The allocation function memblock_alloc() may be seen in
Figure .
Line 7 picks up the current thread's per-thread pool,
and line 8 check to see if it is empty.
If so, lines 9-16 attempt to refill it from the global pool under the spinlock acquired on line 9 and released on line 16. Lines 10-14 move blocks from the global to the per-thread pool until either the local pool reaches its target size (half full) or the global pool is exhausted, and line 15 sets the per-thread pool's count to the proper value.
In either case, line 18 checks for the per-thread pool still being empty, and if not, lines 19-21 remove a block and return it. Otherwise, line 23 tells the sad tale of memory exhaustion.