table of contents
| CONTIGMALLOC(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | CONTIGMALLOC(9) | 
NAME¶
contigmalloc,
    contigfree — manage
    contiguous kernel physical memory
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
    <sys/types.h>
  
  #include <sys/malloc.h>
void *
  
  contigmalloc(unsigned long size,
    struct malloc_type *type, int
    flags, vm_paddr_t low,
    vm_paddr_t high, unsigned long
    alignment, vm_paddr_t boundary);
void
  
  contigfree(void *addr,
    unsigned long size, struct malloc_type
    *type);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
    contigmalloc()
    function allocates size bytes of contiguous physical
    memory that is aligned to alignment bytes, and which
    does not cross a boundary of boundary bytes. If
    successful, the allocation will reside between physical addresses
    low and high. The returned
    pointer points to a wired kernel virtual address range of
    size bytes allocated from the kernel virtual address
    (KVA) map.
The flags parameter
    modifies
    contigmalloc()'s
    behaviour as follows:
M_ZERO- Causes the allocated physical memory to be zero filled.
 M_NOWAIT- Causes 
contigmalloc() to returnNULLif the request cannot be immediately fulfilled due to resource shortage. 
Other flags (if present) are ignored.
The
    contigfree()
    function deallocates memory allocated by a previous call to
    contigmalloc().
IMPLEMENTATION NOTES¶
The contigmalloc() function does not sleep
    waiting for memory resources to be freed up, but instead actively reclaims
    pages before giving up. However, unless M_NOWAIT is
    specified, it may select a page for reclamation that must first be written
    to backing storage, causing it to sleep.
The contigfree() function does not accept
    NULL as an address input, unlike
    free(9).
RETURN VALUES¶
The contigmalloc() function returns a
    kernel virtual address if allocation succeeds, or
    NULL otherwise.
EXAMPLES¶
void *p;
p = contigmalloc(8192, M_DEVBUF, M_ZERO, 0, (1L << 22),
    32 * 1024, 1024 * 1024);
Ask for 8192 bytes of zero-filled memory residing between physical address 0 and 4194303 inclusive, aligned to a 32K boundary and not crossing a 1M address boundary.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
The contigmalloc() function will panic if
    size is zero, or if alignment or
    boundary is not a power of two.
SEE ALSO¶
| January 29, 2015 | Debian |