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The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001/*
2 * Copyright (C) 2008 The Android Open Source Project
3 *
4 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
5 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
6 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
7 *
8 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
9 *
10 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
11 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
12 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
13 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
14 * limitations under the License.
15 */
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -070016
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -080017/*
18 * Thread support.
19 */
20#include "Dalvik.h"
Bob Lee2fe146a2009-09-10 00:36:29 +020021#include "native/SystemThread.h"
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -080022
23#include "utils/threads.h" // need Android thread priorities
24
25#include <stdlib.h>
26#include <unistd.h>
27#include <sys/time.h>
28#include <sys/resource.h>
29#include <sys/mman.h>
30#include <errno.h>
Andy McFaddend62c0b52009-08-04 15:02:12 -070031#include <fcntl.h>
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -080032
San Mehat5a2056c2009-09-12 10:10:13 -070033#include <cutils/sched_policy.h>
34
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -080035#if defined(HAVE_PRCTL)
36#include <sys/prctl.h>
37#endif
38
Ben Chengfe1be872009-08-21 16:18:46 -070039#if defined(WITH_SELF_VERIFICATION)
40#include "interp/Jit.h" // need for self verification
41#endif
42
43
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -080044/* desktop Linux needs a little help with gettid() */
45#if defined(HAVE_GETTID) && !defined(HAVE_ANDROID_OS)
46#define __KERNEL__
47# include <linux/unistd.h>
48#ifdef _syscall0
49_syscall0(pid_t,gettid)
50#else
51pid_t gettid() { return syscall(__NR_gettid);}
52#endif
53#undef __KERNEL__
54#endif
55
San Mehat256fc152009-04-21 14:03:06 -070056// Change this to enable logging on cgroup errors
57#define ENABLE_CGROUP_ERR_LOGGING 0
58
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -080059// change this to LOGV/LOGD to debug thread activity
60#define LOG_THREAD LOGVV
61
62/*
63Notes on Threading
64
65All threads are native pthreads. All threads, except the JDWP debugger
66thread, are visible to code running in the VM and to the debugger. (We
67don't want the debugger to try to manipulate the thread that listens for
68instructions from the debugger.) Internal VM threads are in the "system"
69ThreadGroup, all others are in the "main" ThreadGroup, per convention.
70
71The GC only runs when all threads have been suspended. Threads are
72expected to suspend themselves, using a "safe point" mechanism. We check
73for a suspend request at certain points in the main interpreter loop,
74and on requests coming in from native code (e.g. all JNI functions).
75Certain debugger events may inspire threads to self-suspend.
76
77Native methods must use JNI calls to modify object references to avoid
78clashes with the GC. JNI doesn't provide a way for native code to access
79arrays of objects as such -- code must always get/set individual entries --
80so it should be possible to fully control access through JNI.
81
82Internal native VM threads, such as the finalizer thread, must explicitly
83check for suspension periodically. In most cases they will be sound
84asleep on a condition variable, and won't notice the suspension anyway.
85
86Threads may be suspended by the GC, debugger, or the SIGQUIT listener
87thread. The debugger may suspend or resume individual threads, while the
88GC always suspends all threads. Each thread has a "suspend count" that
89is incremented on suspend requests and decremented on resume requests.
90When the count is zero, the thread is runnable. This allows us to fulfill
91a debugger requirement: if the debugger suspends a thread, the thread is
92not allowed to run again until the debugger resumes it (or disconnects,
93in which case we must resume all debugger-suspended threads).
94
95Paused threads sleep on a condition variable, and are awoken en masse.
96Certain "slow" VM operations, such as starting up a new thread, will be
97done in a separate "VMWAIT" state, so that the rest of the VM doesn't
98freeze up waiting for the operation to finish. Threads must check for
99pending suspension when leaving VMWAIT.
100
101Because threads suspend themselves while interpreting code or when native
102code makes JNI calls, there is no risk of suspending while holding internal
103VM locks. All threads can enter a suspended (or native-code-only) state.
104Also, we don't have to worry about object references existing solely
105in hardware registers.
106
107We do, however, have to worry about objects that were allocated internally
108and aren't yet visible to anything else in the VM. If we allocate an
109object, and then go to sleep on a mutex after changing to a non-RUNNING
110state (e.g. while trying to allocate a second object), the first object
111could be garbage-collected out from under us while we sleep. To manage
112this, we automatically add all allocated objects to an internal object
113tracking list, and only remove them when we know we won't be suspended
114before the object appears in the GC root set.
115
116The debugger may choose to suspend or resume a single thread, which can
117lead to application-level deadlocks; this is expected behavior. The VM
118will only check for suspension of single threads when the debugger is
119active (the java.lang.Thread calls for this are deprecated and hence are
120not supported). Resumption of a single thread is handled by decrementing
121the thread's suspend count and sending a broadcast signal to the condition
122variable. (This will cause all threads to wake up and immediately go back
123to sleep, which isn't tremendously efficient, but neither is having the
124debugger attached.)
125
126The debugger is not allowed to resume threads suspended by the GC. This
127is trivially enforced by ignoring debugger requests while the GC is running
128(the JDWP thread is suspended during GC).
129
130The VM maintains a Thread struct for every pthread known to the VM. There
131is a java/lang/Thread object associated with every Thread. At present,
132there is no safe way to go from a Thread object to a Thread struct except by
133locking and scanning the list; this is necessary because the lifetimes of
134the two are not closely coupled. We may want to change this behavior,
135though at present the only performance impact is on the debugger (see
136threadObjToThread()). See also notes about dvmDetachCurrentThread().
137*/
138/*
139Alternate implementation (signal-based):
140
141Threads run without safe points -- zero overhead. The VM uses a signal
142(e.g. pthread_kill(SIGUSR1)) to notify threads of suspension or resumption.
143
144The trouble with using signals to suspend threads is that it means a thread
145can be in the middle of an operation when garbage collection starts.
146To prevent some sticky situations, we have to introduce critical sections
147to the VM code.
148
149Critical sections temporarily block suspension for a given thread.
150The thread must move to a non-blocked state (and self-suspend) after
151finishing its current task. If the thread blocks on a resource held
152by a suspended thread, we're hosed.
153
154One approach is to require that no blocking operations, notably
155acquisition of mutexes, can be performed within a critical section.
156This is too limiting. For example, if thread A gets suspended while
157holding the thread list lock, it will prevent the GC or debugger from
158being able to safely access the thread list. We need to wrap the critical
159section around the entire operation (enter critical, get lock, do stuff,
160release lock, exit critical).
161
162A better approach is to declare that certain resources can only be held
163within critical sections. A thread that enters a critical section and
164then gets blocked on the thread list lock knows that the thread it is
165waiting for is also in a critical section, and will release the lock
166before suspending itself. Eventually all threads will complete their
167operations and self-suspend. For this to work, the VM must:
168
169 (1) Determine the set of resources that may be accessed from the GC or
170 debugger threads. The mutexes guarding those go into the "critical
171 resource set" (CRS).
172 (2) Ensure that no resource in the CRS can be acquired outside of a
173 critical section. This can be verified with an assert().
174 (3) Ensure that only resources in the CRS can be held while in a critical
175 section. This is harder to enforce.
176
177If any of these conditions are not met, deadlock can ensue when grabbing
178resources in the GC or debugger (#1) or waiting for threads to suspend
179(#2,#3). (You won't actually deadlock in the GC, because if the semantics
180above are followed you don't need to lock anything in the GC. The risk is
181rather that the GC will access data structures in an intermediate state.)
182
183This approach requires more care and awareness in the VM than
184safe-pointing. Because the GC and debugger are fairly intrusive, there
185really aren't any internal VM resources that aren't shared. Thus, the
186enter/exit critical calls can be added to internal mutex wrappers, which
187makes it easy to get #1 and #2 right.
188
189An ordering should be established for all locks to avoid deadlocks.
190
191Monitor locks, which are also implemented with pthread calls, should not
192cause any problems here. Threads fighting over such locks will not be in
193critical sections and can be suspended freely.
194
195This can get tricky if we ever need exclusive access to VM and non-VM
196resources at the same time. It's not clear if this is a real concern.
197
198There are (at least) two ways to handle the incoming signals:
199
200 (a) Always accept signals. If we're in a critical section, the signal
201 handler just returns without doing anything (the "suspend level"
202 should have been incremented before the signal was sent). Otherwise,
203 if the "suspend level" is nonzero, we go to sleep.
204 (b) Block signals in critical sections. This ensures that we can't be
205 interrupted in a critical section, but requires pthread_sigmask()
206 calls on entry and exit.
207
208This is a choice between blocking the message and blocking the messenger.
209Because UNIX signals are unreliable (you can only know that you have been
210signaled, not whether you were signaled once or 10 times), the choice is
211not significant for correctness. The choice depends on the efficiency
212of pthread_sigmask() and the desire to actually block signals. Either way,
213it is best to ensure that there is only one indication of "blocked";
214having two (i.e. block signals and set a flag, then only send a signal
215if the flag isn't set) can lead to race conditions.
216
217The signal handler must take care to copy registers onto the stack (via
218setjmp), so that stack scans find all references. Because we have to scan
219native stacks, "exact" GC is not possible with this approach.
220
221Some other concerns with flinging signals around:
222 - Odd interactions with some debuggers (e.g. gdb on the Mac)
223 - Restrictions on some standard library calls during GC (e.g. don't
224 use printf on stdout to print GC debug messages)
225*/
226
227#define kMaxThreadId ((1<<15) - 1)
228#define kMainThreadId ((1<<1) | 1)
229
230
231static Thread* allocThread(int interpStackSize);
232static bool prepareThread(Thread* thread);
233static void setThreadSelf(Thread* thread);
234static void unlinkThread(Thread* thread);
235static void freeThread(Thread* thread);
236static void assignThreadId(Thread* thread);
237static bool createFakeEntryFrame(Thread* thread);
238static bool createFakeRunFrame(Thread* thread);
239static void* interpThreadStart(void* arg);
240static void* internalThreadStart(void* arg);
241static void threadExitUncaughtException(Thread* thread, Object* group);
242static void threadExitCheck(void* arg);
243static void waitForThreadSuspend(Thread* self, Thread* thread);
244static int getThreadPriorityFromSystem(void);
245
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -0700246/*
247 * The JIT needs to know if any thread is suspended. We do this by
248 * maintaining a global sum of all threads' suspend counts. All suspendCount
249 * updates should go through this after aquiring threadSuspendCountLock.
250 */
251static inline void dvmAddToThreadSuspendCount(int *pSuspendCount, int delta)
252{
253 *pSuspendCount += delta;
254 gDvm.sumThreadSuspendCount += delta;
255}
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800256
257/*
258 * Initialize thread list and main thread's environment. We need to set
259 * up some basic stuff so that dvmThreadSelf() will work when we start
260 * loading classes (e.g. to check for exceptions).
261 */
262bool dvmThreadStartup(void)
263{
264 Thread* thread;
265
266 /* allocate a TLS slot */
267 if (pthread_key_create(&gDvm.pthreadKeySelf, threadExitCheck) != 0) {
268 LOGE("ERROR: pthread_key_create failed\n");
269 return false;
270 }
271
272 /* test our pthread lib */
273 if (pthread_getspecific(gDvm.pthreadKeySelf) != NULL)
274 LOGW("WARNING: newly-created pthread TLS slot is not NULL\n");
275
276 /* prep thread-related locks and conditions */
277 dvmInitMutex(&gDvm.threadListLock);
278 pthread_cond_init(&gDvm.threadStartCond, NULL);
279 //dvmInitMutex(&gDvm.vmExitLock);
280 pthread_cond_init(&gDvm.vmExitCond, NULL);
281 dvmInitMutex(&gDvm._threadSuspendLock);
282 dvmInitMutex(&gDvm.threadSuspendCountLock);
283 pthread_cond_init(&gDvm.threadSuspendCountCond, NULL);
284#ifdef WITH_DEADLOCK_PREDICTION
285 dvmInitMutex(&gDvm.deadlockHistoryLock);
286#endif
287
288 /*
289 * Dedicated monitor for Thread.sleep().
290 * TODO: change this to an Object* so we don't have to expose this
291 * call, and we interact better with JDWP monitor calls. Requires
292 * deferring the object creation to much later (e.g. final "main"
293 * thread prep) or until first use.
294 */
295 gDvm.threadSleepMon = dvmCreateMonitor(NULL);
296
297 gDvm.threadIdMap = dvmAllocBitVector(kMaxThreadId, false);
298
299 thread = allocThread(gDvm.stackSize);
300 if (thread == NULL)
301 return false;
302
303 /* switch mode for when we run initializers */
304 thread->status = THREAD_RUNNING;
305
306 /*
307 * We need to assign the threadId early so we can lock/notify
308 * object monitors. We'll set the "threadObj" field later.
309 */
310 prepareThread(thread);
311 gDvm.threadList = thread;
312
313#ifdef COUNT_PRECISE_METHODS
314 gDvm.preciseMethods = dvmPointerSetAlloc(200);
315#endif
316
317 return true;
318}
319
320/*
321 * We're a little farther up now, and can load some basic classes.
322 *
323 * We're far enough along that we can poke at java.lang.Thread and friends,
324 * but should not assume that static initializers have run (or cause them
325 * to do so). That means no object allocations yet.
326 */
327bool dvmThreadObjStartup(void)
328{
329 /*
330 * Cache the locations of these classes. It's likely that we're the
331 * first to reference them, so they're being loaded now.
332 */
333 gDvm.classJavaLangThread =
334 dvmFindSystemClassNoInit("Ljava/lang/Thread;");
335 gDvm.classJavaLangVMThread =
336 dvmFindSystemClassNoInit("Ljava/lang/VMThread;");
337 gDvm.classJavaLangThreadGroup =
338 dvmFindSystemClassNoInit("Ljava/lang/ThreadGroup;");
339 if (gDvm.classJavaLangThread == NULL ||
340 gDvm.classJavaLangThreadGroup == NULL ||
341 gDvm.classJavaLangThreadGroup == NULL)
342 {
343 LOGE("Could not find one or more essential thread classes\n");
344 return false;
345 }
346
347 /*
348 * Cache field offsets. This makes things a little faster, at the
349 * expense of hard-coding non-public field names into the VM.
350 */
351 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_vmThread =
352 dvmFindFieldOffset(gDvm.classJavaLangThread,
353 "vmThread", "Ljava/lang/VMThread;");
354 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_group =
355 dvmFindFieldOffset(gDvm.classJavaLangThread,
356 "group", "Ljava/lang/ThreadGroup;");
357 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_daemon =
358 dvmFindFieldOffset(gDvm.classJavaLangThread, "daemon", "Z");
359 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_name =
360 dvmFindFieldOffset(gDvm.classJavaLangThread,
361 "name", "Ljava/lang/String;");
362 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_priority =
363 dvmFindFieldOffset(gDvm.classJavaLangThread, "priority", "I");
364
365 if (gDvm.offJavaLangThread_vmThread < 0 ||
366 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_group < 0 ||
367 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_daemon < 0 ||
368 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_name < 0 ||
369 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_priority < 0)
370 {
371 LOGE("Unable to find all fields in java.lang.Thread\n");
372 return false;
373 }
374
375 gDvm.offJavaLangVMThread_thread =
376 dvmFindFieldOffset(gDvm.classJavaLangVMThread,
377 "thread", "Ljava/lang/Thread;");
378 gDvm.offJavaLangVMThread_vmData =
379 dvmFindFieldOffset(gDvm.classJavaLangVMThread, "vmData", "I");
380 if (gDvm.offJavaLangVMThread_thread < 0 ||
381 gDvm.offJavaLangVMThread_vmData < 0)
382 {
383 LOGE("Unable to find all fields in java.lang.VMThread\n");
384 return false;
385 }
386
387 /*
388 * Cache the vtable offset for "run()".
389 *
390 * We don't want to keep the Method* because then we won't find see
391 * methods defined in subclasses.
392 */
393 Method* meth;
394 meth = dvmFindVirtualMethodByDescriptor(gDvm.classJavaLangThread, "run", "()V");
395 if (meth == NULL) {
396 LOGE("Unable to find run() in java.lang.Thread\n");
397 return false;
398 }
399 gDvm.voffJavaLangThread_run = meth->methodIndex;
400
401 /*
402 * Cache vtable offsets for ThreadGroup methods.
403 */
404 meth = dvmFindVirtualMethodByDescriptor(gDvm.classJavaLangThreadGroup,
405 "removeThread", "(Ljava/lang/Thread;)V");
406 if (meth == NULL) {
407 LOGE("Unable to find removeThread(Thread) in java.lang.ThreadGroup\n");
408 return false;
409 }
410 gDvm.voffJavaLangThreadGroup_removeThread = meth->methodIndex;
411
412 return true;
413}
414
415/*
416 * All threads should be stopped by now. Clean up some thread globals.
417 */
418void dvmThreadShutdown(void)
419{
420 if (gDvm.threadList != NULL) {
Andy McFaddenf17638e2009-08-04 16:38:40 -0700421 /*
422 * If we walk through the thread list and try to free the
423 * lingering thread structures (which should only be for daemon
424 * threads), the daemon threads may crash if they execute before
425 * the process dies. Let them leak.
426 */
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800427 freeThread(gDvm.threadList);
428 gDvm.threadList = NULL;
429 }
430
431 dvmFreeBitVector(gDvm.threadIdMap);
432
433 dvmFreeMonitorList();
434
435 pthread_key_delete(gDvm.pthreadKeySelf);
436}
437
438
439/*
440 * Grab the suspend count global lock.
441 */
442static inline void lockThreadSuspendCount(void)
443{
444 /*
445 * Don't try to change to VMWAIT here. When we change back to RUNNING
446 * we have to check for a pending suspend, which results in grabbing
447 * this lock recursively. Doesn't work with "fast" pthread mutexes.
448 *
449 * This lock is always held for very brief periods, so as long as
450 * mutex ordering is respected we shouldn't stall.
451 */
452 int cc = pthread_mutex_lock(&gDvm.threadSuspendCountLock);
453 assert(cc == 0);
454}
455
456/*
457 * Release the suspend count global lock.
458 */
459static inline void unlockThreadSuspendCount(void)
460{
461 dvmUnlockMutex(&gDvm.threadSuspendCountLock);
462}
463
464/*
465 * Grab the thread list global lock.
466 *
467 * This is held while "suspend all" is trying to make everybody stop. If
468 * the shutdown is in progress, and somebody tries to grab the lock, they'll
469 * have to wait for the GC to finish. Therefore it's important that the
470 * thread not be in RUNNING mode.
