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Top Forums Programming Shared memory in shared library Post 302119366 by DreamWarrior on Tuesday 29th of May 2007 01:07:18 PM
Old 05-29-2007
Quote:
Originally Posted by Perderabo
I do not share your trepidation regarding the performance hit. This is virtually the definition of of an array reference is performed and I use arrays quite a bit. Switching your app entirely to arrays and never using pointers at all might actually improve performance provided that you use the optimizer. In any event, many implementations to not allow you to choose the address of a shared memory segment and portable code should not rely on having that option. Shared libraries are compiled using PIC (position independent code) despite the fact that there is often a minor performance hit with PIC. Shared data segments should also be position independent. It's the cost of doing business.
That works beautifully if I want to partition the shared memory up into several buckets and reference each bucket by its index. However, assuming the DB is made up of differently sized information, I must either pick a bucket size big enough to store anything (and waste space on smaller things) or I allocate dynamically sized buckets and pass around pointers (as indexes no longer work).

Essentially, I was thinking I could create a version of malloc that operated within a shared memory region and then use it to allocate items in the DB dynamically to be stored in a chained hash table.

The "performance hit" on pointers is that I need to store the "pointer" to the bucket that I allocated (via my malloc routine) in shared memory somehow. Either that pointer is a native pointer into shared memory, or it is an offset into shared memory that every time application code goes to access a pointer it'll need to perform a conversion routine against it to acquire its position independant address. This would be required for either the array or non-native pointer methods. I guess I could tell the application (in the non-native pointer method) that the shared memory is a huge array of characters and access pointers through an "index" into the character array cast to the appropriate data type...but this seems just as ugly.

Maybe creating an intermediate "malloc" library against a shared memory segment is silly...but I don't know of a better way to store various dynamically sized data into any memory segment without wasting space on static sized buckets.

Last edited by DreamWarrior; 05-29-2007 at 02:18 PM..
 

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SHMAT(2)						      BSD System Calls Manual							  SHMAT(2)

NAME
shmat, shmdt -- map/unmap shared memory LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/shm.h> void * shmat(int shmid, const void *shmaddr, int shmflg); int shmdt(const void *shmaddr); DESCRIPTION
shmat() maps the shared memory segment associated with the shared memory identifier shmid into the address space of the calling process. The address at which the segment is mapped is determined by the shmaddr parameter. If it is equal to 0, the system will pick an address itself. Otherwise, an attempt is made to map the shared memory segment at the address shmaddr specifies. If SHM_RND is set in shmflg, the system will round the address down to a multiple of SHMLBA bytes (SHMLBA is defined in <sys/shm.h>). A shared memory segment can be mapped read-only by specifying the SHM_RDONLY flag in shmflg. shmdt() unmaps the shared memory segment that is currently mapped at shmaddr from the calling process' address space. shmaddr must be a value returned by a prior shmat() call. A shared memory segment will remain in existence until it is removed by a call to shmctl(2) with the IPC_RMID command. RETURN VALUES
shmat() returns the address at which the shared memory segment has been mapped into the calling process' address space when successful, shmdt() returns 0 on successful completion. Otherwise, a value of -1 is returned, and the global variable errno is set to indicate the error. ERRORS
shmat() will fail if: [EACCES] The calling process has no permission to access this shared memory segment. [ENOMEM] There is not enough available data space for the calling process to map the shared memory segment. [EINVAL] shmid is not a valid shared memory identifier. shmaddr specifies an illegal address. [EMFILE] The number of shared memory segments has reached the system-wide limit. shmdt() will fail if: [EINVAL] shmaddr is not the start address of a mapped shared memory segment. SEE ALSO
ipcrm(1), ipcs(1), mmap(2), shmctl(2), shmget(2) STANDARDS
The shmat and shmdt system calls conform to X/Open System Interfaces and Headers Issue 5 (``XSH5''). HISTORY
Shared memory segments appeared in the first release of AT&T System V UNIX. BSD
June 17, 2002 BSD
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