&. Behavior is undefined if
369 \fIsize\fR
370 is
371 \fB0\fR\&.
372 .SH "TUNING"
373 .PP
374 Once, when the first call is made to one of the memory allocation routines, the allocator initializes its internals based in part on various options that can be specified at compile\- or run\-time\&.
375 .PP
376 The string pointed to by the global variable
377 \fImalloc_conf\fR, the \(lqname\(rq of the file referenced by the symbolic link named
378 /etc/malloc\&.conf, and the value of the environment variable
379 \fBMALLOC_CONF\fR, will be interpreted, in that order, from left to right as options\&.
380 .PP
381 An options string is a comma\-separated list of option:value pairs\&. There is one key corresponding to each
382 "opt\&.*"
383 mallctl (see the
384 MALLCTL NAMESPACE
385 section for options documentation)\&. For example,
386 abort:true,narenas:1
387 sets the
388 "opt\&.abort"
389 and
390 "opt\&.narenas"
391 options\&. Some options have boolean values (true/false), others have integer values (base 8, 10, or 16, depending on prefix), and yet others have raw string values\&.
392 .SH "IMPLEMENTATION NOTES"
393 .PP
394 Traditionally, allocators have used
395 \fBsbrk\fR(2)
396 to obtain memory, which is suboptimal for several reasons, including race conditions, increased fragmentation, and artificial limitations on maximum usable memory\&. If
397 \fB\-\-enable\-dss\fR
398 is specified during configuration, this allocator uses both
399 \fBmmap\fR(2)
400 and
401 \fBsbrk\fR(2), in that order of preference; otherwise only
402 \fBmmap\fR(2)
403 is used\&.
404 .PP
405 This allocator uses multiple arenas in order to reduce lock contention for threaded programs on multi\-processor systems\&. This works well with regard to threading scalability, but incurs some costs\&. There is a small fixed per\-arena overhead, and additionally, arenas manage memory completely independently of each other, which means a small fixed increase in overall memory fragmentation\&. These overheads are not generally an issue, given the number of arenas normally used\&. Note that using substantially more arenas than the default is not likely to improve performance, mainly due to reduced cache performance\&. However, it may make sense to reduce the number of arenas if an application does not make much use of the allocation functions\&.
406 .PP
407 In addition to multiple arenas, unless
408 \fB\-\-disable\-tcache\fR
409 is specified during configuration, this allocator supports thread\-specific caching for small and large objects, in order to make it possible to completely avoid synchronization for most allocation requests\&. Such caching allows very fast allocation in the common case, but it increases memory usage and fragmentation, since a bounded number of objects can remain allocated in each thread cache\&.
410 .PP
411 Memory is conceptually broken into equal\-sized chunks, where the chunk size is a power of two that is greater than the page size\&. Chunks are always aligned to multiples of the chunk size\&. This alignment makes it possible to find metadata for user objects very quickly\&.
412 .PP
413 User objects are broken into three categories according to size: small, large, and huge\&. Small objects are smaller than one page\&. Large objects are smaller than the chunk size\&. Huge objects are a multiple of the chunk size\&. Small and large objects are managed by arenas; huge objects are managed separately in a single data structure that is shared by all threads\&. Huge objects are used by applications infrequently enough that this single data structure is not a scalability issue\&.
414 .PP
415 Each chunk that is managed by an arena tracks its contents as runs of contiguous pages (unused, backing a set of small objects, or backing one large object)\&. The combination of chunk alignment and chunk page maps makes it possible to determine all metadata regarding small and large allocations in constant time\&.
416 .PP
417 Small objects are managed in groups by page runs\&. Each run maintains a frontier and free list to track which regions are in use\&. Allocation requests that are no more than half the quantum (8 or 16, depending on architecture) are rounded up to the nearest power of two that is at least
418 sizeof(\fBdouble\fR)\&. All other small object size classes are multiples of the quantum, spaced such that internal fragmentation is limited to approximately 25% for all but the smallest size classes\&. Allocation requests that are larger than the maximum small size class, but small enough to fit in an arena\-managed chunk (see the
419 "opt\&.lg_chunk"
420 option), are rounded up to the nearest run size\&. Allocation requests that are too large to fit in an arena\-managed chunk are rounded up to the nearest multiple of the chunk size\&.
421 .PP
422 Allocations are packed tightly together, which can be an issue for multi\-threaded applications\&. If you need to assure that allocations do not suffer from cacheline sharing, round your allocation requests up to the nearest multiple of the cacheline size, or specify cacheline alignment when allocating\&.
423 .PP
424 Assuming 4 MiB chunks, 4 KiB pages, and a 16\-byte quantum on a 64\-bit system, the size classes in each category are as shown in
425 Table 1\&.
426 .sp
427 .it 1 an-trap
428 .nr an-no-space-flag 1
429 .nr an-break-flag 1
430 .br
431 .B Table\ \&1.\ \&Size classes
432 .TS
433 allbox tab(:);
434 lB rB lB.
435 T{
436 Category
437 T}:T{
438 Spacing
439 T}:T{
440 Size
441 T}
442 .T&
443 l r l
444 ^ r l
445 ^ r l
446 ^ r l
447 ^ r l
448 ^ r l
449 ^ r l
450 l r l
451 l r l.