471 *
472 * We don't have to check to see if we should be suspended once we have
473 * the lock. Nobody can suspend all threads without holding the thread list
474 * lock while they do it, so by definition there isn't a GC in progress.
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700475 *
476 * TODO: consider checking for suspend after acquiring the lock, and
477 * backing off if set. As stated above, it can't happen during normal
478 * execution, but it *can* happen during shutdown when daemon threads
479 * are being suspended.
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800480 */
481void dvmLockThreadList(Thread* self)
482{
483 ThreadStatus oldStatus;
484
485 if (self == NULL) /* try to get it from TLS */
486 self = dvmThreadSelf();
487
488 if (self != NULL) {
489 oldStatus = self->status;
490 self->status = THREAD_VMWAIT;
491 } else {
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700492 /* happens during VM shutdown */
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800493 //LOGW("NULL self in dvmLockThreadList\n");
494 oldStatus = -1; // shut up gcc
495 }
496
497 int cc = pthread_mutex_lock(&gDvm.threadListLock);
498 assert(cc == 0);
499
500 if (self != NULL)
501 self->status = oldStatus;
502}
503
504/*
505 * Release the thread list global lock.
506 */
507void dvmUnlockThreadList(void)
508{
509 int cc = pthread_mutex_unlock(&gDvm.threadListLock);
510 assert(cc == 0);
511}
512
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -0700513/*
514 * Convert SuspendCause to a string.
515 */
516static const char* getSuspendCauseStr(SuspendCause why)
517{
518 switch (why) {
519 case SUSPEND_NOT: return "NOT?";
520 case SUSPEND_FOR_GC: return "gc";
521 case SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG: return "debug";
522 case SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG_EVENT: return "debug-event";
523 case SUSPEND_FOR_STACK_DUMP: return "stack-dump";
Ben Chenga8e64a72009-10-20 13:01:36 -0700524#if defined(WITH_JIT)
525 case SUSPEND_FOR_TBL_RESIZE: return "table-resize";
526 case SUSPEND_FOR_IC_PATCH: return "inline-cache-patch";
527#endif
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -0700528 default: return "UNKNOWN";
529 }
530}
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800531
532/*
533 * Grab the "thread suspend" lock. This is required to prevent the
534 * GC and the debugger from simultaneously suspending all threads.
535 *
536 * If we fail to get the lock, somebody else is trying to suspend all
537 * threads -- including us. If we go to sleep on the lock we'll deadlock
538 * the VM. Loop until we get it or somebody puts us to sleep.
539 */
540static void lockThreadSuspend(const char* who, SuspendCause why)
541{
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800542 const int kSpinSleepTime = 3*1000*1000; /* 3s */
543 u8 startWhen = 0; // init req'd to placate gcc
544 int sleepIter = 0;
545 int cc;
Jeff Hao97319a82009-08-12 16:57:15 -0700546
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800547 do {
548 cc = pthread_mutex_trylock(&gDvm._threadSuspendLock);
549 if (cc != 0) {
550 if (!dvmCheckSuspendPending(NULL)) {
551 /*
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -0700552 * Could be that a resume-all is in progress, and something
553 * grabbed the CPU when the wakeup was broadcast. The thread
554 * performing the resume hasn't had a chance to release the
Andy McFaddene8059be2009-06-04 14:34:14 -0700555 * thread suspend lock. (We release before the broadcast,
556 * so this should be a narrow window.)
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -0700557 *
558 * Could be we hit the window as a suspend was started,
559 * and the lock has been grabbed but the suspend counts
560 * haven't been incremented yet.
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -0700561 *
562 * Could be an unusual JNI thread-attach thing.
563 *
564 * Could be the debugger telling us to resume at roughly
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800565 * the same time we're posting an event.
Ben Chenga8e64a72009-10-20 13:01:36 -0700566 *
567 * Could be two app threads both want to patch predicted
568 * chaining cells around the same time.
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800569 */
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -0700570 LOGI("threadid=%d ODD: want thread-suspend lock (%s:%s),"
571 " it's held, no suspend pending\n",
572 dvmThreadSelf()->threadId, who, getSuspendCauseStr(why));
573 } else {
574 /* we suspended; reset timeout */
575 sleepIter = 0;
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800576 }
577
578 /* give the lock-holder a chance to do some work */
579 if (sleepIter == 0)
580 startWhen = dvmGetRelativeTimeUsec();
581 if (!dvmIterativeSleep(sleepIter++, kSpinSleepTime, startWhen)) {
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -0700582 LOGE("threadid=%d: couldn't get thread-suspend lock (%s:%s),"
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800583 " bailing\n",
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -0700584 dvmThreadSelf()->threadId, who, getSuspendCauseStr(why));
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -0700585 /* threads are not suspended, thread dump could crash */
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800586 dvmDumpAllThreads(false);
587 dvmAbort();
588 }
589 }
590 } while (cc != 0);
591 assert(cc == 0);
592}
593
594/*
595 * Release the "thread suspend" lock.
596 */
597static inline void unlockThreadSuspend(void)
598{
599 int cc = pthread_mutex_unlock(&gDvm._threadSuspendLock);
600 assert(cc == 0);
601}
602
603
604/*
605 * Kill any daemon threads that still exist. All of ours should be
606 * stopped, so these should be Thread objects or JNI-attached threads
607 * started by the application. Actively-running threads are likely
608 * to crash the process if they continue to execute while the VM
609 * shuts down, so we really need to kill or suspend them. (If we want
610 * the VM to restart within this process, we need to kill them, but that
611 * leaves open the possibility of orphaned resources.)
612 *
613 * Waiting for the thread to suspend may be unwise at this point, but
614 * if one of these is wedged in a critical section then we probably
615 * would've locked up on the last GC attempt.
616 *
617 * It's possible for this function to get called after a failed
618 * initialization, so be careful with assumptions about the environment.
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700619 *
620 * This will be called from whatever thread calls DestroyJavaVM, usually
621 * but not necessarily the main thread. It's likely, but not guaranteed,
622 * that the current thread has already been cleaned up.
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800623 */
624void dvmSlayDaemons(void)
625{
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700626 Thread* self = dvmThreadSelf(); // may be null
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800627 Thread* target;
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700628 int threadId = 0;
629 bool doWait = false;
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800630
631 //dvmEnterCritical(self);
632 dvmLockThreadList(self);
633
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700634 if (self != NULL)
635 threadId = self->threadId;
636
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800637 target = gDvm.threadList;
638 while (target != NULL) {
639 if (target == self) {
640 target = target->next;
641 continue;
642 }
643
644 if (!dvmGetFieldBoolean(target->threadObj,
645 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_daemon))
646 {
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700647 /* should never happen; suspend it with the rest */
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800648 LOGW("threadid=%d: non-daemon id=%d still running at shutdown?!\n",
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700649 threadId, target->threadId);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800650 }
651
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700652 char* threadName = dvmGetThreadName(target);
653 LOGD("threadid=%d: suspending daemon id=%d name='%s'\n",
654 threadId, target->threadId, threadName);
655 free(threadName);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800656
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700657 /* mark as suspended */
658 lockThreadSuspendCount();
659 dvmAddToThreadSuspendCount(&target->suspendCount, 1);
660 unlockThreadSuspendCount();
661 doWait = true;
662
663 target = target->next;
664 }
665
666 //dvmDumpAllThreads(false);
667
668 /*
669 * Unlock the thread list, relocking it later if necessary. It's
670 * possible a thread is in VMWAIT after calling dvmLockThreadList,
671 * and that function *doesn't* check for pending suspend after
672 * acquiring the lock. We want to let them finish their business
673 * and see the pending suspend before we continue here.
674 *
675 * There's no guarantee of mutex fairness, so this might not work.
676 * (The alternative is to have dvmLockThreadList check for suspend
677 * after acquiring the lock and back off, something we should consider.)
678 */
679 dvmUnlockThreadList();
680
681 if (doWait) {
682 usleep(200 * 1000);
683
684 dvmLockThreadList(self);
685
686 /*
687 * Sleep for a bit until the threads have suspended. We're trying
688 * to exit, so don't wait for too long.
689 */
690 int i;
691 for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
692 bool allSuspended = true;
693
694 target = gDvm.threadList;
695 while (target != NULL) {
696 if (target == self) {
697 target = target->next;
698 continue;
699 }
700
701 if (target->status == THREAD_RUNNING && !target->isSuspended) {
702 LOGD("threadid=%d not ready yet\n", target->threadId);
703 allSuspended = false;
704 break;
705 }
706
707 target = target->next;
708 }
709
710 if (allSuspended) {
711 LOGD("threadid=%d: all daemons have suspended\n", threadId);
712 break;
713 } else {
714 LOGD("threadid=%d: waiting for daemons to suspend\n", threadId);
715 }
716
717 usleep(200 * 1000);
718 }
719 dvmUnlockThreadList();
720 }
721
722#if 0 /* bad things happen if they come out of JNI or "spuriously" wake up */
723 /*
724 * Abandon the threads and recover their resources.
725 */
726 target = gDvm.threadList;
727 while (target != NULL) {
728 Thread* nextTarget = target->next;
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800729 unlinkThread(target);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800730 freeThread(target);
731 target = nextTarget;
732 }
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700733#endif
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800734
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -0700735 //dvmDumpAllThreads(true);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800736}
737
738
739/*
740 * Finish preparing the parts of the Thread struct required to support
741 * JNI registration.
742 */
743bool dvmPrepMainForJni(JNIEnv* pEnv)
744{
745 Thread* self;
746
747 /* main thread is always first in list at this point */
748 self = gDvm.threadList;
749 assert(self->threadId == kMainThreadId);
750
751 /* create a "fake" JNI frame at the top of the main thread interp stack */
752 if (!createFakeEntryFrame(self))
753 return false;
754
755 /* fill these in, since they weren't ready at dvmCreateJNIEnv time */
756 dvmSetJniEnvThreadId(pEnv, self);
757 dvmSetThreadJNIEnv(self, (JNIEnv*) pEnv);
758
759 return true;
760}
761
762
763/*
764 * Finish preparing the main thread, allocating some objects to represent
765 * it. As part of doing so, we finish initializing Thread and ThreadGroup.
Andy McFaddena1a7a342009-05-04 13:29:30 -0700766 * This will execute some interpreted code (e.g. class initializers).
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800767 */
768bool dvmPrepMainThread(void)
769{
770 Thread* thread;
771 Object* groupObj;
772 Object* threadObj;
773 Object* vmThreadObj;
774 StringObject* threadNameStr;
775 Method* init;
776 JValue unused;
777
778 LOGV("+++ finishing prep on main VM thread\n");
779
780 /* main thread is always first in list at this point */
781 thread = gDvm.threadList;
782 assert(thread->threadId == kMainThreadId);
783
784 /*
785 * Make sure the classes are initialized. We have to do this before
786 * we create an instance of them.
787 */
788 if (!dvmInitClass(gDvm.classJavaLangClass)) {
789 LOGE("'Class' class failed to initialize\n");
790 return false;
791 }
792 if (!dvmInitClass(gDvm.classJavaLangThreadGroup) ||
793 !dvmInitClass(gDvm.classJavaLangThread) ||
794 !dvmInitClass(gDvm.classJavaLangVMThread))
795 {
796 LOGE("thread classes failed to initialize\n");
797 return false;
798 }
799
800 groupObj = dvmGetMainThreadGroup();
801 if (groupObj == NULL)
802 return false;
803
804 /*
805 * Allocate and construct a Thread with the internal-creation
806 * constructor.
807 */
808 threadObj = dvmAllocObject(gDvm.classJavaLangThread, ALLOC_DEFAULT);
809 if (threadObj == NULL) {
810 LOGE("unable to allocate main thread object\n");
811 return false;
812 }
813 dvmReleaseTrackedAlloc(threadObj, NULL);
814
815 threadNameStr = dvmCreateStringFromCstr("main", ALLOC_DEFAULT);
816 if (threadNameStr == NULL)
817 return false;
818 dvmReleaseTrackedAlloc((Object*)threadNameStr, NULL);
819
820 init = dvmFindDirectMethodByDescriptor(gDvm.classJavaLangThread, "<init>",
821 "(Ljava/lang/ThreadGroup;Ljava/lang/String;IZ)V");
822 assert(init != NULL);
823 dvmCallMethod(thread, init, threadObj, &unused, groupObj, threadNameStr,
824 THREAD_NORM_PRIORITY, false);
825 if (dvmCheckException(thread)) {
826 LOGE("exception thrown while constructing main thread object\n");
827 return false;
828 }
829
830 /*
831 * Allocate and construct a VMThread.
832 */
833 vmThreadObj = dvmAllocObject(gDvm.classJavaLangVMThread, ALLOC_DEFAULT);
834 if (vmThreadObj == NULL) {
835 LOGE("unable to allocate main vmthread object\n");
836 return false;
837 }
838 dvmReleaseTrackedAlloc(vmThreadObj, NULL);
839
840 init = dvmFindDirectMethodByDescriptor(gDvm.classJavaLangVMThread, "<init>",
841 "(Ljava/lang/Thread;)V");
842 dvmCallMethod(thread, init, vmThreadObj, &unused, threadObj);
843 if (dvmCheckException(thread)) {
844 LOGE("exception thrown while constructing main vmthread object\n");
845 return false;
846 }
847
848 /* set the VMThread.vmData field to our Thread struct */
849 assert(gDvm.offJavaLangVMThread_vmData != 0);
850 dvmSetFieldInt(vmThreadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangVMThread_vmData, (u4)thread);
851
852 /*
853 * Stuff the VMThread back into the Thread. From this point on, other
Andy McFaddena1a7a342009-05-04 13:29:30 -0700854 * Threads will see that this Thread is running (at least, they would,
855 * if there were any).
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800856 */
857 dvmSetFieldObject(threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_vmThread,
858 vmThreadObj);
859
860 thread->threadObj = threadObj;
861
862 /*
Andy McFaddena1a7a342009-05-04 13:29:30 -0700863 * Set the context class loader. This invokes a ClassLoader method,
864 * which could conceivably call Thread.currentThread(), so we want the
865 * Thread to be fully configured before we do this.
866 */
867 Object* systemLoader = dvmGetSystemClassLoader();
868 if (systemLoader == NULL) {
869 LOGW("WARNING: system class loader is NULL (setting main ctxt)\n");
870 /* keep going */
871 }
872 int ctxtClassLoaderOffset = dvmFindFieldOffset(gDvm.classJavaLangThread,
873 "contextClassLoader", "Ljava/lang/ClassLoader;");
874 if (ctxtClassLoaderOffset < 0) {
875 LOGE("Unable to find contextClassLoader field in Thread\n");
876 return false;
877 }
878 dvmSetFieldObject(threadObj, ctxtClassLoaderOffset, systemLoader);
879
880 /*
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800881 * Finish our thread prep.
882 */
883
884 /* include self in non-daemon threads (mainly for AttachCurrentThread) */
885 gDvm.nonDaemonThreadCount++;
886
887 return true;
888}
889
890
891/*
892 * Alloc and initialize a Thread struct.
893 *
894 * "threadObj" is the java.lang.Thread object. It will be NULL for the
895 * main VM thread, but non-NULL for everything else.
896 *
897 * Does not create any objects, just stuff on the system (malloc) heap. (If
898 * this changes, we need to use ALLOC_NO_GC. And also verify that we're
899 * ready to load classes at the time this is called.)
900 */
901static Thread* allocThread(int interpStackSize)
902{
903 Thread* thread;
904 u1* stackBottom;
905
906 thread = (Thread*) calloc(1, sizeof(Thread));
907 if (thread == NULL)
908 return NULL;
909
Jeff Hao97319a82009-08-12 16:57:15 -0700910#if defined(WITH_SELF_VERIFICATION)
911 if (dvmSelfVerificationShadowSpaceAlloc(thread) == NULL)
912 return NULL;
913#endif
914
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800915 assert(interpStackSize >= kMinStackSize && interpStackSize <=kMaxStackSize);
916
917 thread->status = THREAD_INITIALIZING;
918 thread->suspendCount = 0;
919
920#ifdef WITH_ALLOC_LIMITS
921 thread->allocLimit = -1;
922#endif
923
924 /*
925 * Allocate and initialize the interpreted code stack. We essentially
926 * "lose" the alloc pointer, which points at the bottom of the stack,
927 * but we can get it back later because we know how big the stack is.
928 *
929 * The stack must be aligned on a 4-byte boundary.
930 */
931#ifdef MALLOC_INTERP_STACK
932 stackBottom = (u1*) malloc(interpStackSize);
933 if (stackBottom == NULL) {
Jeff Hao97319a82009-08-12 16:57:15 -0700934#if defined(WITH_SELF_VERIFICATION)
935 dvmSelfVerificationShadowSpaceFree(thread);
936#endif
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800937 free(thread);
938 return NULL;
939 }
940 memset(stackBottom, 0xc5, interpStackSize); // stop valgrind complaints
941#else
942 stackBottom = mmap(NULL, interpStackSize, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE,
943 MAP_PRIVATE | MAP_ANON, -1, 0);
944 if (stackBottom == MAP_FAILED) {
Jeff Hao97319a82009-08-12 16:57:15 -0700945#if defined(WITH_SELF_VERIFICATION)
946 dvmSelfVerificationShadowSpaceFree(thread);
947#endif
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -0800948 free(thread);
949 return NULL;
950 }
951#endif
952
953 assert(((u4)stackBottom & 0x03) == 0); // looks like our malloc ensures this
954 thread->interpStackSize = interpStackSize;
955 thread->interpStackStart = stackBottom + interpStackSize;
956 thread->interpStackEnd = stackBottom + STACK_OVERFLOW_RESERVE;
957
958 /* give the thread code a chance to set things up */
959 dvmInitInterpStack(thread, interpStackSize);
960
961 return thread;
962}
963
964/*
965 * Get a meaningful thread ID. At present this only has meaning under Linux,
966 * where getpid() and gettid() sometimes agree and sometimes don't depending
967 * on your thread model (try "export LD_ASSUME_KERNEL=2.4.19").
968 */
969pid_t dvmGetSysThreadId(void)
970{
971#ifdef HAVE_GETTID
972 return gettid();
973#else
974 return getpid();
975#endif
976}
977
978/*
979 * Finish initialization of a Thread struct.
980 *
981 * This must be called while executing in the new thread, but before the
982 * thread is added to the thread list.
983 *
984 * *** NOTE: The threadListLock must be held by the caller (needed for
985 * assignThreadId()).
