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Friday, June 14, 2013

Explain the methods for free space management? – Part 2

- Managing the free space is easy only when the space that has to be managed is divided in to units of fixed size. 
- If this is the case, the list of these fixed size units can be kept. 
- The first entry can be returned if it is requested by the client. 
- Managing free space gets difficult when the space to be managed consists of units of variable sizes. 
- This is the case with the memory allocation library at the user level. 
- This is also the case in the physical memory where the segmentation is used for the implementation of the virtual memory. 
- In such cases, external fragmentation is the main problem. 
- This leads to the splitting up of the disk space in to pieces of variable size. 
The next coming requests might fail because of unavailability of contiguous free space. 
- For example, the request might fail even if 20 bytes are available and the request requires only 15 bytes because this 20 bytes space is non-contiguous. 
Thus, the main problem is how the free space should be managed while satisfying the variable sized variables. 
How these strategies can manage free space while at the same time keeping the fragmentation in control.

Low level Mechanisms: 
- Most of the allocator use some common mechanisms as these: coalescing and splitting.
- Here, the free list consists of a set of elements describing about all the free spaces available in the heap. 
- Once a pointer to a space is handed over to the program, the determination of the pointers to this space becomes somewhat difficult. 
- These pointers are stored either in the registers or in the variables at some point of execution. 
- However, this is not the case of garbage collected and strongly typed languages as a measure for enabling compaction for combating fragmentation. - Suppose the program makes a request for a single byte of memory.
- In such a case the action performed by the allocator is called splitting. 
- Here a free memory chunk is searched for and split in to two. 
- The first one is returned to the calling request and the second one stays in the list itself. 
- This approach is used in the allocators where small requests are made requesting space that is of size smaller than the chunk. 
- Most of the allocators use a corollary mechanism called the coalescing of the free space. 
- Suppose a small heap is given and an application calls a function to obtain some memory. 
- This function returns the space available in the middle of the heap. 
- All these strategies are based up on simple policies. 
- An ideal allocator is the one that both minimizes fragmentation and is fast. 
But since it is possible for the stream of free requests and allocation to be arbitrary, any strategy would go wrong if wrong inputs are given. 
- Thus, the best approach cannot be described. 
There are 4 major approaches in this regard:

1. Best fit: 
- Simplest and first searches the list for free chunks of memory that might be bigger than the size requested. 
- The smallest one in the searched ones is returned and this is known as the best fitting chunk or smallest fitting too. 
- One pass is enough for finding the appropriate block to be returned.

2. Worst fit: 
- This one is just the opposite of the best fit. 
- It looks for the largest chunk and returns the amount requested while keeping the remaining memory space.

3. First fit: 
- This one also looks for the first bigger block and out of it allocates the amount requested by the thread.

4. Next fit: 
- Here, one extra pointer is kept at the location where the last search was done. 


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