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// Copyright 2015 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"os"
"runtime"
"runtime/debug"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
)
func init() {
register("GCFairness", GCFairness)
register("GCFairness2", GCFairness2)
register("GCSys", GCSys)
register("GCPhys", GCPhys)
register("DeferLiveness", DeferLiveness)
}
func GCSys() {
runtime.GOMAXPROCS(1)
memstats := new(runtime.MemStats)
runtime.GC()
runtime.ReadMemStats(memstats)
sys := memstats.Sys
runtime.MemProfileRate = 0 // disable profiler
itercount := 100000
for i := 0; i < itercount; i++ {
workthegc()
}
// Should only be using a few MB.
// We allocated 100 MB or (if not short) 1 GB.
runtime.ReadMemStats(memstats)
if sys > memstats.Sys {
sys = 0
} else {
sys = memstats.Sys - sys
}
if sys > 16<<20 {
fmt.Printf("using too much memory: %d bytes\n", sys)
return
}
fmt.Printf("OK\n")
}
var sink []byte
func workthegc() []byte {
sink = make([]byte, 1029)
return sink
}
func GCFairness() {
runtime.GOMAXPROCS(1)
f, err := os.Open("/dev/null")
if os.IsNotExist(err) {
// This test tests what it is intended to test only if writes are fast.
// If there is no /dev/null, we just don't execute the test.
fmt.Println("OK")
return
}
if err != nil {
fmt.Println(err)
os.Exit(1)
}
for i := 0; i < 2; i++ {
go func() {
for {
f.Write([]byte("."))
}
}()
}
time.Sleep(10 * time.Millisecond)
fmt.Println("OK")
}
func GCFairness2() {
// Make sure user code can't exploit the GC's high priority
// scheduling to make scheduling of user code unfair. See
// issue #15706.
runtime.GOMAXPROCS(1)
debug.SetGCPercent(1)
var count [3]int64
var sink [3]interface{}
for i := range count {
go func(i int) {
for {
sink[i] = make([]byte, 1024)
atomic.AddInt64(&count[i], 1)
}
}(i)
}
// Note: If the unfairness is really bad, it may not even get
// past the sleep.
//
// If the scheduling rules change, this may not be enough time
// to let all goroutines run, but for now we cycle through
// them rapidly.
//
// OpenBSD's scheduler makes every usleep() take at least
// 20ms, so we need a long time to ensure all goroutines have
// run. If they haven't run after 30ms, give it another 1000ms
// and check again.
time.Sleep(30 * time.Millisecond)
var fail bool
for i := range count {
if atomic.LoadInt64(&count[i]) == 0 {
fail = true
}
}
if fail {
time.Sleep(1 * time.Second)
for i := range count {
if atomic.LoadInt64(&count[i]) == 0 {
fmt.Printf("goroutine %d did not run\n", i)
return
}
}
}
fmt.Println("OK")
}
func GCPhys() {
// This test ensures that heap-growth scavenging is working as intended.
//
// It sets up a specific scenario: it allocates two pairs of objects whose
// sizes sum to size. One object in each pair is "small" (though must be
// large enough to be considered a large object by the runtime) and one is
// large. The small objects are kept while the large objects are freed,
// creating two large unscavenged holes in the heap. The heap goal should
// also be small as a result (so size must be at least as large as the
// minimum heap size). We then allocate one large object, bigger than both
// pairs of objects combined. This allocation, because it will tip
// HeapSys-HeapReleased well above the heap goal, should trigger heap-growth
// scavenging and scavenge most, if not all, of the large holes we created
// earlier.
const (
// Size must be also large enough to be considered a large
// object (not in any size-segregated span).
size = 4 << 20
split = 64 << 10
objects = 2
)
// Set GOGC so that this test operates under consistent assumptions.
debug.SetGCPercent(100)
// Save objects which we want to survive, and condemn objects which we don't.
// Note that we condemn objects in this way and release them all at once in
// order to avoid having the GC start freeing up these objects while the loop
// is still running and filling in the holes we intend to make.
saved := make([][]byte, 0, objects+1)
condemned := make([][]byte, 0, objects)
for i := 0; i < 2*objects; i++ {
if i%2 == 0 {
saved = append(saved, make([]byte, split))
} else {
condemned = append(condemned, make([]byte, size-split))
}
}
condemned = nil
// Clean up the heap. This will free up every other object created above
// (i.e. everything in condemned) creating holes in the heap.
// Also, if the condemned objects are still being swept, its possible that
// the scavenging that happens as a result of the next allocation won't see
// the holes at all. We call runtime.GC() twice here so that when we allocate
// our large object there's no race with sweeping.
runtime.GC()
runtime.GC()
// Perform one big allocation which should also scavenge any holes.
//
// The heap goal will rise after this object is allocated, so it's very
// important that we try to do all the scavenging in a single allocation
// that exceeds the heap goal. Otherwise the rising heap goal could foil our
// test.
saved = append(saved, make([]byte, objects*size))
// Clean up the heap again just to put it in a known state.
runtime.GC()
// heapBacked is an estimate of the amount of physical memory used by
// this test. HeapSys is an estimate of the size of the mapped virtual
// address space (which may or may not be backed by physical pages)
// whereas HeapReleased is an estimate of the amount of bytes returned
// to the OS. Their difference then roughly corresponds to the amount
// of virtual address space that is backed by physical pages.
var stats runtime.MemStats
runtime.ReadMemStats(&stats)
heapBacked := stats.HeapSys - stats.HeapReleased
// If heapBacked does not exceed the heap goal by more than retainExtraPercent
// then the scavenger is working as expected; the newly-created holes have been
// scavenged immediately as part of the allocations which cannot fit in the holes.
//
// Since the runtime should scavenge the entirety of the remaining holes,
// theoretically there should be no more free and unscavenged memory. However due
// to other allocations that happen during this test we may still see some physical
// memory over-use. 10% here is an arbitrary but very conservative threshold which
// should easily account for any other allocations this test may have done.
overuse := (float64(heapBacked) - float64(stats.HeapAlloc)) / float64(stats.HeapAlloc)
if overuse <= 0.10 {
fmt.Println("OK")
return
}
// Physical memory utilization exceeds the threshold, so heap-growth scavenging
// did not operate as expected.
//
// In the context of this test, this indicates a large amount of
// fragmentation with physical pages that are otherwise unused but not
// returned to the OS.
fmt.Printf("exceeded physical memory overuse threshold of 10%%: %3.2f%%\n"+
"(alloc: %d, goal: %d, sys: %d, rel: %d, objs: %d)\n", overuse*100,
stats.HeapAlloc, stats.NextGC, stats.HeapSys, stats.HeapReleased, len(saved))
runtime.KeepAlive(saved)
}
// Test that defer closure is correctly scanned when the stack is scanned.
func DeferLiveness() {
var x [10]int
escape(&x)
fn := func() {
if x[0] != 42 {
panic("FAIL")
}
}
defer fn()
x[0] = 42
runtime.GC()
runtime.GC()
runtime.GC()
}
//go:noinline
func escape(x interface{}) { sink2 = x; sink2 = nil }
var sink2 interface{}