Projet_SETI_RISC-V/riscv-gnu-toolchain/gcc/libgo/go/runtime/mgcmark.go
2023-03-06 14:48:14 +01:00

1361 lines
41 KiB
Go
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

// 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 (
"internal/goarch"
"internal/goexperiment"
"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
// 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 12 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
// pagesPerSpanRoot indicates how many pages to scan from a span root
// at a time. Used by special root marking.
//
// Higher values improve throughput by increasing locality, but
// increase the minimum latency of a marking operation.
//
// Must be a multiple of the pageInUse bitmap element size and
// must also evenly divide pagesPerArena.
pagesPerSpanRoot = 512
)
// gcMarkRootPrepare queues root scanning jobs (stacks, globals, and
// some miscellany) and initializes scanning-related state.
//
// The world must be stopped.
func gcMarkRootPrepare() {
assertWorldStopped()
work.nDataRoots = 0
// Only scan globals once per cycle; preferably concurrently.
roots := gcRoots
for roots != nil {
work.nDataRoots++
roots = roots.next
}
// Scan span roots for finalizer specials.
//
// We depend on addfinalizer to mark objects that get
// finalizers after root marking.
//
// We're going to scan the whole heap (that was available at the time the
// mark phase started, i.e. markArenas) for in-use spans which have specials.
//
// Break up the work into arenas, and further into chunks.
//
// Snapshot allArenas as markArenas. This snapshot is safe because allArenas
// is append-only.
mheap_.markArenas = mheap_.allArenas[:len(mheap_.allArenas):len(mheap_.allArenas)]
work.nSpanRoots = len(mheap_.markArenas) * (pagesPerArena / pagesPerSpanRoot)
// Scan stacks.
//
// 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 caught by the write barrier.
work.stackRoots = allGsSnapshot()
work.nStackRoots = len(work.stackRoots)
work.markrootNext = 0
work.markrootJobs = uint32(fixedRootCount + work.nDataRoots + work.nSpanRoots + work.nStackRoots)
// Calculate base indexes of each root type
work.baseData = uint32(fixedRootCount)
work.baseSpans = work.baseData + uint32(work.nDataRoots)
work.baseStacks = work.baseSpans + uint32(work.nSpanRoots)
work.baseEnd = work.baseStacks + uint32(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")
}
// Check that stacks have been scanned.
//
// We only check the first nStackRoots Gs that we should have scanned.
// Since we don't care about newer Gs (see comment in
// gcMarkRootPrepare), no locking is required.
i := 0
forEachGRace(func(gp *g) {
if i >= work.nStackRoots {
return
}
if !gp.gcscandone {
println("gp", gp, "goid", gp.goid,
"status", readgstatus(gp),
"gcscandone", gp.gcscandone)
throw("scan missed a g")
}
i++
})
}
// 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).
//
// Returns the amount of GC work credit produced by the operation.
// If flushBgCredit is true, then that credit is also flushed
// to the background credit pool.
//
// nowritebarrier is only advisory here.
//
//go:nowritebarrier
func markroot(gcw *gcWork, i uint32, flushBgCredit bool) int64 {
// Note: if you add a case here, please also update heapdump.go:dumproots.
var workDone int64
var workCounter *atomic.Int64
switch {
case work.baseData <= i && i < work.baseSpans:
workCounter = &gcController.globalsScanWork
roots := gcRoots
c := work.baseData
for roots != nil {
if i == c {
workDone += markrootBlock(roots, gcw)
break
}
roots = roots.next
c++
}
case i == fixedRootFinalizers:
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 work.baseSpans <= i && i < work.baseStacks:
// mark mspan.specials
markrootSpans(gcw, int(i-work.baseSpans))
default:
// the rest is scanning goroutine stacks
workCounter = &gcController.stackScanWork
if i < work.baseStacks || work.baseEnd <= i {
printlock()
print("runtime: markroot index ", i, " not in stack roots range [", work.baseStacks, ", ", work.baseEnd, ")\n")
throw("markroot: bad index")
}
gp := work.stackRoots[i-work.baseStacks]
// 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
}
// scanstack 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: suspendG blocks (and spins) until gp
// stops, 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.
stopped := suspendG(gp)
if stopped.dead {
gp.gcscandone = true
return
}
if gp.gcscandone {
throw("g already scanned")
}
workDone += scanstack(gp, gcw)
gp.gcscandone = true
resumeG(stopped)
if selfScan {
casgstatus(userG, _Gwaiting, _Grunning)
}
})
}
if goexperiment.PacerRedesign {
if workCounter != nil && workDone != 0 {
workCounter.Add(workDone)
if flushBgCredit {
gcFlushBgCredit(workDone)
}
}
}
return workDone
}
// markrootBlock scans one element of the list of GC roots.
