Now that the kernel supports startup-time constructors, we were first
doing slab_alloc_init(), and then the constructors ran later on,
zeroing out the freelist pointers.
This meant that all slab allocators thought they were completelty
exhausted and forwarded all requests to kmalloc() instead.
This is obviously not ideal, and it would be better to teach it how to
allocate more pages, etc. But since the physical page allocator itself
currently uses SlabAllocator, it's a little bit tricky :^)
We need these for PhysicalPage objects. Ultimately I'd like to get rid
of these objects entirely, but while we still have to deal with them,
let's at least handle large demand a bit better.
This is a freelist allocator with static size classes that works as a
complement to the generic kmalloc(). It's a lot faster than kmalloc()
since allocation just means popping from the freelist.
It's also significantly more compact when there are a lot of objects
smaller than the minimum kmalloc chunk size (32 bytes.)
This patch enables it for the Region and PhysicalPage classes.
In the PhysicalPage (8 bytes) case, it's a huge improvement since we
no longer waste 75% of the storage allocated.
There are also a number of ways this can be improved, so let's keep
working on it going forward.