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NAME

       erts_alloc - An Erlang runtime system internal memory allocator library.

DESCRIPTION

       erts_alloc  is  an  Erlang  runtime  system  internal memory allocator library. erts_alloc
       provides the Erlang runtime system with a number of memory allocators.

ALLOCATORS

       The following allocators are present:

         temp_alloc:
           Allocator used for temporary allocations.

         eheap_alloc:
           Allocator used for Erlang heap data, such as Erlang process heaps.

         binary_alloc:
           Allocator used for Erlang binary data.

         ets_alloc:
           Allocator used for ets data.

         driver_alloc:
           Allocator used for driver data.

         literal_alloc:
           Allocator used for constant terms in Erlang code.

         sl_alloc:
           Allocator used for memory blocks that are expected to be short-lived.

         ll_alloc:
           Allocator used for memory blocks that are expected  to  be  long-lived,  for  example,
           Erlang code.

         fix_alloc:
           A fast allocator used for some frequently used fixed size data types.

         exec_alloc:
           Allocator used by the HiPE application for native executable code.

         std_alloc:
           Allocator  used  for  most  memory  blocks  not  allocated  through  any  of the other
           allocators described above.

         sys_alloc:
           This is normally the default malloc implementation used on the specific OS.

         mseg_alloc:
           A memory segment allocator. It is used  by  other  allocators  for  allocating  memory
           segments  and  is  only  available  on  systems that have the mmap system call. Memory
           segments that are deallocated are kept for a while in a segment cache before they  are
           destroyed.  When  segments are allocated, cached segments are used if possible instead
           of creating new segments. This to reduce the number of system calls made.

       sys_alloc, literal_alloc and  temp_alloc  are  always  enabled  and  cannot  be  disabled.
       exec_alloc  is only available if it is needed and cannot be disabled. mseg_alloc is always
       enabled if it is available and an allocator that uses it is enabled. All other  allocators
       can  be  enabled  or disabled. By default all allocators are enabled. When an allocator is
       disabled, sys_alloc is used instead of the disabled allocator.

       The main idea with the erts_alloc library is to  separate  memory  blocks  that  are  used
       differently  into different memory areas, to achieve less memory fragmentation. By putting
       less effort in finding a good fit for memory blocks that are frequently allocated than for
       those less frequently allocated, a performance gain can be achieved.

THE ALLOC_UTIL FRAMEWORK

       Internally  a  framework  called alloc_util is used for implementing allocators. sys_alloc
       and mseg_alloc do not use this framework, so the following does not apply to them.

       An allocator manages multiple areas, called carriers, in which memory blocks are placed. A
       carrier  is  either placed in a separate memory segment (allocated through mseg_alloc), or
       in the heap segment (allocated through sys_alloc).

         * Multiblock carriers are used for storage of several blocks.

         * Singleblock carriers are used for storage of one block.

         * Blocks that are larger than the value of  the  singleblock  carrier  threshold  (sbct)
           parameter are placed in singleblock carriers.

         * Blocks  that  are  smaller  than  the value of parameter sbct are placed in multiblock
           carriers.

       Normally an allocator creates a "main multiblock carrier". Main  multiblock  carriers  are
       never  deallocated.  The size of the main multiblock carrier is determined by the value of
       parameter mmbcs.

       Sizes of multiblock carriers  allocated  through  mseg_alloc  are  decided  based  on  the
       following parameters:

         * The values of the largest multiblock carrier size (lmbcs)

         * The smallest multiblock carrier size (smbcs)

         * The multiblock carrier growth stages (mbcgs)

       If  nc is the current number of multiblock carriers (the main multiblock carrier excluded)
       managed by an allocator, the size of the next mseg_alloc multiblock carrier  allocated  by
       this allocator is roughly smbcs+nc*(lmbcs-smbcs)/mbcgs when nc <= mbcgs, and lmbcs when nc
       > mbcgs. If the value of parameter sbct is larger than the value of parameter  lmbcs,  the
       allocator  may  have  to  create  multiblock  carriers  that  are larger than the value of
       parameter lmbcs, though. Singleblock carriers allocated through mseg_alloc  are  sized  to
       whole pages.