452 T{
453 Small
454 T}:T{
455 lg
456 T}:T{
457 [8]
458 T}
459 :T{
460 16
461 T}:T{
462 [16, 32, 48, \&.\&.\&., 128]
463 T}
464 :T{
465 32
466 T}:T{
467 [160, 192, 224, 256]
468 T}
469 :T{
470 64
471 T}:T{
472 [320, 384, 448, 512]
473 T}
474 :T{
475 128
476 T}:T{
477 [640, 768, 896, 1024]
478 T}
479 :T{
480 256
481 T}:T{
482 [1280, 1536, 1792, 2048]
483 T}
484 :T{
485 512
486 T}:T{
487 [2560, 3072, 3584]
488 T}
489 T{
490 Large
491 T}:T{
492 4 KiB
493 T}:T{
494 [4 KiB, 8 KiB, 12 KiB, \&.\&.\&., 4072 KiB]
495 T}
496 T{
497 Huge
498 T}:T{
499 4 MiB
500 T}:T{
501 [4 MiB, 8 MiB, 12 MiB, \&.\&.\&.]
502 T}
503 .TE
504 .sp 1
505 .SH "MALLCTL NAMESPACE"
506 .PP
507 The following names are defined in the namespace accessible via the
508 \fBmallctl*\fR\fB\fR
509 functions\&. Value types are specified in parentheses, their readable/writable statuses are encoded as
510 rw,
511 r\-,
512 \-w, or
513 \-\-, and required build configuration flags follow, if any\&. A name element encoded as
514 <i>
515 or
516 <j>
517 indicates an integer component, where the integer varies from 0 to some upper value that must be determined via introspection\&. In the case of
518 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.*",
519 <i>
520 equal to
521 "arenas\&.narenas"
522 can be used to access the summation of statistics from all arenas\&. Take special note of the
523 "epoch"
524 mallctl, which controls refreshing of cached dynamic statistics\&.
525 .PP
526 "version" (\fBconst char *\fR) r\-
527 .RS 4
528 Return the jemalloc version string\&.
529 .RE
530 .PP
531 "epoch" (\fBuint64_t\fR) rw
532 .RS 4
533 If a value is passed in, refresh the data from which the
534 \fBmallctl*\fR\fB\fR
535 functions report values, and increment the epoch\&. Return the current epoch\&. This is useful for detecting whether another thread caused a refresh\&.
536 .RE
537 .PP
538 "config\&.debug" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
539 .RS 4
540 \fB\-\-enable\-debug\fR
541 was specified during build configuration\&.
542 .RE
543 .PP
544 "config\&.dss" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
545 .RS 4
546 \fB\-\-enable\-dss\fR
547 was specified during build configuration\&.
548 .RE
549 .PP
550 "config\&.fill" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
551 .RS 4
552 \fB\-\-enable\-fill\fR
553 was specified during build configuration\&.
554 .RE
555 .PP
556 "config\&.lazy_lock" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
557 .RS 4
558 \fB\-\-enable\-lazy\-lock\fR
559 was specified during build configuration\&.
560 .RE
561 .PP
562 "config\&.mremap" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
563 .RS 4
564 \fB\-\-enable\-mremap\fR
565 was specified during build configuration\&.
566 .RE
567 .PP
568 "config\&.munmap" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
569 .RS 4
570 \fB\-\-enable\-munmap\fR
571 was specified during build configuration\&.
572 .RE
573 .PP
574 "config\&.prof" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
575 .RS 4
576 \fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR
577 was specified during build configuration\&.
578 .RE
579 .PP
580 "config\&.prof_libgcc" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
581 .RS 4
582 \fB\-\-disable\-prof\-libgcc\fR
583 was not specified during build configuration\&.
584 .RE
585 .PP
586 "config\&.prof_libunwind" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
587 .RS 4
588 \fB\-\-enable\-prof\-libunwind\fR
589 was specified during build configuration\&.
590 .RE
591 .PP
592 "config\&.stats" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
593 .RS 4
594 \fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR
595 was specified during build configuration\&.
596 .RE
597 .PP
598 "config\&.tcache" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
599 .RS 4
600 \fB\-\-disable\-tcache\fR
601 was not specified during build configuration\&.
602 .RE
603 .PP
604 "config\&.tls" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
605 .RS 4
606 \fB\-\-disable\-tls\fR
607 was not specified during build configuration\&.
608 .RE
609 .PP
610 "config\&.utrace" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
611 .RS 4
612 \fB\-\-enable\-utrace\fR
613 was specified during build configuration\&.
614 .RE
615 .PP
616 "config\&.valgrind" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
617 .RS 4
618 \fB\-\-enable\-valgrind\fR
619 was specified during build configuration\&.
620 .RE
621 .PP
622 "config\&.xmalloc" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
623 .RS 4
624 \fB\-\-enable\-xmalloc\fR
625 was specified during build configuration\&.
626 .RE
627 .PP
628 "opt\&.abort" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
629 .RS 4
630 Abort\-on\-warning enabled/disabled\&. If true, most warnings are fatal\&. The process will call
631 \fBabort\fR(3)
632 in these cases\&. This option is disabled by default unless
633 \fB\-\-enable\-debug\fR
634 is specified during configuration, in which case it is enabled by default\&.
635 .RE
636 .PP
637 "opt\&.lg_chunk" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\-
638 .RS 4
639 Virtual memory chunk size (log base 2)\&. The default chunk size is 4 MiB (2^22)\&.
640 .RE
641 .PP
642 "opt\&.dss" (\fBconst char *\fR) r\-
643 .RS 4
644 dss (\fBsbrk\fR(2)) allocation precedence as related to
645 \fBmmap\fR(2)
646 allocation\&. The following settings are supported: \(lqdisabled\(rq, \(lqprimary\(rq, and \(lqsecondary\(rq (default)\&.
647 .RE
648 .PP
649 "opt\&.narenas" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\-
650 .RS 4
651 Maximum number of arenas to use for automatic multiplexing of threads and arenas\&. The default is four times the number of CPUs, or one if there is a single CPU\&.
