From: Richard Jones <rich@annexia.org>
To: Goswin von Brederlow <goswin-v-b@web.de>
Cc: caml-list@inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] How to write a GC for size > memory
Date: Fri, 13 Nov 2009 08:38:02 +0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20091113083802.GA3468@annexia.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <87vdhfxb6c.fsf@frosties.localdomain>
On Fri, Nov 13, 2009 at 06:10:03AM +0100, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
> Normaly the GC would switch between defrag and freeing chunk
> mode. Both would be concurrent to normal filesystem
> operations. Possibly only run when the filesystem is idle. The
> compation mode would only happen in situations where the FS would
> otherwise have to return ENOSPC.
>
> To further improve this I would like to add a generational component
> into the GC. I have no mutables (except the roots) so an old chunk (or
> an old B-Tree node) can hold no references to a newer chunk. Also new
> files are far more likely to be deleted again than old files and new
> B-Tree nodes more likely to be modified again than old B-Tree
> nodes. Seems to screem for a generational approach. A generational
> approach should allow the GC to only scan a fraction of the B-Tree for
> its sweep. But I'm not quite sure how to go about that.
>
> Comments, Ideas, Improvements, Urls welcome.
As I said on IRC I still think ocaml-ancient is a good fit to this,
unless you are planning to modify the OCaml GC itself.
ocaml-ancient essentially converts parts of the heap to use manual
memory allocation, on top of which you can write a more suitable GC in
OCaml for your long-lived rarely-changing blocks (eg. one based on
reference counting). The invariants you describe above are exactly
the ones which ocaml-ancient needs.
Rich.
--
Richard Jones
Red Hat
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-11-13 8:38 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2009-11-13 5:10 Goswin von Brederlow
2009-11-13 8:38 ` Richard Jones [this message]
2009-11-13 17:07 ` [Caml-list] " Goswin von Brederlow
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