986 */
987static bool prepareThread(Thread* thread)
988{
989 assignThreadId(thread);
990 thread->handle = pthread_self();
991 thread->systemTid = dvmGetSysThreadId();
992
993 //LOGI("SYSTEM TID IS %d (pid is %d)\n", (int) thread->systemTid,
994 // (int) getpid());
995 setThreadSelf(thread);
996
997 LOGV("threadid=%d: interp stack at %p\n",
998 thread->threadId, thread->interpStackStart - thread->interpStackSize);
999
1000 /*
1001 * Initialize invokeReq.
1002 */
1003 pthread_mutex_init(&thread->invokeReq.lock, NULL);
1004 pthread_cond_init(&thread->invokeReq.cv, NULL);
1005
1006 /*
1007 * Initialize our reference tracking tables.
1008 *
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001009 * Most threads won't use jniMonitorRefTable, so we clear out the
1010 * structure but don't call the init function (which allocs storage).
1011 */
Andy McFaddend5ab7262009-08-25 07:19:34 -07001012#ifdef USE_INDIRECT_REF
1013 if (!dvmInitIndirectRefTable(&thread->jniLocalRefTable,
1014 kJniLocalRefMin, kJniLocalRefMax, kIndirectKindLocal))
1015 return false;
1016#else
1017 /*
1018 * The JNI local ref table *must* be fixed-size because we keep pointers
1019 * into the table in our stack frames.
1020 */
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001021 if (!dvmInitReferenceTable(&thread->jniLocalRefTable,
1022 kJniLocalRefMax, kJniLocalRefMax))
1023 return false;
Andy McFaddend5ab7262009-08-25 07:19:34 -07001024#endif
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001025 if (!dvmInitReferenceTable(&thread->internalLocalRefTable,
1026 kInternalRefDefault, kInternalRefMax))
1027 return false;
1028
1029 memset(&thread->jniMonitorRefTable, 0, sizeof(thread->jniMonitorRefTable));
1030
1031 return true;
1032}
1033
1034/*
1035 * Remove a thread from the internal list.
1036 * Clear out the links to make it obvious that the thread is
1037 * no longer on the list. Caller must hold gDvm.threadListLock.
1038 */
1039static void unlinkThread(Thread* thread)
1040{
1041 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: removing from list\n", thread->threadId);
1042 if (thread == gDvm.threadList) {
1043 assert(thread->prev == NULL);
1044 gDvm.threadList = thread->next;
1045 } else {
1046 assert(thread->prev != NULL);
1047 thread->prev->next = thread->next;
1048 }
1049 if (thread->next != NULL)
1050 thread->next->prev = thread->prev;
1051 thread->prev = thread->next = NULL;
1052}
1053
1054/*
1055 * Free a Thread struct, and all the stuff allocated within.
1056 */
1057static void freeThread(Thread* thread)
1058{
1059 if (thread == NULL)
1060 return;
1061
1062 /* thread->threadId is zero at this point */
1063 LOGVV("threadid=%d: freeing\n", thread->threadId);
1064
1065 if (thread->interpStackStart != NULL) {
1066 u1* interpStackBottom;
1067
1068 interpStackBottom = thread->interpStackStart;
1069 interpStackBottom -= thread->interpStackSize;
1070#ifdef MALLOC_INTERP_STACK
1071 free(interpStackBottom);
1072#else
1073 if (munmap(interpStackBottom, thread->interpStackSize) != 0)
1074 LOGW("munmap(thread stack) failed\n");
1075#endif
1076 }
1077
Andy McFaddend5ab7262009-08-25 07:19:34 -07001078#ifdef USE_INDIRECT_REF
1079 dvmClearIndirectRefTable(&thread->jniLocalRefTable);
1080#else
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001081 dvmClearReferenceTable(&thread->jniLocalRefTable);
Andy McFaddend5ab7262009-08-25 07:19:34 -07001082#endif
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001083 dvmClearReferenceTable(&thread->internalLocalRefTable);
1084 if (&thread->jniMonitorRefTable.table != NULL)
1085 dvmClearReferenceTable(&thread->jniMonitorRefTable);
1086
Jeff Hao97319a82009-08-12 16:57:15 -07001087#if defined(WITH_SELF_VERIFICATION)
1088 dvmSelfVerificationShadowSpaceFree(thread);
1089#endif
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001090 free(thread);
1091}
1092
1093/*
1094 * Like pthread_self(), but on a Thread*.
1095 */
1096Thread* dvmThreadSelf(void)
1097{
1098 return (Thread*) pthread_getspecific(gDvm.pthreadKeySelf);
1099}
1100
1101/*
1102 * Explore our sense of self. Stuffs the thread pointer into TLS.
1103 */
1104static void setThreadSelf(Thread* thread)
1105{
1106 int cc;
1107
1108 cc = pthread_setspecific(gDvm.pthreadKeySelf, thread);
1109 if (cc != 0) {
1110 /*
1111 * Sometimes this fails under Bionic with EINVAL during shutdown.
1112 * This can happen if the timing is just right, e.g. a thread
1113 * fails to attach during shutdown, but the "fail" path calls
1114 * here to ensure we clean up after ourselves.
1115 */
1116 if (thread != NULL) {
1117 LOGE("pthread_setspecific(%p) failed, err=%d\n", thread, cc);
1118 dvmAbort(); /* the world is fundamentally hosed */
1119 }
1120 }
1121}
1122
1123/*
1124 * This is associated with the pthreadKeySelf key. It's called by the
1125 * pthread library when a thread is exiting and the "self" pointer in TLS
1126 * is non-NULL, meaning the VM hasn't had a chance to clean up. In normal
1127 * operation this should never be called.
1128 *
1129 * This is mainly of use to ensure that we don't leak resources if, for
1130 * example, a thread attaches itself to us with AttachCurrentThread and
1131 * then exits without notifying the VM.
Andy McFadden34e25bb2009-04-15 13:27:12 -07001132 *
1133 * We could do the detach here instead of aborting, but this will lead to
1134 * portability problems. Other implementations do not do this check and
1135 * will simply be unaware that the thread has exited, leading to resource
1136 * leaks (and, if this is a non-daemon thread, an infinite hang when the
1137 * VM tries to shut down).
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001138 */
1139static void threadExitCheck(void* arg)
1140{
1141 Thread* thread = (Thread*) arg;
1142
1143 LOGI("In threadExitCheck %p\n", arg);
1144 assert(thread != NULL);
1145
1146 if (thread->status != THREAD_ZOMBIE) {
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001147 LOGE("Native thread exited without telling us\n");
1148 dvmAbort();
1149 }
1150}
1151
1152
1153/*
1154 * Assign the threadId. This needs to be a small integer so that our
1155 * "thin" locks fit in a small number of bits.
1156 *
1157 * We reserve zero for use as an invalid ID.
1158 *
1159 * This must be called with threadListLock held (unless we're still
1160 * initializing the system).
1161 */
1162static void assignThreadId(Thread* thread)
1163{
1164 /* Find a small unique integer. threadIdMap is a vector of
1165 * kMaxThreadId bits; dvmAllocBit() returns the index of a
1166 * bit, meaning that it will always be < kMaxThreadId.
1167 *
1168 * The thin locking magic requires that the low bit is always
1169 * set, so we do it once, here.
1170 */
1171 int num = dvmAllocBit(gDvm.threadIdMap);
1172 if (num < 0) {
1173 LOGE("Ran out of thread IDs\n");
1174 dvmAbort(); // TODO: make this a non-fatal error result
1175 }
1176
1177 thread->threadId = ((num + 1) << 1) | 1;
1178
1179 assert(thread->threadId != 0);
1180 assert(thread->threadId != DVM_LOCK_INITIAL_THIN_VALUE);
1181}
1182
1183/*
1184 * Give back the thread ID.
1185 */
1186static void releaseThreadId(Thread* thread)
1187{
1188 assert(thread->threadId > 0);
1189 dvmClearBit(gDvm.threadIdMap, (thread->threadId >> 1) - 1);
1190 thread->threadId = 0;
1191}
1192
1193
1194/*
1195 * Add a stack frame that makes it look like the native code in the main
1196 * thread was originally invoked from interpreted code. This gives us a
1197 * place to hang JNI local references. The VM spec says (v2 5.2) that the
1198 * VM begins by executing "main" in a class, so in a way this brings us
1199 * closer to the spec.
1200 */
1201static bool createFakeEntryFrame(Thread* thread)
1202{
1203 assert(thread->threadId == kMainThreadId); // main thread only
1204
1205 /* find the method on first use */
1206 if (gDvm.methFakeNativeEntry == NULL) {
1207 ClassObject* nativeStart;
1208 Method* mainMeth;
1209
1210 nativeStart = dvmFindSystemClassNoInit(
1211 "Ldalvik/system/NativeStart;");
1212 if (nativeStart == NULL) {
1213 LOGE("Unable to find dalvik.system.NativeStart class\n");
1214 return false;
1215 }
1216
1217 /*
1218 * Because we are creating a frame that represents application code, we
1219 * want to stuff the application class loader into the method's class
1220 * loader field, even though we're using the system class loader to
1221 * load it. This makes life easier over in JNI FindClass (though it
1222 * could bite us in other ways).
1223 *
1224 * Unfortunately this is occurring too early in the initialization,
1225 * of necessity coming before JNI is initialized, and we're not quite
1226 * ready to set up the application class loader.
1227 *
1228 * So we save a pointer to the method in gDvm.methFakeNativeEntry
1229 * and check it in FindClass. The method is private so nobody else
1230 * can call it.
1231 */
1232 //nativeStart->classLoader = dvmGetSystemClassLoader();
1233
1234 mainMeth = dvmFindDirectMethodByDescriptor(nativeStart,
1235 "main", "([Ljava/lang/String;)V");
1236 if (mainMeth == NULL) {
1237 LOGE("Unable to find 'main' in dalvik.system.NativeStart\n");
1238 return false;
1239 }
1240
1241 gDvm.methFakeNativeEntry = mainMeth;
1242 }
1243
1244 return dvmPushJNIFrame(thread, gDvm.methFakeNativeEntry);
1245}
1246
1247
1248/*
1249 * Add a stack frame that makes it look like the native thread has been
1250 * executing interpreted code. This gives us a place to hang JNI local
1251 * references.
1252 */
1253static bool createFakeRunFrame(Thread* thread)
1254{
1255 ClassObject* nativeStart;
1256 Method* runMeth;
1257
1258 assert(thread->threadId != 1); // not for main thread
1259
1260 nativeStart =
1261 dvmFindSystemClassNoInit("Ldalvik/system/NativeStart;");
1262 if (nativeStart == NULL) {
1263 LOGE("Unable to find dalvik.system.NativeStart class\n");
1264 return false;
1265 }
1266
1267 runMeth = dvmFindVirtualMethodByDescriptor(nativeStart, "run", "()V");
1268 if (runMeth == NULL) {
1269 LOGE("Unable to find 'run' in dalvik.system.NativeStart\n");
1270 return false;
1271 }
1272
1273 return dvmPushJNIFrame(thread, runMeth);
1274}
1275
1276/*
1277 * Helper function to set the name of the current thread
1278 */
1279static void setThreadName(const char *threadName)
1280{
1281#if defined(HAVE_PRCTL)
1282 int hasAt = 0;
1283 int hasDot = 0;
1284 const char *s = threadName;
1285 while (*s) {
1286 if (*s == '.') hasDot = 1;
1287 else if (*s == '@') hasAt = 1;
1288 s++;
1289 }
1290 int len = s - threadName;
1291 if (len < 15 || hasAt || !hasDot) {
1292 s = threadName;
1293 } else {
1294 s = threadName + len - 15;
1295 }
1296 prctl(PR_SET_NAME, (unsigned long) s, 0, 0, 0);
1297#endif
1298}
1299
1300/*
1301 * Create a thread as a result of java.lang.Thread.start().
1302 *
1303 * We do have to worry about some concurrency problems, e.g. programs
1304 * that try to call Thread.start() on the same object from multiple threads.
1305 * (This will fail for all but one, but we have to make sure that it succeeds
1306 * for exactly one.)
1307 *
1308 * Some of the complexity here arises from our desire to mimic the
1309 * Thread vs. VMThread class decomposition we inherited. We've been given
1310 * a Thread, and now we need to create a VMThread and then populate both
1311 * objects. We also need to create one of our internal Thread objects.
1312 *
1313 * Pass in a stack size of 0 to get the default.
1314 */
1315bool dvmCreateInterpThread(Object* threadObj, int reqStackSize)
1316{
1317 pthread_attr_t threadAttr;
1318 pthread_t threadHandle;
1319 Thread* self;
1320 Thread* newThread = NULL;
1321 Object* vmThreadObj = NULL;
1322 int stackSize;
1323
1324 assert(threadObj != NULL);
1325
1326 if(gDvm.zygote) {
Bob Lee9dc72a32009-09-04 18:28:16 -07001327 // Allow the sampling profiler thread. We shut it down before forking.
1328 StringObject* nameStr = (StringObject*) dvmGetFieldObject(threadObj,
1329 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_name);
1330 char* threadName = dvmCreateCstrFromString(nameStr);
1331 bool profilerThread = strcmp(threadName, "SamplingProfiler") == 0;
1332 free(threadName);
1333 if (!profilerThread) {
1334 dvmThrowException("Ljava/lang/IllegalStateException;",
1335 "No new threads in -Xzygote mode");
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001336
Bob Lee9dc72a32009-09-04 18:28:16 -07001337 goto fail;
1338 }
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001339 }
1340
1341 self = dvmThreadSelf();
1342 if (reqStackSize == 0)
1343 stackSize = gDvm.stackSize;
1344 else if (reqStackSize < kMinStackSize)
1345 stackSize = kMinStackSize;
1346 else if (reqStackSize > kMaxStackSize)
1347 stackSize = kMaxStackSize;
1348 else
1349 stackSize = reqStackSize;
1350
1351 pthread_attr_init(&threadAttr);
1352 pthread_attr_setdetachstate(&threadAttr, PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED);
1353
1354 /*
1355 * To minimize the time spent in the critical section, we allocate the
1356 * vmThread object here.
1357 */
1358 vmThreadObj = dvmAllocObject(gDvm.classJavaLangVMThread, ALLOC_DEFAULT);
1359 if (vmThreadObj == NULL)
1360 goto fail;
1361
1362 newThread = allocThread(stackSize);
1363 if (newThread == NULL)
1364 goto fail;
1365 newThread->threadObj = threadObj;
1366
1367 assert(newThread->status == THREAD_INITIALIZING);
1368
1369 /*
1370 * We need to lock out other threads while we test and set the
1371 * "vmThread" field in java.lang.Thread, because we use that to determine
1372 * if this thread has been started before. We use the thread list lock
1373 * because it's handy and we're going to need to grab it again soon
1374 * anyway.
1375 */
1376 dvmLockThreadList(self);
1377
1378 if (dvmGetFieldObject(threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_vmThread) != NULL) {
1379 dvmUnlockThreadList();
1380 dvmThrowException("Ljava/lang/IllegalThreadStateException;",
1381 "thread has already been started");
1382 goto fail;
1383 }
1384
1385 /*
1386 * There are actually three data structures: Thread (object), VMThread
1387 * (object), and Thread (C struct). All of them point to at least one
1388 * other.
1389 *
1390 * As soon as "VMThread.vmData" is assigned, other threads can start
1391 * making calls into us (e.g. setPriority).
1392 */
1393 dvmSetFieldInt(vmThreadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangVMThread_vmData, (u4)newThread);
1394 dvmSetFieldObject(threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_vmThread, vmThreadObj);
1395
1396 /*
1397 * Thread creation might take a while, so release the lock.
1398 */
1399 dvmUnlockThreadList();
1400
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -07001401 int cc, oldStatus;
1402 oldStatus = dvmChangeStatus(self, THREAD_VMWAIT);
1403 cc = pthread_create(&threadHandle, &threadAttr, interpThreadStart,
1404 newThread);
1405 oldStatus = dvmChangeStatus(self, oldStatus);
1406
1407 if (cc != 0) {
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001408 /*
1409 * Failure generally indicates that we have exceeded system
1410 * resource limits. VirtualMachineError is probably too severe,
1411 * so use OutOfMemoryError.
1412 */
1413 LOGE("Thread creation failed (err=%s)\n", strerror(errno));
1414
1415 dvmSetFieldObject(threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_vmThread, NULL);
1416
1417 dvmThrowException("Ljava/lang/OutOfMemoryError;",
1418 "thread creation failed");
1419 goto fail;
1420 }
1421
1422 /*
1423 * We need to wait for the thread to start. Otherwise, depending on
1424 * the whims of the OS scheduler, we could return and the code in our
1425 * thread could try to do operations on the new thread before it had
1426 * finished starting.
1427 *
1428 * The new thread will lock the thread list, change its state to
1429 * THREAD_STARTING, broadcast to gDvm.threadStartCond, and then sleep
1430 * on gDvm.threadStartCond (which uses the thread list lock). This
1431 * thread (the parent) will either see that the thread is already ready
1432 * after we grab the thread list lock, or will be awakened from the
1433 * condition variable on the broadcast.
1434 *
1435 * We don't want to stall the rest of the VM while the new thread
1436 * starts, which can happen if the GC wakes up at the wrong moment.
1437 * So, we change our own status to VMWAIT, and self-suspend if
1438 * necessary after we finish adding the new thread.
1439 *
1440 *
1441 * We have to deal with an odd race with the GC/debugger suspension
1442 * mechanism when creating a new thread. The information about whether
1443 * or not a thread should be suspended is contained entirely within
1444 * the Thread struct; this is usually cleaner to deal with than having
1445 * one or more globally-visible suspension flags. The trouble is that
1446 * we could create the thread while the VM is trying to suspend all
1447 * threads. The suspend-count won't be nonzero for the new thread,
1448 * so dvmChangeStatus(THREAD_RUNNING) won't cause a suspension.
1449 *
1450 * The easiest way to deal with this is to prevent the new thread from
1451 * running until the parent says it's okay. This results in the
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -07001452 * following (correct) sequence of events for a "badly timed" GC
1453 * (where '-' is us, 'o' is the child, and '+' is some other thread):
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001454 *
1455 * - call pthread_create()
1456 * - lock thread list
1457 * - put self into THREAD_VMWAIT so GC doesn't wait for us
1458 * - sleep on condition var (mutex = thread list lock) until child starts
1459 * + GC triggered by another thread
1460 * + thread list locked; suspend counts updated; thread list unlocked
1461 * + loop waiting for all runnable threads to suspend
1462 * + success, start GC
1463 * o child thread wakes, signals condition var to wake parent
1464 * o child waits for parent ack on condition variable
1465 * - we wake up, locking thread list
1466 * - add child to thread list
1467 * - unlock thread list
1468 * - change our state back to THREAD_RUNNING; GC causes us to suspend
1469 * + GC finishes; all threads in thread list are resumed
1470 * - lock thread list
1471 * - set child to THREAD_VMWAIT, and signal it to start
1472 * - unlock thread list
1473 * o child resumes
1474 * o child changes state to THREAD_RUNNING
1475 *
1476 * The above shows the GC starting up during thread creation, but if
1477 * it starts anywhere after VMThread.create() is called it will
1478 * produce the same series of events.