652 .RE
653 .PP
654 "opt\&.lg_dirty_mult" (\fBssize_t\fR) r\-
655 .RS 4
656 Per\-arena minimum ratio (log base 2) of active to dirty pages\&. Some dirty unused pages may be allowed to accumulate, within the limit set by the ratio (or one chunk worth of dirty pages, whichever is greater), before informing the kernel about some of those pages via
657 \fBmadvise\fR(2)
658 or a similar system call\&. This provides the kernel with sufficient information to recycle dirty pages if physical memory becomes scarce and the pages remain unused\&. The default minimum ratio is 8:1 (2^3:1); an option value of \-1 will disable dirty page purging\&.
659 .RE
660 .PP
661 "opt\&.stats_print" (\fBbool\fR) r\-
662 .RS 4
663 Enable/disable statistics printing at exit\&. If enabled, the
664 \fBmalloc_stats_print\fR\fB\fR
665 function is called at program exit via an
666 \fBatexit\fR(3)
667 function\&. If
668 \fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR
669 is specified during configuration, this has the potential to cause deadlock for a multi\-threaded process that exits while one or more threads are executing in the memory allocation functions\&. Therefore, this option should only be used with care; it is primarily intended as a performance tuning aid during application development\&. This option is disabled by default\&.
670 .RE
671 .PP
672 "opt\&.junk" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-fill\fR]
673 .RS 4
674 Junk filling enabled/disabled\&. If enabled, each byte of uninitialized allocated memory will be initialized to
675 0xa5\&. All deallocated memory will be initialized to
676 0x5a\&. This is intended for debugging and will impact performance negatively\&. This option is disabled by default unless
677 \fB\-\-enable\-debug\fR
678 is specified during configuration, in which case it is enabled by default unless running inside
679 \m[blue]\fBValgrind\fR\m[]\&\s-2\u[2]\d\s+2\&.
680 .RE
681 .PP
682 "opt\&.quarantine" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-fill\fR]
683 .RS 4
684 Per thread quarantine size in bytes\&. If non\-zero, each thread maintains a FIFO object quarantine that stores up to the specified number of bytes of memory\&. The quarantined memory is not freed until it is released from quarantine, though it is immediately junk\-filled if the
685 "opt\&.junk"
686 option is enabled\&. This feature is of particular use in combination with
687 \m[blue]\fBValgrind\fR\m[]\&\s-2\u[2]\d\s+2, which can detect attempts to access quarantined objects\&. This is intended for debugging and will impact performance negatively\&. The default quarantine size is 0 unless running inside Valgrind, in which case the default is 16 MiB\&.
688 .RE
689 .PP
690 "opt\&.redzone" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-fill\fR]
691 .RS 4
692 Redzones enabled/disabled\&. If enabled, small allocations have redzones before and after them\&. Furthermore, if the
693 "opt\&.junk"
694 option is enabled, the redzones are checked for corruption during deallocation\&. However, the primary intended purpose of this feature is to be used in combination with
695 \m[blue]\fBValgrind\fR\m[]\&\s-2\u[2]\d\s+2, which needs redzones in order to do effective buffer overflow/underflow detection\&. This option is intended for debugging and will impact performance negatively\&. This option is disabled by default unless running inside Valgrind\&.
696 .RE
697 .PP
698 "opt\&.zero" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-fill\fR]
699 .RS 4
700 Zero filling enabled/disabled\&. If enabled, each byte of uninitialized allocated memory will be initialized to 0\&. Note that this initialization only happens once for each byte, so
701 \fBrealloc\fR\fB\fR
702 and
703 \fBrallocm\fR\fB\fR
704 calls do not zero memory that was previously allocated\&. This is intended for debugging and will impact performance negatively\&. This option is disabled by default\&.
705 .RE
706 .PP
707 "opt\&.utrace" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-utrace\fR]
708 .RS 4
709 Allocation tracing based on
710 \fButrace\fR(2)
711 enabled/disabled\&. This option is disabled by default\&.
712 .RE
713 .PP
714 "opt\&.valgrind" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-valgrind\fR]
715 .RS 4
716 \m[blue]\fBValgrind\fR\m[]\&\s-2\u[2]\d\s+2
717 support enabled/disabled\&. This option is vestigal because jemalloc auto\-detects whether it is running inside Valgrind\&. This option is disabled by default, unless running inside Valgrind\&.
718 .RE
719 .PP
720 "opt\&.xmalloc" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-xmalloc\fR]
721 .RS 4
722 Abort\-on\-out\-of\-memory enabled/disabled\&. If enabled, rather than returning failure for any allocation function, display a diagnostic message on
723 \fBSTDERR_FILENO\fR
724 and cause the program to drop core (using
725 \fBabort\fR(3))\&. If an application is designed to depend on this behavior, set the option at compile time by including the following in the source code:
726 .sp
727 .if n \{\
728 .RS 4
729 .\}
730 .nf
731 malloc_conf = "xmalloc:true";
732 .fi
733 .if n \{\
734 .RE
735 .\}
736 .sp
737 This option is disabled by default\&.
738 .RE
739 .PP
740 "opt\&.tcache" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-tcache\fR]
741 .RS 4
742 Thread\-specific caching enabled/disabled\&. When there are multiple threads, each thread uses a thread\-specific cache for objects up to a certain size\&. Thread\-specific caching allows many allocations to be satisfied without performing any thread synchronization, at the cost of increased memory use\&. See the
743 "opt\&.lg_tcache_max"
744 option for related tuning information\&. This option is enabled by default unless running inside
745 \m[blue]\fBValgrind\fR\m[]\&\s-2\u[2]\d\s+2\&.
746 .RE
747 .PP
748 "opt\&.lg_tcache_max" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-tcache\fR]
749 .RS 4
750 Maximum size class (log base 2) to cache in the thread\-specific cache\&. At a minimum, all small size classes are cached, and at a maximum all large size classes are cached\&. The default maximum is 32 KiB (2^15)\&.
