/* $NetBSD: qp_p.h,v 1.2 2025/01/26 16:25:24 christos Exp $ */ /* * Copyright (C) Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") * * SPDX-License-Identifier: MPL-2.0 * * This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this * file, you can obtain one at https://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. * * See the COPYRIGHT file distributed with this work for additional * information regarding copyright ownership. */ /* * For an overview, see doc/design/qp-trie.md * * This private header defines the internal data structures, */ #pragma once /*********************************************************************** * * interior node basics */ /* * A qp-trie node is almost always one of two types: branch or leaf. * (A third type is used only to anchor the root of a trie; see below.) * * A node contains a 64-bit word and a 32-bit word. In order to avoid * unwanted padding, they are declared as three 32-bit words; this keeps * the size down to 12 bytes. They are in native endian order, so getting * the 64-bit part should compile down to an unaligned load. * * The node type is identified by the least significant bits of the 64-bit * word. * * In a leaf node: * - The 64-bit word is used to store a pointer value. (Pointers must be * word-aligned so the least significant bits are zero; those bits can * then act as a node tag to indicate that this is a leaf. This * requirement is enforced by the make_leaf() constructor.) * - The 32-bit word is used to store an integer value. Both the * pointer and integer values can be retrieved when looking up a key. * * In a branch node: * - The 64-bit word is subdivided into three portions: the least * significant bits are the node type (for a branch, 0x1); the * most sigificant 15 bits are an offset value into the key, and * the 47 bits in the middle are a bitmap; see the documentation * for the SHIFT_* enum below. * - The 32-bit word is a reference (dns_qpref_t) to the packed sparse * vector of "twigs", i.e. child nodes. A branch node has at least * two and at most 47 twigs. (The qp-trie update functions ensure that * branches actually branch, i.e. a branch cannot have only one child.) * * A third node type, reader nodes, anchors the root of a trie. * A pair of reader nodes together contain a packed `dns_qpreader_t`. * See the section on "packed reader nodes" for details. */ struct dns_qpnode { #if WORDS_BIGENDIAN uint32_t bighi, biglo, small; #else uint32_t biglo, bighi, small; #endif }; /* * The possible values of the node type tag. Type tags must fit in two bits * for compatibility with 4-byte pointer alignment on 32-bit systems. */ enum { LEAF_TAG = 0, /* leaf node */ BRANCH_TAG = 1, /* branch node */ READER_TAG = 2, /* reader node */ TAG_MASK = 3, /* mask covering tag bits */ }; /* * This code does not work on CPUs with large pointers, e.g. CHERI capability * architectures. When porting to that kind of machine, a `dns_qpnode` should * be just a `uintptr_t`; a leaf node will contain a single pointer, and a * branch node will fit in the same space with room to spare. */ STATIC_ASSERT(sizeof(void *) <= sizeof(uint64_t), "pointers must fit in 64 bits"); /* * The 64-bit word in a branch node is comprised of a node type tag, a * bitmap, and an offset into the key. It is called an "index word" because * it describes how to access the twigs vector (think "database index"). * The following enum sets up the bit positions of these parts. * * The bitmap is just above the type tag. The `dns_qp_bits_for_byte[]` table * is used to fill in a key so that bit tests can work directly against the * index word without superfluous masking or shifting; we don't need to * mask out the bitmap before testing a bit, but we do need to mask the * bitmap before calling popcount. * * The byte offset into the key is at the top of the word, so that it * can be extracted with just a shift, with no masking needed. * * The names are SHIFT_thing because they are dns_qpshift_t values. (See * below for the various `qp_*` type declarations.) * * These values are relatively fixed in practice: SHIFT_NOBYTE needs * to leave space for the type tag, and the implementation of * `dns_qpkey_fromname()` depends on the bitmap being large enough. * The symbolic