1479 *
1480 * Once the child is in the thread list, it will be suspended and
1481 * resumed like any other thread. In the above scenario the resume-all
1482 * code will try to resume the new thread, which was never actually
1483 * suspended, and try to decrement the child's thread suspend count to -1.
1484 * We can catch this in the resume-all code.
1485 *
1486 * Bouncing back and forth between threads like this adds a small amount
1487 * of scheduler overhead to thread startup.
1488 *
1489 * One alternative to having the child wait for the parent would be
1490 * to have the child inherit the parents' suspension count. This
1491 * would work for a GC, since we can safely assume that the parent
1492 * thread didn't cause it, but we must only do so if the parent suspension
1493 * was caused by a suspend-all. If the parent was being asked to
1494 * suspend singly by the debugger, the child should not inherit the value.
1495 *
1496 * We could also have a global "new thread suspend count" that gets
1497 * picked up by new threads before changing state to THREAD_RUNNING.
1498 * This would be protected by the thread list lock and set by a
1499 * suspend-all.
1500 */
1501 dvmLockThreadList(self);
1502 assert(self->status == THREAD_RUNNING);
1503 self->status = THREAD_VMWAIT;
1504 while (newThread->status != THREAD_STARTING)
1505 pthread_cond_wait(&gDvm.threadStartCond, &gDvm.threadListLock);
1506
1507 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: adding to list\n", newThread->threadId);
1508 newThread->next = gDvm.threadList->next;
1509 if (newThread->next != NULL)
1510 newThread->next->prev = newThread;
1511 newThread->prev = gDvm.threadList;
1512 gDvm.threadList->next = newThread;
1513
1514 if (!dvmGetFieldBoolean(threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_daemon))
1515 gDvm.nonDaemonThreadCount++; // guarded by thread list lock
1516
1517 dvmUnlockThreadList();
1518
1519 /* change status back to RUNNING, self-suspending if necessary */
1520 dvmChangeStatus(self, THREAD_RUNNING);
1521
1522 /*
1523 * Tell the new thread to start.
1524 *
1525 * We must hold the thread list lock before messing with another thread.
1526 * In the general case we would also need to verify that newThread was
1527 * still in the thread list, but in our case the thread has not started
1528 * executing user code and therefore has not had a chance to exit.
1529 *
1530 * We move it to VMWAIT, and it then shifts itself to RUNNING, which
1531 * comes with a suspend-pending check.
1532 */
1533 dvmLockThreadList(self);
1534
1535 assert(newThread->status == THREAD_STARTING);
1536 newThread->status = THREAD_VMWAIT;
1537 pthread_cond_broadcast(&gDvm.threadStartCond);
1538
1539 dvmUnlockThreadList();
1540
1541 dvmReleaseTrackedAlloc(vmThreadObj, NULL);
1542 return true;
1543
1544fail:
1545 freeThread(newThread);
1546 dvmReleaseTrackedAlloc(vmThreadObj, NULL);
1547 return false;
1548}
1549
1550/*
1551 * pthread entry function for threads started from interpreted code.
1552 */
1553static void* interpThreadStart(void* arg)
1554{
1555 Thread* self = (Thread*) arg;
1556
1557 char *threadName = dvmGetThreadName(self);
1558 setThreadName(threadName);
1559 free(threadName);
1560
1561 /*
1562 * Finish initializing the Thread struct.
1563 */
1564 prepareThread(self);
1565
1566 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: created from interp\n", self->threadId);
1567
1568 /*
1569 * Change our status and wake our parent, who will add us to the
1570 * thread list and advance our state to VMWAIT.
1571 */
1572 dvmLockThreadList(self);
1573 self->status = THREAD_STARTING;
1574 pthread_cond_broadcast(&gDvm.threadStartCond);
1575
1576 /*
1577 * Wait until the parent says we can go. Assuming there wasn't a
1578 * suspend pending, this will happen immediately. When it completes,
1579 * we're full-fledged citizens of the VM.
1580 *
1581 * We have to use THREAD_VMWAIT here rather than THREAD_RUNNING
1582 * because the pthread_cond_wait below needs to reacquire a lock that
1583 * suspend-all is also interested in. If we get unlucky, the parent could
1584 * change us to THREAD_RUNNING, then a GC could start before we get
1585 * signaled, and suspend-all will grab the thread list lock and then
1586 * wait for us to suspend. We'll be in the tail end of pthread_cond_wait
1587 * trying to get the lock.
1588 */
1589 while (self->status != THREAD_VMWAIT)
1590 pthread_cond_wait(&gDvm.threadStartCond, &gDvm.threadListLock);
1591
1592 dvmUnlockThreadList();
1593
1594 /*
1595 * Add a JNI context.
1596 */
1597 self->jniEnv = dvmCreateJNIEnv(self);
1598
1599 /*
1600 * Change our state so the GC will wait for us from now on. If a GC is
1601 * in progress this call will suspend us.
1602 */
1603 dvmChangeStatus(self, THREAD_RUNNING);
1604
1605 /*
1606 * Notify the debugger & DDM. The debugger notification may cause
1607 * us to suspend ourselves (and others).
1608 */
1609 if (gDvm.debuggerConnected)
1610 dvmDbgPostThreadStart(self);
1611
1612 /*
1613 * Set the system thread priority according to the Thread object's
1614 * priority level. We don't usually need to do this, because both the
1615 * Thread object and system thread priorities inherit from parents. The
1616 * tricky case is when somebody creates a Thread object, calls
1617 * setPriority(), and then starts the thread. We could manage this with
1618 * a "needs priority update" flag to avoid the redundant call.
1619 */
Andy McFadden4879df92009-08-07 14:49:40 -07001620 int priority = dvmGetFieldInt(self->threadObj,
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001621 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_priority);
1622 dvmChangeThreadPriority(self, priority);
1623
1624 /*
1625 * Execute the "run" method.
1626 *
1627 * At this point our stack is empty, so somebody who comes looking for
1628 * stack traces right now won't have much to look at. This is normal.
1629 */
1630 Method* run = self->threadObj->clazz->vtable[gDvm.voffJavaLangThread_run];
1631 JValue unused;
1632
1633 LOGV("threadid=%d: calling run()\n", self->threadId);
1634 assert(strcmp(run->name, "run") == 0);
1635 dvmCallMethod(self, run, self->threadObj, &unused);
1636 LOGV("threadid=%d: exiting\n", self->threadId);
1637
1638 /*
1639 * Remove the thread from various lists, report its death, and free
1640 * its resources.
1641 */
1642 dvmDetachCurrentThread();
1643
1644 return NULL;
1645}
1646
1647/*
1648 * The current thread is exiting with an uncaught exception. The
1649 * Java programming language allows the application to provide a
1650 * thread-exit-uncaught-exception handler for the VM, for a specific
1651 * Thread, and for all threads in a ThreadGroup.
1652 *
1653 * Version 1.5 added the per-thread handler. We need to call
1654 * "uncaughtException" in the handler object, which is either the
1655 * ThreadGroup object or the Thread-specific handler.
1656 */
1657static void threadExitUncaughtException(Thread* self, Object* group)
1658{
1659 Object* exception;
1660 Object* handlerObj;
1661 ClassObject* throwable;
1662 Method* uncaughtHandler = NULL;
1663 InstField* threadHandler;
1664
1665 LOGW("threadid=%d: thread exiting with uncaught exception (group=%p)\n",
1666 self->threadId, group);
1667 assert(group != NULL);
1668
1669 /*
1670 * Get a pointer to the exception, then clear out the one in the
1671 * thread. We don't want to have it set when executing interpreted code.
1672 */
1673 exception = dvmGetException(self);
1674 dvmAddTrackedAlloc(exception, self);
1675 dvmClearException(self);
1676
1677 /*
1678 * Get the Thread's "uncaughtHandler" object. Use it if non-NULL;
1679 * else use "group" (which is an instance of UncaughtExceptionHandler).
1680 */
1681 threadHandler = dvmFindInstanceField(gDvm.classJavaLangThread,
1682 "uncaughtHandler", "Ljava/lang/Thread$UncaughtExceptionHandler;");
1683 if (threadHandler == NULL) {
1684 LOGW("WARNING: no 'uncaughtHandler' field in java/lang/Thread\n");
1685 goto bail;
1686 }
1687 handlerObj = dvmGetFieldObject(self->threadObj, threadHandler->byteOffset);
1688 if (handlerObj == NULL)
1689 handlerObj = group;
1690
1691 /*
1692 * Find the "uncaughtHandler" field in this object.
1693 */
1694 uncaughtHandler = dvmFindVirtualMethodHierByDescriptor(handlerObj->clazz,
1695 "uncaughtException", "(Ljava/lang/Thread;Ljava/lang/Throwable;)V");
1696
1697 if (uncaughtHandler != NULL) {
1698 //LOGI("+++ calling %s.uncaughtException\n",
1699 // handlerObj->clazz->descriptor);
1700 JValue unused;
1701 dvmCallMethod(self, uncaughtHandler, handlerObj, &unused,
1702 self->threadObj, exception);
1703 } else {
1704 /* restore it and dump a stack trace */
1705 LOGW("WARNING: no 'uncaughtException' method in class %s\n",
1706 handlerObj->clazz->descriptor);
1707 dvmSetException(self, exception);
1708 dvmLogExceptionStackTrace();
1709 }
1710
1711bail:
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07001712#if defined(WITH_JIT)
1713 /* Remove this thread's suspendCount from global suspendCount sum */
1714 lockThreadSuspendCount();
1715 dvmAddToThreadSuspendCount(&self->suspendCount, -self->suspendCount);
1716 unlockThreadSuspendCount();
1717#endif
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08001718 dvmReleaseTrackedAlloc(exception, self);
1719}
1720
1721
1722/*
1723 * Create an internal VM thread, for things like JDWP and finalizers.
1724 *
1725 * The easiest way to do this is create a new thread and then use the
1726 * JNI AttachCurrentThread implementation.
1727 *
1728 * This does not return until after the new thread has begun executing.
1729 */
1730bool dvmCreateInternalThread(pthread_t* pHandle, const char* name,
1731 InternalThreadStart func, void* funcArg)
1732{
1733 InternalStartArgs* pArgs;
1734 Object* systemGroup;
1735 pthread_attr_t threadAttr;
1736 volatile Thread* newThread = NULL;
1737 volatile int createStatus = 0;
1738
1739 systemGroup = dvmGetSystemThreadGroup();
1740 if (systemGroup == NULL)
1741 return false;
1742
1743 pArgs = (InternalStartArgs*) malloc(sizeof(*pArgs));
1744 pArgs->func = func;
1745 pArgs->funcArg = funcArg;
1746 pArgs->name = strdup(name); // storage will be owned by new thread
1747 pArgs->group = systemGroup;
1748 pArgs->isDaemon = true;
1749 pArgs->pThread = &newThread;
1750 pArgs->pCreateStatus = &createStatus;
1751
1752 pthread_attr_init(&threadAttr);
1753 //pthread_attr_setdetachstate(&threadAttr, PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED);
1754
1755 if (pthread_create(pHandle, &threadAttr, internalThreadStart,
1756 pArgs) != 0)
1757 {
1758 LOGE("internal thread creation failed\n");
1759 free(pArgs->name);
1760 free(pArgs);
1761 return false;
1762 }
1763
1764 /*
1765 * Wait for the child to start. This gives us an opportunity to make
1766 * sure that the thread started correctly, and allows our caller to
1767 * assume that the thread has started running.
1768 *
1769 * Because we aren't holding a lock across the thread creation, it's
1770 * possible that the child will already have completed its
1771 * initialization. Because the child only adjusts "createStatus" while
1772 * holding the thread list lock, the initial condition on the "while"
1773 * loop will correctly avoid the wait if this occurs.
1774 *
1775 * It's also possible that we'll have to wait for the thread to finish
1776 * being created, and as part of allocating a Thread object it might
1777 * need to initiate a GC. We switch to VMWAIT while we pause.
1778 */
1779 Thread* self = dvmThreadSelf();
1780 int oldStatus = dvmChangeStatus(self, THREAD_VMWAIT);
1781 dvmLockThreadList(self);
1782 while (createStatus == 0)
1783 pthread_cond_wait(&gDvm.threadStartCond, &gDvm.threadListLock);
1784
1785 if (newThread == NULL) {
1786 LOGW("internal thread create failed (createStatus=%d)\n", createStatus);
1787 assert(createStatus < 0);
1788 /* don't free pArgs -- if pthread_create succeeded, child owns it */
1789 dvmUnlockThreadList();
1790 dvmChangeStatus(self, oldStatus);
1791 return false;
1792 }
1793
1794 /* thread could be in any state now (except early init states) */
1795 //assert(newThread->status == THREAD_RUNNING);
1796
1797 dvmUnlockThreadList();
1798 dvmChangeStatus(self, oldStatus);
1799
1800 return true;
1801}
1802
1803/*
1804 * pthread entry function for internally-created threads.
1805 *
1806 * We are expected to free "arg" and its contents. If we're a daemon
1807 * thread, and we get cancelled abruptly when the VM shuts down, the
1808 * storage won't be freed. If this becomes a concern we can make a copy
1809 * on the stack.
1810 */
1811static void* internalThreadStart(void* arg)
1812{
1813 InternalStartArgs* pArgs = (InternalStartArgs*) arg;
1814 JavaVMAttachArgs jniArgs;
1815
1816 jniArgs.version = JNI_VERSION_1_2;
1817 jniArgs.name = pArgs->name;
1818 jniArgs.group = pArgs->group;
1819
1820 setThreadName(pArgs->name);
1821
1822 /* use local jniArgs as stack top */
1823 if (dvmAttachCurrentThread(&jniArgs, pArgs->isDaemon)) {
1824 /*
1825 * Tell the parent of our success.
1826 *
1827 * threadListLock is the mutex for threadStartCond.
1828 */
1829 dvmLockThreadList(dvmThreadSelf());
1830 *pArgs->pCreateStatus = 1;
1831 *pArgs->pThread = dvmThreadSelf();
1832 pthread_cond_broadcast(&gDvm.threadStartCond);
1833 dvmUnlockThreadList();
1834
1835 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: internal '%s'\n",
1836 dvmThreadSelf()->threadId, pArgs->name);
1837
1838 /* execute */
1839 (*pArgs->func)(pArgs->funcArg);
1840
1841 /* detach ourselves */
1842 dvmDetachCurrentThread();
1843 } else {
1844 /*
1845 * Tell the parent of our failure. We don't have a Thread struct,
1846 * so we can't be suspended, so we don't need to enter a critical
1847 * section.
1848 */
1849 dvmLockThreadList(dvmThreadSelf());
1850 *pArgs->pCreateStatus = -1;
1851 assert(*pArgs->pThread == NULL);
1852 pthread_cond_broadcast(&gDvm.threadStartCond);
1853 dvmUnlockThreadList();
1854
1855 assert(*pArgs->pThread == NULL);
1856 }
1857
1858 free(pArgs->name);
1859 free(pArgs);
1860 return NULL;
1861}
1862
1863/*
1864 * Attach the current thread to the VM.
1865 *
1866 * Used for internally-created threads and JNI's AttachCurrentThread.
1867 */
1868bool dvmAttachCurrentThread(const JavaVMAttachArgs* pArgs, bool isDaemon)
1869{
1870 Thread* self = NULL;
1871 Object* threadObj = NULL;
1872 Object* vmThreadObj = NULL;
1873 StringObject* threadNameStr = NULL;
1874 Method* init;
1875 bool ok, ret;
1876
1877 /* establish a basic sense of self */
1878 self = allocThread(gDvm.stackSize);
1879 if (self == NULL)
1880 goto fail;
1881 setThreadSelf(self);
1882
1883 /*
1884 * Create Thread and VMThread objects. We have to use ALLOC_NO_GC
1885 * because this thread is not yet visible to the VM. We could also
1886 * just grab the GC lock earlier, but that leaves us executing
1887 * interpreted code with the lock held, which is not prudent.
1888 *
1889 * The alloc calls will block if a GC is in progress, so we don't need
1890 * to check for global suspension here.
1891 *
1892 * It's also possible for the allocation calls to *cause* a GC.
1893 */
1894 //BUG: deadlock if a GC happens here during HeapWorker creation
1895 threadObj = dvmAllocObject(gDvm.classJavaLangThread, ALLOC_NO_GC);
1896 if (threadObj == NULL)
1897 goto fail;
1898 vmThreadObj = dvmAllocObject(gDvm.classJavaLangVMThread, ALLOC_NO_GC);
1899 if (vmThreadObj == NULL)
1900 goto fail;
1901
1902 self->threadObj = threadObj;
1903 dvmSetFieldInt(vmThreadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangVMThread_vmData, (u4)self);
1904
1905 /*
1906 * Do some java.lang.Thread constructor prep before we lock stuff down.
1907 */
1908 if (pArgs->name != NULL) {
1909 threadNameStr = dvmCreateStringFromCstr(pArgs->name, ALLOC_NO_GC);
1910 if (threadNameStr == NULL) {
1911 assert(dvmCheckException(dvmThreadSelf()));
1912 goto fail;
1913 }
1914 }
1915
1916 init = dvmFindDirectMethodByDescriptor(gDvm.classJavaLangThread, "<init>",
1917 "(Ljava/lang/ThreadGroup;Ljava/lang/String;IZ)V");
1918 if (init == NULL) {
1919 assert(dvmCheckException(dvmThreadSelf()));
1920 goto fail;
1921 }
1922
1923 /*
1924 * Finish our thread prep. We need to do this before invoking any
1925 * interpreted code. prepareThread() requires that we hold the thread
1926 * list lock.
1927 */
1928 dvmLockThreadList(self);
1929 ok = prepareThread(self);
1930 dvmUnlockThreadList();
1931 if (!ok)
1932 goto fail;
1933
1934 self->jniEnv = dvmCreateJNIEnv(self);
1935 if (self->jniEnv == NULL)
1936 goto fail;
1937
1938 /*
1939 * Create a "fake" JNI frame at the top of the main thread interp stack.
