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<h1>TCMalloc : Thread-Caching Malloc</h1>
<address>Sanjay Ghemawat</address>
<h2><A name=motivation>Motivation</A></h2>
<p>TCMalloc is faster than the glibc 2.3 malloc (available as a
separate library called ptmalloc2) and other mallocs that I have
tested. ptmalloc2 takes approximately 300 nanoseconds to execute a
malloc/free pair on a 2.8 GHz P4 (for small objects). The TCMalloc
implementation takes approximately 50 nanoseconds for the same
operation pair. Speed is important for a malloc implementation
because if malloc is not fast enough, application writers are inclined
to write their own custom free lists on top of malloc. This can lead
to extra complexity, and more memory usage unless the application
writer is very careful to appropriately size the free lists and
scavenge idle objects out of the free list.</p>
<p>TCMalloc also reduces lock contention for multi-threaded programs.
For small objects, there is virtually zero contention. For large
objects, TCMalloc tries to use fine grained and efficient spinlocks.
ptmalloc2 also reduces lock contention by using per-thread arenas but
there is a big problem with ptmalloc2's use of per-thread arenas. In
ptmalloc2 memory can never move from one arena to another. This can
lead to huge amounts of wasted space. For example, in one Google
application, the first phase would allocate approximately 300MB of
memory for its URL canonicalization data structures. When the first
phase finished, a second phase would be started in the same address
space. If this second phase was assigned a different arena than the
one used by the first phase, this phase would not reuse any of the
memory left after the first phase and would add another 300MB to the
address space. Similar memory blowup problems were also noticed in
other applications.</p>
<p>Another benefit of TCMalloc is space-efficient representation of
small objects. For example, N 8-byte objects can be allocated while
using space approximately <code>8N * 1.01</code> bytes. I.e., a
one-percent space overhead. ptmalloc2 uses a four-byte header for
each object and (I think) rounds up the size to a multiple of 8 bytes
and ends up using <code>16N</code> bytes.</p>
<h2><A NAME="Usage">Usage</A></h2>
<p>To use TCMalloc, just link TCMalloc into your application via the
"-ltcmalloc" linker flag.</p>
<p>You can use TCMalloc in applications you didn't compile yourself,
by using LD_PRELOAD:</p>
<pre>
$ LD_PRELOAD="/usr/lib/libtcmalloc.so" <binary>
</pre>
<p>LD_PRELOAD is tricky, and we don't necessarily recommend this mode
of usage.</p>
<p>TCMalloc includes a <A HREF="heap_checker.html">heap checker</A>
and <A HREF="heapprofile.html">heap profiler</A> as well.</p>
<p>If you'd rather link in a version of TCMalloc that does not include
the heap profiler and checker (perhaps to reduce binary size for a
static binary), you can link in <code>libtcmalloc_minimal</code>
instead.</p>
<h2><A NAME="Overview">Overview</A></h2>
<p>TCMalloc assigns each thread a thread-local cache. Small
allocations are satisfied from the thread-local cache. Objects are
moved from central data structures into a thread-local cache as
needed, and periodic garbage collections are used to migrate memory
back from a thread-local cache into the central data structures.</p>
<center><img src="overview.gif"></center>
<p>TCMalloc treats objects with size &lt;= 32K ("small" objects)
differently from larger objects. Large objects are allocated directly
from the central heap using a page-level allocator (a page is a 4K
aligned region of memory). I.e., a large object is always
page-aligned and occupies an integral number of pages.</p>
<p>A run of pages can be carved up into a sequence of small objects,
each equally sized. For example a run of one page (4K) can be carved
up into 32 objects of size 128 bytes each.</p>
<h2><A NAME="Small_Object_Allocation">Small Object Allocation</A></h2>
<p>Each small object size maps to one of approximately 60 allocatable
size-classes. For example, all allocations in the range 833 to 1024
