Stephen Hines | ebe69fe | 2015-03-23 12:10:34 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | ===================================== |
| 2 | Garbage Collection Safepoints in LLVM |
| 3 | ===================================== |
| 4 | |
| 5 | .. contents:: |
| 6 | :local: |
| 7 | :depth: 2 |
| 8 | |
| 9 | Status |
| 10 | ======= |
| 11 | |
| 12 | This document describes a set of experimental extensions to LLVM. Use |
| 13 | with caution. Because the intrinsics have experimental status, |
| 14 | compatibility across LLVM releases is not guaranteed. |
| 15 | |
| 16 | LLVM currently supports an alternate mechanism for conservative |
| 17 | garbage collection support using the ``gcroot`` intrinsic. The mechanism |
| 18 | described here shares little in common with the alternate ``gcroot`` |
| 19 | implementation and it is hoped that this mechanism will eventually |
| 20 | replace the gc_root mechanism. |
| 21 | |
| 22 | Overview |
| 23 | ======== |
| 24 | |
| 25 | To collect dead objects, garbage collectors must be able to identify |
| 26 | any references to objects contained within executing code, and, |
| 27 | depending on the collector, potentially update them. The collector |
| 28 | does not need this information at all points in code - that would make |
| 29 | the problem much harder - but only at well-defined points in the |
| 30 | execution known as 'safepoints' For most collectors, it is sufficient |
| 31 | to track at least one copy of each unique pointer value. However, for |
| 32 | a collector which wishes to relocate objects directly reachable from |
| 33 | running code, a higher standard is required. |
| 34 | |
| 35 | One additional challenge is that the compiler may compute intermediate |
| 36 | results ("derived pointers") which point outside of the allocation or |
| 37 | even into the middle of another allocation. The eventual use of this |
| 38 | intermediate value must yield an address within the bounds of the |
| 39 | allocation, but such "exterior derived pointers" may be visible to the |
| 40 | collector. Given this, a garbage collector can not safely rely on the |
| 41 | runtime value of an address to indicate the object it is associated |
| 42 | with. If the garbage collector wishes to move any object, the |
| 43 | compiler must provide a mapping, for each pointer, to an indication of |
| 44 | its allocation. |
| 45 | |
| 46 | To simplify the interaction between a collector and the compiled code, |
| 47 | most garbage collectors are organized in terms of three abstractions: |
| 48 | load barriers, store barriers, and safepoints. |
| 49 | |
| 50 | #. A load barrier is a bit of code executed immediately after the |
| 51 | machine load instruction, but before any use of the value loaded. |
| 52 | Depending on the collector, such a barrier may be needed for all |
| 53 | loads, merely loads of a particular type (in the original source |
| 54 | language), or none at all. |
| 55 | |
| 56 | #. Analogously, a store barrier is a code fragement that runs |
| 57 | immediately before the machine store instruction, but after the |
| 58 | computation of the value stored. The most common use of a store |
| 59 | barrier is to update a 'card table' in a generational garbage |
| 60 | collector. |
| 61 | |
| 62 | #. A safepoint is a location at which pointers visible to the compiled |
| 63 | code (i.e. currently in registers or on the stack) are allowed to |
| 64 | change. After the safepoint completes, the actual pointer value |
| 65 | may differ, but the 'object' (as seen by the source language) |
| 66 | pointed to will not. |
| 67 | |
| 68 | Note that the term 'safepoint' is somewhat overloaded. It refers to |
| 69 | both the location at which the machine state is parsable and the |
| 70 | coordination protocol involved in bring application threads to a |
| 71 | point at which the collector can safely use that information. The |
| 72 | term "statepoint" as used in this document refers exclusively to the |
| 73 | former. |
| 74 | |
| 75 | This document focuses on the last item - compiler support for |
| 76 | safepoints in generated code. We will assume that an outside |
| 77 | mechanism has decided where to place safepoints. From our |
| 78 | perspective, all safepoints will be function calls. To support |
| 79 | relocation of objects directly reachable from values in compiled code, |
| 80 | the collector must be able to: |
| 81 | |
| 82 | #. identify every copy of a pointer (including copies introduced by |
| 83 | the compiler itself) at the safepoint, |
| 84 | #. identify which object each pointer relates to, and |
| 85 | #. potentially update each of those copies. |
| 86 | |
| 87 | This document describes the mechanism by which an LLVM based compiler |
| 88 | can provide this information to a language runtime/collector, and |
| 89 | ensure that all pointers can be read and updated if desired. The |
| 90 | heart of the approach is to construct (or rewrite) the IR in a manner |