//
// Returns the amount of work done.
//
//go:nowritebarrier
func markrootBlock(roots *gcRootList, gcw *gcWork) int64 {
var ret int64
for i := 0; i < roots.count; i++ {
r := &roots.roots[i]
scanblock(uintptr(r.decl), r.ptrdata, r.gcdata, gcw)
ret += int64(r.ptrdata)
}
return ret
}
// markrootSpans marks roots for one shard of markArenas.
//
//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.
sg := mheap_.sweepgen
// Find the arena and page index into that arena for this shard.
ai := mheap_.markArenas[shard/(pagesPerArena/pagesPerSpanRoot)]
ha := mheap_.arenas[ai.l1()][ai.l2()]
arenaPage := uint(uintptr(shard) * pagesPerSpanRoot % pagesPerArena)
// Construct slice of bitmap which we'll iterate over.
specialsbits := ha.pageSpecials[arenaPage/8:]
specialsbits = specialsbits[:pagesPerSpanRoot/8]
for i := range specialsbits {
// Find set bits, which correspond to spans with specials.
specials := atomic.Load8(&specialsbits[i])
if specials == 0 {
continue
}
for j := uint(0); j < 8; j++ {
if specials&(1<<j) == 0 {
continue
}
// Find the span for this bit.
//
// This value is guaranteed to be non-nil because having
// specials implies that the span is in-use, and since we're
// currently marking we can be sure that we don't have to worry
// about the span being freed and re-used.
s := ha.spans[arenaPage+uint(i)*8+j]
// The state must be mSpanInUse if the specials bit is set, so
// sanity check that.
if state := s.state.get(); state != mSpanInUse {
print("s.state = ", state, "\n")
throw("non in-use span found with specials bit set")
}
// Check that this span was swept (it may be cached or uncached).
if !useCheckmark && !(s.sweepgen == sg || s.sweepgen == sg+3) {
// sweepgen was updated (+2) during non-checkmark GC pass
print("sweep ", s.sweepgen, " ", sg, "\n")
throw("gc: unswept span")
}
// 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)), goarch.PtrSize, &oneptrmask[0], gcw)
}
unlock(&s.speciallock)
}
}
}
// gcAssistAlloc performs GC work to make gp's assist debt positive.
// gp must be the calling user goroutine.
//
// 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.
assistWorkPerByte := gcController.assistWorkPerByte.Load()
assistBytesPerWork := gcController.assistBytesPerWork.Load()
debtBytes := -gp.gcAssistBytes
scanWork := int64(assistWorkPerByte * float64(debtBytes))
if scanWork < gcOverAssistWork {
scanWork = gcOverAssistWork
debtBytes = int64(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(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)
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.
assistBytesPerWork := gcController.assistBytesPerWork.Load()
gp.gcAssistBytes += 1 + int64(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)
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)
list := work.assistQueue.q.popList()
injectglist(&list)
unlock(&work.assistQueue.lock)
}
// gcParkAssist puts the current goroutine on the assist queue and parks.
//
// gcParkAssist reports whether the assist is now satisfied. If it
// returns false, the caller must retry the assist.
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()
oldList := work.assistQueue.q
work.assistQueue.q.pushBack(gp)
// 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.q = oldList
if oldList.tail != 0 {
oldList.tail.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.q.empty() {
// 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
}
assistBytesPerWork := gcController.assistBytesPerWork.Load()
scanBytes := int64(float64(scanWork) * assistBytesPerWork)
lock(&work.assistQueue.lock)
for !work.assistQueue.q.empty() && scanBytes > 0 {
gp := work.assistQueue.q.pop()
// 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
// It's important that we *not* put gp 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(gp, 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.
work.assistQueue.q.pushBack(gp)
break
}
}
if scanBytes > 0 {
// Convert from scan bytes back to work.
assistWorkPerByte := gcController.assistWorkPerByte.Load()
scanWork = int64(float64(scanBytes) * assistWorkPerByte)
atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.bgScanCredit, scanWork)
}
unlock(&work.assistQueue.lock)
}
// We use a C function to find the stack.
