| // Copyright 2009 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. |
| |
| // Garbage collector: marking and scanning |
| |
| package runtime |
| |
| import ( |
| "runtime/internal/atomic" |
| "runtime/internal/sys" |
| "unsafe" |
| ) |
| |
| const ( |
| fixedRootFinalizers = iota |
| fixedRootFreeGStacks |
| fixedRootCount |
| |
| // rootBlockBytes is the number of bytes to scan per data or |
| // BSS root. |
| rootBlockBytes = 256 << 10 |
| |
| // rootBlockSpans is the number of spans to scan per span |
| // root. |
| rootBlockSpans = 8 * 1024 // 64MB worth of spans |
| |
| // maxObletBytes is the maximum bytes of an object to scan at |
| // once. Larger objects will be split up into "oblets" of at |
| // most this size. Since we can scan 1–2 MB/ms, 128 KB bounds |
| // scan preemption at ~100 µs. |
| // |
| // This must be > _MaxSmallSize so that the object base is the |
| // span base. |
| maxObletBytes = 128 << 10 |
| |
| // drainCheckThreshold specifies how many units of work to do |
| // between self-preemption checks in gcDrain. Assuming a scan |
| // rate of 1 MB/ms, this is ~100 µs. Lower values have higher |
| // overhead in the scan loop (the scheduler check may perform |
| // a syscall, so its overhead is nontrivial). Higher values |
| // make the system less responsive to incoming work. |
| drainCheckThreshold = 100000 |
| ) |
| |
| // gcMarkRootPrepare queues root scanning jobs (stacks, globals, and |
| // some miscellany) and initializes scanning-related state. |
| // |
| // The caller must have call gcCopySpans(). |
| // |
| // The world must be stopped. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| func gcMarkRootPrepare() { |
| if gcphase == _GCmarktermination { |
| work.nFlushCacheRoots = int(gomaxprocs) |
| } else { |
| work.nFlushCacheRoots = 0 |
| } |
| |
| work.nDataRoots = 0 |
| |
| // Only scan globals once per cycle; preferably concurrently. |
| if !work.markrootDone { |
| roots := gcRoots |
| for roots != nil { |
| work.nDataRoots++ |
| roots = roots.next |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if !work.markrootDone { |
| // On the first markroot, we need to scan span roots. |
| // In concurrent GC, this happens during concurrent |
| // mark and we depend on addfinalizer to ensure the |
| // above invariants for objects that get finalizers |
| // after concurrent mark. In STW GC, this will happen |
| // during mark termination. |
| // |
| // We're only interested in scanning the in-use spans, |
| // which will all be swept at this point. More spans |
| // may be added to this list during concurrent GC, but |
| // we only care about spans that were allocated before |
| // this mark phase. |
| work.nSpanRoots = mheap_.sweepSpans[mheap_.sweepgen/2%2].numBlocks() |
| |
| // On the first markroot, we need to scan all Gs. Gs |
| // may be created after this point, but it's okay that |
| // we ignore them because they begin life without any |
| // roots, so there's nothing to scan, and any roots |
| // they create during the concurrent phase will be |
| // scanned during mark termination. During mark |
| // termination, allglen isn't changing, so we'll scan |
| // all Gs. |
| work.nStackRoots = int(atomic.Loaduintptr(&allglen)) |
| } else { |
| // We've already scanned span roots and kept the scan |
| // up-to-date during concurrent mark. |
| work.nSpanRoots = 0 |
| |
| // The hybrid barrier ensures that stacks can't |
| // contain pointers to unmarked objects, so on the |
| // second markroot, there's no need to scan stacks. |
| work.nStackRoots = 0 |
| |
| if debug.gcrescanstacks > 0 { |
| // Scan stacks anyway for debugging. |
| work.nStackRoots = int(atomic.Loaduintptr(&allglen)) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| work.markrootNext = 0 |
| work.markrootJobs = uint32(fixedRootCount + work.nFlushCacheRoots + work.nDataRoots + work.nSpanRoots + work.nStackRoots) |
| } |
| |
| // gcMarkRootCheck checks that all roots have been scanned. It is |
| // purely for debugging. |
| func gcMarkRootCheck() { |
| if work.markrootNext < work.markrootJobs { |
| print(work.markrootNext, " of ", work.markrootJobs, " markroot jobs done\n") |
| throw("left over markroot jobs") |
| } |
| |
| lock(&allglock) |
| // Check that stacks have been scanned. |
| var gp *g |
| if gcphase == _GCmarktermination && debug.gcrescanstacks > 0 { |
| for i := 0; i < len(allgs); i++ { |
| gp = allgs[i] |
| if !(gp.gcscandone && gp.gcscanvalid) && readgstatus(gp) != _Gdead { |
| goto fail |
| } |
| } |
| } else { |
| for i := 0; i < work.nStackRoots; i++ { |
| gp = allgs[i] |
| if !gp.gcscandone { |
| goto fail |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| unlock(&allglock) |
| return |
| |
| fail: |
| println("gp", gp, "goid", gp.goid, |
| "status", readgstatus(gp), |
| "gcscandone", gp.gcscandone, |
| "gcscanvalid", gp.gcscanvalid) |
| unlock(&allglock) // Avoid self-deadlock with traceback. |
| throw("scan missed a g") |
| } |
| |
| // ptrmask for an allocation containing a single pointer. |
| var oneptrmask = [...]uint8{1} |
| |
| // markroot scans the i'th root. |
| // |
| // Preemption must be disabled (because this uses a gcWork). |
| // |
| // nowritebarrier is only advisory here. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| func markroot(gcw *gcWork, i uint32) { |
| // TODO(austin): This is a bit ridiculous. Compute and store |
| // the bases in gcMarkRootPrepare instead of the counts. |