751 .RE
752 .PP
753 "opt\&.prof" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
754 .RS 4
755 Memory profiling enabled/disabled\&. If enabled, profile memory allocation activity\&. See the
756 "opt\&.prof_active"
757 option for on\-the\-fly activation/deactivation\&. See the
758 "opt\&.lg_prof_sample"
759 option for probabilistic sampling control\&. See the
760 "opt\&.prof_accum"
761 option for control of cumulative sample reporting\&. See the
762 "opt\&.lg_prof_interval"
763 option for information on interval\-triggered profile dumping, the
764 "opt\&.prof_gdump"
765 option for information on high\-water\-triggered profile dumping, and the
766 "opt\&.prof_final"
767 option for final profile dumping\&. Profile output is compatible with the included
768 \fBpprof\fR
769 Perl script, which originates from the
770 \m[blue]\fBgperftools package\fR\m[]\&\s-2\u[3]\d\s+2\&.
771 .RE
772 .PP
773 "opt\&.prof_prefix" (\fBconst char *\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
774 .RS 4
775 Filename prefix for profile dumps\&. If the prefix is set to the empty string, no automatic dumps will occur; this is primarily useful for disabling the automatic final heap dump (which also disables leak reporting, if enabled)\&. The default prefix is
776 jeprof\&.
777 .RE
778 .PP
779 "opt\&.prof_active" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
780 .RS 4
781 Profiling activated/deactivated\&. This is a secondary control mechanism that makes it possible to start the application with profiling enabled (see the
782 "opt\&.prof"
783 option) but inactive, then toggle profiling at any time during program execution with the
784 "prof\&.active"
785 mallctl\&. This option is enabled by default\&.
786 .RE
787 .PP
788 "opt\&.lg_prof_sample" (\fBssize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
789 .RS 4
790 Average interval (log base 2) between allocation samples, as measured in bytes of allocation activity\&. Increasing the sampling interval decreases profile fidelity, but also decreases the computational overhead\&. The default sample interval is 512 KiB (2^19 B)\&.
791 .RE
792 .PP
793 "opt\&.prof_accum" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
794 .RS 4
795 Reporting of cumulative object/byte counts in profile dumps enabled/disabled\&. If this option is enabled, every unique backtrace must be stored for the duration of execution\&. Depending on the application, this can impose a large memory overhead, and the cumulative counts are not always of interest\&. This option is disabled by default\&.
796 .RE
797 .PP
798 "opt\&.lg_prof_interval" (\fBssize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
799 .RS 4
800 Average interval (log base 2) between memory profile dumps, as measured in bytes of allocation activity\&. The actual interval between dumps may be sporadic because decentralized allocation counters are used to avoid synchronization bottlenecks\&. Profiles are dumped to files named according to the pattern
801 <prefix>\&.<pid>\&.<seq>\&.i<iseq>\&.heap, where
802 <prefix>
803 is controlled by the
804 "opt\&.prof_prefix"
805 option\&. By default, interval\-triggered profile dumping is disabled (encoded as \-1)\&.
806 .RE
807 .PP
808 "opt\&.prof_gdump" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
809 .RS 4
810 Trigger a memory profile dump every time the total virtual memory exceeds the previous maximum\&. Profiles are dumped to files named according to the pattern
811 <prefix>\&.<pid>\&.<seq>\&.u<useq>\&.heap, where
812 <prefix>
813 is controlled by the
814 "opt\&.prof_prefix"
815 option\&. This option is disabled by default\&.
816 .RE
817 .PP
818 "opt\&.prof_final" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
819 .RS 4
820 Use an
821 \fBatexit\fR(3)
822 function to dump final memory usage to a file named according to the pattern
823 <prefix>\&.<pid>\&.<seq>\&.f\&.heap, where
824 <prefix>
825 is controlled by the
826 "opt\&.prof_prefix"
827 option\&. This option is enabled by default\&.
828 .RE
829 .PP
830 "opt\&.prof_leak" (\fBbool\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
831 .RS 4
832 Leak reporting enabled/disabled\&. If enabled, use an
833 \fBatexit\fR(3)
834 function to report memory leaks detected by allocation sampling\&. See the
835 "opt\&.prof"
836 option for information on analyzing heap profile output\&. This option is disabled by default\&.
837 .RE
838 .PP
839 "thread\&.arena" (\fBunsigned\fR) rw
840 .RS 4
841 Get or set the arena associated with the calling thread\&. If the specified arena was not initialized beforehand (see the
842 "arenas\&.initialized"
843 mallctl), it will be automatically initialized as a side effect of calling this interface\&.
844 .RE
845 .PP
846 "thread\&.allocated" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
847 .RS 4
848 Get the total number of bytes ever allocated by the calling thread\&. This counter has the potential to wrap around; it is up to the application to appropriately interpret the counter in such cases\&.
849 .RE
850 .PP
851 "thread\&.allocatedp" (\fBuint64_t *\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
852 .RS 4
853 Get a pointer to the the value that is returned by the
854 "thread\&.allocated"
855 mallctl\&. This is useful for avoiding the overhead of repeated
856 \fBmallctl*\fR\fB\fR
857 calls\&.
858 .RE
859 .PP
860 "thread\&.deallocated" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
861 .RS 4
862 Get the total number of bytes ever deallocated by the calling thread\&. This counter has the potential to wrap around; it is up to the application to appropriately interpret the counter in such cases\&.
863 .RE
864 .PP
865 "thread\&.deallocatedp" (\fBuint64_t *\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
866 .RS 4
867 Get a pointer to the the value that is returned by the
868 "thread\&.deallocated"
869 mallctl\&. This is useful for avoiding the overhead of repeated
870 \fBmallctl*\fR\fB\fR
871 calls\&.
