Alloc and check are very trivial. Alloc checks if a page is used, if not it marks it used, if it is, it panics. Check just checks if a bit in a bitmap is set and returns 1 or 0 indicating one way or another.
I've renamed stuff. I didn't like that the names resembled early Linux as much as they did.
pmem.c:
Code:
#include <kernel/mem/pmem.h>
#include <kernel/panic.h>
unsigned int high_mem, low_mem, reserved_low_pages;
unsigned int pbmp[MAX_PAGES/32];
#define pbmpset(page) pbmp[(unsigned int)page / 32] |= (1 << page % 32)
#define pbmpclear(page) pbmp[(unsigned int)page / 32] &= ~(1 << page % 32)
#define pbmpcheck(page) pbmp[(unsigned int)page / 32] & ~(1 << page % 32)
int palloc(unsigned int page)
{
if(pcheck(page) != MEM_RESERVED)
{
pbmpset(page);
return PALLOC_SUCCESS;
}
else
{
panic("Allocating used page!");
return PALLOC_FAIL;
}
}
int palloc_m(unsigned int start, int len)
{
unsigned int i;
if(pcheck_m(start, len) == MEM_RESERVED)
return PALLOC_FAIL;
for(i = start;i < start + len;i++)
palloc(i);
return PALLOC_SUCCESS;
}
int pfree(unsigned int page)
{
if(pcheck(page) == MEM_RESERVED)
pbmpclear(page);
else
{
panic("Freeing free page!");
return PFREE_FAIL;
}
return PFREE_SUCCESS;
}
int pfree_m(unsigned int start, int len)
{
int i;
for(i = start;i < start + len;i++)
if(pfree(i))
return PFREE_FAIL;
return PFREE_SUCCESS;
}
int pcheck(unsigned int page)
{
if(pbmpcheck(page))
return MEM_RESERVED;
else
return MEM_FREE;
}
int pcheck_m(unsigned int start, int len)
{
unsigned int i;
for(i = start;i < start + len;i++)
if(pcheck(i) == MEM_RESERVED)
return MEM_RESERVED;
return MEM_FREE;
}
unsigned int pget()
{
unsigned int i;
for(i = reserved_low_pages + 1;i <= high_page;i++)
if(pcheck(i) == MEM_FREE)
{
palloc(i);
return i;
}
panic("Out of memory!");
return PGET_FAIL;
}
unsigned int pget_m(int pages)
{
unsigned int i, j = 0;
for(i = reserved_low_pages + 1;i + pages <= high_page;i += (j + 1))
for(j = 0;j <= pages;j++);
if(j == pages)
{
if(palloc_m(i, pages) == 0)
return i;
else
return PGET_FAIL;
}
panic("Out of memory!");
return 0;
}