names avoid mystery numbers in the code. */ enum { SHIFT_NOBYTE = 2, /* label separator has no byte value */ SHIFT_BITMAP, /* many bits here */ SHIFT_OFFSET = 49, /* offset of byte in key */ }; /*********************************************************************** * * garbage collector tuning parameters */ /* * A "cell" is a location that can contain a `dns_qpnode_t`, and a "chunk" * is a moderately large array of cells. A big trie can occupy * multiple chunks. (Unlike other nodes, a trie's root node lives in * its `struct dns_qp` instead of being allocated in a cell.) * * The qp-trie allocator hands out space for twigs vectors. Allocations are * made sequentially from one of the chunks; this kind of "sequential * allocator" is also known as a "bump allocator", so in `struct dns_qp` * (see below) the allocation chunk is called `bump`. */ /* * Number of cells in a chunk is a power of 2, which must have space for * a full twigs vector (48 wide). When testing, use a much smaller chunk * size to make the allocator work harder. */ #ifdef FUZZING_BUILD_MODE_UNSAFE_FOR_PRODUCTION #define QP_CHUNK_LOG 7 #else #define QP_CHUNK_LOG 10 #endif STATIC_ASSERT(6 <= QP_CHUNK_LOG && QP_CHUNK_LOG <= 20, "qp-trie chunk size is unreasonable"); #define QP_CHUNK_SIZE (1U << QP_CHUNK_LOG) #define QP_CHUNK_BYTES (QP_CHUNK_SIZE * sizeof(dns_qpnode_t)) /* * We need a bitfield this big to count how much of a chunk is in use: * it needs to count from 0 up to and including `1 << QP_CHUNK_LOG`. */ #define QP_USAGE_BITS (QP_CHUNK_LOG + 1) /* * A chunk needs to be compacted if it is less full than this threshold. * (12% overhead seems reasonable) */ #define QP_MAX_FREE (QP_CHUNK_SIZE / 8) #define QP_MIN_USED (QP_CHUNK_SIZE - QP_MAX_FREE) /* * Compact automatically when we pass this threshold: when there is a lot * of free space in absolute terms, and when we have freed more than half * of the space we allocated. * * The current compaction algorithm scans the whole trie, so it is important * to scale the threshold based on the size of the trie to avoid quadratic * behaviour. XXXFANF find an algorithm that scans less of the trie! * * During a modification transaction, when we copy-on-write some twigs we * count the old copy as "free", because they will be when the transaction * commits. But they cannot be recovered immediately so they are also * counted as on hold, and discounted when we decide whether to compact. */ #define QP_GC_HEURISTIC(qp, free) \ ((free) > QP_CHUNK_SIZE * 4 && (free) > (qp)->used_count / 2) #define QP_NEEDGC(qp) QP_GC_HEURISTIC(qp, (qp)->free_count) #define QP_AUTOGC(qp) QP_GC_HEURISTIC(qp, (qp)->free_count - (qp)->hold_count) /* * The chunk base and usage arrays are resized geometically and start off * with two entries. */ #define GROWTH_FACTOR(size) ((size) + (size) / 2 + 2) /* * Constructors and accessors for dns_qpref_t values, defined here to show * how the dns_qpref_t, dns_qpchunk_t, dns_qpcell_t types relate to each other */ static inline dns_qpref_t make_ref(dns_qpchunk_t chunk, dns_qpcell_t cell) { return QP_CHUNK_SIZE * chunk + cell; } static inline dns_qpchunk_t ref_chunk(dns_qpref_t ref) { return ref / QP_CHUNK_SIZE; } static inline dns_qpcell_t ref_cell(dns_qpref_t ref) { return ref % QP_CHUNK_SIZE; } /* * We should not use the `root_ref` in an empty trie, so we set it * to a value that should trigger an obvious bug. See qp_init() * and get_root() below. */ #define INVALID_REF ((dns_qpref_t)~0UL) /*********************************************************************** * * chunk arrays */ /* * A `dns_qp_t` contains two arrays holding information about each chunk. * * The `base` array holds pointers to the base of each chunk. * The `usage` array hold the allocator's state for each chunk. * * The `base` array is used by the hot qp-trie traversal paths. It can * be shared by multiple versions of a trie, which are tracked with a * refcount. Old versions of the trie can retain old versions of the * `base` array. * * In multithreaded code, the `usage` array is only used when the * `dns_qpmulti_t` mutex is held, and there is only one version of * it in active use (maybe with a snapshot for rollback support). * * The two arrays are separate because they have rather different * access patterns, different lifetimes, and different element sizes. */ /* * For most purposes we don't need to know exactly which cells are * in use in a chunk, we only need to know how many of them there are. * * After we have finished allocating from a chunk, the `used` counter * is the size we need to know for shrinking the chunk and for * scanning it to detach leaf values before the chunk is free()d. The * `free` counter tells us when the chunk needs compacting and when it * has become empty. * * The `exists` flag allows the chunk scanning loops to look at the * usage array only. * * In multithreaded code, we mark chunks as `immutable` when a modify * transaction is opened. (We don't mark them immutable on commit, * because the old bump chunk must remain mutable between write * transactions, but it must become immutable when an update * transaction is opened.) * * There are a few flags used to mark which chunks are still needed by * snapshots after the chunks have passed their normal reclamation * phase. */ typedef struct qp_usage { /*% the allocation point, increases monotonically */ dns_qpcell_t used : QP_USAGE_BITS; /*% count of nodes no longer needed, also monotonic */ dns_qpcell_t free : QP_USAGE_BITS; /*% qp->base->ptr[chunk] != NULL */ bool exists : 1; /*% is this chunk shared? [MT] */ bool immutable : 1; /*% already subtracted from multi->*_count [MT] */ bool discounted : 1; /*% is a snapshot using this chunk? [MT] */ bool snapshot : 1; /*% tried to free it but a snapshot needs it [MT] */ bool snapfree : 1; /*% for mark/sweep snapshot flag updates [MT] */ bool snapmark : 1; } qp_usage_t; /* * The chunks are owned by the current version of the `base` array. * When the array is resized, the old version might still be in use by * concurrent readers, in which case it is free()d later when its * refcount drops to zero. * * A `dns_qpbase_t` counts references from `dns_qp_t` objects and * from packed readers, but not from `dns_qpread_t` nor from * `dns_qpsnap_t` objects. Refcount adjustments for `dns_qpread_t` * would wreck multicore scalability; instead we rely on RCU. * * The `usage` array determines when a chunk is no longer needed: old * chunk pointers in old `base` arrays are ignored. (They can become * dangling pointers to free memory, but they will never be * dereferenced.) * * We ensure that individual chunk base pointers remain immutable * after assignment, and they are not cleared until the chunk is * free()d, after all readers have departed. Slots can be reused, and * we allow transactions to fill or re-fill empty slots adjacent to * busy slots that are in use by readers. */ struct dns_qpbase { unsigned int magic; isc_refcount_t refcount; dns_qpnode_t *ptr[]; }; /* * Chunks that may be in use by readers are reclaimed asynchronously. * When a transaction commits, immutable chunks that are now empty are * listed in a `qp_rcuctx_t` structure and passed to `call_rcu()`. */ typedef struct qp_rcuctx { unsigned int magic; struct rcu_head rcu_head; isc_mem_t *mctx; dns_qpmulti_t *multi; dns_qpchunk_t count; dns_qpchunk_t chunk[]; } qp_rcuctx_t; /* * Returns true when the base array can be free()d. */ static inline bool qpbase_unref(dns_qpreadable_t qpr) { dns_qpreader_t *qp = dns_qpreader(qpr); return qp->base != NULL && isc_refcount_decrement(&qp->base->refcount) == 1; } /* * Now we know about `dns_qpreader_t` and `dns_qpbase_t`, * here's how we convert a twig reference into a pointer. */ static inline dns_qpnode_t * ref_ptr(dns_qpreadable_t qpr, dns_qpref_t ref) { dns_qpreader_t *qp = dns_qpreader(qpr); return qp->base->ptr[ref_chunk(ref)] + ref_cell(ref); } /*********************************************************************** * * main qp-trie structures */ #define QP_MAGIC ISC_MAGIC('t', 'r', 'i', 'e') #define QPITER_MAGIC ISC_MAGIC('q', 'p', 'i', 't') #define QPCHAIN_MAGIC ISC_MAGIC('q', 'p', 'c', 'h') #define QPMULTI_MAGIC ISC_MAGIC('q', 'p', 'm', 'v') #define QPREADER_MAGIC ISC_MAGIC('q', 'p', 'r', 'x') #define QPBASE_MAGIC ISC_MAGIC('q', 'p', 'b', 'p') #define QPRCU_MAGIC ISC_MAGIC('q', 'p', 'c', 'b') #define QP_VALID(qp) ISC_MAGIC_VALID(qp, QP_MAGIC) #define QPITER_VALID(qp) ISC_MAGIC_VALID(qp, QPITER_MAGIC) #define QPCHAIN_VALID(qp) ISC_MAGIC_VALID(qp, QPCHAIN_MAGIC) #define