// Returns whether we succesfully scanned the stack.
func doscanstack(*g, *gcWork) bool
func doscanstackswitch(*g, *g)
// scanstack scans gp's stack, greying all pointers found on the stack.
//
// For goexperiment.PacerRedesign:
// Returns the amount of scan work performed, but doesn't update
// gcController.stackScanWork or flush any credit. Any background credit produced
// by this function should be flushed by its caller. scanstack itself can't
// safely flush because it may result in trying to wake up a goroutine that
// was just scanned, resulting in a self-deadlock.
//
// scanstack will also shrink the stack if it is safe to do so. If it
// is not, it schedules a stack shrink for the next synchronous safe
// point.
//
// 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) int64 {
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 0
case _Grunning:
print("runtime: gp=", gp, ", goid=", gp.goid, ", gp->atomicstatus=", readgstatus(gp), "\n")
throw("scanstack: goroutine not stopped")
case _Grunnable, _Gsyscall, _Gwaiting:
// ok
}
// Scan the stack.
if usestackmaps {
g := getg()
if g == gp {
// Scan its own stack.
doscanstack(gp, gcw)
} else if gp.entry != nil {
// This is a newly created g that hasn't run. No stack to scan.
} else if readgstatus(gp)&^_Gscan == _Gsyscall {
scanSyscallStack(gp, gcw)
} else {
// Scanning another g's stack. We need to switch to that g
// to unwind its stack. And switch back after scan.
scanstackswitch(gp, gcw)
}
} else {
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)
}
// Note: in the gc runtime scanstack also scans defer records.
// This is necessary as it uses stack objects (a.k.a. stack tracing).
// We don't (yet) do stack objects, and regular stack/heap scan
// will take care of defer records just fine.
return 0
}
// scanstackswitch scans gp's stack by switching (gogo) to gp and
// letting it scan its own stack, and switching back upon finish.
//
//go:nowritebarrier
func scanstackswitch(gp *g, gcw *gcWork) {
g := getg()
// We are on the system stack which prevents preemption. But
// we are going to switch to g stack. Lock m to block preemption.
mp := acquirem()
// The doscanstackswitch function will modify the current g's
// context. Preserve it.
// The stack scan code may call systemstack, which will modify
// gp's context. Preserve it as well so we can resume gp.
context := g.context
stackcontext := g.stackcontext
context2 := gp.context
stackcontext2 := gp.stackcontext
gp.scangcw = uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(gcw))
gp.scang = uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(g))
doscanstackswitch(g, gp)
// Restore the contexts.
g.context = context
g.stackcontext = stackcontext
gp.context = context2
gp.stackcontext = stackcontext2
gp.scangcw = 0
// gp.scang is already cleared in C code.
releasem(mp)
}
// scanSyscallStack scans the stack of a goroutine blocked in a
// syscall by waking it up and asking it to scan its own stack.
func scanSyscallStack(gp *g, gcw *gcWork) {
if gp.scanningself {
// We've suspended the goroutine by setting the _Gscan bit,
// so this shouldn't be possible.
throw("scanSyscallStack: scanningself")
}
if gp.gcscandone {
// We've suspended the goroutine by setting the _Gscan bit,
// so this shouldn't be possible.
throw("scanSyscallStack: gcscandone")
}
gp.gcScannedSyscallStack = false
for {
mp := gp.m
noteclear(&mp.scannote)
gp.scangcw = uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(gcw))
tgkill(getpid(), _pid_t(mp.procid), _SIGURG)
// Wait for gp to scan its own stack.
notesleep(&mp.scannote)
if gp.gcScannedSyscallStack {
return
}
// The signal was delivered at a bad time. Try again.
osyield()
}
}
type gcDrainFlags int
const (
gcDrainUntilPreempt gcDrainFlags = 1 << iota
gcDrainFlushBgCredit
gcDrainIdle
gcDrainFractional
)
// gcDrain scans roots and objects in work buffers, blackening grey
// objects until it is unable to get more work. It may return before
// GC is done; it's the caller's responsibility to balance work from
// other Ps.
//
// If flags&gcDrainUntilPreempt != 0, gcDrain returns when g.preempt
// is set.