872 .RE
873 .PP
874 "thread\&.tcache\&.enabled" (\fBbool\fR) rw [\fB\-\-enable\-tcache\fR]
875 .RS 4
876 Enable/disable calling thread\*(Aqs tcache\&. The tcache is implicitly flushed as a side effect of becoming disabled (see
877 "thread\&.tcache\&.flush")\&.
878 .RE
879 .PP
880 "thread\&.tcache\&.flush" (\fBvoid\fR) \-\- [\fB\-\-enable\-tcache\fR]
881 .RS 4
882 Flush calling thread\*(Aqs tcache\&. This interface releases all cached objects and internal data structures associated with the calling thread\*(Aqs thread\-specific cache\&. Ordinarily, this interface need not be called, since automatic periodic incremental garbage collection occurs, and the thread cache is automatically discarded when a thread exits\&. However, garbage collection is triggered by allocation activity, so it is possible for a thread that stops allocating/deallocating to retain its cache indefinitely, in which case the developer may find manual flushing useful\&.
883 .RE
884 .PP
885 "arena\&.<i>\&.purge" (\fBunsigned\fR) \-\-
886 .RS 4
887 Purge unused dirty pages for arena <i>, or for all arenas if <i> equals
888 "arenas\&.narenas"\&.
889 .RE
890 .PP
891 "arena\&.<i>\&.dss" (\fBconst char *\fR) rw
892 .RS 4
893 Set the precedence of dss allocation as related to mmap allocation for arena <i>, or for all arenas if <i> equals
894 "arenas\&.narenas"\&. See
895 "opt\&.dss"
896 for supported settings\&.
897 .RE
898 .PP
899 "arenas\&.narenas" (\fBunsigned\fR) r\-
900 .RS 4
901 Current limit on number of arenas\&.
902 .RE
903 .PP
904 "arenas\&.initialized" (\fBbool *\fR) r\-
905 .RS 4
906 An array of
907 "arenas\&.narenas"
908 booleans\&. Each boolean indicates whether the corresponding arena is initialized\&.
909 .RE
910 .PP
911 "arenas\&.quantum" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\-
912 .RS 4
913 Quantum size\&.
914 .RE
915 .PP
916 "arenas\&.page" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\-
917 .RS 4
918 Page size\&.
919 .RE
920 .PP
921 "arenas\&.tcache_max" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-tcache\fR]
922 .RS 4
923 Maximum thread\-cached size class\&.
924 .RE
925 .PP
926 "arenas\&.nbins" (\fBunsigned\fR) r\-
927 .RS 4
928 Number of bin size classes\&.
929 .RE
930 .PP
931 "arenas\&.nhbins" (\fBunsigned\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-tcache\fR]
932 .RS 4
933 Total number of thread cache bin size classes\&.
934 .RE
935 .PP
936 "arenas\&.bin\&.<i>\&.size" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\-
937 .RS 4
938 Maximum size supported by size class\&.
939 .RE
940 .PP
941 "arenas\&.bin\&.<i>\&.nregs" (\fBuint32_t\fR) r\-
942 .RS 4
943 Number of regions per page run\&.
944 .RE
945 .PP
946 "arenas\&.bin\&.<i>\&.run_size" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\-
947 .RS 4
948 Number of bytes per page run\&.
949 .RE
950 .PP
951 "arenas\&.nlruns" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\-
952 .RS 4
953 Total number of large size classes\&.
954 .RE
955 .PP
956 "arenas\&.lrun\&.<i>\&.size" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\-
957 .RS 4
958 Maximum size supported by this large size class\&.
959 .RE
960 .PP
961 "arenas\&.purge" (\fBunsigned\fR) \-w
962 .RS 4
963 Purge unused dirty pages for the specified arena, or for all arenas if none is specified\&.
964 .RE
965 .PP
966 "arenas\&.extend" (\fBunsigned\fR) r\-
967 .RS 4
968 Extend the array of arenas by appending a new arena, and returning the new arena index\&.
969 .RE
970 .PP
971 "prof\&.active" (\fBbool\fR) rw [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
972 .RS 4
973 Control whether sampling is currently active\&. See the
974 "opt\&.prof_active"
975 option for additional information\&.
976 .RE
977 .PP
978 "prof\&.dump" (\fBconst char *\fR) \-w [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
979 .RS 4
980 Dump a memory profile to the specified file, or if NULL is specified, to a file according to the pattern
981 <prefix>\&.<pid>\&.<seq>\&.m<mseq>\&.heap, where
982 <prefix>
983 is controlled by the
984 "opt\&.prof_prefix"
985 option\&.
986 .RE
987 .PP
988 "prof\&.interval" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-prof\fR]
989 .RS 4
990 Average number of bytes allocated between inverval\-based profile dumps\&. See the
991 "opt\&.lg_prof_interval"
992 option for additional information\&.
993 .RE
994 .PP
995 "stats\&.cactive" (\fBsize_t *\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
996 .RS 4
997 Pointer to a counter that contains an approximate count of the current number of bytes in active pages\&. The estimate may be high, but never low, because each arena rounds up to the nearest multiple of the chunk size when computing its contribution to the counter\&. Note that the
998 "epoch"
999 mallctl has no bearing on this counter\&. Furthermore, counter consistency is maintained via atomic operations, so it is necessary to use an atomic operation in order to guarantee a consistent read when dereferencing the pointer\&.
1000 .RE
1001 .PP
1002 "stats\&.allocated" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1003 .RS 4
1004 Total number of bytes allocated by the application\&.
1005 .RE
1006 .PP
1007 "stats\&.active" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1008 .RS 4
1009 Total number of bytes in active pages allocated by the application\&. This is a multiple of the page size, and greater than or equal to
1010 "stats\&.allocated"\&. This does not include
1011 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.pdirty"
1012 and pages entirely devoted to allocator metadata\&.