       Sizes  of  carriers  allocated  through  sys_alloc  are  decided based on the value of the
       sys_alloc carrier size (ycs) parameter. The size of a  carrier  is  the  least  number  of
       multiples of the value of parameter ycs satisfying the request.

       Coalescing  of  free  blocks  are always performed immediately. Boundary tags (headers and
       footers) in free blocks are used, which makes the time complexity for coalescing constant.

       The memory allocation strategy used  for  multiblock  carriers  by  an  allocator  can  be
       configured using parameter as. The following strategies are available:

         Best fit:
           Strategy: Find the smallest block satisfying the requested block size.

           Implementation:  A  balanced  binary  search  tree  is  used.  The  time complexity is
           proportional to log N, where N is the number of sizes of free blocks.

         Address order best fit:
           Strategy: Find the smallest block satisfying the requested  block  size.  If  multiple
           blocks are found, choose the one with the lowest address.

           Implementation:  A  balanced  binary  search  tree  is  used.  The  time complexity is
           proportional to log N, where N is the number of free blocks.

         Address order first fit:
           Strategy: Find the block with the lowest address satisfying the requested block size.

           Implementation: A balanced  binary  search  tree  is  used.  The  time  complexity  is
           proportional to log N, where N is the number of free blocks.

         Address order first fit carrier best fit:
           Strategy:  Find  the  carrier  with  the lowest address that can satisfy the requested
           block size, then find a block within that carrier using the "best fit" strategy.

           Implementation: Balanced  binary  search  trees  are  used.  The  time  complexity  is
           proportional to log N, where N is the number of free blocks.

         Address order first fit carrier address order best fit:
           Strategy:  Find  the  carrier  with  the lowest address that can satisfy the requested
           block size, then find a block within that carrier using the "address order  best  fit"
           strategy.

           Implementation:  Balanced  binary  search  trees  are  used.  The  time  complexity is
           proportional to log N, where N is the number of free blocks.

         Age order first fit carrier address order first fit:
           Strategy: Find the oldest carrier that can satisfy the requested block size, then find
           a block within that carrier using the "address order first fit" strategy.

           Implementation:  A  balanced  binary  search  tree  is  used.  The  time complexity is
           proportional to log N, where N is the number of free blocks.

         Age order first fit carrier best fit:
           Strategy: Find the oldest carrier that can satisfy the requested block size, then find
           a block within that carrier using the "best fit" strategy.

           Implementation:  Balanced  binary  search  trees  are  used.  The  time  complexity is
           proportional to log N, where N is the number of free blocks.

         Age order first fit carrier address order best fit:
           Strategy: Find the oldest carrier that can satisfy the requested block size, then find
           a block within that carrier using the "address order best fit" strategy.

           Implementation:  Balanced  binary  search  trees  are  used.  The  time  complexity is
           proportional to log N, where N is the number of free blocks.

         Good fit:
           Strategy: Try to find the best fit, but settle for the best fit found during a limited
           search.

           Implementation:  The  implementation  uses  segregated free lists with a maximum block
           search depth (in each list) to find a good fit fast. When  the  maximum  block  search
           depth  is  small  (by  default  3),  this implementation has a time complexity that is
           constant. The maximum block search depth can be configured using parameter mbsd.

         A fit:
           Strategy: Do not search for a fit, inspect only one free block to see if it  satisfies
           the request. This strategy is only intended to be used for temporary allocations.

           Implementation:  Inspect  the first block in a free-list. If it satisfies the request,
           it is used, otherwise a  new  carrier  is  created.  The  implementation  has  a  time
           complexity that is constant.

           As  from ERTS 5.6.1 the emulator refuses to use this strategy on other allocators than
           temp_alloc. This because it only causes problems for other allocators.