bytes are rounded up to 1024. The size-classes are spaced so that
small sizes are separated by 8 bytes, larger sizes by 16 bytes, even
larger sizes by 32 bytes, and so forth. The maximal spacing is
controlled so that not too much space is wasted when an allocation
request falls just past the end of a size class and has to be rounded
up to the next class.</p>
<p>A thread cache contains a singly linked list of free objects per
size-class.</p>
<center><img src="threadheap.gif"></center>
<p>When allocating a small object: (1) We map its size to the
corresponding size-class. (2) Look in the corresponding free list in
the thread cache for the current thread. (3) If the free list is not
empty, we remove the first object from the list and return it. When
following this fast path, TCMalloc acquires no locks at all. This
helps speed-up allocation significantly because a lock/unlock pair
takes approximately 100 nanoseconds on a 2.8 GHz Xeon.</p>
<p>If the free list is empty: (1) We fetch a bunch of objects from a
central free list for this size-class (the central free list is shared
by all threads). (2) Place them in the thread-local free list. (3)
Return one of the newly fetched objects to the applications.</p>
<p>If the central free list is also empty: (1) We allocate a run of
pages from the central page allocator. (2) Split the run into a set
of objects of this size-class. (3) Place the new objects on the
central free list. (4) As before, move some of these objects to the
thread-local free list.</p>
<h3><A NAME="Sizing_Thread_Cache_Free_Lists">
Sizing Thread Cache Free Lists</A></h3>
<p>It is important to size the thread cache free lists correctly. If
the free list is too small, we'll need to go to the central free list
too often. If the free list is too big, we'll waste memory as objects
sit idle in the free list.</p>
<p>Note that the thread caches are just as important for deallocation
as they are for allocation. Without a cache, each deallocation would
require moving the memory to the central free list. Also, some threads
have asymmetric alloc/free behavior (e.g. producer and consumer threads),
so sizing the free list correctly gets trickier.</p>
<p>To size the free lists appropriately, we use a slow-start algorithm
to determine the maximum length of each individual free list. As the
free list is used more frequently, its maximum length grows. However,
if a free list is used more for deallocation than allocation, its
maximum length will grow only up to a point where the whole list can
be efficiently moved to the central free list at once.</p>
<p>The psuedo-code below illustrates this slow-start algorithm. Note
that <code>num_objects_to_move</code> is specific to each size class.
By moving a list of objects with a well-known length, the central
cache can efficiently pass these lists between thread caches. If
a thread cache wants fewer than <code>num_objects_to_move</code>,
the operation on the central free list has linear time complexity.
The downside of always using <code>num_objects_to_move</code> as
the number of objects to transfer to and from the central cache is
that it wastes memory in threads that don't need all of those objects.
<pre>
Start each freelist max_length at 1.
Allocation
if freelist empty {
fetch min(max_length, num_objects_to_move) from central list;
if max_length < num_objects_to_move { // slow-start
max_length++;
} else {
max_length += num_objects_to_move;
}
}
Deallocation
if length > max_length {
// Don't try to release num_objects_to_move if we don't have that many.
release min(max_length, num_objects_to_move) objects to central list
if max_length < num_objects_to_move {
// Slow-start up to num_objects_to_move.
max_length++;
} else if max_length > num_objects_to_move {
// If we consistently go over max_length, shrink max_length.
overages++;
if overages > kMaxOverages {
max_length -= num_objects_to_move;
overages = 0;
}
}
}
</pre>
See also the section on <a href="#Garbage_Collection">Garbage Collection</a>
to see how it affects the <code>max_length</code>.