| 91 | where the possible updates performed by the garbage collector are |
| 92 | explicitly visible in the IR. Doing so requires that we: |
| 93 | |
| 94 | #. create a new SSA value for each potentially relocated pointer, and |
| 95 | ensure that no uses of the original (non relocated) value is |
| 96 | reachable after the safepoint, |
| 97 | #. specify the relocation in a way which is opaque to the compiler to |
| 98 | ensure that the optimizer can not introduce new uses of an |
| 99 | unrelocated value after a statepoint. This prevents the optimizer |
| 100 | from performing unsound optimizations. |
| 101 | #. recording a mapping of live pointers (and the allocation they're |
| 102 | associated with) for each statepoint. |
| 103 | |
| 104 | At the most abstract level, inserting a safepoint can be thought of as |
| 105 | replacing a call instruction with a call to a multiple return value |
| 106 | function which both calls the original target of the call, returns |
| 107 | it's result, and returns updated values for any live pointers to |
| 108 | garbage collected objects. |
| 109 | |
| 110 | Note that the task of identifying all live pointers to garbage |
| 111 | collected values, transforming the IR to expose a pointer giving the |
| 112 | base object for every such live pointer, and inserting all the |
| 113 | intrinsics correctly is explicitly out of scope for this document. |
| 114 | The recommended approach is to use the :ref:`utility passes |
| 115 | <statepoint-utilities>` described below. |
| 116 | |
| 117 | This abstract function call is concretely represented by a sequence of |
| 118 | intrinsic calls known collectively as a "statepoint relocation sequence". |
| 119 | |
| 120 | Let's consider a simple call in LLVM IR: |
| 121 | |
| 122 | .. code-block:: llvm |
| 123 | |
| 124 | define i8 addrspace(1)* @test1(i8 addrspace(1)* %obj) |
| 125 | gc "statepoint-example" { |
| 126 | call void ()* @foo() |
| 127 | ret i8 addrspace(1)* %obj |
| 128 | } |
| 129 | |
| 130 | Depending on our language we may need to allow a safepoint during the execution |
| 131 | of ``foo``. If so, we need to let the collector update local values in the |
| 132 | current frame. If we don't, we'll be accessing a potential invalid reference |
| 133 | once we eventually return from the call. |
| 134 | |
| 135 | In this example, we need to relocate the SSA value ``%obj``. Since we can't |
| 136 | actually change the value in the SSA value ``%obj``, we need to introduce a new |
| 137 | SSA value ``%obj.relocated`` which represents the potentially changed value of |
| 138 | ``%obj`` after the safepoint and update any following uses appropriately. The |
| 139 | resulting relocation sequence is: |
| 140 | |
| 141 | .. code-block:: llvm |
| 142 | |
| 143 | define i8 addrspace(1)* @test1(i8 addrspace(1)* %obj) |
| 144 | gc "statepoint-example" { |
| 145 | %0 = call i32 (void ()*, i32, i32, ...)* @llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint.p0f_isVoidf(void ()* @foo, i32 0, i32 0, i32 5, i32 0, i32 -1, i32 0, i32 0, i32 0, i8 addrspace(1)* %obj) |
| 146 | %obj.relocated = call coldcc i8 addrspace(1)* @llvm.experimental.gc.relocate.p1i8(i32 %0, i32 9, i32 9) |
| 147 | ret i8 addrspace(1)* %obj.relocated |
| 148 | } |
| 149 | |
| 150 | Ideally, this sequence would have been represented as a M argument, N |
| 151 | return value function (where M is the number of values being |
| 152 | relocated + the original call arguments and N is the original return |
| 153 | value + each relocated value), but LLVM does not easily support such a |
| 154 | representation. |
| 155 | |
| 156 | Instead, the statepoint intrinsic marks the actual site of the |
| 157 | safepoint or statepoint. The statepoint returns a token value (which |
| 158 | exists only at compile time). To get back the original return value |
| 159 | of the call, we use the ``gc.result`` intrinsic. To get the relocation |
| 160 | of each pointer in turn, we use the ``gc.relocate`` intrinsic with the |
| 161 | appropriate index. Note that both the ``gc.relocate`` and ``gc.result`` are |
| 162 | tied to the statepoint. The combination forms a "statepoint relocation |
| 163 | sequence" and represents the entitety of a parseable call or 'statepoint'. |
| 164 | |
| 165 | When lowered, this example would generate the following x86 assembly: |
| 166 | |
| 167 | .. code-block:: gas |
| 168 | |
| 169 | .globl test1 |
| 170 | .align 16, 0x90 |
| 171 | pushq %rax |
| 172 | callq foo |
| 173 | .Ltmp1: |
| 174 | movq (%rsp), %rax # This load is redundant (oops!) |
| 175 | popq %rdx |
| 176 | retq |
| 177 | |
| 178 | Each of the potentially relocated values has been spilled to the |
| 179 | stack, and a record of that location has been recorded to the |
| 180 | :ref:`Stack Map section <stackmap-section>`. If the garbage collector |
| 181 | needs to update any of these pointers during the call, it knows |