| baseFlushCache := uint32(fixedRootCount) |
| baseData := baseFlushCache + uint32(work.nFlushCacheRoots) |
| baseSpans := baseData + uint32(work.nDataRoots) |
| baseStacks := baseSpans + uint32(work.nSpanRoots) |
| end := baseStacks + uint32(work.nStackRoots) |
| |
| // Note: if you add a case here, please also update heapdump.go:dumproots. |
| switch { |
| case baseFlushCache <= i && i < baseData: |
| flushmcache(int(i - baseFlushCache)) |
| |
| case baseData <= i && i < baseSpans: |
| roots := gcRoots |
| c := baseData |
| for roots != nil { |
| if i == c { |
| markrootBlock(roots, gcw) |
| break |
| } |
| roots = roots.next |
| c++ |
| } |
| |
| case i == fixedRootFinalizers: |
| // Only do this once per GC cycle since we don't call |
| // queuefinalizer during marking. |
| if work.markrootDone { |
| break |
| } |
| for fb := allfin; fb != nil; fb = fb.alllink { |
| cnt := uintptr(atomic.Load(&fb.cnt)) |
| scanblock(uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&fb.fin[0])), cnt*unsafe.Sizeof(fb.fin[0]), &finptrmask[0], gcw) |
| } |
| |
| case i == fixedRootFreeGStacks: |
| // FIXME: We don't do this for gccgo. |
| |
| case baseSpans <= i && i < baseStacks: |
| // mark MSpan.specials |
| markrootSpans(gcw, int(i-baseSpans)) |
| |
| default: |
| // the rest is scanning goroutine stacks |
| var gp *g |
| if baseStacks <= i && i < end { |
| gp = allgs[i-baseStacks] |
| } else { |
| throw("markroot: bad index") |
| } |
| |
| // remember when we've first observed the G blocked |
| // needed only to output in traceback |
| status := readgstatus(gp) // We are not in a scan state |
| if (status == _Gwaiting || status == _Gsyscall) && gp.waitsince == 0 { |
| gp.waitsince = work.tstart |
| } |
| |
| // scang must be done on the system stack in case |
| // we're trying to scan our own stack. |
| systemstack(func() { |
| // If this is a self-scan, put the user G in |
| // _Gwaiting to prevent self-deadlock. It may |
| // already be in _Gwaiting if this is a mark |
| // worker or we're in mark termination. |
| userG := getg().m.curg |
| selfScan := gp == userG && readgstatus(userG) == _Grunning |
| if selfScan { |
| casgstatus(userG, _Grunning, _Gwaiting) |
| userG.waitreason = waitReasonGarbageCollectionScan |
| } |
| |
| // TODO: scang blocks until gp's stack has |
| // been scanned, which may take a while for |
| // running goroutines. Consider doing this in |
| // two phases where the first is non-blocking: |
| // we scan the stacks we can and ask running |
| // goroutines to scan themselves; and the |
| // second blocks. |
| scang(gp, gcw) |
| |
| if selfScan { |
| casgstatus(userG, _Gwaiting, _Grunning) |
| } |
| }) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // markrootBlock scans one element of the list of GC roots. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| func markrootBlock(roots *gcRootList, gcw *gcWork) { |
| for i := 0; i < roots.count; i++ { |
| r := &roots.roots[i] |
| scanblock(uintptr(r.decl), r.ptrdata, r.gcdata, gcw) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // markrootSpans marks roots for one shard of work.spans. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| func markrootSpans(gcw *gcWork, shard int) { |
| // Objects with finalizers have two GC-related invariants: |
| // |
| // 1) Everything reachable from the object must be marked. |
| // This ensures that when we pass the object to its finalizer, |
| // everything the finalizer can reach will be retained. |
| // |
| // 2) Finalizer specials (which are not in the garbage |
| // collected heap) are roots. In practice, this means the fn |
| // field must be scanned. |
| // |
| // TODO(austin): There are several ideas for making this more |
| // efficient in issue #11485. |
| |
| if work.markrootDone { |
| throw("markrootSpans during second markroot") |
| } |
| |
| sg := mheap_.sweepgen |
| spans := mheap_.sweepSpans[mheap_.sweepgen/2%2].block(shard) |
| // Note that work.spans may not include spans that were |
| // allocated between entering the scan phase and now. This is |
| // okay because any objects with finalizers in those spans |
| // must have been allocated and given finalizers after we |
| // entered the scan phase, so addfinalizer will have ensured |
| // the above invariants for them. |
| for _, s := range spans { |
| if s.state != mSpanInUse { |
| continue |
| } |
| if !useCheckmark && s.sweepgen != sg { |
| // sweepgen was updated (+2) during non-checkmark GC pass |
| print("sweep ", s.sweepgen, " ", sg, "\n") |
| throw("gc: unswept span") |
| } |
| |
| // Speculatively check if there are any specials |
| // without acquiring the span lock. This may race with |
| // adding the first special to a span, but in that |
| // case addfinalizer will observe that the GC is |
| // active (which is globally synchronized) and ensure |
| // the above invariants. We may also ensure the |
| // invariants, but it's okay to scan an object twice. |
| if s.specials == nil { |
| continue |
| } |
| |
| // Lock the specials to prevent a special from being |
| // removed from the list while we're traversing it. |
| lock(&s.speciallock) |
| |
| for sp := s.specials; sp != nil; sp = sp.next { |
| if sp.kind != _KindSpecialFinalizer { |
| continue |
| } |
| // don't mark finalized object, but scan it so we |
| // retain everything it points to. |
| spf := (*specialfinalizer)(unsafe.Pointer(sp)) |
| // A finalizer can be set for an inner byte of an object, find object beginning. |