<h2><A NAME="Large_Object_Allocation">Large Object Allocation</A></h2>
<p>A large object size (&gt; 32K) is rounded up to a page size (4K)
and is handled by a central page heap. The central page heap is again
an array of free lists. For <code>i &lt; 256</code>, the
<code>k</code>th entry is a free list of runs that consist of
<code>k</code> pages. The <code>256</code>th entry is a free list of
runs that have length <code>&gt;= 256</code> pages: </p>
<center><img src="pageheap.gif"></center>
<p>An allocation for <code>k</code> pages is satisfied by looking in
the <code>k</code>th free list. If that free list is empty, we look
in the next free list, and so forth. Eventually, we look in the last
free list if necessary. If that fails, we fetch memory from the
system (using <code>sbrk</code>, <code>mmap</code>, or by mapping in
portions of <code>/dev/mem</code>).</p>
<p>If an allocation for <code>k</code> pages is satisfied by a run
of pages of length &gt; <code>k</code>, the remainder of the
run is re-inserted back into the appropriate free list in the
page heap.</p>
<h2><A NAME="Spans">Spans</A></h2>
<p>The heap managed by TCMalloc consists of a set of pages. A run of
contiguous pages is represented by a <code>Span</code> object. A span
can either be <em>allocated</em>, or <em>free</em>. If free, the span
is one of the entries in a page heap linked-list. If allocated, it is
either a large object that has been handed off to the application, or
a run of pages that have been split up into a sequence of small
objects. If split into small objects, the size-class of the objects
is recorded in the span.</p>
<p>A central array indexed by page number can be used to find the span to
which a page belongs. For example, span <em>a</em> below occupies 2
pages, span <em>b</em> occupies 1 page, span <em>c</em> occupies 5
pages and span <em>d</em> occupies 3 pages.</p>
<center><img src="spanmap.gif"></center>
<p>In a 32-bit address space, the central array is represented by a a
2-level radix tree where the root contains 32 entries and each leaf
contains 2^15 entries (a 32-bit address spave has 2^20 4K pages, and
the first level of tree divides the 2^20 pages by 2^5). This leads to
a starting memory usage of 128KB of space (2^15*4 bytes) for the
central array, which seems acceptable.</p>
<p>On 64-bit machines, we use a 3-level radix tree.</p>
<h2><A NAME="Deallocation">Deallocation</A></h2>
<p>When an object is deallocated, we compute its page number and look
it up in the central array to find the corresponding span object. The
span tells us whether or not the object is small, and its size-class
if it is small. If the object is small, we insert it into the
appropriate free list in the current thread's thread cache. If the
thread cache now exceeds a predetermined size (2MB by default), we run
a garbage collector that moves unused objects from the thread cache
into central free lists.</p>
<p>If the object is large, the span tells us the range of pages covered
by the object. Suppose this range is <code>[p,q]</code>. We also
lookup the spans for pages <code>p-1</code> and <code>q+1</code>. If
either of these neighboring spans are free, we coalesce them with the
<code>[p,q]</code> span. The resulting span is inserted into the
appropriate free list in the page heap.</p>
<h2>Central Free Lists for Small Objects</h2>
<p>As mentioned before, we keep a central free list for each
size-class. Each central free list is organized as a two-level data
structure: a set of spans, and a linked list of free objects per
span.</p>
<p>An object is allocated from a central free list by removing the
first entry from the linked list of some span. (If all spans have
empty linked lists, a suitably sized span is first allocated from the
central page heap.)</p>
<p>An object is returned to a central free list by adding it to the
linked list of its containing span. If the linked list length now
equals the total number of small objects in the span, this span is now
completely free and is returned to the page heap.</p>
<h2><A NAME="Garbage_Collection">Garbage Collection of Thread Caches</A></h2>
<p>Garbage collecting objects from a thread cache keeps the size of
the cache under control and returns unused objects to the central free
lists. Some threads need large caches to perform well while others
can get by with little or no cache at all. When a thread cache goes
over its <code>max_size</code>, garbage collection kicks in and then the
thread competes with the other threads for a larger cache.</p>
<p>Garbage collection is run only during a deallocation. We walk over
all free lists in the cache and move some number of objects from the
free list to the corresponding central list.</p>
<p>The number of objects to be moved from a free list is determined
using a per-list low-water-mark <code>L</code>. <code>L</code>
records the minimum length of the list since the last garbage
collection. Note that we could have shortened the list by
<code>L</code> objects at the last garbage collection without
requiring any extra accesses to the central list. We use this past
history as a predictor of future accesses and move <code>L/2</code>
objects from the thread cache free list to the corresponding central
free list. This algorithm has the nice property that if a thread
stops using a particular size, all objects of that size will quickly
move from the thread cache to the central free list where they can be
used by other threads.</p>
<p>If a thread consistently deallocates more objects of a certain size
than it allocates, this <code>L/2</code> behavior will cause at least
<code>L/2</code> objects to always sit in the free list. To avoid
wasting memory this way, we shrink the maximum length of the freelist
to converge on <code>num_objects_to_move</code> (see also
<a href="#Sizing_Thread_Cache_Free_Lists">Sizing Thread Cache Free Lists</a>).