//
// If flags&gcDrainIdle != 0, gcDrain returns when there is other work
// to do.
//
// If flags&gcDrainFractional != 0, gcDrain self-preempts when
// pollFractionalWorkerExit() returns true. This implies
// gcDrainNoBlock.
//
// If flags&gcDrainFlushBgCredit != 0, gcDrain flushes scan work
// credit to gcController.bgScanCredit every gcCreditSlack units of
// scan work.
//
// gcDrain will always return if there is a pending STW.
//
//go:nowritebarrier
func gcDrain(gcw *gcWork, flags gcDrainFlags) {
if !writeBarrier.needed {
throw("gcDrain phase incorrect")
}
gp := getg().m.curg
preemptible := flags&gcDrainUntilPreempt != 0
flushBgCredit := flags&gcDrainFlushBgCredit != 0
idle := flags&gcDrainIdle != 0
initScanWork := gcw.heapScanWork
// 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 {
// Stop if we're preemptible or if someone wants to STW.
for !(gp.preempt && (preemptible || atomic.Load(&sched.gcwaiting) != 0)) {
job := atomic.Xadd(&work.markrootNext, +1) - 1
if job >= work.markrootJobs {
break
}
markroot(gcw, job, flushBgCredit)
if check != nil && check() {
goto done
}
}
}
// Drain heap marking jobs.
// Stop if we're preemptible or if someone wants to STW.
for !(gp.preempt && (preemptible || atomic.Load(&sched.gcwaiting) != 0)) {
// 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()
}
b := gcw.tryGetFast()
if b == 0 {
b = gcw.tryGet()
if b == 0 {
// Flush the write barrier
// buffer; this may create
// more work.
wbBufFlush(nil, 0)
b = gcw.tryGet()
}
}
if b == 0 {
// Unable to get work.
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.heapScanWork >= gcCreditSlack {
gcController.heapScanWork.Add(gcw.heapScanWork)
if flushBgCredit {
gcFlushBgCredit(gcw.heapScanWork - initScanWork)
initScanWork = 0
}
checkWork -= gcw.heapScanWork
gcw.heapScanWork = 0
if checkWork <= 0 {
checkWork += drainCheckThreshold
if check != nil && check() {
break
}
}
}
}
done:
// Flush remaining scan work credit.
if gcw.heapScanWork > 0 {
gcController.heapScanWork.Add(gcw.heapScanWork)
if flushBgCredit {
gcFlushBgCredit(gcw.heapScanWork - initScanWork)
}
gcw.heapScanWork = 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.heapScanWork
gp := getg().m.curg
for !gp.preempt && workFlushed+gcw.heapScanWork < scanWork {
// See gcDrain comment.
if work.full == 0 {
gcw.balance()
}
b := gcw.tryGetFast()
if b == 0 {
b = gcw.tryGet()
if b == 0 {
// Flush the write barrier buffer;
// this may create more work.
wbBufFlush(nil, 0)
b = gcw.tryGet()
}
}
if b == 0 {
// Try to do a root job.
if work.markrootNext < work.markrootJobs {
job := atomic.Xadd(&work.markrootNext, +1) - 1
if job < work.markrootJobs {
work := markroot(gcw, job, false)
if goexperiment.PacerRedesign {
workFlushed += work
}
continue
}
}
// No heap or root jobs.
break
}
scanobject(b, gcw)
// Flush background scan work credit.
if gcw.heapScanWork >= gcCreditSlack {
gcController.heapScanWork.Add(gcw.heapScanWork)
workFlushed += gcw.heapScanWork
gcw.heapScanWork = 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.heapScanWork
}
// 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.heapScanWork.
//
//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/(goarch.PtrSize*8)))
if bits == 0 {
i += goarch.PtrSize * 8
continue
}
for j := 0; j < 8 && i < n; j++ {
if bits&1 != 0 {
// Same work as in scanobject; see comments there.
p := *(*uintptr)(unsafe.Pointer(b + i))
if p != 0 {
if obj, span, objIndex := findObject(p, b, i, false); obj != 0 {
greyobject(obj, b, i, span, gcw, objIndex, false)
}
}
}
bits >>= 1
i += goarch.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) {
// Prefetch object before we scan it.