| p := s.base() + uintptr(spf.special.offset)/s.elemsize*s.elemsize |
| |
| // Mark everything that can be reached from |
| // the object (but *not* the object itself or |
| // we'll never collect it). |
| scanobject(p, gcw) |
| |
| // The special itself is a root. |
| scanblock(uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&spf.fn)), sys.PtrSize, &oneptrmask[0], gcw) |
| } |
| |
| unlock(&s.speciallock) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // gcAssistAlloc performs GC work to make gp's assist debt positive. |
| // gp must be the calling user gorountine. |
| // |
| // This must be called with preemption enabled. |
| func gcAssistAlloc(gp *g) { |
| // Don't assist in non-preemptible contexts. These are |
| // generally fragile and won't allow the assist to block. |
| if getg() == gp.m.g0 { |
| return |
| } |
| if mp := getg().m; mp.locks > 0 || mp.preemptoff != "" { |
| return |
| } |
| |
| traced := false |
| retry: |
| // Compute the amount of scan work we need to do to make the |
| // balance positive. When the required amount of work is low, |
| // we over-assist to build up credit for future allocations |
| // and amortize the cost of assisting. |
| debtBytes := -gp.gcAssistBytes |
| scanWork := int64(gcController.assistWorkPerByte * float64(debtBytes)) |
| if scanWork < gcOverAssistWork { |
| scanWork = gcOverAssistWork |
| debtBytes = int64(gcController.assistBytesPerWork * float64(scanWork)) |
| } |
| |
| // Steal as much credit as we can from the background GC's |
| // scan credit. This is racy and may drop the background |
| // credit below 0 if two mutators steal at the same time. This |
| // will just cause steals to fail until credit is accumulated |
| // again, so in the long run it doesn't really matter, but we |
| // do have to handle the negative credit case. |
| bgScanCredit := atomic.Loadint64(&gcController.bgScanCredit) |
| stolen := int64(0) |
| if bgScanCredit > 0 { |
| if bgScanCredit < scanWork { |
| stolen = bgScanCredit |
| gp.gcAssistBytes += 1 + int64(gcController.assistBytesPerWork*float64(stolen)) |
| } else { |
| stolen = scanWork |
| gp.gcAssistBytes += debtBytes |
| } |
| atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.bgScanCredit, -stolen) |
| |
| scanWork -= stolen |
| |
| if scanWork == 0 { |
| // We were able to steal all of the credit we |
| // needed. |
| if traced { |
| traceGCMarkAssistDone() |
| } |
| return |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if trace.enabled && !traced { |
| traced = true |
| traceGCMarkAssistStart() |
| } |
| |
| // Perform assist work |
| systemstack(func() { |
| gcAssistAlloc1(gp, scanWork) |
| // The user stack may have moved, so this can't touch |
| // anything on it until it returns from systemstack. |
| }) |
| |
| completed := gp.param != nil |
| gp.param = nil |
| if completed { |
| gcMarkDone() |
| } |
| |
| if gp.gcAssistBytes < 0 { |
| // We were unable steal enough credit or perform |
| // enough work to pay off the assist debt. We need to |
| // do one of these before letting the mutator allocate |
| // more to prevent over-allocation. |
| // |
| // If this is because we were preempted, reschedule |
| // and try some more. |
| if gp.preempt { |
| Gosched() |
| goto retry |
| } |
| |
| // Add this G to an assist queue and park. When the GC |
| // has more background credit, it will satisfy queued |
| // assists before flushing to the global credit pool. |
| // |
| // Note that this does *not* get woken up when more |
| // work is added to the work list. The theory is that |
| // there wasn't enough work to do anyway, so we might |
| // as well let background marking take care of the |
| // work that is available. |
| if !gcParkAssist() { |
| goto retry |
| } |
| |
| // At this point either background GC has satisfied |
| // this G's assist debt, or the GC cycle is over. |
| } |
| if traced { |
| traceGCMarkAssistDone() |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // gcAssistAlloc1 is the part of gcAssistAlloc that runs on the system |
| // stack. This is a separate function to make it easier to see that |
| // we're not capturing anything from the user stack, since the user |
| // stack may move while we're in this function. |
| // |
| // gcAssistAlloc1 indicates whether this assist completed the mark |
| // phase by setting gp.param to non-nil. This can't be communicated on |
| // the stack since it may move. |
| // |
| //go:systemstack |
| func gcAssistAlloc1(gp *g, scanWork int64) { |
| // Clear the flag indicating that this assist completed the |
| // mark phase. |
| gp.param = nil |
| |
| if atomic.Load(&gcBlackenEnabled) == 0 { |
| // The gcBlackenEnabled check in malloc races with the |
| // store that clears it but an atomic check in every malloc |
| // would be a performance hit. |
| // Instead we recheck it here on the non-preemptable system |
| // stack to determine if we should perform an assist. |
| |
| // GC is done, so ignore any remaining debt. |
| gp.gcAssistBytes = 0 |
| return |
| } |
| // Track time spent in this assist. Since we're on the |
| // system stack, this is non-preemptible, so we can |
| // just measure start and end time. |
| startTime := nanotime() |
| |
| decnwait := atomic.Xadd(&work.nwait, -1) |
| if decnwait == work.nproc { |
| println("runtime: work.nwait =", decnwait, "work.nproc=", work.nproc) |
| throw("nwait > work.nprocs") |
| } |
| |
| // gcDrainN requires the caller to be preemptible. |