       Apart from the ordinary allocators described above, some pre-allocators are used for  some
       specific  data  types.  These  pre-allocators  pre-allocate  a  fixed amount of memory for
       certain data types when the runtime system starts. As  long  as  pre-allocated  memory  is
       available,  it  is used. When no pre-allocated memory is available, memory is allocated in
       ordinary allocators. These pre-allocators are typically  much  faster  than  the  ordinary
       allocators, but can only satisfy a limited number of requests.

SYSTEM FLAGS EFFECTING ERTS_ALLOC

   Warning:
       Only  use  these  flags  if you are sure what you are doing. Unsuitable settings can cause
       serious performance degradation and even a system crash at any time during operation.

       Memory allocator system flags have the following syntax: +M<S><P>  <V>,  where  <S>  is  a
       letter identifying a subsystem, <P> is a parameter, and <V> is the value to use. The flags
       can be passed to the Erlang emulator (erl(1)) as command-line arguments.

       System flags effecting specific allocators have an uppercase letter as <S>. The  following
       letters are used for the allocators:

         * B: binary_alloc

         * D: std_alloc

         * E: ets_alloc

         * F: fix_alloc

         * H: eheap_alloc

         * I: literal_alloc

         * L: ll_alloc

         * M: mseg_alloc

         * R: driver_alloc

         * S: sl_alloc

         * T: temp_alloc

         * X: exec_alloc

         * Y: sys_alloc

   Flags for Configuration of mseg_alloc
         +MMamcbf <size>:
           Absolute  maximum  cache bad fit (in kilobytes). A segment in the memory segment cache
           is not reused if its size exceeds the requested size with more than the value of  this
           parameter. Defaults to 4096.

         +MMrmcbf <ratio>:
           Relative  maximum cache bad fit (in percent). A segment in the memory segment cache is
           not reused if its size exceeds the requested size  with  more  than  relative  maximum
           cache bad fit percent of the requested size. Defaults to 20.

         +MMsco true|false:
           Sets  super carrier only flag. Defaults to true. When a super carrier is used and this
           flag is true, mseg_alloc only creates carriers in the super carrier. Notice  that  the
           alloc_util  framework can create sys_alloc carriers, so if you want all carriers to be
           created in the super carrier, you therefore want to disable use of sys_alloc  carriers
           by  also  passing  +Musac  false.  When  the flag is false, mseg_alloc tries to create
           carriers outside of the super carrier when the super carrier is full.

     Note:
         Setting this flag to false is not supported on all systems. The flag is then ignored.

         +MMscrfsd <amount>:
           Sets super  carrier  reserved  free  segment  descriptors.  Defaults  to  65536.  This
           parameter determines the amount of memory to reserve for free segment descriptors used
           by the super carrier. If the system runs out  of  reserved  memory  for  free  segment
           descriptors, other memory is used. This can however cause fragmentation issues, so you
           want to ensure that this never happens. The maximum amount of free segment descriptors
           used  can  be  retrieved  from  the  erts_mmap  tuple  part of the result from calling
           erlang:system_info({allocator, mseg_alloc}).

         +MMscrpm true|false:
           Sets super carrier reserve physical memory flag. Defaults to true. When this  flag  is
           true,  physical  memory  is  reserved  for  the whole super carrier at once when it is
           created. The reservation is after that left unchanged. When this flag is set to false,
           only virtual address space is reserved for the super carrier upon creation. The system
           attempts to reserve physical memory upon carrier creations in the super  carrier,  and
           attempt to unreserve physical memory upon carrier destructions in the super carrier.

     Note:
         What  reservation  of physical memory means, highly depends on the operating system, and
         how it is configured.  For  example,  different  memory  overcommit  settings  on  Linux
         drastically change the behavior.

         Setting  this  flag  to false is possibly not supported on all systems. The flag is then
         ignored.

         +MMscs <size in MB>:
           Sets super carrier size (in MB). Defaults to 0, that  is,  the  super  carrier  is  by
           default  disabled. The super carrier is a large continuous area in the virtual address
           space. mseg_alloc always tries to create new carriers  in  the  super  carrier  if  it
           exists.  Notice  that the alloc_util framework can create sys_alloc carriers. For more
           information, see +MMsco.

