ipcz: Ref counted fragments

Introduces RefCountedFragment and FragmentRef<T> as helpers to support
ref-counted objects living in shared memory fragments, as allocated
via NodeLinkMemory.

Also introduces some builtin BlockAllocators to each NodeLinkMemory's
primary buffer.

This change lays the ground work for dynamic allocation of managed state
objects between each connected pair of Routers.

Bug: 1299283
Change-Id: Ibc2859a8cdcca00fd0d9602664eceaaccb5bd9ae
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/3750056
Reviewed-by: Alex Gough <ajgo@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Ken Rockot <rockot@google.com>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main@{#1021940}
NOKEYCHECK=True
GitOrigin-RevId: 6385cfb931f738334dc59e9d7d39eb7daa70f7ba
8 files changed
tree: 2327a1515261179b33ee02eb361180062b59c949
  1. build_overrides/
  2. include/
  3. src/
  4. .clang-format
  5. BUILD.gn
  6. DEPS
  7. LICENSE
  8. OWNERS
  9. README.md
README.md

ipcz

Overview

ipcz is a fully cross-platform C library for interprocess communication (IPC) intended to address two generic problems: routing and data transfer.

Routing

With ipcz, applications create pairs of entangled portals to facilitate bidirectional communication. These are grouped into collections called nodes, which typically correspond 1:1 to OS processes.

Nodes may be explicitly connected by an application to establish portal pairs which span the node boundary.

                   ┌───────┐
       Connect     │       │     Connect
       ┌──────────>O   A   O<───────────┐
       │           │       │            │
       │           └───────┘            │
       │                                │
       v                                v
   ┌───O───┐                        ┌───O───┐
   │       │                        │       │
   │   B   │                        │   C   │
   │       │                        │       │
   └───────┘                        └───────┘

Here nodes A and B are explicitly connected by the application, as are nodes A and C. B can put stuff into its portal, and that stuff will come out of the linked portal on A.

But portals may also be sent over other portals. For example, B may create a new pair of portals...

                   ┌───────┐
       Connect     │       │     Connect
       ┌──────────>O   A   O<───────────┐
       │           │       │            │
       │           └───────┘            │
       │                                │
       v                                v
   ┌───O───┐                        ┌───O───┐
   │       │                        │       │
   │   B   │                        │   C   │
   │ O───O │                        │       │
   └───────┘                        └───────┘

...and send one over B's existing portal to A:

                   ┌───────┐
       Connect     │       │     Connect
       ┌──────────>O   A   O<───────────┐
       │ ┌────────>O       │            │
       │ │         └───────┘            │
       │ │                              │
       v v                              v
   ┌───O─O─┐                        ┌───O───┐
   │       │                        │       │
   │   B   │                        │   C   │
   │       │                        │       │
   └───────┘                        └───────┘

Node A may then forward this new portal along its own existing portal to node C:

                   ┌───────┐
       Connect     │       │     Connect
       ┌──────────>O   A   O<───────────┐
       │           │       │            │
       │           └───────┘            │
       │                                │
       v                                v
   ┌───O───┐                        ┌───O───┐
   │       │                        │       │
   │   B   O────────────────────────O   C   │
   │       │                        │       │
   └───────┘                        └───────┘

As a result, the application ends up with a portal on node B linked directly to a portal on node C, despite no explicit effort by the application to connect these two nodes directly.

ipcz enables this seamless creation and transferrence of routes with minimal end-to-end latency and amortized overhead.

Data Transfer

ipcz supports an arbitrarily large number of interconnected portals across the system, with potentially hundreds of thousands of individual portal pairs spanning any two nodes. Apart from managing how these portal pairs route their communications (i.e. which nodes they must traverse from end-to-end), ipcz is also concerned with how each communication is physically conveyed from one node to another.

In a traditional IPC system, each transmission typically corresponds to a system I/O call of some kind (e.g. POSIX writev(), or WriteFile() on Windows). These calls may require extra copies of transmitted data, incur additional context switches, and potentially elicit other forms of overhead (e.g. redundant idle CPU wakes) under various conditions.

ipcz tries to avoid such I/O operations in favor of pure userspace memory transactions, falling back onto system I/O only for signaling and less frequent edge cases. To facilitate this behavior, every pair of interconnected nodes has a private shared memory pool managed by ipcz.

Setup

To set up a new local repository, first install depot_tools and make sure it's in your PATH.

Then from within the repository root:

cp .gclient-default .gclient
gclient sync

When updating a local copy of the repository, it's a good idea to rerun gclient sync to ensure that all external dependencies are up-to-date.

Build

ipcz uses GN for builds. This is provided by the depot_tools installation.

To create a new build configuration, first create a directory for it. For example on Linux or macOS:

mkdir -p out/Debug

Then run gn args to create and edit the build configuration:

gn args out/Debug

For a typical debug build the contents may be as simple as:

is_debug = true

Now targets can be built:

ninja -C out/Debug ipcz_tests

# Hope they all pass!
./ipcz_tests

Usage

ipcz may be statically linked into a project, or it may be consumed as a shared library. A shared library can be built with the ipcz_shared target.

The library is meant to be consumed exclusively through the C ABI defined in include/ipcz/ipcz.h. Applications populate an IpczAPI structure by calling IpczGetAPI(), the library's only exported symbol. From there they can create and connect nodes and establish portals for higher-level communication.

Applications must provide each node with an implementation of the IpczDriver function table to perform a variety of straightforward, platform- and environment-specific tasks such as establishing a basic I/O transport, generating random numbers, and allocating shared memory regions. See reference drivers for examples.

In Chromium

This directory in the Chromium tree is the source of truth for ipcz. It is not a mirror of an external repository, so there is no separate maintenance of local modifications or other versioning considerations.

The decision to place ipcz sources in //third_party/ipcz was made in light of some unique characteristics:

  • No dependencies on //base or other Chromium directories are allowed, with the exception of a very small number of carefully chosen APIs allowed when integrating with Chromium builds.

  • The library is structured and maintained to be useful as a standalone dependency, without needing any other contents of the Chromium tree or its large set of dependencies.

  • Certain style and dependency violations are made in service of the above two points; for example, ipcz depends on parts of Abseil disallowed in the rest of upstream Chromium, and ipcz internally uses relative include paths rather than paths rooted in Chromium's top-level directory.

Design

Some extensive coverage of ipcz design details can be found here.