| casgstatus(gp, _Grunning, _Gwaiting) |
| gp.waitreason = waitReasonGCAssistMarking |
| |
| // drain own cached work first in the hopes that it |
| // will be more cache friendly. |
| gcw := &getg().m.p.ptr().gcw |
| workDone := gcDrainN(gcw, scanWork) |
| // If we are near the end of the mark phase |
| // dispose of the gcw. |
| if gcBlackenPromptly { |
| gcw.dispose() |
| } |
| |
| casgstatus(gp, _Gwaiting, _Grunning) |
| |
| // Record that we did this much scan work. |
| // |
| // Back out the number of bytes of assist credit that |
| // this scan work counts for. The "1+" is a poor man's |
| // round-up, to ensure this adds credit even if |
| // assistBytesPerWork is very low. |
| gp.gcAssistBytes += 1 + int64(gcController.assistBytesPerWork*float64(workDone)) |
| |
| // If this is the last worker and we ran out of work, |
| // signal a completion point. |
| incnwait := atomic.Xadd(&work.nwait, +1) |
| if incnwait > work.nproc { |
| println("runtime: work.nwait=", incnwait, |
| "work.nproc=", work.nproc, |
| "gcBlackenPromptly=", gcBlackenPromptly) |
| throw("work.nwait > work.nproc") |
| } |
| |
| if incnwait == work.nproc && !gcMarkWorkAvailable(nil) { |
| // This has reached a background completion point. Set |
| // gp.param to a non-nil value to indicate this. It |
| // doesn't matter what we set it to (it just has to be |
| // a valid pointer). |
| gp.param = unsafe.Pointer(gp) |
| } |
| duration := nanotime() - startTime |
| _p_ := gp.m.p.ptr() |
| _p_.gcAssistTime += duration |
| if _p_.gcAssistTime > gcAssistTimeSlack { |
| atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.assistTime, _p_.gcAssistTime) |
| _p_.gcAssistTime = 0 |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // gcWakeAllAssists wakes all currently blocked assists. This is used |
| // at the end of a GC cycle. gcBlackenEnabled must be false to prevent |
| // new assists from going to sleep after this point. |
| func gcWakeAllAssists() { |
| lock(&work.assistQueue.lock) |
| injectglist(work.assistQueue.head.ptr()) |
| work.assistQueue.head.set(nil) |
| work.assistQueue.tail.set(nil) |
| unlock(&work.assistQueue.lock) |
| } |
| |
| // gcParkAssist puts the current goroutine on the assist queue and parks. |
| // |
| // gcParkAssist returns whether the assist is now satisfied. If it |
| // returns false, the caller must retry the assist. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| func gcParkAssist() bool { |
| lock(&work.assistQueue.lock) |
| // If the GC cycle finished while we were getting the lock, |
| // exit the assist. The cycle can't finish while we hold the |
| // lock. |
| if atomic.Load(&gcBlackenEnabled) == 0 { |
| unlock(&work.assistQueue.lock) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| gp := getg() |
| oldHead, oldTail := work.assistQueue.head, work.assistQueue.tail |
| if oldHead == 0 { |
| work.assistQueue.head.set(gp) |
| } else { |
| oldTail.ptr().schedlink.set(gp) |
| } |
| work.assistQueue.tail.set(gp) |
| gp.schedlink.set(nil) |
| |
| // Recheck for background credit now that this G is in |
| // the queue, but can still back out. This avoids a |
| // race in case background marking has flushed more |
| // credit since we checked above. |
| if atomic.Loadint64(&gcController.bgScanCredit) > 0 { |
| work.assistQueue.head = oldHead |
| work.assistQueue.tail = oldTail |
| if oldTail != 0 { |
| oldTail.ptr().schedlink.set(nil) |
| } |
| unlock(&work.assistQueue.lock) |
| return false |
| } |
| // Park. |
| goparkunlock(&work.assistQueue.lock, waitReasonGCAssistWait, traceEvGoBlockGC, 2) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| // gcFlushBgCredit flushes scanWork units of background scan work |
| // credit. This first satisfies blocked assists on the |
| // work.assistQueue and then flushes any remaining credit to |
| // gcController.bgScanCredit. |
| // |
| // Write barriers are disallowed because this is used by gcDrain after |
| // it has ensured that all work is drained and this must preserve that |
| // condition. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrierrec |
| func gcFlushBgCredit(scanWork int64) { |
| if work.assistQueue.head == 0 { |
| // Fast path; there are no blocked assists. There's a |
| // small window here where an assist may add itself to |
| // the blocked queue and park. If that happens, we'll |
| // just get it on the next flush. |
| atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.bgScanCredit, scanWork) |
| return |
| } |
| |
| scanBytes := int64(float64(scanWork) * gcController.assistBytesPerWork) |
| |
| lock(&work.assistQueue.lock) |
| gp := work.assistQueue.head.ptr() |
| for gp != nil && scanBytes > 0 { |
| // Note that gp.gcAssistBytes is negative because gp |
| // is in debt. Think carefully about the signs below. |
| if scanBytes+gp.gcAssistBytes >= 0 { |
| // Satisfy this entire assist debt. |
| scanBytes += gp.gcAssistBytes |
| gp.gcAssistBytes = 0 |
| xgp := gp |
| gp = gp.schedlink.ptr() |
| // It's important that we *not* put xgp in |
| // runnext. Otherwise, it's possible for user |
| // code to exploit the GC worker's high |
| // scheduler priority to get itself always run |
| // before other goroutines and always in the |
| // fresh quantum started by GC. |
| ready(xgp, 0, false) |
| } else { |
| // Partially satisfy this assist. |
| gp.gcAssistBytes += scanBytes |
| scanBytes = 0 |
| // As a heuristic, we move this assist to the |
| // back of the queue so that large assists |