1940 * It isn't really necessary for the internal threads, but it gives
1941 * the debugger something to show. It is essential for the JNI-attached
1942 * threads.
1943 */
1944 if (!createFakeRunFrame(self))
1945 goto fail;
1946
1947 /*
1948 * The native side of the thread is ready; add it to the list.
1949 */
1950 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: adding to list (attached)\n", self->threadId);
1951
1952 /* Start off in VMWAIT, because we may be about to block
1953 * on the heap lock, and we don't want any suspensions
1954 * to wait for us.
1955 */
1956 self->status = THREAD_VMWAIT;
1957
1958 /*
1959 * Add ourselves to the thread list. Once we finish here we are
1960 * visible to the debugger and the GC.
1961 */
1962 dvmLockThreadList(self);
1963
1964 self->next = gDvm.threadList->next;
1965 if (self->next != NULL)
1966 self->next->prev = self;
1967 self->prev = gDvm.threadList;
1968 gDvm.threadList->next = self;
1969 if (!isDaemon)
1970 gDvm.nonDaemonThreadCount++;
1971
1972 dvmUnlockThreadList();
1973
1974 /*
1975 * It's possible that a GC is currently running. Our thread
1976 * wasn't in the list when the GC started, so it's not properly
1977 * suspended in that case. Synchronize on the heap lock (held
1978 * when a GC is happening) to guarantee that any GCs from here
1979 * on will see this thread in the list.
1980 */
1981 dvmLockMutex(&gDvm.gcHeapLock);
1982 dvmUnlockMutex(&gDvm.gcHeapLock);
1983
1984 /*
1985 * Switch to the running state now that we're ready for
1986 * suspensions. This call may suspend.
1987 */
1988 dvmChangeStatus(self, THREAD_RUNNING);
1989
1990 /*
1991 * Now we're ready to run some interpreted code.
1992 *
1993 * We need to construct the Thread object and set the VMThread field.
1994 * Setting VMThread tells interpreted code that we're alive.
1995 *
1996 * Call the (group, name, priority, daemon) constructor on the Thread.
1997 * This sets the thread's name and adds it to the specified group, and
1998 * provides values for priority and daemon (which are normally inherited
1999 * from the current thread).
2000 */
2001 JValue unused;
2002 dvmCallMethod(self, init, threadObj, &unused, (Object*)pArgs->group,
2003 threadNameStr, getThreadPriorityFromSystem(), isDaemon);
2004 if (dvmCheckException(self)) {
2005 LOGE("exception thrown while constructing attached thread object\n");
2006 goto fail_unlink;
2007 }
2008 //if (isDaemon)
2009 // dvmSetFieldBoolean(threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_daemon, true);
2010
2011 /*
2012 * Set the VMThread field, which tells interpreted code that we're alive.
2013 *
2014 * The risk of a thread start collision here is very low; somebody
2015 * would have to be deliberately polling the ThreadGroup list and
2016 * trying to start threads against anything it sees, which would
2017 * generally cause problems for all thread creation. However, for
2018 * correctness we test "vmThread" before setting it.
2019 */
2020 if (dvmGetFieldObject(threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_vmThread) != NULL) {
2021 dvmThrowException("Ljava/lang/IllegalThreadStateException;",
2022 "thread has already been started");
2023 /* We don't want to free anything associated with the thread
2024 * because someone is obviously interested in it. Just let
2025 * it go and hope it will clean itself up when its finished.
2026 * This case should never happen anyway.
2027 *
2028 * Since we're letting it live, we need to finish setting it up.
2029 * We just have to let the caller know that the intended operation
2030 * has failed.
2031 *
2032 * [ This seems strange -- stepping on the vmThread object that's
2033 * already present seems like a bad idea. TODO: figure this out. ]
2034 */
2035 ret = false;
2036 } else
2037 ret = true;
2038 dvmSetFieldObject(threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_vmThread, vmThreadObj);
2039
2040 /* These are now reachable from the thread groups. */
2041 dvmClearAllocFlags(threadObj, ALLOC_NO_GC);
2042 dvmClearAllocFlags(vmThreadObj, ALLOC_NO_GC);
2043
2044 /*
2045 * The thread is ready to go; let the debugger see it.
2046 */
2047 self->threadObj = threadObj;
2048
2049 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: attached from native, name=%s\n",
2050 self->threadId, pArgs->name);
2051
2052 /* tell the debugger & DDM */
2053 if (gDvm.debuggerConnected)
2054 dvmDbgPostThreadStart(self);
2055
2056 return ret;
2057
2058fail_unlink:
2059 dvmLockThreadList(self);
2060 unlinkThread(self);
2061 if (!isDaemon)
2062 gDvm.nonDaemonThreadCount--;
2063 dvmUnlockThreadList();
2064 /* fall through to "fail" */
2065fail:
2066 dvmClearAllocFlags(threadObj, ALLOC_NO_GC);
2067 dvmClearAllocFlags(vmThreadObj, ALLOC_NO_GC);
2068 if (self != NULL) {
2069 if (self->jniEnv != NULL) {
2070 dvmDestroyJNIEnv(self->jniEnv);
2071 self->jniEnv = NULL;
2072 }
2073 freeThread(self);
2074 }
2075 setThreadSelf(NULL);
2076 return false;
2077}
2078
2079/*
2080 * Detach the thread from the various data structures, notify other threads
2081 * that are waiting to "join" it, and free up all heap-allocated storage.
2082 *
2083 * Used for all threads.
2084 *
2085 * When we get here the interpreted stack should be empty. The JNI 1.6 spec
2086 * requires us to enforce this for the DetachCurrentThread call, probably
2087 * because it also says that DetachCurrentThread causes all monitors
2088 * associated with the thread to be released. (Because the stack is empty,
2089 * we only have to worry about explicit JNI calls to MonitorEnter.)
2090 *
2091 * THOUGHT:
2092 * We might want to avoid freeing our internal Thread structure until the
2093 * associated Thread/VMThread objects get GCed. Our Thread is impossible to
2094 * get to once the thread shuts down, but there is a small possibility of
2095 * an operation starting in another thread before this thread halts, and
2096 * finishing much later (perhaps the thread got stalled by a weird OS bug).
2097 * We don't want something like Thread.isInterrupted() crawling through
2098 * freed storage. Can do with a Thread finalizer, or by creating a
2099 * dedicated ThreadObject class for java/lang/Thread and moving all of our
2100 * state into that.
2101 */
2102void dvmDetachCurrentThread(void)
2103{
2104 Thread* self = dvmThreadSelf();
2105 Object* vmThread;
2106 Object* group;
2107
2108 /*
2109 * Make sure we're not detaching a thread that's still running. (This
2110 * could happen with an explicit JNI detach call.)
2111 *
2112 * A thread created by interpreted code will finish with a depth of
2113 * zero, while a JNI-attached thread will have the synthetic "stack
2114 * starter" native method at the top.
2115 */
2116 int curDepth = dvmComputeExactFrameDepth(self->curFrame);
2117 if (curDepth != 0) {
2118 bool topIsNative = false;
2119
2120 if (curDepth == 1) {
2121 /* not expecting a lingering break frame; just look at curFrame */
2122 assert(!dvmIsBreakFrame(self->curFrame));
2123 StackSaveArea* ssa = SAVEAREA_FROM_FP(self->curFrame);
2124 if (dvmIsNativeMethod(ssa->method))
2125 topIsNative = true;
2126 }
2127
2128 if (!topIsNative) {
2129 LOGE("ERROR: detaching thread with interp frames (count=%d)\n",
2130 curDepth);
2131 dvmDumpThread(self, false);
2132 dvmAbort();
2133 }
2134 }
2135
2136 group = dvmGetFieldObject(self->threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_group);
2137 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: detach (group=%p)\n", self->threadId, group);
2138
2139 /*
2140 * Release any held monitors. Since there are no interpreted stack
2141 * frames, the only thing left are the monitors held by JNI MonitorEnter
2142 * calls.
2143 */
2144 dvmReleaseJniMonitors(self);
2145
2146 /*
2147 * Do some thread-exit uncaught exception processing if necessary.
2148 */
2149 if (dvmCheckException(self))
2150 threadExitUncaughtException(self, group);
2151
2152 /*
2153 * Remove the thread from the thread group.
2154 */
2155 if (group != NULL) {
2156 Method* removeThread =
2157 group->clazz->vtable[gDvm.voffJavaLangThreadGroup_removeThread];
2158 JValue unused;
2159 dvmCallMethod(self, removeThread, group, &unused, self->threadObj);
2160 }
2161
2162 /*
2163 * Clear the vmThread reference in the Thread object. Interpreted code
2164 * will now see that this Thread is not running. As this may be the
2165 * only reference to the VMThread object that the VM knows about, we
2166 * have to create an internal reference to it first.
2167 */
2168 vmThread = dvmGetFieldObject(self->threadObj,
2169 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_vmThread);
2170 dvmAddTrackedAlloc(vmThread, self);
2171 dvmSetFieldObject(self->threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_vmThread, NULL);
2172
2173 /* clear out our struct Thread pointer, since it's going away */
2174 dvmSetFieldObject(vmThread, gDvm.offJavaLangVMThread_vmData, NULL);
2175
2176 /*
2177 * Tell the debugger & DDM. This may cause the current thread or all
2178 * threads to suspend.
2179 *
2180 * The JDWP spec is somewhat vague about when this happens, other than
2181 * that it's issued by the dying thread, which may still appear in
2182 * an "all threads" listing.
2183 */
2184 if (gDvm.debuggerConnected)
2185 dvmDbgPostThreadDeath(self);
2186
2187 /*
2188 * Thread.join() is implemented as an Object.wait() on the VMThread
2189 * object. Signal anyone who is waiting.
2190 */
2191 dvmLockObject(self, vmThread);
2192 dvmObjectNotifyAll(self, vmThread);
2193 dvmUnlockObject(self, vmThread);
2194
2195 dvmReleaseTrackedAlloc(vmThread, self);
2196 vmThread = NULL;
2197
2198 /*
2199 * We're done manipulating objects, so it's okay if the GC runs in
2200 * parallel with us from here out. It's important to do this if
2201 * profiling is enabled, since we can wait indefinitely.
2202 */
2203 self->status = THREAD_VMWAIT;
2204
2205#ifdef WITH_PROFILER
2206 /*
2207 * If we're doing method trace profiling, we don't want threads to exit,
2208 * because if they do we'll end up reusing thread IDs. This complicates
2209 * analysis and makes it impossible to have reasonable output in the
2210 * "threads" section of the "key" file.
2211 *
2212 * We need to do this after Thread.join() completes, or other threads
2213 * could get wedged. Since self->threadObj is still valid, the Thread
2214 * object will not get GCed even though we're no longer in the ThreadGroup
2215 * list (which is important since the profiling thread needs to get
2216 * the thread's name).
2217 */
2218 MethodTraceState* traceState = &gDvm.methodTrace;
2219
2220 dvmLockMutex(&traceState->startStopLock);
2221 if (traceState->traceEnabled) {
2222 LOGI("threadid=%d: waiting for method trace to finish\n",
2223 self->threadId);
2224 while (traceState->traceEnabled) {
2225 int cc;
2226 cc = pthread_cond_wait(&traceState->threadExitCond,
2227 &traceState->startStopLock);
2228 assert(cc == 0);
2229 }
2230 }
2231 dvmUnlockMutex(&traceState->startStopLock);
2232#endif
2233
2234 dvmLockThreadList(self);
2235
2236 /*
2237 * Lose the JNI context.
2238 */
2239 dvmDestroyJNIEnv(self->jniEnv);
2240 self->jniEnv = NULL;
2241
2242 self->status = THREAD_ZOMBIE;
2243
2244 /*
2245 * Remove ourselves from the internal thread list.
2246 */
2247 unlinkThread(self);
2248
2249 /*
2250 * If we're the last one standing, signal anybody waiting in
2251 * DestroyJavaVM that it's okay to exit.
2252 */
2253 if (!dvmGetFieldBoolean(self->threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_daemon)) {
2254 gDvm.nonDaemonThreadCount--; // guarded by thread list lock
2255
2256 if (gDvm.nonDaemonThreadCount == 0) {
2257 int cc;
2258
2259 LOGV("threadid=%d: last non-daemon thread\n", self->threadId);
2260 //dvmDumpAllThreads(false);
2261 // cond var guarded by threadListLock, which we already hold
2262 cc = pthread_cond_signal(&gDvm.vmExitCond);
2263 assert(cc == 0);
2264 }
2265 }
2266
2267 LOGV("threadid=%d: bye!\n", self->threadId);
2268 releaseThreadId(self);
2269 dvmUnlockThreadList();
2270
2271 setThreadSelf(NULL);
Bob Lee9dc72a32009-09-04 18:28:16 -07002272
Bob Lee2fe146a2009-09-10 00:36:29 +02002273 dvmDetachSystemThread(self);
Bob Lee9dc72a32009-09-04 18:28:16 -07002274
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002275 freeThread(self);
2276}
2277
2278
2279/*
2280 * Suspend a single thread. Do not use to suspend yourself.
2281 *
2282 * This is used primarily for debugger/DDMS activity. Does not return
2283 * until the thread has suspended or is in a "safe" state (e.g. executing
2284 * native code outside the VM).
2285 *
2286 * The thread list lock should be held before calling here -- it's not
2287 * entirely safe to hang on to a Thread* from another thread otherwise.
2288 * (We'd need to grab it here anyway to avoid clashing with a suspend-all.)
2289 */
2290void dvmSuspendThread(Thread* thread)
2291{
2292 assert(thread != NULL);
2293 assert(thread != dvmThreadSelf());
2294 //assert(thread->handle != dvmJdwpGetDebugThread(gDvm.jdwpState));
2295
2296 lockThreadSuspendCount();
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07002297 dvmAddToThreadSuspendCount(&thread->suspendCount, 1);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002298 thread->dbgSuspendCount++;
2299
2300 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: suspend++, now=%d\n",
2301 thread->threadId, thread->suspendCount);
2302 unlockThreadSuspendCount();
2303
2304 waitForThreadSuspend(dvmThreadSelf(), thread);
2305}
2306
2307/*
2308 * Reduce the suspend count of a thread. If it hits zero, tell it to
2309 * resume.
2310 *
2311 * Used primarily for debugger/DDMS activity. The thread in question
2312 * might have been suspended singly or as part of a suspend-all operation.
2313 *
2314 * The thread list lock should be held before calling here -- it's not
2315 * entirely safe to hang on to a Thread* from another thread otherwise.
2316 * (We'd need to grab it here anyway to avoid clashing with a suspend-all.)
2317 */
2318void dvmResumeThread(Thread* thread)
2319{
2320 assert(thread != NULL);
2321 assert(thread != dvmThreadSelf());
2322 //assert(thread->handle != dvmJdwpGetDebugThread(gDvm.jdwpState));
2323
2324 lockThreadSuspendCount();
2325 if (thread->suspendCount > 0) {
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07002326 dvmAddToThreadSuspendCount(&thread->suspendCount, -1);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002327 thread->dbgSuspendCount--;
2328 } else {
2329 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: suspendCount already zero\n",
2330 thread->threadId);
2331 }
2332
2333 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: suspend--, now=%d\n",
2334 thread->threadId, thread->suspendCount);
2335
2336 if (thread->suspendCount == 0) {
2337 int cc = pthread_cond_broadcast(&gDvm.threadSuspendCountCond);
2338 assert(cc == 0);
2339 }
2340
2341 unlockThreadSuspendCount();
2342}
2343
2344/*
2345 * Suspend yourself, as a result of debugger activity.
2346 */
2347void dvmSuspendSelf(bool jdwpActivity)
2348{
2349 Thread* self = dvmThreadSelf();
2350
2351 /* debugger thread may not suspend itself due to debugger activity! */
2352 assert(gDvm.jdwpState != NULL);
2353 if (self->handle == dvmJdwpGetDebugThread(gDvm.jdwpState)) {
2354 assert(false);
2355 return;
2356 }
2357
2358 /*
2359 * Collisions with other suspends aren't really interesting. We want
2360 * to ensure that we're the only one fiddling with the suspend count
2361 * though.
2362 */
2363 lockThreadSuspendCount();
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07002364 dvmAddToThreadSuspendCount(&self->suspendCount, 1);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002365 self->dbgSuspendCount++;
2366
2367 /*
2368 * Suspend ourselves.
2369 */
2370 assert(self->suspendCount > 0);
2371 self->isSuspended = true;
2372 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: self-suspending (dbg)\n", self->threadId);
2373
2374 /*
2375 * Tell JDWP that we've completed suspension. The JDWP thread can't
2376 * tell us to resume before we're fully asleep because we hold the
2377 * suspend count lock.
2378 *
2379 * If we got here via waitForDebugger(), don't do this part.
2380 */
2381 if (jdwpActivity) {
2382 //LOGI("threadid=%d: clearing wait-for-event (my handle=%08x)\n",
2383 // self->threadId, (int) self->handle);
2384 dvmJdwpClearWaitForEventThread(gDvm.jdwpState);
2385 }
2386
2387 while (self->suspendCount != 0) {
2388 int cc;
2389 cc = pthread_cond_wait(&gDvm.threadSuspendCountCond,
2390 &gDvm.threadSuspendCountLock);
2391 assert(cc == 0);
2392 if (self->suspendCount != 0) {
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07002393 /*
2394 * The condition was signaled but we're still suspended. This
2395 * can happen if the debugger lets go while a SIGQUIT thread
2396 * dump event is pending (assuming SignalCatcher was resumed for
2397 * just long enough to try to grab the thread-suspend lock).
2398 */
2399 LOGD("threadid=%d: still suspended after undo (sc=%d dc=%d s=%c)\n",
2400 self->threadId, self->suspendCount, self->dbgSuspendCount,
2401 self->isSuspended ? 'Y' : 'N');
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002402 }
2403 }
2404 assert(self->suspendCount == 0 && self->dbgSuspendCount == 0);
2405 self->isSuspended = false;
2406 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: self-reviving (dbg), status=%d\n",
2407 self->threadId, self->status);
2408
2409 unlockThreadSuspendCount();
2410}
2411
2412
2413#ifdef HAVE_GLIBC
2414# define NUM_FRAMES 20
2415# include <execinfo.h>
2416/*
2417 * glibc-only stack dump function. Requires link with "--export-dynamic".
2418 *
2419 * TODO: move this into libs/cutils and make it work for all platforms.