//
// This will overlap fetching the beginning of the object with initial
// setup before we start scanning the object.
sys.Prefetch(b)
// 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, hbits = i+goarch.PtrSize, hbits.next() {
// Load bits once. See CL 22712 and issue 16973 for discussion.
bits := hbits.bits()
if 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.heapScanWork += int64(i)
}
//go:linkname 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) {
if usestackmaps {
throw("scanstackblock: conservative scan but stack map is used")
}
for i := uintptr(0); i < n; i += goarch.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)
}
}
}
// scanstackblockwithmap is like scanstackblock, but with an explicit
// pointer bitmap. This is used only when precise stack scan is enabled.
//go:linkname scanstackblockwithmap
//go:nowritebarrier
func scanstackblockwithmap(pc, 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/(goarch.PtrSize*8)))
if bits == 0 {
i += goarch.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 {
o, span, objIndex := findObject(obj, b, i, false)
if obj < minPhysPageSize ||
span != nil && span.state.get() != mSpanManual &&
(obj < span.base() || obj >= span.limit || span.state.get() != mSpanInUse) {
print("runtime: found in object at *(", hex(b), "+", hex(i), ") = ", hex(obj), ", pc=", hex(pc), "\n")
name, file, line, _ := funcfileline(pc, -1, false)
print(name, "\n", file, ":", line, "\n")
//gcDumpObject("object", b, i)
throw("found bad pointer in Go stack (incorrect use of unsafe or cgo?)")
}
if o != 0 {
greyobject(o, b, i, span, gcw, objIndex, false)
}
}
}
bits >>= 1
i += goarch.PtrSize
}
}
}
// 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, !usestackmaps); obj != 0 {
gcw := &getg().m.p.ptr().gcw
greyobject(obj, 0, 0, span, gcw, objIndex, !usestackmaps)
}
}
// 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&(goarch.PtrSize-1) != 0 {
throw("greyobject: obj not pointer-aligned")
}
mbits := span.markBitsForIndex(objIndex)
if useCheckmark {
if setCheckmark(obj, base, off, mbits, forStack) {
// Already marked.
return
}
} 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()
// Mark span.
arena, pageIdx, pageMask := pageIndexOf(span.base())
if arena.pageMarks[pageIdx]&pageMask == 0 {
atomic.Or8(&arena.pageMarks[pageIdx], pageMask)
}
// 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
}
}
// We're adding obj to P's local workbuf, so it's likely
// this object will be processed soon by the same P.
// Even if the workbuf gets flushed, there will likely still be
// some benefit on platforms with inclusive shared caches.
sys.Prefetch(obj)
// Queue the obj for scanning.
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 state := s.state.get(); 0 <= state && int(state) < len(mSpanStateNames) {
print(mSpanStateNames[state], "\n")
} else {
print("unknown(", state, ")\n")
}
skipped := false
size := s.elemsize
if s.state.get() == 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 + goarch.PtrSize
}
for i := uintptr(0); i < size; i += goarch.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*goarch.PtrSize || off-16*goarch.PtrSize < i && i < off+16*goarch.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(span *mspan, obj, size, scanSize uintptr) {
if useCheckmark { // The world should be stopped so this should not happen.
throw("gcmarknewobject called while doing checkmark")
}
// Mark object.
objIndex := span.objIndex(obj)
span.markBitsForIndex(objIndex).setMarked()
// Mark span.
arena, pageIdx, pageMask := pageIndexOf(span.base())
if arena.pageMarks[pageIdx]&pageMask == 0 {
atomic.Or8(&arena.pageMarks[pageIdx], pageMask)
}
gcw := &getg().m.p.ptr().gcw
gcw.bytesMarked += uint64(size)
if !goexperiment.PacerRedesign {
// The old pacer counts newly allocated memory toward
// heapScanWork because heapScan is continuously updated
// throughout the GC cycle with newly allocated memory. However,
// these objects are never actually scanned, so we need
// to account for them in heapScanWork here, "faking" their work.
// Otherwise the pacer will think it's always behind, potentially
// by a large margin.
//
// The new pacer doesn't care about this because it ceases to updated
// heapScan once a GC cycle starts, effectively snapshotting it.
gcw.heapScanWork += int64(scanSize)
}
}
// gcMarkTinyAllocs greys all active tiny alloc blocks.
//
// The world must be stopped.
func gcMarkTinyAllocs() {
assertWorldStopped()
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)
}
}