| // can't clog up the assist queue and |
| // substantially delay small assists. |
| xgp := gp |
| gp = gp.schedlink.ptr() |
| if gp == nil { |
| // gp is the only assist in the queue. |
| gp = xgp |
| } else { |
| xgp.schedlink = 0 |
| work.assistQueue.tail.ptr().schedlink.set(xgp) |
| work.assistQueue.tail.set(xgp) |
| } |
| break |
| } |
| } |
| work.assistQueue.head.set(gp) |
| if gp == nil { |
| work.assistQueue.tail.set(nil) |
| } |
| |
| if scanBytes > 0 { |
| // Convert from scan bytes back to work. |
| scanWork = int64(float64(scanBytes) * gcController.assistWorkPerByte) |
| atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.bgScanCredit, scanWork) |
| } |
| unlock(&work.assistQueue.lock) |
| } |
| |
| // We use a C function to find the stack. |
| func doscanstack(*g, *gcWork) |
| |
| // scanstack scans gp's stack, greying all pointers found on the stack. |
| // |
| // scanstack is marked go:systemstack because it must not be preempted |
| // while using a workbuf. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| //go:systemstack |
| func scanstack(gp *g, gcw *gcWork) { |
| if gp.gcscanvalid { |
| return |
| } |
| |
| if readgstatus(gp)&_Gscan == 0 { |
| print("runtime:scanstack: gp=", gp, ", goid=", gp.goid, ", gp->atomicstatus=", hex(readgstatus(gp)), "\n") |
| throw("scanstack - bad status") |
| } |
| |
| switch readgstatus(gp) &^ _Gscan { |
| default: |
| print("runtime: gp=", gp, ", goid=", gp.goid, ", gp->atomicstatus=", readgstatus(gp), "\n") |
| throw("mark - bad status") |
| case _Gdead: |
| return |
| case _Grunning: |
| // ok for gccgo, though not for gc. |
| case _Grunnable, _Gsyscall, _Gwaiting: |
| // ok |
| } |
| |
| mp := gp.m |
| if mp != nil && mp.helpgc != 0 { |
| throw("can't scan gchelper stack") |
| } |
| |
| // Scan the stack. |
| doscanstack(gp, gcw) |
| |
| // Conservatively scan the saved register values. |
| scanstackblock(uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&gp.gcregs)), unsafe.Sizeof(gp.gcregs), gcw) |
| scanstackblock(uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&gp.context)), unsafe.Sizeof(gp.context), gcw) |
| |
| gp.gcscanvalid = true |
| } |
| |
| type gcDrainFlags int |
| |
| const ( |
| gcDrainUntilPreempt gcDrainFlags = 1 << iota |
| gcDrainNoBlock |
| gcDrainFlushBgCredit |
| gcDrainIdle |
| gcDrainFractional |
| |
| // gcDrainBlock means neither gcDrainUntilPreempt or |
| // gcDrainNoBlock. It is the default, but callers should use |
| // the constant for documentation purposes. |
| gcDrainBlock gcDrainFlags = 0 |
| ) |
| |
| // gcDrain scans roots and objects in work buffers, blackening grey |
| // objects until all roots and work buffers have been drained. |
| // |
| // If flags&gcDrainUntilPreempt != 0, gcDrain returns when g.preempt |
| // is set. This implies gcDrainNoBlock. |
| // |
| // If flags&gcDrainIdle != 0, gcDrain returns when there is other work |
| // to do. This implies gcDrainNoBlock. |
| // |
| // If flags&gcDrainFractional != 0, gcDrain self-preempts when |
| // pollFractionalWorkerExit() returns true. This implies |
| // gcDrainNoBlock. |
| // |
| // If flags&gcDrainNoBlock != 0, gcDrain returns as soon as it is |
| // unable to get more work. Otherwise, it will block until all |
| // blocking calls are blocked in gcDrain. |
| // |
| // If flags&gcDrainFlushBgCredit != 0, gcDrain flushes scan work |
| // credit to gcController.bgScanCredit every gcCreditSlack units of |
| // scan work. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| func gcDrain(gcw *gcWork, flags gcDrainFlags) { |
| if !writeBarrier.needed { |
| throw("gcDrain phase incorrect") |
| } |
| |
| gp := getg().m.curg |
| preemptible := flags&gcDrainUntilPreempt != 0 |
| blocking := flags&(gcDrainUntilPreempt|gcDrainIdle|gcDrainFractional|gcDrainNoBlock) == 0 |
| flushBgCredit := flags&gcDrainFlushBgCredit != 0 |
| idle := flags&gcDrainIdle != 0 |
| |
| initScanWork := gcw.scanWork |
| |
| // checkWork is the scan work before performing the next |
| // self-preempt check. |
| checkWork := int64(1<<63 - 1) |
| var check func() bool |
| if flags&(gcDrainIdle|gcDrainFractional) != 0 { |
| checkWork = initScanWork + drainCheckThreshold |
| if idle { |
| check = pollWork |
| } else if flags&gcDrainFractional != 0 { |
| check = pollFractionalWorkerExit |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Drain root marking jobs. |
| if work.markrootNext < work.markrootJobs { |
| for !(preemptible && gp.preempt) { |
| job := atomic.Xadd(&work.markrootNext, +1) - 1 |
| if job >= work.markrootJobs { |
| break |
| } |
| markroot(gcw, job) |
| if check != nil && check() { |
| goto done |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Drain heap marking jobs. |
| for !(preemptible && gp.preempt) { |
| // Try to keep work available on the global queue. We used to |
| // check if there were waiting workers, but it's better to |
| // just keep work available than to make workers wait. In the |
| // worst case, we'll do O(log(_WorkbufSize)) unnecessary |
| // balances. |
| if work.full == 0 { |
| gcw.balance() |
| } |
| |
| var b uintptr |
| if blocking { |
| b = gcw.get() |
| } else { |
| b = gcw.tryGetFast() |
| if b == 0 { |
| b = gcw.tryGet() |
| } |
| } |
| if b == 0 { |
| // work barrier reached or tryGet failed. |
| break |
| } |
| scanobject(b, gcw) |
| |
| // Flush background scan work credit to the global |
| // account if we've accumulated enough locally so |