         +MMmcs <amount>:
           Maximum cached segments. The maximum number of memory segments stored  in  the  memory
           segment cache. Valid range is [0, 30]. Defaults to 10.

   Flags for Configuration of sys_alloc
         +MYe true:
           Enables sys_alloc.

     Note:
         sys_alloc cannot be disabled.

         +MYm libc:
           malloc  library  to use. Only libc is available. libc enables the standard libc malloc
           implementation. By default libc is used.

         +MYtt <size>:
           Trim threshold size (in kilobytes). This is the maximum amount of free memory  at  the
           top  of  the  heap  (allocated  by  sbrk)  that is kept by malloc (not released to the
           operating system). When the amount of free memory at the top of the heap  exceeds  the
           trim  threshold,  malloc releases it (by calling sbrk). Trim threshold is specified in
           kilobytes. Defaults to 128.

     Note:
         This flag has effect only when the emulator is linked with the GNU C library,  and  uses
         its malloc implementation.

         +MYtp <size>:
           Top  pad  size (in kilobytes). This is the amount of extra memory that is allocated by
           malloc when sbrk is called to get more memory from the operating system.  Defaults  to
           0.

     Note:
         This  flag  has effect only when the emulator is linked with the GNU C library, and uses
         its malloc implementation.

   Flags for Configuration of Allocators Based on alloc_util
       If u is used as subsystem  identifier  (that  is,  <S>  =  u),  all  allocators  based  on
       alloc_util  are effected. If B, D, E, F, H, L, R, S, or T is used as subsystem identifier,
       only the specific allocator identifier is effected.

         +M<S>acul <utilization>|de:
           Abandon carrier utilization limit. A valid <utilization> is an integer  in  the  range
           [0,  100]  representing  utilization in percent. When a utilization value > 0 is used,
           allocator instances are  allowed  to  abandon  multiblock  carriers.  If  de  (default
           enabled)  is  passed  instead  of  a <utilization>, a recommended non-zero utilization
           value is used. The value chosen depends on the  allocator  type  and  can  be  changed
           between ERTS versions. Defaults to de, but this can be changed in the future.

           Carriers  are  abandoned when memory utilization in the allocator instance falls below
           the utilization value used. Once a carrier is abandoned, no new allocations  are  made
           in  it. When an allocator instance gets an increased multiblock carrier need, it first
           tries to fetch an abandoned carrier from another allocator instance. If  no  abandoned
           carrier  can be fetched, it creates a new empty carrier. When an abandoned carrier has
           been fetched, it will function as  an  ordinary  carrier.  This  feature  has  special
           requirements  on  the  allocation  strategy  used.  Only the strategies aoff, aoffcbf,
           aoffcaobf, ageffcaoffm, ageffcbf and ageffcaobf support abandoned carriers.

           This feature also requires multiple thread specific  instances  to  be  enabled.  When
           enabling  this  feature, multiple thread-specific instances are enabled if not already
           enabled, and the aoffcbf strategy is enabled if the current strategy does not  support
           abandoned  carriers.  This  feature  can  be  enabled  on  all allocators based on the
           alloc_util framework, except temp_alloc (which would be pointless).

         +M<S>acfml <bytes>:
           Abandon carrier  free  block  min  limit.  A  valid  <bytes>  is  a  positive  integer
           representing  a block size limit. The largest free block in a carrier must be at least
           bytes large, for the carrier to be abandoned. The default is zero but can  be  changed
           in the future.

           See also acul.

         +M<S>acnl <amount>:
           Abandon  carrier number limit. A valid <amount> is a positive integer representing max
           number of abandoned carriers per allocator  instance.  Defaults  to  1000  which  will
           practically disable the limit, but this can be changed in the future.

           See also acul.

         +M<S>as bf|aobf|aoff|aoffcbf|aoffcaobf|ageffcaoff|ageffcbf|ageffcaobf|gf|af:
           Allocation strategy. The following strategies are valid:

           * bf (best fit)

           * aobf (address order best fit)

           * aoff (address order first fit)

           * aoffcbf (address order first fit carrier best fit)

           * aoffcaobf (address order first fit carrier address order best fit)

           * ageffcaoff (age order first fit carrier address order first fit)

           * ageffcbf (age order first fit carrier best fit)

           * ageffcaobf (age order first fit carrier address order best fit)

           * gf (good fit)

           * af (a fit)

           See the description of allocation strategies in section The alloc_util Framework.