1013 .RE
1014 .PP
1015 "stats\&.mapped" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1016 .RS 4
1017 Total number of bytes in chunks mapped on behalf of the application\&. This is a multiple of the chunk size, and is at least as large as
1018 "stats\&.active"\&. This does not include inactive chunks\&.
1019 .RE
1020 .PP
1021 "stats\&.chunks\&.current" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1022 .RS 4
1023 Total number of chunks actively mapped on behalf of the application\&. This does not include inactive chunks\&.
1024 .RE
1025 .PP
1026 "stats\&.chunks\&.total" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1027 .RS 4
1028 Cumulative number of chunks allocated\&.
1029 .RE
1030 .PP
1031 "stats\&.chunks\&.high" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1032 .RS 4
1033 Maximum number of active chunks at any time thus far\&.
1034 .RE
1035 .PP
1036 "stats\&.huge\&.allocated" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1037 .RS 4
1038 Number of bytes currently allocated by huge objects\&.
1039 .RE
1040 .PP
1041 "stats\&.huge\&.nmalloc" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1042 .RS 4
1043 Cumulative number of huge allocation requests\&.
1044 .RE
1045 .PP
1046 "stats\&.huge\&.ndalloc" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1047 .RS 4
1048 Cumulative number of huge deallocation requests\&.
1049 .RE
1050 .PP
1051 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.dss" (\fBconst char *\fR) r\-
1052 .RS 4
1053 dss (\fBsbrk\fR(2)) allocation precedence as related to
1054 \fBmmap\fR(2)
1055 allocation\&. See
1056 "opt\&.dss"
1057 for details\&.
1058 .RE
1059 .PP
1060 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.nthreads" (\fBunsigned\fR) r\-
1061 .RS 4
1062 Number of threads currently assigned to arena\&.
1063 .RE
1064 .PP
1065 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.pactive" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\-
1066 .RS 4
1067 Number of pages in active runs\&.
1068 .RE
1069 .PP
1070 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.pdirty" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\-
1071 .RS 4
1072 Number of pages within unused runs that are potentially dirty, and for which
1073 \fBmadvise\fR\fB\fI\&.\&.\&.\fR\fR\fB \fR\fB\fI\fBMADV_DONTNEED\fR\fR\fR
1074 or similar has not been called\&.
1075 .RE
1076 .PP
1077 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.mapped" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1078 .RS 4
1079 Number of mapped bytes\&.
1080 .RE
1081 .PP
1082 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.npurge" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1083 .RS 4
1084 Number of dirty page purge sweeps performed\&.
1085 .RE
1086 .PP
1087 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.nmadvise" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1088 .RS 4
1089 Number of
1090 \fBmadvise\fR\fB\fI\&.\&.\&.\fR\fR\fB \fR\fB\fI\fBMADV_DONTNEED\fR\fR\fR
1091 or similar calls made to purge dirty pages\&.
1092 .RE
1093 .PP
1094 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.npurged" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1095 .RS 4
1096 Number of pages purged\&.
1097 .RE
1098 .PP
1099 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.small\&.allocated" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1100 .RS 4
1101 Number of bytes currently allocated by small objects\&.
1102 .RE
1103 .PP
1104 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.small\&.nmalloc" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1105 .RS 4
1106 Cumulative number of allocation requests served by small bins\&.
1107 .RE
1108 .PP
1109 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.small\&.ndalloc" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1110 .RS 4
1111 Cumulative number of small objects returned to bins\&.
1112 .RE
1113 .PP
1114 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.small\&.nrequests" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1115 .RS 4
1116 Cumulative number of small allocation requests\&.
1117 .RE
1118 .PP
1119 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.large\&.allocated" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1120 .RS 4
1121 Number of bytes currently allocated by large objects\&.
1122 .RE
1123 .PP
1124 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.large\&.nmalloc" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1125 .RS 4
1126 Cumulative number of large allocation requests served directly by the arena\&.
1127 .RE
1128 .PP
1129 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.large\&.ndalloc" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1130 .RS 4
1131 Cumulative number of large deallocation requests served directly by the arena\&.
1132 .RE
1133 .PP
1134 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.large\&.nrequests" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1135 .RS 4
1136 Cumulative number of large allocation requests\&.
1137 .RE
1138 .PP
1139 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.bins\&.<j>\&.allocated" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1140 .RS 4
1141 Current number of bytes allocated by bin\&.
1142 .RE
1143 .PP
1144 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.bins\&.<j>\&.nmalloc" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1145 .RS 4
1146 Cumulative number of allocations served by bin\&.
1147 .RE
1148 .PP
1149 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.bins\&.<j>\&.ndalloc" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1150 .RS 4
1151 Cumulative number of allocations returned to bin\&.
1152 .RE
1153 .PP
1154 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.bins\&.<j>\&.nrequests" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1155 .RS 4
1156 Cumulative number of allocation requests\&.
1157 .RE
1158 .PP
1159 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.bins\&.<j>\&.nfills" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR \fB\-\-enable\-tcache\fR]
1160 .RS 4
1161 Cumulative number of tcache fills\&.
1162 .RE
1163 .PP
1164 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.bins\&.<j>\&.nflushes" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR \fB\-\-enable\-tcache\fR]
1165 .RS 4
1166 Cumulative number of tcache flushes\&.
1167 .RE
1168 .PP
1169 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.bins\&.<j>\&.nruns" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1170 .RS 4
1171 Cumulative number of runs created\&.
1172 .RE
1173 .PP
1174 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.bins\&.<j>\&.nreruns" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1175 .RS 4