| // mutator assists can draw on it. |
| if gcw.scanWork >= gcCreditSlack { |
| atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.scanWork, gcw.scanWork) |
| if flushBgCredit { |
| gcFlushBgCredit(gcw.scanWork - initScanWork) |
| initScanWork = 0 |
| } |
| checkWork -= gcw.scanWork |
| gcw.scanWork = 0 |
| |
| if checkWork <= 0 { |
| checkWork += drainCheckThreshold |
| if check != nil && check() { |
| break |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // In blocking mode, write barriers are not allowed after this |
| // point because we must preserve the condition that the work |
| // buffers are empty. |
| |
| done: |
| // Flush remaining scan work credit. |
| if gcw.scanWork > 0 { |
| atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.scanWork, gcw.scanWork) |
| if flushBgCredit { |
| gcFlushBgCredit(gcw.scanWork - initScanWork) |
| } |
| gcw.scanWork = 0 |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // gcDrainN blackens grey objects until it has performed roughly |
| // scanWork units of scan work or the G is preempted. This is |
| // best-effort, so it may perform less work if it fails to get a work |
| // buffer. Otherwise, it will perform at least n units of work, but |
| // may perform more because scanning is always done in whole object |
| // increments. It returns the amount of scan work performed. |
| // |
| // The caller goroutine must be in a preemptible state (e.g., |
| // _Gwaiting) to prevent deadlocks during stack scanning. As a |
| // consequence, this must be called on the system stack. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| //go:systemstack |
| func gcDrainN(gcw *gcWork, scanWork int64) int64 { |
| if !writeBarrier.needed { |
| throw("gcDrainN phase incorrect") |
| } |
| |
| // There may already be scan work on the gcw, which we don't |
| // want to claim was done by this call. |
| workFlushed := -gcw.scanWork |
| |
| gp := getg().m.curg |
| for !gp.preempt && workFlushed+gcw.scanWork < scanWork { |
| // See gcDrain comment. |
| if work.full == 0 { |
| gcw.balance() |
| } |
| |
| // This might be a good place to add prefetch code... |
| // if(wbuf.nobj > 4) { |
| // PREFETCH(wbuf->obj[wbuf.nobj - 3]; |
| // } |
| // |
| b := gcw.tryGetFast() |
| if b == 0 { |
| b = gcw.tryGet() |
| } |
| |
| if b == 0 { |
| // Try to do a root job. |
| // |
| // TODO: Assists should get credit for this |
| // work. |
| if work.markrootNext < work.markrootJobs { |
| job := atomic.Xadd(&work.markrootNext, +1) - 1 |
| if job < work.markrootJobs { |
| markroot(gcw, job) |
| continue |
| } |
| } |
| // No heap or root jobs. |
| break |
| } |
| scanobject(b, gcw) |
| |
| // Flush background scan work credit. |
| if gcw.scanWork >= gcCreditSlack { |
| atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.scanWork, gcw.scanWork) |
| workFlushed += gcw.scanWork |
| gcw.scanWork = 0 |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Unlike gcDrain, there's no need to flush remaining work |
| // here because this never flushes to bgScanCredit and |
| // gcw.dispose will flush any remaining work to scanWork. |
| |
| return workFlushed + gcw.scanWork |
| } |
| |
| // scanblock scans b as scanobject would, but using an explicit |
| // pointer bitmap instead of the heap bitmap. |
| // |
| // This is used to scan non-heap roots, so it does not update |
| // gcw.bytesMarked or gcw.scanWork. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| func scanblock(b0, n0 uintptr, ptrmask *uint8, gcw *gcWork) { |
| // Use local copies of original parameters, so that a stack trace |
| // due to one of the throws below shows the original block |
| // base and extent. |
| b := b0 |
| n := n0 |
| |
| for i := uintptr(0); i < n; { |
| // Find bits for the next word. |
| bits := uint32(*addb(ptrmask, i/(sys.PtrSize*8))) |
| if bits == 0 { |
| i += sys.PtrSize * 8 |
| continue |
| } |
| for j := 0; j < 8 && i < n; j++ { |
| if bits&1 != 0 { |
| // Same work as in scanobject; see comments there. |
| obj := *(*uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(b + i)) |
| if obj != 0 { |
| if obj, span, objIndex := findObject(obj, b, i, false); obj != 0 { |
| greyobject(obj, b, i, span, gcw, objIndex, false) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| bits >>= 1 |
| i += sys.PtrSize |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // scanobject scans the object starting at b, adding pointers to gcw. |
| // b must point to the beginning of a heap object or an oblet. |
| // scanobject consults the GC bitmap for the pointer mask and the |
| // spans for the size of the object. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| func scanobject(b uintptr, gcw *gcWork) { |
| // Find the bits for b and the size of the object at b. |
| // |
| // b is either the beginning of an object, in which case this |
| // is the size of the object to scan, or it points to an |
| // oblet, in which case we compute the size to scan below. |
| hbits := heapBitsForAddr(b) |
| s := spanOfUnchecked(b) |
| n := s.elemsize |
| if n == 0 { |
| throw("scanobject n == 0") |
| } |
| |
| if n > maxObletBytes { |
| // Large object. Break into oblets for better |
| // parallelism and lower latency. |
| if b == s.base() { |
| // It's possible this is a noscan object (not |
| // from greyobject, but from other code |
| // paths), in which case we must *not* enqueue |
| // oblets since their bitmaps will be |
| // uninitialized. |
| if s.spanclass.noscan() { |