QPMULTI_VALID(qp) ISC_MAGIC_VALID(qp, QPMULTI_MAGIC) #define QPBASE_VALID(qp) ISC_MAGIC_VALID(qp, QPBASE_MAGIC) #define QPRCU_VALID(qp) ISC_MAGIC_VALID(qp, QPRCU_MAGIC) /* * Polymorphic initialization of the `dns_qpreader_t` prefix. * * The location of the root node is actually a dns_qpref_t, but is * declared in DNS_QPREADER_FIELDS as uint32_t to avoid leaking too * many internal details into the public API. * * The `uctx` and `methods` support callbacks into the user's code. * They are constant after initialization. */ #define QP_INIT(qp, m, x) \ (*(qp) = (typeof(*(qp))){ \ .magic = QP_MAGIC, \ .root_ref = INVALID_REF, \ .uctx = x, \ .methods = m, \ }) /* * Snapshots have some extra cleanup machinery. * * Originally, a snapshot was basically just a `dns_qpread_t` * allocated on the heap, with the extra behaviour that memory * reclamation is suppressed for a particular trie while it has any * snapshots. However that design gets into trouble for a zone with * frequent updates and many zone transfers. * * Instead, each snapshot records which chunks it needs. When a * snapshot is created, it makes a copy of the `base` array, except * for chunks that are empty and waiting to be reclaimed. When a * snapshot is destroyed, we can traverse the list of snapshots to * accurately mark which chunks are still needed. * * A snapshot's `whence` pointer helps ensure that a `dns_qpsnap_t`is * not muddled up with the wrong `dns_qpmulti_t`. * * A trie's `base` array might have grown after the snapshot was * created, so it records its own `chunk_max`. */ struct dns_qpsnap { DNS_QPREADER_FIELDS; dns_qpmulti_t *whence; uint32_t chunk_max; ISC_LINK(struct dns_qpsnap) link; }; /* * Read-write access to a qp-trie requires extra fields to support the * allocator and garbage collector. * * Bare instances of a `struct dns_qp` are used for stand-alone * single-threaded tries. For multithreaded access, a `dns_qpmulti_t` * wraps a `dns_qp_t` with a mutex and other fields that are only needed * at the start or end of a transaction. * * Allocations are made sequentially in the `bump` chunk. A sequence * of lightweight write transactions can use the same `bump` chunk, so * its prefix before `fender` is immutable, and the rest is mutable. * * To decide when to compact and reclaim space, QP_MAX_GARBAGE() examines * the values of `used_count`, `free_count`, and `hold_count`. The * `hold_count` tracks nodes that need to be retained while readers are * using them; they are free but cannot be reclaimed until the transaction * has committed, so the `hold_count` is discounted from QP_MAX_GARBAGE() * during a transaction. * * There are some flags that alter the behaviour of write transactions. * * - The `transaction_mode` indicates whether the current transaction is a * light write or a heavy update, or (between transactions) the previous * transaction's mode, because the setup for the next transaction * depends on how the previous one committed. The mode is set at the * start of each transaction. It is QP_NONE in a single-threaded qp-trie * to detect if part of a `dns_qpmulti_t` is passed to dns_qp_destroy(). * * - The `compact_all` flag is used when every node in the trie should be * copied. (Usually compation aims to avoid moving nodes out of * unfragmented chunks.) It is used when compaction is explicitly * requested via `dns_qp_compact()`, and as an emergency mechanism if * normal compaction failed to clear the QP_MAX_GARBAGE() condition. * (This emergency is a bug even tho we have a rescue mechanism.) * * - When a qp-trie is destroyed while it has pending cleanup work, its * `destroy` flag is set so that it is destroyed by the reclaim worker. * (Because items cannot be removed from the middle of the cleanup list.) * * - When built with fuzzing support, we can use mprotect() and munmap() * to ensure that incorrect memory accesses cause fatal errors. The * `write_protect` flag must be set straight after the `dns_qpmulti_t` * is created, then left unchanged. * * Some of the dns_qp_t fields are only needed for multithreaded transactions * (marked [MT] below) but the same code paths are also used for single- * threaded writes. */ struct dns_qp { DNS_QPREADER_FIELDS; /*% memory context (const) */ isc_mem_t *mctx; /*% array of per-chunk allocation counters */ qp_usage_t *usage; /*% number of slots in `chunk` and `usage` arrays */ dns_qpchunk_t chunk_max; /*% which chunk is used for allocations */ dns_qpchunk_t bump; /*% nodes in the `bump` chunk below `fender` are read only [MT] */ dns_qpcell_t fender; /*% number of leaf nodes */ dns_qpcell_t leaf_count; /*% total of all usage[] counters */ dns_qpcell_t used_count, free_count; /*% free cells that cannot be recovered right now */ dns_qpcell_t hold_count; /*% what kind of transaction was most recently started [MT] */ enum { QP_NONE, QP_WRITE, QP_UPDATE } transaction_mode : 2; /*% compact the entire trie [MT] */ bool compact_all : 1; /*% optionally when compiled with fuzzing support [MT] */ bool write_protect : 1; }; /* * Concurrent access to a qp-trie. * * The `reader` pointer provides wait-free access to the current version * of the trie. See the "packed reader nodes" section below for a * description of what it points to. * * The main object under the protection of the mutex is the `writer` * containing all the allocator state. There can be a backup copy when * we want to be able to rollback an update transaction. * * There is a `reader_ref` which corresponds to the `reader` pointer * (`ref_ptr(multi->reader_ref) == multi->reader`). The `reader_ref` is * necessary when freeing the space used by the reader, because there * isn't a good way to recover a dns_qpref_t from a dns_qpnode_t pointer. * * There is a per-trie list of snapshots that is used for reclaiming * memory when a snapshot is destroyed. * * Finally, we maintain a global list of `dns_qpmulti_t` objects that * need asynchronous safe memory recovery. */ struct dns_qpmulti { uint32_t magic; /*% RCU-protected pointer to current packed reader */ dns_qpnode_t *reader; /*% the mutex protects the rest of this structure */ isc_mutex_t mutex; /*% ref_ptr(writer, reader_ref) == reader */ dns_qpref_t reader_ref; /*% the main working structure */ dns_qp_t writer; /*% saved allocator state to support rollback */ dns_qp_t *rollback; /*% all snapshots of this trie */ ISC_LIST(dns_qpsnap_t) snapshots; }; /*********************************************************************** * * interior node constructors and accessors */ /* * See the comments under "interior node basics" above, which explain * the layout of nodes as implemented by the following functions. * * These functions are (mostly) constructors and getters. Imagine how * much less code there would be if C had sum types with control over * the layout... */ /* * Get the 64-bit word of a node. */ static inline uint64_t node64(dns_qpnode_t *n) { uint64_t lo = n->biglo; uint64_t hi = n->bighi; return lo | (hi << 32); } /* * Get the 32-bit word of a node. */ static inline uint32_t node32(dns_qpnode_t *n) { return n->small; } /* * Create a node from its parts */ static inline dns_qpnode_t make_node(uint64_t big, uint32_t small) { return (dns_qpnode_t){ .biglo = (uint32_t)(big), .bighi = (uint32_t)(big >> 32), .small = small, }; } /* * Extract a pointer from a node's 64 bit word. The double cast is to avoid * a warning about mismatched pointer/integer sizes on 32 bit systems. */ static inline void * node_pointer(dns_qpnode_t *n) { return (void *)(uintptr_t)(node64(n) & ~TAG_MASK); } /* * Examine a node's tag bits */ static inline uint32_t node_tag(dns_qpnode_t *n) { return n->biglo & TAG_MASK; } /* * simplified for the hot path */ static inline bool is_branch(dns_qpnode_t *n) { return n->biglo & BRANCH_TAG; } /* leaf nodes *********************************************************/ /* * Get a leaf's pointer value. */ static inline void * leaf_pval(dns_qpnode_t *n) { return node_pointer(n); } /* * Get a leaf's integer value */ static inline uint32_t leaf_ival(dns_qpnode_t *n) { return node32(n); } /* * Create a leaf node from its parts */ static inline dns_qpnode_t make_leaf(const void *pval, uint32_t ival) { dns_qpnode_t leaf = make_node((uintptr_t)pval, ival); REQUIRE(node_tag(&leaf) == LEAF_TAG); return leaf; } /* branch nodes *******************************************************/ /* * The following function names use plural `twigs` when they work on a * branch's twigs vector as a whole, and singular `twig` when