2420 */
2421static void printBackTrace(void)
2422{
2423 void* array[NUM_FRAMES];
2424 size_t size;
2425 char** strings;
2426 size_t i;
2427
2428 size = backtrace(array, NUM_FRAMES);
2429 strings = backtrace_symbols(array, size);
2430
2431 LOGW("Obtained %zd stack frames.\n", size);
2432
2433 for (i = 0; i < size; i++)
2434 LOGW("%s\n", strings[i]);
2435
2436 free(strings);
2437}
2438#else
2439static void printBackTrace(void) {}
2440#endif
2441
2442/*
2443 * Dump the state of the current thread and that of another thread that
2444 * we think is wedged.
2445 */
2446static void dumpWedgedThread(Thread* thread)
2447{
2448 char exePath[1024];
2449
2450 /*
2451 * The "executablepath" function in libutils is host-side only.
2452 */
2453 strcpy(exePath, "-");
2454#ifdef HAVE_GLIBC
2455 {
2456 char proc[100];
2457 sprintf(proc, "/proc/%d/exe", getpid());
2458 int len;
Jeff Hao97319a82009-08-12 16:57:15 -07002459
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002460 len = readlink(proc, exePath, sizeof(exePath)-1);
2461 exePath[len] = '\0';
2462 }
2463#endif
2464
2465 LOGW("dumping state: process %s %d\n", exePath, getpid());
2466 dvmDumpThread(dvmThreadSelf(), false);
2467 printBackTrace();
2468
2469 // dumping a running thread is risky, but could be useful
2470 dvmDumpThread(thread, true);
2471
2472
2473 // stop now and get a core dump
2474 //abort();
2475}
2476
2477
2478/*
2479 * Wait for another thread to see the pending suspension and stop running.
2480 * It can either suspend itself or go into a non-running state such as
2481 * VMWAIT or NATIVE in which it cannot interact with the GC.
2482 *
2483 * If we're running at a higher priority, sched_yield() may not do anything,
2484 * so we need to sleep for "long enough" to guarantee that the other
2485 * thread has a chance to finish what it's doing. Sleeping for too short
2486 * a period (e.g. less than the resolution of the sleep clock) might cause
2487 * the scheduler to return immediately, so we want to start with a
2488 * "reasonable" value and expand.
2489 *
2490 * This does not return until the other thread has stopped running.
2491 * Eventually we time out and the VM aborts.
2492 *
2493 * This does not try to detect the situation where two threads are
2494 * waiting for each other to suspend. In normal use this is part of a
2495 * suspend-all, which implies that the suspend-all lock is held, or as
2496 * part of a debugger action in which the JDWP thread is always the one
2497 * doing the suspending. (We may need to re-evaluate this now that
2498 * getThreadStackTrace is implemented as suspend-snapshot-resume.)
2499 *
2500 * TODO: track basic stats about time required to suspend VM.
2501 */
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07002502#define FIRST_SLEEP (250*1000) /* 0.25s */
2503#define MORE_SLEEP (750*1000) /* 0.75s */
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002504static void waitForThreadSuspend(Thread* self, Thread* thread)
2505{
2506 const int kMaxRetries = 10;
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07002507 int spinSleepTime = FIRST_SLEEP;
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -07002508 bool complained = false;
Andy McFadden7ce9bd72009-08-07 11:41:35 -07002509 bool needPriorityReset = false;
2510 int savedThreadPrio = -500;
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002511
2512 int sleepIter = 0;
2513 int retryCount = 0;
2514 u8 startWhen = 0; // init req'd to placate gcc
Andy McFadden7ce9bd72009-08-07 11:41:35 -07002515 u8 firstStartWhen = 0;
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002516
2517 while (thread->status == THREAD_RUNNING && !thread->isSuspended) {
Andy McFadden7ce9bd72009-08-07 11:41:35 -07002518 if (sleepIter == 0) { // get current time on first iteration
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002519 startWhen = dvmGetRelativeTimeUsec();
Andy McFadden7ce9bd72009-08-07 11:41:35 -07002520 if (firstStartWhen == 0) // first iteration of first attempt
2521 firstStartWhen = startWhen;
2522
2523 /*
2524 * After waiting for a bit, check to see if the target thread is
2525 * running at a reduced priority. If so, bump it up temporarily
2526 * to give it more CPU time.
2527 *
2528 * getpriority() returns the "nice" value, so larger numbers
2529 * indicate lower priority.
2530 *
2531 * (Not currently changing the cgroup. Wasn't necessary in some
2532 * simple experiments.)
2533 */
2534 if (retryCount == 2) {
2535 assert(thread->systemTid != 0);
2536 errno = 0;
2537 int threadPrio = getpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, thread->systemTid);
2538 if (errno == 0 && threadPrio > 0) {
2539 const int kHigher = 0;
2540 if (setpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, thread->systemTid, kHigher) < 0)
2541 {
2542 LOGW("Couldn't raise priority on tid %d to %d\n",
2543 thread->systemTid, kHigher);
2544 } else {
2545 savedThreadPrio = threadPrio;
2546 needPriorityReset = true;
2547 LOGD("Temporarily raising priority on tid %d (%d -> %d)\n",
2548 thread->systemTid, threadPrio, kHigher);
2549 }
2550 }
2551 }
2552 }
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002553
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07002554#if defined (WITH_JIT)
2555 /*
2556 * If we're still waiting after the first timeout,
2557 * unchain all translations.
2558 */
2559 if (gDvmJit.pJitEntryTable && retryCount > 0) {
2560 LOGD("JIT unchain all attempt #%d",retryCount);
2561 dvmJitUnchainAll();
2562 }
2563#endif
2564
Andy McFadden7ce9bd72009-08-07 11:41:35 -07002565 /*
2566 * Sleep briefly. This returns false if we've exceeded the total
2567 * time limit for this round of sleeping.
2568 */
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07002569 if (!dvmIterativeSleep(sleepIter++, spinSleepTime, startWhen)) {
Andy McFadden7ce9bd72009-08-07 11:41:35 -07002570 LOGW("threadid=%d: spin on suspend #%d threadid=%d (h=%d)\n",
2571 self->threadId, retryCount,
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002572 thread->threadId, (int)thread->handle);
2573 dumpWedgedThread(thread);
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -07002574 complained = true;
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002575
2576 // keep going; could be slow due to valgrind
2577 sleepIter = 0;
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07002578 spinSleepTime = MORE_SLEEP;
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002579
2580 if (retryCount++ == kMaxRetries) {
2581 LOGE("threadid=%d: stuck on threadid=%d, giving up\n",
2582 self->threadId, thread->threadId);
2583 dvmDumpAllThreads(false);
2584 dvmAbort();
2585 }
2586 }
2587 }
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -07002588
2589 if (complained) {
Andy McFadden7ce9bd72009-08-07 11:41:35 -07002590 LOGW("threadid=%d: spin on suspend resolved in %lld msec\n",
2591 self->threadId,
2592 (dvmGetRelativeTimeUsec() - firstStartWhen) / 1000);
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -07002593 //dvmDumpThread(thread, false); /* suspended, so dump is safe */
2594 }
Andy McFadden7ce9bd72009-08-07 11:41:35 -07002595 if (needPriorityReset) {
2596 if (setpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, thread->systemTid, savedThreadPrio) < 0) {
2597 LOGW("NOTE: couldn't reset priority on thread %d to %d\n",
2598 thread->systemTid, savedThreadPrio);
2599 } else {
2600 LOGV("Restored priority on %d to %d\n",
2601 thread->systemTid, savedThreadPrio);
2602 }
2603 }
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002604}
2605
2606/*
2607 * Suspend all threads except the current one. This is used by the GC,
2608 * the debugger, and by any thread that hits a "suspend all threads"
2609 * debugger event (e.g. breakpoint or exception).
2610 *
2611 * If thread N hits a "suspend all threads" breakpoint, we don't want it
2612 * to suspend the JDWP thread. For the GC, we do, because the debugger can
2613 * create objects and even execute arbitrary code. The "why" argument
2614 * allows the caller to say why the suspension is taking place.
2615 *
2616 * This can be called when a global suspend has already happened, due to
2617 * various debugger gymnastics, so keeping an "everybody is suspended" flag
2618 * doesn't work.
2619 *
2620 * DO NOT grab any locks before calling here. We grab & release the thread
2621 * lock and suspend lock here (and we're not using recursive threads), and
2622 * we might have to self-suspend if somebody else beats us here.
2623 *
2624 * The current thread may not be attached to the VM. This can happen if
2625 * we happen to GC as the result of an allocation of a Thread object.
2626 */
2627void dvmSuspendAllThreads(SuspendCause why)
2628{
2629 Thread* self = dvmThreadSelf();
2630 Thread* thread;
2631
2632 assert(why != 0);
2633
2634 /*
2635 * Start by grabbing the thread suspend lock. If we can't get it, most
2636 * likely somebody else is in the process of performing a suspend or
2637 * resume, so lockThreadSuspend() will cause us to self-suspend.
2638 *
2639 * We keep the lock until all other threads are suspended.
2640 */
2641 lockThreadSuspend("susp-all", why);
2642
2643 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: SuspendAll starting\n", self->threadId);
2644
2645 /*
2646 * This is possible if the current thread was in VMWAIT mode when a
2647 * suspend-all happened, and then decided to do its own suspend-all.
2648 * This can happen when a couple of threads have simultaneous events
2649 * of interest to the debugger.
2650 */
2651 //assert(self->suspendCount == 0);
2652
2653 /*
2654 * Increment everybody's suspend count (except our own).
2655 */
2656 dvmLockThreadList(self);
2657
2658 lockThreadSuspendCount();
2659 for (thread = gDvm.threadList; thread != NULL; thread = thread->next) {
2660 if (thread == self)
2661 continue;
2662
2663 /* debugger events don't suspend JDWP thread */
2664 if ((why == SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG || why == SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG_EVENT) &&
2665 thread->handle == dvmJdwpGetDebugThread(gDvm.jdwpState))
2666 continue;
2667
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07002668 dvmAddToThreadSuspendCount(&thread->suspendCount, 1);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002669 if (why == SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG || why == SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG_EVENT)
2670 thread->dbgSuspendCount++;
2671 }
2672 unlockThreadSuspendCount();
2673
2674 /*
2675 * Wait for everybody in THREAD_RUNNING state to stop. Other states
2676 * indicate the code is either running natively or sleeping quietly.
2677 * Any attempt to transition back to THREAD_RUNNING will cause a check
2678 * for suspension, so it should be impossible for anything to execute
2679 * interpreted code or modify objects (assuming native code plays nicely).
2680 *
2681 * It's also okay if the thread transitions to a non-RUNNING state.
2682 *
2683 * Note we released the threadSuspendCountLock before getting here,
2684 * so if another thread is fiddling with its suspend count (perhaps
2685 * self-suspending for the debugger) it won't block while we're waiting
2686 * in here.
2687 */
2688 for (thread = gDvm.threadList; thread != NULL; thread = thread->next) {
2689 if (thread == self)
2690 continue;
2691
2692 /* debugger events don't suspend JDWP thread */
2693 if ((why == SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG || why == SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG_EVENT) &&
2694 thread->handle == dvmJdwpGetDebugThread(gDvm.jdwpState))
2695 continue;
2696
2697 /* wait for the other thread to see the pending suspend */
2698 waitForThreadSuspend(self, thread);
2699
Jeff Hao97319a82009-08-12 16:57:15 -07002700 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: threadid=%d status=%d c=%d dc=%d isSusp=%d\n",
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002701 self->threadId,
2702 thread->threadId, thread->status, thread->suspendCount,
2703 thread->dbgSuspendCount, thread->isSuspended);
2704 }
2705
2706 dvmUnlockThreadList();
2707 unlockThreadSuspend();
2708
2709 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: SuspendAll complete\n", self->threadId);
2710}
2711
2712/*
2713 * Resume all threads that are currently suspended.
2714 *
2715 * The "why" must match with the previous suspend.
2716 */
2717void dvmResumeAllThreads(SuspendCause why)
2718{
2719 Thread* self = dvmThreadSelf();
2720 Thread* thread;
2721 int cc;
2722
2723 lockThreadSuspend("res-all", why); /* one suspend/resume at a time */
2724 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: ResumeAll starting\n", self->threadId);
2725
2726 /*
2727 * Decrement the suspend counts for all threads. No need for atomic
2728 * writes, since nobody should be moving until we decrement the count.
2729 * We do need to hold the thread list because of JNI attaches.
2730 */
2731 dvmLockThreadList(self);
2732 lockThreadSuspendCount();
2733 for (thread = gDvm.threadList; thread != NULL; thread = thread->next) {
2734 if (thread == self)
2735 continue;
2736
2737 /* debugger events don't suspend JDWP thread */
2738 if ((why == SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG || why == SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG_EVENT) &&
2739 thread->handle == dvmJdwpGetDebugThread(gDvm.jdwpState))
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -07002740 {
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002741 continue;
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -07002742 }
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002743
2744 if (thread->suspendCount > 0) {
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07002745 dvmAddToThreadSuspendCount(&thread->suspendCount, -1);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002746 if (why == SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG || why == SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG_EVENT)
2747 thread->dbgSuspendCount--;
2748 } else {
2749 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: suspendCount already zero\n",
2750 thread->threadId);
2751 }
2752 }
2753 unlockThreadSuspendCount();
2754 dvmUnlockThreadList();
2755
2756 /*
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -07002757 * In some ways it makes sense to continue to hold the thread-suspend
2758 * lock while we issue the wakeup broadcast. It allows us to complete
2759 * one operation before moving on to the next, which simplifies the
2760 * thread activity debug traces.
2761 *
2762 * This approach caused us some difficulty under Linux, because the
2763 * condition variable broadcast not only made the threads runnable,
2764 * but actually caused them to execute, and it was a while before
2765 * the thread performing the wakeup had an opportunity to release the
2766 * thread-suspend lock.
2767 *
2768 * This is a problem because, when a thread tries to acquire that
2769 * lock, it times out after 3 seconds. If at some point the thread
2770 * is told to suspend, the clock resets; but since the VM is still
2771 * theoretically mid-resume, there's no suspend pending. If, for
2772 * example, the GC was waking threads up while the SIGQUIT handler
2773 * was trying to acquire the lock, we would occasionally time out on
2774 * a busy system and SignalCatcher would abort.
2775 *
2776 * We now perform the unlock before the wakeup broadcast. The next
2777 * suspend can't actually start until the broadcast completes and
2778 * returns, because we're holding the thread-suspend-count lock, but the
2779 * suspending thread is now able to make progress and we avoid the abort.
2780 *
2781 * (Technically there is a narrow window between when we release
2782 * the thread-suspend lock and grab the thread-suspend-count lock.
2783 * This could cause us to send a broadcast to threads with nonzero
2784 * suspend counts, but this is expected and they'll all just fall
2785 * right back to sleep. It's probably safe to grab the suspend-count
2786 * lock before releasing thread-suspend, since we're still following
2787 * the correct order of acquisition, but it feels weird.)
2788 */
2789
2790 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: ResumeAll waking others\n", self->threadId);
2791 unlockThreadSuspend();
2792
2793 /*
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002794 * Broadcast a notification to all suspended threads, some or all of
2795 * which may choose to wake up. No need to wait for them.
2796 */
2797 lockThreadSuspendCount();
2798 cc = pthread_cond_broadcast(&gDvm.threadSuspendCountCond);
2799 assert(cc == 0);
2800 unlockThreadSuspendCount();
2801
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002802 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: ResumeAll complete\n", self->threadId);
2803}
2804
2805/*
2806 * Undo any debugger suspensions. This is called when the debugger
2807 * disconnects.
2808 */
2809void dvmUndoDebuggerSuspensions(void)
2810{
2811 Thread* self = dvmThreadSelf();
2812 Thread* thread;
2813 int cc;
2814
2815 lockThreadSuspend("undo", SUSPEND_FOR_DEBUG);
2816 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: UndoDebuggerSusp starting\n", self->threadId);
2817
2818 /*
2819 * Decrement the suspend counts for all threads. No need for atomic
2820 * writes, since nobody should be moving until we decrement the count.
2821 * We do need to hold the thread list because of JNI attaches.
2822 */
2823 dvmLockThreadList(self);
2824 lockThreadSuspendCount();
2825 for (thread = gDvm.threadList; thread != NULL; thread = thread->next) {
2826 if (thread == self)
2827 continue;
2828
2829 /* debugger events don't suspend JDWP thread */
2830 if (thread->handle == dvmJdwpGetDebugThread(gDvm.jdwpState)) {
2831 assert(thread->dbgSuspendCount == 0);
2832 continue;
2833 }
2834
2835 assert(thread->suspendCount >= thread->dbgSuspendCount);
Bill Buzbee46cd5b62009-06-05 15:36:06 -07002836 dvmAddToThreadSuspendCount(&thread->suspendCount,
2837 -thread->dbgSuspendCount);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08002838 thread->dbgSuspendCount = 0;
2839 }
2840 unlockThreadSuspendCount();
2841 dvmUnlockThreadList();
2842
2843 /*
2844 * Broadcast a notification to all suspended threads, some or all of
2845 * which may choose to wake up. No need to wait for them.
2846 */
2847 lockThreadSuspendCount();
2848 cc = pthread_cond_broadcast(&gDvm.threadSuspendCountCond);
2849 assert(cc == 0);
2850 unlockThreadSuspendCount();
2851
2852 unlockThreadSuspend();
2853
2854 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: UndoDebuggerSusp complete\n", self->threadId);
2855}
2856
2857/*
2858 * Determine if a thread is suspended.
2859 *
2860 * As with all operations on foreign threads, the caller should hold
2861 * the thread list lock before calling.
2862 */
2863bool dvmIsSuspended(Thread* thread)
2864{
2865 /*
2866 * The thread could be:
2867 * (1) Running happily. status is RUNNING, isSuspended is false,
2868 * suspendCount is zero. Return "false".
2869 * (2) Pending suspend. status is RUNNING, isSuspended is false,
2870 * suspendCount is nonzero. Return "false".
2871 * (3) Suspended. suspendCount is nonzero, and either (status is
2872 * RUNNING and isSuspended is true) OR (status is !RUNNING).
2873 * Return "true".
2874 * (4) Waking up. suspendCount is zero, status is RUNNING and
2875 * isSuspended is true. Return "false" (since it could change
2876 * out from under us, unless we hold suspendCountLock).