| // Bypass the whole scan. |
| gcw.bytesMarked += uint64(n) |
| return |
| } |
| |
| // Enqueue the other oblets to scan later. |
| // Some oblets may be in b's scalar tail, but |
| // these will be marked as "no more pointers", |
| // so we'll drop out immediately when we go to |
| // scan those. |
| for oblet := b + maxObletBytes; oblet < s.base()+s.elemsize; oblet += maxObletBytes { |
| if !gcw.putFast(oblet) { |
| gcw.put(oblet) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Compute the size of the oblet. Since this object |
| // must be a large object, s.base() is the beginning |
| // of the object. |
| n = s.base() + s.elemsize - b |
| if n > maxObletBytes { |
| n = maxObletBytes |
| } |
| } |
| |
| var i uintptr |
| for i = 0; i < n; i += sys.PtrSize { |
| // Find bits for this word. |
| if i != 0 { |
| // Avoid needless hbits.next() on last iteration. |
| hbits = hbits.next() |
| } |
| // Load bits once. See CL 22712 and issue 16973 for discussion. |
| bits := hbits.bits() |
| // During checkmarking, 1-word objects store the checkmark |
| // in the type bit for the one word. The only one-word objects |
| // are pointers, or else they'd be merged with other non-pointer |
| // data into larger allocations. |
| if i != 1*sys.PtrSize && bits&bitScan == 0 { |
| break // no more pointers in this object |
| } |
| if bits&bitPointer == 0 { |
| continue // not a pointer |
| } |
| |
| // Work here is duplicated in scanblock and above. |
| // If you make changes here, make changes there too. |
| obj := *(*uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(b + i)) |
| |
| // At this point we have extracted the next potential pointer. |
| // Quickly filter out nil and pointers back to the current object. |
| if obj != 0 && obj-b >= n { |
| // Test if obj points into the Go heap and, if so, |
| // mark the object. |
| // |
| // Note that it's possible for findObject to |
| // fail if obj points to a just-allocated heap |
| // object because of a race with growing the |
| // heap. In this case, we know the object was |
| // just allocated and hence will be marked by |
| // allocation itself. |
| if obj, span, objIndex := findObject(obj, b, i, false); obj != 0 { |
| greyobject(obj, b, i, span, gcw, objIndex, false) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| gcw.bytesMarked += uint64(n) |
| gcw.scanWork += int64(i) |
| } |
| |
| //go:linkname scanstackblock runtime.scanstackblock |
| |
| // scanstackblock is called by the stack scanning code in C to |
| // actually find and mark pointers in the stack block. This is like |
| // scanblock, but we scan the stack conservatively, so there is no |
| // bitmask of pointers. |
| func scanstackblock(b, n uintptr, gcw *gcWork) { |
| for i := uintptr(0); i < n; i += sys.PtrSize { |
| // Same work as in scanobject; see comments there. |
| obj := *(*uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(b + i)) |
| if obj, span, objIndex := findObject(obj, b, i, true); obj != 0 { |
| greyobject(obj, b, i, span, gcw, objIndex, true) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Shade the object if it isn't already. |
| // The object is not nil and known to be in the heap. |
| // Preemption must be disabled. |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| func shade(b uintptr) { |
| if obj, span, objIndex := findObject(b, 0, 0, true); obj != 0 { |
| gcw := &getg().m.p.ptr().gcw |
| greyobject(obj, 0, 0, span, gcw, objIndex, true) |
| if gcphase == _GCmarktermination || gcBlackenPromptly { |
| // Ps aren't allowed to cache work during mark |
| // termination. |
| gcw.dispose() |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // obj is the start of an object with mark mbits. |
| // If it isn't already marked, mark it and enqueue into gcw. |
| // base and off are for debugging only and could be removed. |
| // |
| // See also wbBufFlush1, which partially duplicates this logic. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrierrec |
| func greyobject(obj, base, off uintptr, span *mspan, gcw *gcWork, objIndex uintptr, forStack bool) { |
| // obj should be start of allocation, and so must be at least pointer-aligned. |
| if obj&(sys.PtrSize-1) != 0 { |
| throw("greyobject: obj not pointer-aligned") |
| } |
| mbits := span.markBitsForIndex(objIndex) |
| |
| if useCheckmark { |
| if !mbits.isMarked() { |
| // Stack scanning is conservative, so we can |
| // see a reference to an object not previously |
| // found. Assume the object was correctly not |
| // marked and ignore the pointer. |
| if forStack { |
| return |
| } |
| printlock() |
| print("runtime:greyobject: checkmarks finds unexpected unmarked object obj=", hex(obj), "\n") |
| print("runtime: found obj at *(", hex(base), "+", hex(off), ")\n") |
| |
| // Dump the source (base) object |
| gcDumpObject("base", base, off) |
| |
| // Dump the object |
| gcDumpObject("obj", obj, ^uintptr(0)) |
| |
| getg().m.traceback = 2 |
| throw("checkmark found unmarked object") |
| } |
| hbits := heapBitsForAddr(obj) |
| if hbits.isCheckmarked(span.elemsize) { |
| return |
| } |
| hbits.setCheckmarked(span.elemsize) |
| if !hbits.isCheckmarked(span.elemsize) { |
| throw("setCheckmarked and isCheckmarked disagree") |
| } |
| } else { |
| // Stack scanning is conservative, so we can see a |
| // pointer to a free object. Assume the object was |
| // correctly freed and we must ignore the pointer. |
| if forStack && span.isFree(objIndex) { |
| return |
| } |