<pre>
Garbage Collection
if (L != 0 && max_length > num_objects_to_move) {
max_length = max(max_length - num_objects_to_move, num_objects_to_move)
}
</pre>
<p>The fact that the thread cache went over its <code>max_size</code> is
an indication that the thread would benefit from a larger cache. Simply
increasing <code>max_size</code> would use an inordinate amount of memory
in programs that have lots of active threads. Developers can bound the
memory used with the flag --tcmalloc_max_total_thread_cache_bytes.</p>
<p>Each thread cache starts with a small <code>max_size</code>
(e.g. 64KB) so that idle threads won't pre-allocate memory they don't
need. Each time the cache runs a garbage collection, it will also try
to grow its <code>max_size</code>. If the sum of the thread cache
sizes is less than --tcmalloc_max_total_thread_cache_bytes,
<code>max_size</code> grows easily. If not, thread cache 1 will try
to steal from thread cache 2 (picked round-robin) by decreasing thread
cache 2's <code>max_size</code>. In this way, threads that are more
active will steal memory from other threads more often than they are
have memory stolen from themselves. Mostly idle threads end up with
small caches and active threads end up with big caches. Note that
this stealing can cause the sum of the thread cache sizes to be
greater than --tcmalloc_max_total_thread_cache_bytes until thread
cache 2 deallocates some memory to trigger a garbage collection.</p>
<h2><A NAME="performance">Performance Notes</A></h2>
<h3>PTMalloc2 unittest</h3>
<p>The PTMalloc2 package (now part of glibc) contains a unittest
program <code>t-test1.c</code>. This forks a number of threads and
performs a series of allocations and deallocations in each thread; the
threads do not communicate other than by synchronization in the memory
allocator.</p>
<p><code>t-test1</code> (included in
<code>tests/tcmalloc/</code>, and compiled as
<code>ptmalloc_unittest1</code>) was run with a varying numbers of
threads (1-20) and maximum allocation sizes (64 bytes -
32Kbytes). These tests were run on a 2.4GHz dual Xeon system with
hyper-threading enabled, using Linux glibc-2.3.2 from RedHat 9, with
one million operations per thread in each test. In each case, the test
was run once normally, and once with
<code>LD_PRELOAD=libtcmalloc.so</code>.
<p>The graphs below show the performance of TCMalloc vs PTMalloc2 for
several different metrics. Firstly, total operations (millions) per
elapsed second vs max allocation size, for varying numbers of
threads. The raw data used to generate these graphs (the output of the
<code>time</code> utility) is available in
<code>t-test1.times.txt</code>.</p>
<table>
<tr>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspersec.vs.size.1.threads.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspersec.vs.size.2.threads.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspersec.vs.size.3.threads.png"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspersec.vs.size.4.threads.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspersec.vs.size.5.threads.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspersec.vs.size.8.threads.png"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspersec.vs.size.12.threads.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspersec.vs.size.16.threads.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspersec.vs.size.20.threads.png"></td>
</tr>
</table>
<ul>
<li> TCMalloc is much more consistently scalable than PTMalloc2 - for
all thread counts &gt;1 it achieves ~7-9 million ops/sec for small
allocations, falling to ~2 million ops/sec for larger
allocations. The single-thread case is an obvious outlier,
since it is only able to keep a single processor busy and hence
can achieve fewer ops/sec. PTMalloc2 has a much higher variance
on operations/sec - peaking somewhere around 4 million ops/sec
for small allocations and falling to &lt;1 million ops/sec for
larger allocations.
<li> TCMalloc is faster than PTMalloc2 in the vast majority of
cases, and particularly for small allocations. Contention
between threads is less of a problem in TCMalloc.
<li> TCMalloc's performance drops off as the allocation size
increases. This is because the per-thread cache is
garbage-collected when it hits a threshold (defaulting to
2MB). With larger allocation sizes, fewer objects can be stored
in the cache before it is garbage-collected.
<li> There is a noticeable drop in TCMalloc's performance at ~32K
maximum allocation size; at larger sizes performance drops less
quickly. This is due to the 32K maximum size of objects in the
per-thread caches; for objects larger than this TCMalloc
allocates from the central page heap.