2877 */
2878
2879 return (thread->suspendCount != 0 &&
2880 ((thread->status == THREAD_RUNNING && thread->isSuspended) ||
2881 (thread->status != THREAD_RUNNING)));
2882}
2883
2884/*
2885 * Wait until another thread self-suspends. This is specifically for
2886 * synchronization between the JDWP thread and a thread that has decided
2887 * to suspend itself after sending an event to the debugger.
2888 *
2889 * Threads that encounter "suspend all" events work as well -- the thread
2890 * in question suspends everybody else and then itself.
2891 *
2892 * We can't hold a thread lock here or in the caller, because we could
2893 * get here just before the to-be-waited-for-thread issues a "suspend all".
2894 * There's an opportunity for badness if the thread we're waiting for exits
2895 * and gets cleaned up, but since the thread in question is processing a
2896 * debugger event, that's not really a possibility. (To avoid deadlock,
2897 * it's important that we not be in THREAD_RUNNING while we wait.)
2898 */
2899void dvmWaitForSuspend(Thread* thread)
2900{
2901 Thread* self = dvmThreadSelf();
2902
2903 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: waiting for threadid=%d to sleep\n",
2904 self->threadId, thread->threadId);
2905
2906 assert(thread->handle != dvmJdwpGetDebugThread(gDvm.jdwpState));
2907 assert(thread != self);
2908 assert(self->status != THREAD_RUNNING);
2909
2910 waitForThreadSuspend(self, thread);
2911
2912 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: threadid=%d is now asleep\n",
2913 self->threadId, thread->threadId);
2914}
2915
2916/*
2917 * Check to see if we need to suspend ourselves. If so, go to sleep on
2918 * a condition variable.
2919 *
2920 * Takes "self" as an argument as an optimization. Pass in NULL to have
2921 * it do the lookup.
2922 *
2923 * Returns "true" if we suspended ourselves.
2924 */
2925bool dvmCheckSuspendPending(Thread* self)
2926{
2927 bool didSuspend;
2928
2929 if (self == NULL)
2930 self = dvmThreadSelf();
2931
2932 /* fast path: if count is zero, bail immediately */
2933 if (self->suspendCount == 0)
2934 return false;
2935
2936 lockThreadSuspendCount(); /* grab gDvm.threadSuspendCountLock */
2937
2938 assert(self->suspendCount >= 0); /* XXX: valid? useful? */
2939
2940 didSuspend = (self->suspendCount != 0);
2941 self->isSuspended = true;
2942 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: self-suspending\n", self->threadId);
2943 while (self->suspendCount != 0) {
2944 /* wait for wakeup signal; releases lock */
2945 int cc;
2946 cc = pthread_cond_wait(&gDvm.threadSuspendCountCond,
2947 &gDvm.threadSuspendCountLock);
2948 assert(cc == 0);
2949 }
2950 assert(self->suspendCount == 0 && self->dbgSuspendCount == 0);
2951 self->isSuspended = false;
2952 LOG_THREAD("threadid=%d: self-reviving, status=%d\n",
2953 self->threadId, self->status);
2954
2955 unlockThreadSuspendCount();
2956
2957 return didSuspend;
2958}
2959
2960/*
2961 * Update our status.
2962 *
2963 * The "self" argument, which may be NULL, is accepted as an optimization.
2964 *
2965 * Returns the old status.
2966 */
2967ThreadStatus dvmChangeStatus(Thread* self, ThreadStatus newStatus)
2968{
2969 ThreadStatus oldStatus;
2970
2971 if (self == NULL)
2972 self = dvmThreadSelf();
2973
2974 LOGVV("threadid=%d: (status %d -> %d)\n",
2975 self->threadId, self->status, newStatus);
2976
2977 oldStatus = self->status;
2978
2979 if (newStatus == THREAD_RUNNING) {
2980 /*
2981 * Change our status to THREAD_RUNNING. The transition requires
2982 * that we check for pending suspension, because the VM considers
2983 * us to be "asleep" in all other states.
2984 *
2985 * We need to do the "suspend pending" check FIRST, because it grabs
2986 * a lock that could be held by something that wants us to suspend.
2987 * If we're in RUNNING it will wait for us, and we'll be waiting
2988 * for the lock it holds.
2989 */
2990 assert(self->status != THREAD_RUNNING);
2991
2992 dvmCheckSuspendPending(self);
2993 self->status = THREAD_RUNNING;
2994 } else {
2995 /*
2996 * Change from one state to another, neither of which is
2997 * THREAD_RUNNING. This is most common during system or thread
2998 * initialization.
2999 */
3000 self->status = newStatus;
3001 }
3002
3003 return oldStatus;
3004}
3005
3006/*
3007 * Get a statically defined thread group from a field in the ThreadGroup
3008 * Class object. Expected arguments are "mMain" and "mSystem".
3009 */
3010static Object* getStaticThreadGroup(const char* fieldName)
3011{
3012 StaticField* groupField;
3013 Object* groupObj;
3014
3015 groupField = dvmFindStaticField(gDvm.classJavaLangThreadGroup,
3016 fieldName, "Ljava/lang/ThreadGroup;");
3017 if (groupField == NULL) {
3018 LOGE("java.lang.ThreadGroup does not have an '%s' field\n", fieldName);
3019 dvmThrowException("Ljava/lang/IncompatibleClassChangeError;", NULL);
3020 return NULL;
3021 }
3022 groupObj = dvmGetStaticFieldObject(groupField);
3023 if (groupObj == NULL) {
3024 LOGE("java.lang.ThreadGroup.%s not initialized\n", fieldName);
3025 dvmThrowException("Ljava/lang/InternalError;", NULL);
3026 return NULL;
3027 }
3028
3029 return groupObj;
3030}
3031Object* dvmGetSystemThreadGroup(void)
3032{
3033 return getStaticThreadGroup("mSystem");
3034}
3035Object* dvmGetMainThreadGroup(void)
3036{
3037 return getStaticThreadGroup("mMain");
3038}
3039
3040/*
3041 * Given a VMThread object, return the associated Thread*.
3042 *
3043 * NOTE: if the thread detaches, the struct Thread will disappear, and
3044 * we will be touching invalid data. For safety, lock the thread list
3045 * before calling this.
3046 */
3047Thread* dvmGetThreadFromThreadObject(Object* vmThreadObj)
3048{
3049 int vmData;
3050
3051 vmData = dvmGetFieldInt(vmThreadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangVMThread_vmData);
Andy McFadden44860362009-08-06 17:56:14 -07003052
3053 if (false) {
3054 Thread* thread = gDvm.threadList;
3055 while (thread != NULL) {
3056 if ((Thread*)vmData == thread)
3057 break;
3058
3059 thread = thread->next;
3060 }
3061
3062 if (thread == NULL) {
3063 LOGW("WARNING: vmThreadObj=%p has thread=%p, not in thread list\n",
3064 vmThreadObj, (Thread*)vmData);
3065 vmData = 0;
3066 }
3067 }
3068
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003069 return (Thread*) vmData;
3070}
3071
3072
3073/*
3074 * Conversion map for "nice" values.
3075 *
3076 * We use Android thread priority constants to be consistent with the rest
3077 * of the system. In some cases adjacent entries may overlap.
3078 */
3079static const int kNiceValues[10] = {
3080 ANDROID_PRIORITY_LOWEST, /* 1 (MIN_PRIORITY) */
3081 ANDROID_PRIORITY_BACKGROUND + 6,
3082 ANDROID_PRIORITY_BACKGROUND + 3,
3083 ANDROID_PRIORITY_BACKGROUND,
3084 ANDROID_PRIORITY_NORMAL, /* 5 (NORM_PRIORITY) */
3085 ANDROID_PRIORITY_NORMAL - 2,
3086 ANDROID_PRIORITY_NORMAL - 4,
3087 ANDROID_PRIORITY_URGENT_DISPLAY + 3,
3088 ANDROID_PRIORITY_URGENT_DISPLAY + 2,
3089 ANDROID_PRIORITY_URGENT_DISPLAY /* 10 (MAX_PRIORITY) */
3090};
3091
3092/*
3093 * Change the priority of a system thread to match that of the Thread object.
3094 *
3095 * We map a priority value from 1-10 to Linux "nice" values, where lower
3096 * numbers indicate higher priority.
3097 */
3098void dvmChangeThreadPriority(Thread* thread, int newPriority)
3099{
3100 pid_t pid = thread->systemTid;
3101 int newNice;
3102
3103 if (newPriority < 1 || newPriority > 10) {
3104 LOGW("bad priority %d\n", newPriority);
3105 newPriority = 5;
3106 }
3107 newNice = kNiceValues[newPriority-1];
3108
Andy McFaddend62c0b52009-08-04 15:02:12 -07003109 if (newNice >= ANDROID_PRIORITY_BACKGROUND) {
San Mehat5a2056c2009-09-12 10:10:13 -07003110 set_sched_policy(dvmGetSysThreadId(), SP_BACKGROUND);
San Mehat3e371e22009-06-26 08:36:16 -07003111 } else if (getpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, pid) >= ANDROID_PRIORITY_BACKGROUND) {
San Mehat5a2056c2009-09-12 10:10:13 -07003112 set_sched_policy(dvmGetSysThreadId(), SP_FOREGROUND);
San Mehat256fc152009-04-21 14:03:06 -07003113 }
3114
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003115 if (setpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, pid, newNice) != 0) {
3116 char* str = dvmGetThreadName(thread);
3117 LOGI("setPriority(%d) '%s' to prio=%d(n=%d) failed: %s\n",
3118 pid, str, newPriority, newNice, strerror(errno));
3119 free(str);
3120 } else {
3121 LOGV("setPriority(%d) to prio=%d(n=%d)\n",
3122 pid, newPriority, newNice);
3123 }
3124}
3125
3126/*
3127 * Get the thread priority for the current thread by querying the system.
3128 * This is useful when attaching a thread through JNI.
3129 *
3130 * Returns a value from 1 to 10 (compatible with java.lang.Thread values).
3131 */
3132static int getThreadPriorityFromSystem(void)
3133{
3134 int i, sysprio, jprio;
3135
3136 errno = 0;
3137 sysprio = getpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, 0);
3138 if (sysprio == -1 && errno != 0) {
3139 LOGW("getpriority() failed: %s\n", strerror(errno));
3140 return THREAD_NORM_PRIORITY;
3141 }
3142
3143 jprio = THREAD_MIN_PRIORITY;
3144 for (i = 0; i < NELEM(kNiceValues); i++) {
3145 if (sysprio >= kNiceValues[i])
3146 break;
3147 jprio++;
3148 }
3149 if (jprio > THREAD_MAX_PRIORITY)
3150 jprio = THREAD_MAX_PRIORITY;
3151
3152 return jprio;
3153}
3154
3155
3156/*
3157 * Return true if the thread is on gDvm.threadList.
3158 * Caller should not hold gDvm.threadListLock.
3159 */
3160bool dvmIsOnThreadList(const Thread* thread)
3161{
3162 bool ret = false;
3163
3164 dvmLockThreadList(NULL);
3165 if (thread == gDvm.threadList) {
3166 ret = true;
3167 } else {
3168 ret = thread->prev != NULL || thread->next != NULL;
3169 }
3170 dvmUnlockThreadList();
3171
3172 return ret;
3173}
3174
3175/*
3176 * Dump a thread to the log file -- just calls dvmDumpThreadEx() with an
3177 * output target.
3178 */
3179void dvmDumpThread(Thread* thread, bool isRunning)
3180{
3181 DebugOutputTarget target;
3182
3183 dvmCreateLogOutputTarget(&target, ANDROID_LOG_INFO, LOG_TAG);
3184 dvmDumpThreadEx(&target, thread, isRunning);
3185}
3186
3187/*
Andy McFaddend62c0b52009-08-04 15:02:12 -07003188 * Try to get the scheduler group.
3189 *
3190 * The data from /proc/<pid>/cgroup looks like:
3191 * 2:cpu:/bg_non_interactive
3192 *
3193 * We return the part after the "/", which will be an empty string for
3194 * the default cgroup. If the string is longer than "bufLen", the string
3195 * will be truncated.
3196 */
3197static bool getSchedulerGroup(Thread* thread, char* buf, size_t bufLen)
3198{
3199#ifdef HAVE_ANDROID_OS
3200 char pathBuf[32];
3201 char readBuf[256];
3202 ssize_t count;
3203 int fd;
3204
3205 snprintf(pathBuf, sizeof(pathBuf), "/proc/%d/cgroup", thread->systemTid);
3206 if ((fd = open(pathBuf, O_RDONLY)) < 0) {
3207 LOGV("open(%s) failed: %s\n", pathBuf, strerror(errno));
3208 return false;
3209 }
3210
3211 count = read(fd, readBuf, sizeof(readBuf));
3212 if (count <= 0) {
3213 LOGV("read(%s) failed (%d): %s\n",
3214 pathBuf, (int) count, strerror(errno));
3215 close(fd);
3216 return false;
3217 }
3218 close(fd);
3219
3220 readBuf[--count] = '\0'; /* remove the '\n', now count==strlen */
3221
3222 char* cp = strchr(readBuf, '/');
3223 if (cp == NULL) {
3224 readBuf[sizeof(readBuf)-1] = '\0';
3225 LOGV("no '/' in '%s' (file=%s count=%d)\n",
3226 readBuf, pathBuf, (int) count);
3227 return false;
3228 }
3229
3230 memcpy(buf, cp+1, count); /* count-1 for cp+1, count+1 for NUL */
3231 return true;
3232#else
3233 return false;
3234#endif
3235}
3236
3237/*
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003238 * Print information about the specified thread.
3239 *
3240 * Works best when the thread in question is "self" or has been suspended.
3241 * When dumping a separate thread that's still running, set "isRunning" to
3242 * use a more cautious thread dump function.
3243 */
3244void dvmDumpThreadEx(const DebugOutputTarget* target, Thread* thread,
3245 bool isRunning)
3246{
3247 /* tied to ThreadStatus enum */
3248 static const char* kStatusNames[] = {
3249 "ZOMBIE", "RUNNABLE", "TIMED_WAIT", "MONITOR", "WAIT",
3250 "INITIALIZING", "STARTING", "NATIVE", "VMWAIT"
3251 };
3252 Object* threadObj;
3253 Object* groupObj;
3254 StringObject* nameStr;
3255 char* threadName = NULL;
3256 char* groupName = NULL;
Andy McFaddend62c0b52009-08-04 15:02:12 -07003257 char schedulerGroupBuf[32];
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003258 bool isDaemon;
3259 int priority; // java.lang.Thread priority
3260 int policy; // pthread policy
3261 struct sched_param sp; // pthread scheduling parameters
3262
3263 threadObj = thread->threadObj;
3264 if (threadObj == NULL) {
3265 LOGW("Can't dump thread %d: threadObj not set\n", thread->threadId);
3266 return;
3267 }
3268 nameStr = (StringObject*) dvmGetFieldObject(threadObj,
3269 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_name);
3270 threadName = dvmCreateCstrFromString(nameStr);
3271
3272 priority = dvmGetFieldInt(threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_priority);
3273 isDaemon = dvmGetFieldBoolean(threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_daemon);
3274
3275 if (pthread_getschedparam(pthread_self(), &policy, &sp) != 0) {
3276 LOGW("Warning: pthread_getschedparam failed\n");
3277 policy = -1;
3278 sp.sched_priority = -1;
3279 }
Andy McFaddend62c0b52009-08-04 15:02:12 -07003280 if (!getSchedulerGroup(thread, schedulerGroupBuf,sizeof(schedulerGroupBuf)))
3281 {
3282 strcpy(schedulerGroupBuf, "unknown");
3283 } else if (schedulerGroupBuf[0] == '\0') {
3284 strcpy(schedulerGroupBuf, "default");
3285 }
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003286
3287 /* a null value for group is not expected, but deal with it anyway */
3288 groupObj = (Object*) dvmGetFieldObject(threadObj,
3289 gDvm.offJavaLangThread_group);
3290 if (groupObj != NULL) {
3291 int offset = dvmFindFieldOffset(gDvm.classJavaLangThreadGroup,
3292 "name", "Ljava/lang/String;");
3293 if (offset < 0) {
3294 LOGW("Unable to find 'name' field in ThreadGroup\n");
3295 } else {
3296 nameStr = (StringObject*) dvmGetFieldObject(groupObj, offset);
3297 groupName = dvmCreateCstrFromString(nameStr);
3298 }
3299 }
3300 if (groupName == NULL)
3301 groupName = strdup("(BOGUS GROUP)");
3302
3303 assert(thread->status < NELEM(kStatusNames));
3304 dvmPrintDebugMessage(target,
3305 "\"%s\"%s prio=%d tid=%d %s\n",
3306 threadName, isDaemon ? " daemon" : "",
3307 priority, thread->threadId, kStatusNames[thread->status]);
3308 dvmPrintDebugMessage(target,
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -07003309 " | group=\"%s\" sCount=%d dsCount=%d s=%c obj=%p self=%p\n",
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003310 groupName, thread->suspendCount, thread->dbgSuspendCount,
Andy McFadden2aa43612009-06-17 16:29:30 -07003311 thread->isSuspended ? 'Y' : 'N', thread->threadObj, thread);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003312 dvmPrintDebugMessage(target,
Andy McFaddend62c0b52009-08-04 15:02:12 -07003313 " | sysTid=%d nice=%d sched=%d/%d cgrp=%s handle=%d\n",
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003314 thread->systemTid, getpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, thread->systemTid),
Andy McFaddend62c0b52009-08-04 15:02:12 -07003315 policy, sp.sched_priority, schedulerGroupBuf, (int)thread->handle);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003316
3317#ifdef WITH_MONITOR_TRACKING
3318 if (!isRunning) {
3319 LockedObjectData* lod = thread->pLockedObjects;
3320 if (lod != NULL)
3321 dvmPrintDebugMessage(target, " | monitors held:\n");
3322 else
3323 dvmPrintDebugMessage(target, " | monitors held: <none>\n");
3324 while (lod != NULL) {
3325 dvmPrintDebugMessage(target, " > %p[%d] (%s)\n",
3326 lod->obj, lod->recursionCount, lod->obj->clazz->descriptor);
3327 lod = lod->next;
3328 }
3329 }
3330#endif
3331
3332 if (isRunning)
3333 dvmDumpRunningThreadStack(target, thread);
3334 else
3335 dvmDumpThreadStack(target, thread);
3336
3337 free(threadName);
3338 free(groupName);
3339
3340}
3341
3342/*
3343 * Get the name of a thread.
3344 *
3345 * For correctness, the caller should hold the thread list lock to ensure
3346 * that the thread doesn't go away mid-call.