they work on * a particular twig. */ /* * Get a branch node's index word */ static inline uint64_t branch_index(dns_qpnode_t *n) { return node64(n); } /* * Get a reference to a branch node's child twigs. */ static inline dns_qpref_t branch_twigs_ref(dns_qpnode_t *n) { return node32(n); } /* * Bit positions in the bitmap come directly from the key. DNS names are * converted to keys using the tables declared at the end of this file. */ static inline dns_qpshift_t qpkey_bit(const dns_qpkey_t key, size_t len, size_t offset) { if (offset < len) { return key[offset]; } else { return SHIFT_NOBYTE; } } /* * Extract a branch node's offset field, used to index the key. */ static inline size_t branch_key_offset(dns_qpnode_t *n) { return (size_t)(branch_index(n) >> SHIFT_OFFSET); } /* * Which bit identifies the twig of this node for this key? */ static inline dns_qpshift_t branch_keybit(dns_qpnode_t *n, const dns_qpkey_t key, size_t len) { return qpkey_bit(key, len, branch_key_offset(n)); } /* * Get a pointer to a the first twig of a branch (this also functions * as a pointer to the entire twig vector). */ static inline dns_qpnode_t * branch_twigs(dns_qpreadable_t qpr, dns_qpnode_t *n) { return ref_ptr(qpr, branch_twigs_ref(n)); } /* * Warm up the cache while calculating which twig we want. */ static inline void prefetch_twigs(dns_qpreadable_t qpr, dns_qpnode_t *n) { __builtin_prefetch(ref_ptr(qpr, branch_twigs_ref(n))); } /* root node **********************************************************/ /* * Get a pointer to the root node, checking if the trie is empty. */ static inline dns_qpnode_t * get_root(dns_qpreadable_t qpr) { dns_qpreader_t *qp = dns_qpreader(qpr); if (qp->root_ref == INVALID_REF) { return NULL; } else { return ref_ptr(qp, qp->root_ref); } } /* * When we need to move the root node, we avoid repeating allocation * logistics by making a temporary fake branch node that has * `branch_twigs_size() == 1 && branch_twigs_ref() == root_ref` * just enough to treat the root node as a vector of one twig. */ #define MOVABLE_ROOT(qp) \ (&(dns_qpnode_t){ \ .biglo = BRANCH_TAG | (1 << SHIFT_NOBYTE), \ .small = qp->root_ref, \ }) /*********************************************************************** * * bitmap popcount shenanigans */ /* * How many twigs appear in the vector before the one corresponding to the * given bit? Calculated using popcount of part of the branch's bitmap. * * To calculate a mask that covers the lesser bits in the bitmap, * we subtract 1 to set all lesser bits, and subtract the tag mask * because the type tag is not part of the bitmap. */ static inline dns_qpweight_t branch_count_bitmap_before(dns_qpnode_t *n, dns_qpshift_t bit) { uint64_t mask = (1ULL << bit) - 1 - TAG_MASK; uint64_t bitmap = branch_index(n) & mask; return (dns_qpweight_t)__builtin_popcountll(bitmap); } /* * How many twigs does this branch have? * * The offset is directly after the bitmap so the offset's lesser bits * covers the whole bitmap, and the bitmap's weight is the number of twigs. */ static inline dns_qpweight_t branch_twigs_size(dns_qpnode_t *n) { return branch_count_bitmap_before(n, SHIFT_OFFSET); } /* * Position of a twig within the packed sparse vector. */ static inline dns_qpweight_t branch_twig_pos(dns_qpnode_t *n, dns_qpshift_t bit) { return branch_count_bitmap_before(n, bit); } /* * Get a pointer to the twig for a given bit number. */ static inline dns_qpnode_t * branch_twig_ptr(dns_qpreadable_t qpr, dns_qpnode_t *n, dns_qpshift_t bit) { return ref_ptr(qpr, branch_twigs_ref(n) + branch_twig_pos(n, bit)); } /* * Is the twig identified by this bit present? */ static inline bool branch_has_twig(dns_qpnode_t *n, dns_qpshift_t bit) { return branch_index(n) & (1ULL << bit); } /* twig logistics *****************************************************/ static inline void move_twigs(dns_qpnode_t *to, dns_qpnode_t *from, dns_qpweight_t size) { memmove(to, from, size * sizeof(dns_qpnode_t)); } static inline void zero_twigs(dns_qpnode_t *twigs, dns_qpweight_t size) { memset(twigs, 0, size * sizeof(dns_qpnode_t)); } /*********************************************************************** * * packed reader nodes */ /* * The purpose of these packed reader nodes is to simplify safe memory * reclamation for a multithreaded qp-trie. * * After the `reader` pointer in a qpmulti is replaced, we need to wait * for a grace period before we can reclaim the memory that is no longer * needed by the trie. So we need some kind of structure to hold * pointers to the (logically) detached memory until it is safe to free. * This memory includes the chunks and the `base` arrays. * * Packed reader nodes save us from having to track `dns_qpread_t` * objects as distinct allocations: the packed reader nodes get * reclaimed when the the chunk containing their cells is reclaimed. * When a real `dns_qpread_t` object is needed, it is allocated on the * stack (it must not live longer than a isc_loop callback) and the * packed reader is unpacked into it. * * Chunks are owned by the current `base` array, so unused chunks are * held there until they are free()d. Old `base` arrays are attached * to packed reader nodes with a refcount. When a chunk is reclaimed, * it is scanned so that `chunk_free()` can call `detach_leaf()` on * any remaining references to leaf objects. Similarly, it calls * `qpbase_unref()` to reclaim old `base` arrays. */ /* * Two nodes is just enough space for the information needed by * readers and for deferred memory reclamation. */ #define READER_SIZE 2 /* * Create a packed reader; space for the reader should have been * allocated using `alloc_twigs(&multi->writer, READER_SIZE)`. */ static inline void make_reader(dns_qpnode_t *reader, dns_qpmulti_t *multi) { dns_qp_t *qp = &multi->writer; reader[0] = make_node(READER_TAG | (uintptr_t)multi, QPREADER_MAGIC); reader[1] = make_node(READER_TAG | (uintptr_t)qp->base, qp->root_ref); } static inline bool reader_valid(dns_qpnode_t *reader) { return reader != NULL && // node_tag(&reader[0]) == READER_TAG && node_tag(&reader[1]) == READER_TAG && node32(&reader[0]) == QPREADER_MAGIC; } /* * Verify and unpack a reader. We return the `multi` pointer to use in * consistency checks. */ static inline dns_qpmulti_t * unpack_reader(dns_qpreader_t *qp, dns_qpnode_t *reader) { INSIST(reader_valid(reader)); dns_qpmulti_t *multi = node_pointer(&reader[0]); dns_qpbase_t *base = node_pointer(&reader[1]); INSIST(QPMULTI_VALID(multi)); INSIST(QPBASE_VALID(base)); *qp = (dns_qpreader_t){ .magic = QP_MAGIC, .uctx = multi->writer.uctx, .methods = multi->writer.methods, .root_ref = node32(&reader[1]), .base = base, }; return multi; } /*********************************************************************** * * method invocation helpers */ static inline void attach_leaf(dns_qpreadable_t qpr, dns_qpnode_t *n) { dns_qpreader_t *qp = dns_qpreader(qpr); qp->methods->attach(qp->uctx, leaf_pval(n), leaf_ival(n)); } static inline void detach_leaf(dns_qpreadable_t qpr, dns_qpnode_t *n) { dns_qpreader_t *qp = dns_qpreader(qpr); qp->methods->detach(qp->uctx, leaf_pval(n), leaf_ival(n)); } static inline size_t leaf_qpkey(dns_qpreadable_t qpr, dns_qpnode_t *n, dns_qpkey_t key) { dns_qpreader_t *qp = dns_qpreader(qpr); size_t len = qp->methods->makekey(key, qp->uctx, leaf_pval(n), leaf_ival(n)); INSIST(len < sizeof(dns_qpkey_t)); return len; } static inline char * triename(dns_qpreadable_t qpr, char *buf, size_t size) { dns_qpreader_t *qp = dns_qpreader(qpr); qp->methods->triename(qp->uctx, buf, size); return buf; } #define TRIENAME(qp) \ triename(qp, (char[DNS_QP_TRIENAME_MAX]){}, DNS_QP_TRIENAME_MAX) /*********************************************************************** * * converting DNS names to trie keys */ /* * This is a deliberate simplification of the hostname characters, * because it doesn't matter much if we treat a few extra characters * favourably: there is plenty of space in the index word for a * slightly larger bitmap. */ static inline bool qp_common_character(uint8_t byte) { return ('-' <= byte && byte <= '9') || ('_' <= byte && byte <= 'z'); } /* * Lookup table mapping bytes in DNS names to bit positions, used * by dns_qpkey_fromname() to convert DNS names to qp-trie keys. */ extern uint16_t dns_qp_bits_for_byte[]; /* * And the reverse, mapping bit positions to characters, so the tests * can print diagnostics involving qp-trie keys. */ extern uint8_t dns_qp_byte_for_bit[]; /**********************************************************************/