Created Memory Manager (markdown)
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## User Level Functions
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The main functions that a user needs are:
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`gc_alloc` -- malloc with gc
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`gc_free` -- free with gc
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These are built on top of a memory structure using Allocation Table Bytes (ATBs)
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## Memory Structure
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Memory is split up into 4 Allocation Tables. Every Allocation Table has a `ATB` which stands for "Allocation Table Byte". This is a single byte containing 4 sets of the following
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```
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// 0b00 = FREE -- free block
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// 0b01 = HEAD -- head of a chain of blocks
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// 0b10 = TAIL -- in the tail of a chain of blocks
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// 0b11 = MARK -- marked head block
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```
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These are known as `ATB_0` through `ATB_3` and have several C methods (i.e. functions and macros) to access their attributes. These include:
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BLOCKS_PER_ATB -- The number of ATB's that fit in an Allocation Table
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ATB_MASK_0 -- Get the relevant bytes for ATB_0
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...
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ATB_MASK_3
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ATB_0_IS_FREE(a) -- Determine whether table is currently free
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...
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ATB_3_IS_FREE(a)
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**What do these do? Why are they useful???**
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BLOCK_SHIFT(block)
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ATB_GET_KIND(block)
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ATB_ANY_TO_FREE(block)
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ATB_FREE_TO_HEAD(block)
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ATB_FREE_TO_TAIL(block)
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ATB_HEAD_TO_MARK(block)
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ATB_MARK_TO_HEAD(block)
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BLOCK_FROM_PTR(ptr)
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PTR_FROM_BLOCK(block)
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ATB_FROM_BLOCK(bl)
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## Questions
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- Is there documentation for the above methods? I think that would help me understand what they do
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- How is the memory structured? How is it gotten? Does python take out an array of data, or does it take out single elements at at time? I am having trouble understanding how this memory manager is supposed to be used.
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- How many pointers can the memory manager handle at once (on your reference implementation, I believe 128k of memory)? Does the size of the data being requested matter? How does it deal with fragmentation? For instance, if the system asks for a few 100byte arrays and a few 5byte structs one after another, and then frees the 100byte arrays -- how does it handle the fragmentation? Is there a memory defragmenter?
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