</ul>
<p>Next, operations (millions) per second of CPU time vs number of
threads, for max allocation size 64 bytes - 128 Kbytes.</p>
<table>
<tr>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspercpusec.vs.threads.64.bytes.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspercpusec.vs.threads.256.bytes.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspercpusec.vs.threads.1024.bytes.png"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspercpusec.vs.threads.4096.bytes.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspercpusec.vs.threads.8192.bytes.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspercpusec.vs.threads.16384.bytes.png"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspercpusec.vs.threads.32768.bytes.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspercpusec.vs.threads.65536.bytes.png"></td>
<td><img src="tcmalloc-opspercpusec.vs.threads.131072.bytes.png"></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>Here we see again that TCMalloc is both more consistent and more
efficient than PTMalloc2. For max allocation sizes &lt;32K, TCMalloc
typically achieves ~2-2.5 million ops per second of CPU time with a
large number of threads, whereas PTMalloc achieves generally 0.5-1
million ops per second of CPU time, with a lot of cases achieving much
less than this figure. Above 32K max allocation size, TCMalloc drops
to 1-1.5 million ops per second of CPU time, and PTMalloc drops almost
to zero for large numbers of threads (i.e. with PTMalloc, lots of CPU
time is being burned spinning waiting for locks in the heavily
multi-threaded case).</p>
<H2><A NAME="runtime">Modifying Runtime Behavior</A></H2>
<p>You can more finely control the behavior of the tcmalloc via
environment variables.</p>
<p>Generally useful flags:</p>
<table frame=box rules=sides cellpadding=5 width=100%>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_SAMPLE_PARAMETER</code></td>
<td>default: 524288</td>
<td>
The approximate gap between sampling actions. That is, we
take one sample approximately once every
<code>tcmalloc_sample_parmeter</code> bytes of allocation.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_RELEASE_RATE</code></td>
<td>default: 1.0</td>
<td>
Rate at which we release unused memory to the system, via
<code>madvise(MADV_DONTNEED)</code>, on systems that support
it. Zero means we never release memory back to the system.
Increase this flag to return memory faster; decrease it
to return memory slower. Reasonable rates are in the
range [0,10].
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_LARGE_ALLOC_REPORT_THRESHOLD</code></td>
<td>default: 1073741824</td>
<td>
Allocations larger than this value cause a stack trace to be
dumped to stderr. The threshold for dumping stack traces is
increased by a factor of 1.125 every time we print a message so
that the threshold automatically goes up by a factor of ~1000
every 60 messages. This bounds the amount of extra logging
generated by this flag. Default value of this flag is very large
and therefore you should see no extra logging unless the flag is
overridden.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_MAX_TOTAL_THREAD_CACHE_BYTES=<i>x</i></code></td>
<td>default: 16777216</td>
<td>
Bound on the total amount of bytes allocated to thread caches. This
bound is not strict, so it is possible for the cache to go over this
bound in certain circumstances. This value defaults to 16MB. For
applications with many threads, this may not be a large enough cache,
which can affect performance. If you suspect your application is not
scaling to many threads due to lock contention in TCMalloc, you can
try increasing this value. This may improve performance, at a cost
of extra memory use by TCMalloc. See <a href="#Garbage_Collection">
Garbage Collection</a> for more details.
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>Advanced "tweaking" flags, that control more precisely how tcmalloc
tries to allocate memory from the kernel.</p>
<table frame=box rules=sides cellpadding=5 width=100%>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_SKIP_MMAP</code></td>
<td>default: false</td>
<td>
If true, do not try to use <code>mmap</code> to obtain memory
from the kernel.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_SKIP_SBRK</code></td>
<td>default: false</td>
<td>
If true, do not try to use <code>sbrk</code> to obtain memory
from the kernel.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_DEVMEM_START</code></td>
<td>default: 0</td>
<td>
Physical memory starting location in MB for <code>/dev/mem</code>
allocation. Setting this to 0 disables <code>/dev/mem</code>
allocation.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_DEVMEM_LIMIT</code></td>
<td>default: 0</td>
<td>
Physical memory limit location in MB for <code>/dev/mem</code>
allocation. Setting this to 0 means no limit.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_DEVMEM_DEVICE</code></td>
<td>default: /dev/mem</td>
<td>
Device to use for allocating unmanaged memory.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_MEMFS_MALLOC_PATH</code></td>
<td>default: ""</td>
<td>
If set, specify a path where hugetlbfs or tmpfs is mounted.
This may allow for speedier allocations.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_MEMFS_LIMIT_MB</code></td>
<td>default: 0</td>
<td>
Limit total memfs allocation size to specified number of MB.