1176 Cumulative number of times the current run from which to allocate changed\&.
1177 .RE
1178 .PP
1179 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.bins\&.<j>\&.curruns" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1180 .RS 4
1181 Current number of runs\&.
1182 .RE
1183 .PP
1184 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.lruns\&.<j>\&.nmalloc" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1185 .RS 4
1186 Cumulative number of allocation requests for this size class served directly by the arena\&.
1187 .RE
1188 .PP
1189 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.lruns\&.<j>\&.ndalloc" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1190 .RS 4
1191 Cumulative number of deallocation requests for this size class served directly by the arena\&.
1192 .RE
1193 .PP
1194 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.lruns\&.<j>\&.nrequests" (\fBuint64_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1195 .RS 4
1196 Cumulative number of allocation requests for this size class\&.
1197 .RE
1198 .PP
1199 "stats\&.arenas\&.<i>\&.lruns\&.<j>\&.curruns" (\fBsize_t\fR) r\- [\fB\-\-enable\-stats\fR]
1200 .RS 4
1201 Current number of runs for this size class\&.
1202 .RE
1203 .SH "DEBUGGING MALLOC PROBLEMS"
1204 .PP
1205 When debugging, it is a good idea to configure/build jemalloc with the
1206 \fB\-\-enable\-debug\fR
1207 and
1208 \fB\-\-enable\-fill\fR
1209 options, and recompile the program with suitable options and symbols for debugger support\&. When so configured, jemalloc incorporates a wide variety of run\-time assertions that catch application errors such as double\-free, write\-after\-free, etc\&.
1210 .PP
1211 Programs often accidentally depend on \(lquninitialized\(rq memory actually being filled with zero bytes\&. Junk filling (see the
1212 "opt\&.junk"
1213 option) tends to expose such bugs in the form of obviously incorrect results and/or coredumps\&. Conversely, zero filling (see the
1214 "opt\&.zero"
1215 option) eliminates the symptoms of such bugs\&. Between these two options, it is usually possible to quickly detect, diagnose, and eliminate such bugs\&.
1216 .PP
1217 This implementation does not provide much detail about the problems it detects, because the performance impact for storing such information would be prohibitive\&. However, jemalloc does integrate with the most excellent
1218 \m[blue]\fBValgrind\fR\m[]\&\s-2\u[2]\d\s+2
1219 tool if the
1220 \fB\-\-enable\-valgrind\fR
1221 configuration option is enabled\&.
1222 .SH "DIAGNOSTIC MESSAGES"
1223 .PP
1224 If any of the memory allocation/deallocation functions detect an error or warning condition, a message will be printed to file descriptor
1225 \fBSTDERR_FILENO\fR\&. Errors will result in the process dumping core\&. If the
1226 "opt\&.abort"
1227 option is set, most warnings are treated as errors\&.
1228 .PP
1229 The
1230 \fImalloc_message\fR
1231 variable allows the programmer to override the function which emits the text strings forming the errors and warnings if for some reason the
1232 \fBSTDERR_FILENO\fR
1233 file descriptor is not suitable for this\&.
1234 \fBmalloc_message\fR\fB\fR
1235 takes the
1236 \fIcbopaque\fR
1237 pointer argument that is
1238 \fBNULL\fR
1239 unless overridden by the arguments in a call to
1240 \fBmalloc_stats_print\fR\fB\fR, followed by a string pointer\&. Please note that doing anything which tries to allocate memory in this function is likely to result in a crash or deadlock\&.
1241 .PP
1242 All messages are prefixed by \(lq<jemalloc>:\(rq\&.
1243 .SH "RETURN VALUES"
1244 .SS "Standard API"
1245 .PP
1246 The
1247 \fBmalloc\fR\fB\fR
1248 and
1249 \fBcalloc\fR\fB\fR
1250 functions return a pointer to the allocated memory if successful; otherwise a
1251 \fBNULL\fR
1252 pointer is returned and
1253 \fIerrno\fR
1254 is set to
1255 ENOMEM\&.
1256 .PP
1257 The
1258 \fBposix_memalign\fR\fB\fR
1259 function returns the value 0 if successful; otherwise it returns an error value\&. The
1260 \fBposix_memalign\fR\fB\fR
1261 function will fail if:
1262 .PP
1263 EINVAL
1264 .RS 4
1265 The
1266 \fIalignment\fR
1267 parameter is not a power of 2 at least as large as
1268 sizeof(\fBvoid *\fR)\&.
1269 .RE
1270 .PP
1271 ENOMEM
1272 .RS 4
1273 Memory allocation error\&.
1274 .RE
1275 .PP
1276 The
1277 \fBaligned_alloc\fR\fB\fR
1278 function returns a pointer to the allocated memory if successful; otherwise a
1279 \fBNULL\fR
1280 pointer is returned and
1281 \fIerrno\fR
1282 is set\&. The
1283 \fBaligned_alloc\fR\fB\fR
1284 function will fail if:
1285 .PP
1286 EINVAL
1287 .RS 4
1288 The
1289 \fIalignment\fR
1290 parameter is not a power of 2\&.
1291 .RE
1292 .PP
1293 ENOMEM
1294 .RS 4
1295 Memory allocation error\&.
1296 .RE
1297 .PP
1298 The
1299 \fBrealloc\fR\fB\fR
1300 function returns a pointer, possibly identical to
1301 \fIptr\fR, to the allocated memory if successful; otherwise a
1302 \fBNULL\fR
1303 pointer is returned, and
1304 \fIerrno\fR
1305 is set to
1306 ENOMEM
1307 if the error was the result of an allocation failure\&. The
1308 \fBrealloc\fR\fB\fR
1309 function always leaves the original buffer intact when an error occurs\&.
1310 .PP
1311 The
1312 \fBfree\fR\fB\fR
1313 function returns no value\&.