         +M<S>asbcst <size>:
           Absolute  singleblock carrier shrink threshold (in kilobytes). When a block located in
           an mseg_alloc singleblock carrier is shrunk, the carrier  is  left  unchanged  if  the
           amount  of unused memory is less than this threshold, otherwise the carrier is shrunk.
           See also rsbcst.

         +M<S>atags true|false:
           Adds a small tag to each allocated block that contains basic information about what it
           is and who allocated it. Use the instrument module to inspect this information.

           The  runtime  overhead is one word per allocation when enabled. This may change at any
           time in the future.

           The default is true for  binary_alloc  and  driver_alloc,  and  false  for  the  other
           allocator types.

         +M<S>e true|false:
           Enables allocator <S>.

         +M<S>lmbcs <size>:
           Largest  (mseg_alloc)  multiblock  carrier size (in kilobytes). See the description on
           how sizes for mseg_alloc multiblock carriers are decided in  section   The  alloc_util
           Framework. On 32-bit Unix style OS this limit cannot be set > 64 MB.

         +M<S>mbcgs <ratio>:
           (mseg_alloc)  multiblock  carrier  growth stages. See the description on how sizes for
           mseg_alloc multiblock carriers are decided in section  The alloc_util Framework.

         +M<S>mbsd <depth>:
           Maximum block search depth. This flag has effect only if  the  good  fit  strategy  is
           selected for allocator <S>. When the good fit strategy is used, free blocks are placed
           in segregated free-lists. Each free-list contains blocks of sizes in a specific range.
           The  maxiumum  block  search  depth  sets  a  limit on the maximum number of blocks to
           inspect in a free-list during a search for suitable block satisfying the request.

         +M<S>mmbcs <size>:
           Main multiblock carrier size. Sets  the  size  of  the  main  multiblock  carrier  for
           allocator <S>. The main multiblock carrier is allocated through sys_alloc and is never
           deallocated.

         +M<S>mmmbc <amount>:
           Maximum  mseg_alloc  multiblock  carriers.  Maximum  number  of  multiblock   carriers
           allocated  through  mseg_alloc  by  allocator  <S>.  When  this  limit is reached, new
           multiblock carriers are allocated through sys_alloc.

         +M<S>mmsbc <amount>:
           Maximum mseg_alloc  singleblock  carriers.  Maximum  number  of  singleblock  carriers
           allocated  through  mseg_alloc  by  allocator  <S>.  When  this  limit is reached, new
           singleblock carriers are allocated through sys_alloc.

         +M<S>ramv <bool>:
           Realloc always moves. When enabled, reallocate operations are more or less  translated
           into  an  allocate,  copy, free sequence. This often reduces memory fragmentation, but
           costs performance.

         +M<S>rmbcmt <ratio>:
           Relative multiblock carrier move threshold (in percent). When a  block  located  in  a
           multiblock  carrier  is  shrunk,  the  block  is moved if the ratio of the size of the
           returned memory compared to the previous size is more than this  threshold,  otherwise
           the block is shrunk at the current location.

         +M<S>rsbcmt <ratio>:
           Relative  singleblock  carrier  move threshold (in percent). When a block located in a
           singleblock carrier is shrunk to a size smaller than the value of parameter sbct,  the
           block  is  left  unchanged in the singleblock carrier if the ratio of unused memory is
           less than this threshold, otherwise it is moved into a multiblock carrier.

         +M<S>rsbcst <ratio>:
           Relative singleblock carrier shrink threshold (in percent). When a block located in an
           mseg_alloc  singleblock  carrier is shrunk, the carrier is left unchanged if the ratio
           of unused memory is less than this threshold, otherwise the  carrier  is  shrunk.  See
           also asbcst.

