cachet/README.md

3.2 KiB

Cachet, a simple cache system for mmap

Cachet is a small library that provides a simple cache system for page-by-page read access on a block device. The cache system requires a map function, which can correspond to Unix.map_file.

Here's a simple example using Unix.map_file:

let shared = true
let empty = Bigarray.Array1.create Bigarray.char Bigarray.c_layout 0

let map fd ~pos len =
  let stat = Unix.fstat fd in
  let len = Int.min len (stat.Unix.st_size - pos) in
  if pos < stat.Unix.st_size
  then let barr = Unix.map_file fd ~pos:(Int64.of_int pos)
         Bigarray.char Bigarray.c_layout shared [| len |] in
       Bigarray.array1_of_genarray barr
  else empty

external getpagesize : unit -> int = "unix_getpagesize" [@@noalloc]

let () =
  let fd = Unix.openfile "disk.img" Unix.[ O_RDONLY ] 0o644 in
  let finally () = Unix.close fd in
  Fun.protect ~finally @@ fun () ->
  let cache = Cachet.make ~pagesize:(getpagesize ()) ~map fd in
  let seq = Cachet.get_seq cache 0 in
  ...

Cachet and schedulers

Cachet is designed to treat the map function as atomic. In other words: a unit of work that is indivisible and guaranteed to be executed as a single, coherent, and uninterrupted operation. Therefore, the load function (used to load a page) cannot be more cooperative (and give other tasks the opportunity to run) than it already is.

Using Cachet with a scheduler requires addressing two issues:

  1. enabling cooperation after a page has been loaded
  2. the possibility of parallel loading of the page to ensure that other tasks can be executed

For the first point, with regard to Lwt or Async, it's essentially a question of potentially adding Lwt.pause or Async.yield after using Cachet.load (or the user-friendly functions):

let () = Lwt_main.run begin
  let page = Cachet.load cache 0xdead in
  let* () = Lwt.pause () in
  ... end

For the second point, only OCaml 5 and effects can answer this issue by using an effect which will notify the scheduler to read the page in parallel.

(* see [man 3 pread] *)
let map fd ~pos len = Effect.perform (Scheduler.Pread (fd, pos, len))

let () = Scheduler.run begin fun () ->
    let fd = Unix.openfile "disk.img" Unix.[ O_RDONLY ] 0o644 in
    let finally () = Unix.close fd in
    Fun.protect ~finally @@ fun () ->
    let cache = Cachet.make ~pagesize:(getpagesize ()) ~map fd in
    let page = Cachet.load cache 0xdead in
    ...
  end

Note that this is only effective if the page is read in parallel. If this is not the case, adding a cooperation point as you could do with Lwt/Async is enough. Reading a page remains atomic and allowing other tasks to run at the same time as this reading implies that the latter must necessarily be done in parallel (via a Thread or a Domain).

Finally, the Cachet documentation specifies how many pages we would need to read to obtain the requested value. As a result, it's up to the user to know where the cooperation point should be placed and whether it makes sense to use, for example, get_string or just use load interspersed with cooperation points.