1314 .SS "Non\-standard API"
1315 .PP
1316 The
1317 \fBmalloc_usable_size\fR\fB\fR
1318 function returns the usable size of the allocation pointed to by
1319 \fIptr\fR\&.
1320 .PP
1321 The
1322 \fBmallctl\fR\fB\fR,
1323 \fBmallctlnametomib\fR\fB\fR, and
1324 \fBmallctlbymib\fR\fB\fR
1325 functions return 0 on success; otherwise they return an error value\&. The functions will fail if:
1326 .PP
1327 EINVAL
1328 .RS 4
1329 \fInewp\fR
1330 is not
1331 \fBNULL\fR, and
1332 \fInewlen\fR
1333 is too large or too small\&. Alternatively,
1334 \fI*oldlenp\fR
1335 is too large or too small; in this case as much data as possible are read despite the error\&.
1336 .RE
1337 .PP
1338 ENOMEM
1339 .RS 4
1340 \fI*oldlenp\fR
1341 is too short to hold the requested value\&.
1342 .RE
1343 .PP
1344 ENOENT
1345 .RS 4
1346 \fIname\fR
1347 or
1348 \fImib\fR
1349 specifies an unknown/invalid value\&.
1350 .RE
1351 .PP
1352 EPERM
1353 .RS 4
1354 Attempt to read or write void value, or attempt to write read\-only value\&.
1355 .RE
1356 .PP
1357 EAGAIN
1358 .RS 4
1359 A memory allocation failure occurred\&.
1360 .RE
1361 .PP
1362 EFAULT
1363 .RS 4
1364 An interface with side effects failed in some way not directly related to
1365 \fBmallctl*\fR\fB\fR
1366 read/write processing\&.
1367 .RE
1368 .SS "Experimental API"
1369 .PP
1370 The
1371 \fBallocm\fR\fB\fR,
1372 \fBrallocm\fR\fB\fR,
1373 \fBsallocm\fR\fB\fR,
1374 \fBdallocm\fR\fB\fR, and
1375 \fBnallocm\fR\fB\fR
1376 functions return
1377 \fBALLOCM_SUCCESS\fR
1378 on success; otherwise they return an error value\&. The
1379 \fBallocm\fR\fB\fR,
1380 \fBrallocm\fR\fB\fR, and
1381 \fBnallocm\fR\fB\fR
1382 functions will fail if:
1383 .PP
1384 ALLOCM_ERR_OOM
1385 .RS 4
1386 Out of memory\&. Insufficient contiguous memory was available to service the allocation request\&. The
1387 \fBallocm\fR\fB\fR
1388 function additionally sets
1389 \fI*ptr\fR
1390 to
1391 \fBNULL\fR, whereas the
1392 \fBrallocm\fR\fB\fR
1393 function leaves
1394 \fB*ptr\fR
1395 unmodified\&.
1396 .RE
1397 The
1398 \fBrallocm\fR\fB\fR
1399 function will also fail if:
1400 .PP
1401 ALLOCM_ERR_NOT_MOVED
1402 .RS 4
1403 \fBALLOCM_NO_MOVE\fR
1404 was specified, but the reallocation request could not be serviced without moving the object\&.
1405 .RE
1406 .SH "ENVIRONMENT"
1407 .PP
1408 The following environment variable affects the execution of the allocation functions:
1409 .PP
1410 \fBMALLOC_CONF\fR
1411 .RS 4
1412 If the environment variable
1413 \fBMALLOC_CONF\fR
1414 is set, the characters it contains will be interpreted as options\&.
1415 .RE
1416 .SH "EXAMPLES"
1417 .PP
1418 To dump core whenever a problem occurs:
1419 .sp
1420 .if n \{\
1421 .RS 4
1422 .\}
1423 .nf
1424 ln \-s \*(Aqabort:true\*(Aq /etc/malloc\&.conf
1425 .fi
1426 .if n \{\
1427 .RE
1428 .\}
1429 .PP
1430 To specify in the source a chunk size that is 16 MiB:
1431 .sp
1432 .if n \{\
1433 .RS 4
1434 .\}
1435 .nf
1436 malloc_conf = "lg_chunk:24";
1437 .fi
1438 .if n \{\
1439 .RE
1440 .\}
1441 .SH "SEE ALSO"
1442 .PP
1443 \fBmadvise\fR(2),
1444 \fBmmap\fR(2),
1445 \fBsbrk\fR(2),
1446 \fButrace\fR(2),
1447 \fBalloca\fR(3),
1448 \fBatexit\fR(3),
1449 \fBgetpagesize\fR(3)
1450 .SH "STANDARDS"
1451 .PP
1452 The
1453 \fBmalloc\fR\fB\fR,
1454 \fBcalloc\fR\fB\fR,
1455 \fBrealloc\fR\fB\fR, and
1456 \fBfree\fR\fB\fR
1457 functions conform to ISO/IEC 9899:1990 (\(lqISO C90\(rq)\&.
1458 .PP
1459 The
1460 \fBposix_memalign\fR\fB\fR
1461 function conforms to IEEE Std 1003\&.1\-2001 (\(lqPOSIX\&.1\(rq)\&.
1462 .SH "AUTHOR"
1463 .PP
1464 \fBJason Evans\fR
1465 .RS 4
1466 .RE
1467 .SH "NOTES"
1468 .IP " 1." 4
1469 jemalloc website
1470 .RS 4
1471 \%http://www.canonware.com/jemalloc/
1472 .RE
1473 .IP " 2." 4
1474 Valgrind
1475 .RS 4
1476 \%http://valgrind.org/
1477 .RE
1478 .IP " 3." 4
1479 gperftools package
1480 .RS 4
1481 \%http://code.google.com/p/gperftools/
1482 .RE