| |
| if debug.gccheckmark > 0 && span.isFree(objIndex) { |
| print("runtime: marking free object ", hex(obj), " found at *(", hex(base), "+", hex(off), ")\n") |
| gcDumpObject("base", base, off) |
| gcDumpObject("obj", obj, ^uintptr(0)) |
| getg().m.traceback = 2 |
| throw("marking free object") |
| } |
| |
| // If marked we have nothing to do. |
| if mbits.isMarked() { |
| return |
| } |
| // mbits.setMarked() // Avoid extra call overhead with manual inlining. |
| atomic.Or8(mbits.bytep, mbits.mask) |
| // If this is a noscan object, fast-track it to black |
| // instead of greying it. |
| if span.spanclass.noscan() { |
| gcw.bytesMarked += uint64(span.elemsize) |
| return |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Queue the obj for scanning. The PREFETCH(obj) logic has been removed but |
| // seems like a nice optimization that can be added back in. |
| // There needs to be time between the PREFETCH and the use. |
| // Previously we put the obj in an 8 element buffer that is drained at a rate |
| // to give the PREFETCH time to do its work. |
| // Use of PREFETCHNTA might be more appropriate than PREFETCH |
| if !gcw.putFast(obj) { |
| gcw.put(obj) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // gcDumpObject dumps the contents of obj for debugging and marks the |
| // field at byte offset off in obj. |
| func gcDumpObject(label string, obj, off uintptr) { |
| s := spanOf(obj) |
| print(label, "=", hex(obj)) |
| if s == nil { |
| print(" s=nil\n") |
| return |
| } |
| print(" s.base()=", hex(s.base()), " s.limit=", hex(s.limit), " s.spanclass=", s.spanclass, " s.elemsize=", s.elemsize, " s.state=") |
| if 0 <= s.state && int(s.state) < len(mSpanStateNames) { |
| print(mSpanStateNames[s.state], "\n") |
| } else { |
| print("unknown(", s.state, ")\n") |
| } |
| |
| skipped := false |
| size := s.elemsize |
| if s.state == _MSpanManual && size == 0 { |
| // We're printing something from a stack frame. We |
| // don't know how big it is, so just show up to an |
| // including off. |
| size = off + sys.PtrSize |
| } |
| for i := uintptr(0); i < size; i += sys.PtrSize { |
| // For big objects, just print the beginning (because |
| // that usually hints at the object's type) and the |
| // fields around off. |
| if !(i < 128*sys.PtrSize || off-16*sys.PtrSize < i && i < off+16*sys.PtrSize) { |
| skipped = true |
| continue |
| } |
| if skipped { |
| print(" ...\n") |
| skipped = false |
| } |
| print(" *(", label, "+", i, ") = ", hex(*(*uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(obj + i)))) |
| if i == off { |
| print(" <==") |
| } |
| print("\n") |
| } |
| if skipped { |
| print(" ...\n") |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // gcmarknewobject marks a newly allocated object black. obj must |
| // not contain any non-nil pointers. |
| // |
| // This is nosplit so it can manipulate a gcWork without preemption. |
| // |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| //go:nosplit |
| func gcmarknewobject(obj, size, scanSize uintptr) { |
| if useCheckmark && !gcBlackenPromptly { // The world should be stopped so this should not happen. |
| throw("gcmarknewobject called while doing checkmark") |
| } |
| markBitsForAddr(obj).setMarked() |
| gcw := &getg().m.p.ptr().gcw |
| gcw.bytesMarked += uint64(size) |
| gcw.scanWork += int64(scanSize) |
| if gcBlackenPromptly { |
| // There shouldn't be anything in the work queue, but |
| // we still need to flush stats. |
| gcw.dispose() |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // gcMarkTinyAllocs greys all active tiny alloc blocks. |
| // |
| // The world must be stopped. |
| func gcMarkTinyAllocs() { |
| for _, p := range allp { |
| c := p.mcache |
| if c == nil || c.tiny == 0 { |
| continue |
| } |
| _, span, objIndex := findObject(c.tiny, 0, 0, false) |
| gcw := &p.gcw |
| greyobject(c.tiny, 0, 0, span, gcw, objIndex, false) |
| if gcBlackenPromptly { |
| gcw.dispose() |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Checkmarking |
| |
| // To help debug the concurrent GC we remark with the world |
| // stopped ensuring that any object encountered has their normal |
| // mark bit set. To do this we use an orthogonal bit |
| // pattern to indicate the object is marked. The following pattern |
| // uses the upper two bits in the object's boundary nibble. |
| // 01: scalar not marked |
| // 10: pointer not marked |
| // 11: pointer marked |
| // 00: scalar marked |
| // Xoring with 01 will flip the pattern from marked to unmarked and vica versa. |
| // The higher bit is 1 for pointers and 0 for scalars, whether the object |
| // is marked or not. |
| // The first nibble no longer holds the typeDead pattern indicating that the |
| // there are no more pointers in the object. This information is held |
| // in the second nibble. |
| |
| // If useCheckmark is true, marking of an object uses the |
| // checkmark bits (encoding above) instead of the standard |
| // mark bits. |
| var useCheckmark = false |
| |
| //go:nowritebarrier |
| func initCheckmarks() { |
| useCheckmark = true |
| for _, s := range mheap_.allspans { |
| if s.state == _MSpanInUse { |
| heapBitsForAddr(s.base()).initCheckmarkSpan(s.layout()) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| func clearCheckmarks() { |
| useCheckmark = false |
| for _, s := range mheap_.allspans { |
| if s.state == _MSpanInUse { |
| heapBitsForAddr(s.base()).clearCheckmarkSpan(s.layout()) |
| } |
| } |
| } |