0 means "no limit".
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_MEMFS_ABORT_ON_FAIL</code></td>
<td>default: false</td>
<td>
If true, abort() whenever memfs_malloc fails to satisfy an allocation.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>TCMALLOC_MEMFS_IGNORE_MMAP_FAIL</code></td>
<td>default: false</td>
<td>
If true, ignore failures from mmap.
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<H2><A NAME="compiletime">Modifying Behavior In Code</A></H2>
<p>The <code>MallocExtension</code> class, in
<code>malloc_extension.h</code>, provides a few knobs that you can
tweak in your program, to affect tcmalloc's behavior.</p>
<h3>Releasing Memory Back to the System</h3>
<p>By default, tcmalloc will release no-longer-used memory back to the
kernel gradually, over time. The <a
href="#runtime">tcmalloc_release_rate</a> flag controls how quickly
this happens. You can also force a release at a given point in the
progam execution like so:</p>
<pre>
MallocExtension::instance()->ReleaseFreeMemory();
</pre>
<p>You can also call <code>SetMemoryReleaseRate()</code> to change the
<code>tcmalloc_release_rate</code> value at runtime, or
<code>GetMemoryReleaseRate</code> to see what the current release rate
is.</p>
<h3>Memory Introspection</h3>
<p>There are several routines for getting a human-readable form of the
current memory usage:</p>
<pre>
MallocExtension::instance()->GetStats(buffer, buffer_length);
MallocExtension::instance()->GetHeapSample(&string);
MallocExtension::instance()->GetHeapGrowthStacks(&string);
</pre>
<p>The last two create files in the same format as the heap-profiler,
and can be passed as data files to pprof. The first is human-readable
and is meant for debugging.</p>
<h3>Generic Tcmalloc Status</h3>
<p>TCMalloc has support for setting and retrieving arbitrary
'properties':</p>
<pre>
MallocExtension::instance()->SetNumericProperty(property_name, value);
MallocExtension::instance()->GetNumericProperty(property_name, &value);
</pre>
<p>It is possible for an application to set and get these properties,
but the most useful is when a library sets the properties so the
application can read them. Here are the properties TCMalloc defines;
you can access them with a call like
<code>MallocExtension::instance()->GetNumericProperty("generic.heap_size",
&value);</code>:</p>
<table frame=box rules=sides cellpadding=5 width=100%>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>generic.current_allocated_bytes</code></td>
<td>
Number of bytes used by the application. This will not typically
match the memory use reported by the OS, because it does not
include TCMalloc overhead or memory fragmentation.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>generic.heap_size</code></td>
<td>
Bytes of system memory reserved by TCMalloc.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>tcmalloc.slack_bytes</code></td>
<td>
A measure of memory fragmentation (how much memory is reserved by
TCMalloc but unlikely to ever be able to serve an allocation
request).
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>tcmalloc.max_total_thread_cache_bytes</code></td>
<td>
A limit to how much memory TCMalloc dedicates for small objects.
Higher numbers trade off more memory use for -- in some situations
-- improved efficiency.
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td><code>tcmalloc.current_total_thread_cache_bytes</code></td>
<td>
A measure of some of the memory TCMalloc is using (for
small objects).
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<h2><A NAME="caveats">Caveats</A></h2>
<p>For some systems, TCMalloc may not work correctly with
applications that aren't linked against <code>libpthread.so</code> (or
the equivalent on your OS). It should work on Linux using glibc 2.3,
but other OS/libc combinations have not been tested.</p>
<p>TCMalloc may be somewhat more memory hungry than other mallocs,
(but tends not to have the huge blowups that can happen with other
mallocs). In particular, at startup TCMalloc allocates approximately
240KB of internal memory.</p>
<p>Don't try to load TCMalloc into a running binary (e.g., using JNI
in Java programs). The binary will have allocated some objects using
the system malloc, and may try to pass them to TCMalloc for
deallocation. TCMalloc will not be able to handle such objects.</p>
<hr>
<address>Sanjay Ghemawat, Paul Menage<br>
<!-- Created: Tue Dec 19 10:43:14 PST 2000 -->
<!-- hhmts start -->
Last modified: Sat Feb 24 13:11:38 PST 2007 (csilvers)
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</address>
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