         +M<S>sbct <size>:
           Singleblock  carrier  threshold  (in kilobytes). Blocks larger than this threshold are
           placed in singleblock carriers. Blocks smaller  than  this  threshold  are  placed  in
           multiblock carriers. On 32-bit Unix style OS this threshold cannot be set > 8 MB.

         +M<S>smbcs <size>:
           Smallest  (mseg_alloc)  multiblock carrier size (in kilobytes). See the description on
           how sizes for mseg_alloc multiblock carriers are decided in  section   The  alloc_util
           Framework.

         +M<S>t true|false:
           Multiple,  thread-specific  instances of the allocator. This option has only effect on
           the runtime system with SMP support. Default behavior on the runtime system  with  SMP
           support  is  NoSchedulers+1 instances. Each scheduler uses a lock-free instance of its
           own and other threads use a common instance.

           Before ERTS 5.9 it was possible to  configure  a  smaller  number  of  thread-specific
           instances than schedulers. This is, however, not possible anymore.

   Flags for Configuration of alloc_util
       All allocators based on alloc_util are effected.

         +Muycs <size>:
           sys_alloc  carrier  size.  Carriers allocated through sys_alloc are allocated in sizes
           that are multiples of the sys_alloc carrier size. This is not true for main multiblock
           carriers and carriers allocated during a memory shortage, though.

         +Mummc <amount>:
           Maximum  mseg_alloc  carriers.  Maximum  number  of carriers placed in separate memory
           segments. When this limit is reached, new carriers are placed in memory retrieved from
           sys_alloc.

         +Musac <bool>:
           Allow  sys_alloc  carriers.  Defaults to true. If set to false, sys_alloc carriers are
           never created by allocators using the alloc_util framework.

   Special Flag for literal_alloc
         +MIscs <size in MB>:
           literal_alloc super carrier size (in MB). The amount of virtual address space reserved
           for literal terms in Erlang code on 64-bit architectures. Defaults to 1024 (that is, 1
           GB), which is usually sufficient. The flag is ignored on 32-bit architectures.

   Instrumentation Flags
         +M<S>atags:
           Adds a small tag to each allocated block that contains basic information about what it
           is and who allocated it. See +M<S>atags for a more complete description.

         +Mit X:
           Reserved for future use. Do not use this flag.

   Note:
       When  instrumentation  of  the emulator is enabled, the emulator uses more memory and runs
       slower.

   Other Flags
         +Mea min|max|r9c|r10b|r11b|config:
           Options:

           min:
             Disables all allocators that can be disabled.

           max:
             Enables all allocators (default).

           r9c|r10b|r11b:
             Configures all allocators as they were configured in respective Erlang/OTP  release.
             These will eventually be removed.

           config:
             Disables  features  that cannot be enabled while creating an allocator configuration
             with erts_alloc_config(3erl).

       Note:
           This option is to be used only while running erts_alloc_config(3erl), not  when  using
           the created configuration.

         +Mlpm all|no:
           Lock physical memory. Defaults to no, that is, no physical memory is locked. If set to
           all, all memory mappings made by the runtime system are locked into  physical  memory.
           If set to all, the runtime system fails to start if this feature is not supported, the
           user has not got enough privileges, or the user is not allowed to lock enough physical
           memory.  The  runtime  system  also  fails with an out of memory condition if the user
           limit on the amount of locked memory is reached.

NOTES

       Only some default values have been presented here. For  information  about  the  currently
       used  settings and the current status of the allocators, see erlang:system_info(allocator)
       and erlang:system_info({allocator, Alloc}).

   Note:
       Most of these flags are highly implementation-dependent and  can  be  changed  or  removed
       without prior notice.

       erts_alloc is not obliged to strictly use the settings that have been passed to it (it can
       even ignore them).

       The  erts_alloc_config(3erl)  tool  can  be  used  to  aid  creation  of   an   erts_alloc
       configuration that is suitable for a limited number of runtime scenarios.

SEE ALSO

       erl(1), erlang(3erl), erts_alloc_config(3erl), instrument(3erl)