3347 *
3348 * Returns a newly-allocated string, or NULL if the Thread doesn't have a name.
3349 */
3350char* dvmGetThreadName(Thread* thread)
3351{
3352 StringObject* nameObj;
3353
3354 if (thread->threadObj == NULL) {
3355 LOGW("threadObj is NULL, name not available\n");
3356 return strdup("-unknown-");
3357 }
3358
3359 nameObj = (StringObject*)
3360 dvmGetFieldObject(thread->threadObj, gDvm.offJavaLangThread_name);
3361 return dvmCreateCstrFromString(nameObj);
3362}
3363
3364/*
3365 * Dump all threads to the log file -- just calls dvmDumpAllThreadsEx() with
3366 * an output target.
3367 */
3368void dvmDumpAllThreads(bool grabLock)
3369{
3370 DebugOutputTarget target;
3371
3372 dvmCreateLogOutputTarget(&target, ANDROID_LOG_INFO, LOG_TAG);
3373 dvmDumpAllThreadsEx(&target, grabLock);
3374}
3375
3376/*
3377 * Print information about all known threads. Assumes they have been
3378 * suspended (or are in a non-interpreting state, e.g. WAIT or NATIVE).
3379 *
3380 * If "grabLock" is true, we grab the thread lock list. This is important
3381 * to do unless the caller already holds the lock.
3382 */
3383void dvmDumpAllThreadsEx(const DebugOutputTarget* target, bool grabLock)
3384{
3385 Thread* thread;
3386
3387 dvmPrintDebugMessage(target, "DALVIK THREADS:\n");
3388
3389 if (grabLock)
3390 dvmLockThreadList(dvmThreadSelf());
3391
3392 thread = gDvm.threadList;
3393 while (thread != NULL) {
3394 dvmDumpThreadEx(target, thread, false);
3395
3396 /* verify link */
3397 assert(thread->next == NULL || thread->next->prev == thread);
3398
3399 thread = thread->next;
3400 }
3401
3402 if (grabLock)
3403 dvmUnlockThreadList();
3404}
3405
3406#ifdef WITH_MONITOR_TRACKING
3407/*
3408 * Count up the #of locked objects in the current thread.
3409 */
3410static int getThreadObjectCount(const Thread* self)
3411{
3412 LockedObjectData* lod;
3413 int count = 0;
3414
3415 lod = self->pLockedObjects;
3416 while (lod != NULL) {
3417 count++;
3418 lod = lod->next;
3419 }
3420 return count;
3421}
3422
3423/*
3424 * Add the object to the thread's locked object list if it doesn't already
3425 * exist. The most recently added object is the most likely to be released
3426 * next, so we insert at the head of the list.
3427 *
3428 * If it already exists, we increase the recursive lock count.
3429 *
3430 * The object's lock may be thin or fat.
3431 */
3432void dvmAddToMonitorList(Thread* self, Object* obj, bool withTrace)
3433{
3434 LockedObjectData* newLod;
3435 LockedObjectData* lod;
3436 int* trace;
3437 int depth;
3438
3439 lod = self->pLockedObjects;
3440 while (lod != NULL) {
3441 if (lod->obj == obj) {
3442 lod->recursionCount++;
3443 LOGV("+++ +recursive lock %p -> %d\n", obj, lod->recursionCount);
3444 return;
3445 }
3446 lod = lod->next;
3447 }
3448
3449 newLod = (LockedObjectData*) calloc(1, sizeof(LockedObjectData));
3450 if (newLod == NULL) {
3451 LOGE("malloc failed on %d bytes\n", sizeof(LockedObjectData));
3452 return;
3453 }
3454 newLod->obj = obj;
3455 newLod->recursionCount = 0;
3456
3457 if (withTrace) {
3458 trace = dvmFillInStackTraceRaw(self, &depth);
3459 newLod->rawStackTrace = trace;
3460 newLod->stackDepth = depth;
3461 }
3462
3463 newLod->next = self->pLockedObjects;
3464 self->pLockedObjects = newLod;
3465
3466 LOGV("+++ threadid=%d: added %p, now %d\n",
3467 self->threadId, newLod, getThreadObjectCount(self));
3468}
3469
3470/*
3471 * Remove the object from the thread's locked object list. If the entry
3472 * has a nonzero recursion count, we just decrement the count instead.
3473 */
3474void dvmRemoveFromMonitorList(Thread* self, Object* obj)
3475{
3476 LockedObjectData* lod;
3477 LockedObjectData* prevLod;
3478
3479 lod = self->pLockedObjects;
3480 prevLod = NULL;
3481 while (lod != NULL) {
3482 if (lod->obj == obj) {
3483 if (lod->recursionCount > 0) {
3484 lod->recursionCount--;
3485 LOGV("+++ -recursive lock %p -> %d\n",
3486 obj, lod->recursionCount);
3487 return;
3488 } else {
3489 break;
3490 }
3491 }
3492 prevLod = lod;
3493 lod = lod->next;
3494 }
3495
3496 if (lod == NULL) {
3497 LOGW("BUG: object %p not found in thread's lock list\n", obj);
3498 return;
3499 }
3500 if (prevLod == NULL) {
3501 /* first item in list */
3502 assert(self->pLockedObjects == lod);
3503 self->pLockedObjects = lod->next;
3504 } else {
3505 /* middle/end of list */
3506 prevLod->next = lod->next;
3507 }
3508
3509 LOGV("+++ threadid=%d: removed %p, now %d\n",
3510 self->threadId, lod, getThreadObjectCount(self));
3511 free(lod->rawStackTrace);
3512 free(lod);
3513}
3514
3515/*
3516 * If the specified object is already in the thread's locked object list,
3517 * return the LockedObjectData struct. Otherwise return NULL.
3518 */
3519LockedObjectData* dvmFindInMonitorList(const Thread* self, const Object* obj)
3520{
3521 LockedObjectData* lod;
3522
3523 lod = self->pLockedObjects;
3524 while (lod != NULL) {
3525 if (lod->obj == obj)
3526 return lod;
3527 lod = lod->next;
3528 }
3529 return NULL;
3530}
3531#endif /*WITH_MONITOR_TRACKING*/
3532
3533
3534/*
3535 * GC helper functions
3536 */
3537
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003538/*
3539 * Add the contents of the registers from the interpreted call stack.
3540 */
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003541static void gcScanInterpStackReferences(Thread *thread)
3542{
3543 const u4 *framePtr;
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003544#if WITH_EXTRA_GC_CHECKS > 1
3545 bool first = true;
3546#endif
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003547
3548 framePtr = (const u4 *)thread->curFrame;
3549 while (framePtr != NULL) {
3550 const StackSaveArea *saveArea;
3551 const Method *method;
3552
3553 saveArea = SAVEAREA_FROM_FP(framePtr);
3554 method = saveArea->method;
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003555 if (method != NULL && !dvmIsNativeMethod(method)) {
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003556#ifdef COUNT_PRECISE_METHODS
3557 /* the GC is running, so no lock required */
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003558 if (dvmPointerSetAddEntry(gDvm.preciseMethods, method))
3559 LOGI("PGC: added %s.%s %p\n",
3560 method->clazz->descriptor, method->name, method);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003561#endif
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003562#if WITH_EXTRA_GC_CHECKS > 1
3563 /*
3564 * May also want to enable the memset() in the "invokeMethod"
3565 * goto target in the portable interpreter. That sets the stack
3566 * to a pattern that makes referring to uninitialized data
3567 * very obvious.
3568 */
3569
3570 if (first) {
3571 /*
3572 * First frame, isn't native, check the "alternate" saved PC
3573 * as a sanity check.
3574 *
3575 * It seems like we could check the second frame if the first
3576 * is native, since the PCs should be the same. It turns out
3577 * this doesn't always work. The problem is that we could
3578 * have calls in the sequence:
3579 * interp method #2
3580 * native method
3581 * interp method #1
3582 *
3583 * and then GC while in the native method after returning
3584 * from interp method #2. The currentPc on the stack is
3585 * for interp method #1, but thread->currentPc2 is still
3586 * set for the last thing interp method #2 did.
3587 *
3588 * This can also happen in normal execution:
3589 * - sget-object on not-yet-loaded class
3590 * - class init updates currentPc2
3591 * - static field init is handled by parsing annotations;
3592 * static String init requires creation of a String object,
3593 * which can cause a GC
3594 *
3595 * Essentially, any pattern that involves executing
3596 * interpreted code and then causes an allocation without
3597 * executing instructions in the original method will hit
3598 * this. These are rare enough that the test still has
3599 * some value.
3600 */
3601 if (saveArea->xtra.currentPc != thread->currentPc2) {
3602 LOGW("PGC: savedPC(%p) != current PC(%p), %s.%s ins=%p\n",
3603 saveArea->xtra.currentPc, thread->currentPc2,
3604 method->clazz->descriptor, method->name, method->insns);
3605 if (saveArea->xtra.currentPc != NULL)
3606 LOGE(" pc inst = 0x%04x\n", *saveArea->xtra.currentPc);
3607 if (thread->currentPc2 != NULL)
3608 LOGE(" pc2 inst = 0x%04x\n", *thread->currentPc2);
3609 dvmDumpThread(thread, false);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003610 }
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003611 } else {
3612 /*
3613 * It's unusual, but not impossible, for a non-first frame
3614 * to be at something other than a method invocation. For
3615 * example, if we do a new-instance on a nonexistent class,
3616 * we'll have a lot of class loader activity on the stack
3617 * above the frame with the "new" operation. Could also
3618 * happen while we initialize a Throwable when an instruction
3619 * fails.
3620 *
3621 * So there's not much we can do here to verify the PC,
3622 * except to verify that it's a GC point.
3623 */
3624 }
3625 assert(saveArea->xtra.currentPc != NULL);
3626#endif
3627
3628 const RegisterMap* pMap;
3629 const u1* regVector;
3630 int i;
3631
Andy McFaddencf8b55c2009-04-13 15:26:03 -07003632 Method* nonConstMethod = (Method*) method; // quiet gcc
3633 pMap = dvmGetExpandedRegisterMap(nonConstMethod);
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003634 if (pMap != NULL) {
3635 /* found map, get registers for this address */
3636 int addr = saveArea->xtra.currentPc - method->insns;
Andy McFaddend45a8872009-03-24 20:41:52 -07003637 regVector = dvmRegisterMapGetLine(pMap, addr);
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003638 if (regVector == NULL) {
3639 LOGW("PGC: map but no entry for %s.%s addr=0x%04x\n",
3640 method->clazz->descriptor, method->name, addr);
3641 } else {
3642 LOGV("PGC: found map for %s.%s 0x%04x (t=%d)\n",
3643 method->clazz->descriptor, method->name, addr,
3644 thread->threadId);
3645 }
3646 } else {
3647 /*
3648 * No map found. If precise GC is disabled this is
3649 * expected -- we don't create pointers to the map data even
3650 * if it's present -- but if it's enabled it means we're
3651 * unexpectedly falling back on a conservative scan, so it's
3652 * worth yelling a little.
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003653 */
3654 if (gDvm.preciseGc) {
Andy McFaddena66a01a2009-08-18 15:11:35 -07003655 LOGVV("PGC: no map for %s.%s\n",
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003656 method->clazz->descriptor, method->name);
3657 }
3658 regVector = NULL;
3659 }
3660
3661 if (regVector == NULL) {
3662 /* conservative scan */
3663 for (i = method->registersSize - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
3664 u4 rval = *framePtr++;
3665 if (rval != 0 && (rval & 0x3) == 0) {
3666 dvmMarkIfObject((Object *)rval);
3667 }
3668 }
3669 } else {
3670 /*
3671 * Precise scan. v0 is at the lowest address on the
3672 * interpreted stack, and is the first bit in the register
3673 * vector, so we can walk through the register map and
3674 * memory in the same direction.
3675 *
3676 * A '1' bit indicates a live reference.
3677 */
3678 u2 bits = 1 << 1;
3679 for (i = method->registersSize - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
3680 u4 rval = *framePtr++;
3681
3682 bits >>= 1;
3683 if (bits == 1) {
3684 /* set bit 9 so we can tell when we're empty */
3685 bits = *regVector++ | 0x0100;
3686 LOGVV("loaded bits: 0x%02x\n", bits & 0xff);
3687 }
3688
3689 if (rval != 0 && (bits & 0x01) != 0) {
3690 /*
3691 * Non-null, register marked as live reference. This
3692 * should always be a valid object.
3693 */
3694#if WITH_EXTRA_GC_CHECKS > 0
3695 if ((rval & 0x3) != 0 ||
3696 !dvmIsValidObject((Object*) rval))
3697 {
3698 /* this is very bad */
3699 LOGE("PGC: invalid ref in reg %d: 0x%08x\n",
3700 method->registersSize-1 - i, rval);
3701 } else
3702#endif
3703 {
3704 dvmMarkObjectNonNull((Object *)rval);
3705 }
3706 } else {
3707 /*
3708 * Null or non-reference, do nothing at all.
3709 */
3710#if WITH_EXTRA_GC_CHECKS > 1
3711 if (dvmIsValidObject((Object*) rval)) {
3712 /* this is normal, but we feel chatty */
3713 LOGD("PGC: ignoring valid ref in reg %d: 0x%08x\n",
3714 method->registersSize-1 - i, rval);
3715 }
3716#endif
3717 }
3718 }
3719 dvmReleaseRegisterMapLine(pMap, regVector);
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003720 }
3721 }
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003722 /* else this is a break frame and there is nothing to mark, or
3723 * this is a native method and the registers are just the "ins",
3724 * copied from various registers in the caller's set.
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003725 */
3726
The Android Open Source Project99409882009-03-18 22:20:24 -07003727#if WITH_EXTRA_GC_CHECKS > 1
3728 first = false;
3729#endif
3730
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003731 /* Don't fall into an infinite loop if things get corrupted.
3732 */
3733 assert((uintptr_t)saveArea->prevFrame > (uintptr_t)framePtr ||
3734 saveArea->prevFrame == NULL);
3735 framePtr = saveArea->prevFrame;
3736 }
3737}
3738
3739static void gcScanReferenceTable(ReferenceTable *refTable)
3740{
3741 Object **op;
3742
3743 //TODO: these asserts are overkill; turn them off when things stablize.
3744 assert(refTable != NULL);
3745 assert(refTable->table != NULL);
3746 assert(refTable->nextEntry != NULL);
3747 assert((uintptr_t)refTable->nextEntry >= (uintptr_t)refTable->table);
3748 assert(refTable->nextEntry - refTable->table <= refTable->maxEntries);
3749
3750 op = refTable->table;
3751 while ((uintptr_t)op < (uintptr_t)refTable->nextEntry) {
3752 dvmMarkObjectNonNull(*(op++));
3753 }
3754}
3755
Andy McFaddend5ab7262009-08-25 07:19:34 -07003756static void gcScanIndirectRefTable(IndirectRefTable* pRefTable)
3757{
3758 Object** op = pRefTable->table;
3759 int numEntries = dvmIndirectRefTableEntries(pRefTable);
3760 int i;
3761
3762 for (i = 0; i < numEntries; i++) {
3763 Object* obj = *op;
3764 if (obj != NULL)
3765 dvmMarkObjectNonNull(obj);
3766 op++;
3767 }
3768}
3769
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003770/*
3771 * Scan a Thread and mark any objects it references.
3772 */
3773static void gcScanThread(Thread *thread)
3774{
3775 assert(thread != NULL);
3776
3777 /*
3778 * The target thread must be suspended or in a state where it can't do
3779 * any harm (e.g. in Object.wait()). The only exception is the current
3780 * thread, which will still be active and in the "running" state.
3781 *
3782 * (Newly-created threads shouldn't be able to shift themselves to
3783 * RUNNING without a suspend-pending check, so this shouldn't cause
3784 * a false-positive.)
3785 */
3786 assert(thread->status != THREAD_RUNNING || thread->isSuspended ||
3787 thread == dvmThreadSelf());
3788
3789 HPROF_SET_GC_SCAN_STATE(HPROF_ROOT_THREAD_OBJECT, thread->threadId);
3790
3791 dvmMarkObject(thread->threadObj); // could be NULL, when constructing
3792
3793 HPROF_SET_GC_SCAN_STATE(HPROF_ROOT_NATIVE_STACK, thread->threadId);
3794
3795 dvmMarkObject(thread->exception); // usually NULL
3796 gcScanReferenceTable(&thread->internalLocalRefTable);
3797
3798 HPROF_SET_GC_SCAN_STATE(HPROF_ROOT_JNI_LOCAL, thread->threadId);
3799
Andy McFaddend5ab7262009-08-25 07:19:34 -07003800#ifdef USE_INDIRECT_REF
3801 gcScanIndirectRefTable(&thread->jniLocalRefTable);
3802#else
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003803 gcScanReferenceTable(&thread->jniLocalRefTable);
Andy McFaddend5ab7262009-08-25 07:19:34 -07003804#endif
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003805
3806 if (thread->jniMonitorRefTable.table != NULL) {
3807 HPROF_SET_GC_SCAN_STATE(HPROF_ROOT_JNI_MONITOR, thread->threadId);
3808
3809 gcScanReferenceTable(&thread->jniMonitorRefTable);
3810 }
3811
3812 HPROF_SET_GC_SCAN_STATE(HPROF_ROOT_JAVA_FRAME, thread->threadId);
3813
3814 gcScanInterpStackReferences(thread);
3815
3816 HPROF_CLEAR_GC_SCAN_STATE();
3817}
3818
3819static void gcScanAllThreads()
3820{
3821 Thread *thread;
3822
3823 /* Lock the thread list so we can safely use the
3824 * next/prev pointers.
3825 */
3826 dvmLockThreadList(dvmThreadSelf());
3827
3828 for (thread = gDvm.threadList; thread != NULL;
3829 thread = thread->next)
3830 {
3831 /* We need to scan our own stack, so don't special-case
3832 * the current thread.
3833 */
3834 gcScanThread(thread);
3835 }
3836
3837 dvmUnlockThreadList();
3838}
3839
3840void dvmGcScanRootThreadGroups()
3841{
3842 /* We scan the VM's list of threads instead of going
3843 * through the actual ThreadGroups, but it should be
3844 * equivalent.
3845 *
Jeff Hao97319a82009-08-12 16:57:15 -07003846 * This assumes that the ThreadGroup class object is in
The Android Open Source Projectf6c38712009-03-03 19:28:47 -08003847 * the root set, which should always be true; it's
3848 * loaded by the built-in class loader, which is part
3849 * of the root set.
3850 */
3851 gcScanAllThreads();
3852}