| 182 | exactly what to change. |
| 183 | |
| 184 | The relevant parts of the StackMap section for our example are: |
| 185 | |
| 186 | .. code-block:: gas |
| 187 | |
| 188 | # This describes the call site |
| 189 | # Stack Maps: callsite 2882400000 |
| 190 | .quad 2882400000 |
| 191 | .long .Ltmp1-test1 |
| 192 | .short 0 |
| 193 | # .. 8 entries skipped .. |
| 194 | # This entry describes the spill slot which is directly addressable |
| 195 | # off RSP with offset 0. Given the value was spilled with a pushq, |
| 196 | # that makes sense. |
| 197 | # Stack Maps: Loc 8: Direct RSP [encoding: .byte 2, .byte 8, .short 7, .int 0] |
| 198 | .byte 2 |
| 199 | .byte 8 |
| 200 | .short 7 |
| 201 | .long 0 |
| 202 | |
| 203 | This example was taken from the tests for the :ref:`RewriteStatepointsForGC` utility pass. As such, it's full StackMap can be easily examined with the following command. |
| 204 | |
| 205 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 206 | |
| 207 | opt -rewrite-statepoints-for-gc test/Transforms/RewriteStatepointsForGC/basics.ll -S | llc -debug-only=stackmaps |
| 208 | |
| 209 | |
| 210 | |
| 211 | |
| 212 | |
| 213 | Intrinsics |
| 214 | =========== |
| 215 | |
| 216 | 'llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint' Intrinsic |
| 217 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 218 | |
| 219 | Syntax: |
| 220 | """"""" |
| 221 | |
| 222 | :: |
| 223 | |
| 224 | declare i32 |
| 225 | @llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint(func_type <target>, |
| 226 | i64 <#call args>. i64 <unused>, |
| 227 | ... (call parameters), |
| 228 | i64 <# deopt args>, ... (deopt parameters), |
| 229 | ... (gc parameters)) |
| 230 | |
| 231 | Overview: |
| 232 | """"""""" |
| 233 | |
| 234 | The statepoint intrinsic represents a call which is parse-able by the |
| 235 | runtime. |
| 236 | |
| 237 | Operands: |
| 238 | """"""""" |
| 239 | |
| 240 | The 'target' operand is the function actually being called. The |
| 241 | target can be specified as either a symbolic LLVM function, or as an |
| 242 | arbitrary Value of appropriate function type. Note that the function |
| 243 | type must match the signature of the callee and the types of the 'call |
| 244 | parameters' arguments. |
| 245 | |
| 246 | The '#call args' operand is the number of arguments to the actual |
| 247 | call. It must exactly match the number of arguments passed in the |
| 248 | 'call parameters' variable length section. |
| 249 | |
| 250 | The 'unused' operand is unused and likely to be removed. Please do |
| 251 | not use. |
| 252 | |
| 253 | The 'call parameters' arguments are simply the arguments which need to |
| 254 | be passed to the call target. They will be lowered according to the |
| 255 | specified calling convention and otherwise handled like a normal call |
| 256 | instruction. The number of arguments must exactly match what is |
| 257 | specified in '# call args'. The types must match the signature of |
| 258 | 'target'. |
| 259 | |
| 260 | The 'deopt parameters' arguments contain an arbitrary list of Values |
| 261 | which is meaningful to the runtime. The runtime may read any of these |
| 262 | values, but is assumed not to modify them. If the garbage collector |
| 263 | might need to modify one of these values, it must also be listed in |
| 264 | the 'gc pointer' argument list. The '# deopt args' field indicates |
| 265 | how many operands are to be interpreted as 'deopt parameters'. |
| 266 | |
| 267 | The 'gc parameters' arguments contain every pointer to a garbage |
| 268 | collector object which potentially needs to be updated by the garbage |
| 269 | collector. Note that the argument list must explicitly contain a base |
| 270 | pointer for every derived pointer listed. The order of arguments is |
| 271 | unimportant. Unlike the other variable length parameter sets, this |
| 272 | list is not length prefixed. |
| 273 | |
| 274 | Semantics: |
| 275 | """""""""" |
| 276 | |
| 277 | A statepoint is assumed to read and write all memory. As a result, |
| 278 | memory operations can not be reordered past a statepoint. It is |
| 279 | illegal to mark a statepoint as being either 'readonly' or 'readnone'. |
| 280 | |
| 281 | Note that legal IR can not perform any memory operation on a 'gc |
| 282 | pointer' argument of the statepoint in a location statically reachable |
| 283 | from the statepoint. Instead, the explicitly relocated value (from a |
| 284 | ``gc.relocate``) must be used. |
| 285 | |
| 286 | 'llvm.experimental.gc.result' Intrinsic |
| 287 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 288 | |
| 289 | Syntax: |
| 290 | """"""" |
| 291 | |
| 292 | :: |
| 293 | |
| 294 | declare type* |
| 295 | @llvm.experimental.gc.result(i32 %statepoint_token) |
| 296 | |
| 297 | Overview: |
| 298 | """"""""" |
| 299 | |
| 300 | ``gc.result`` extracts the result of the original call instruction |
| 301 | which was replaced by the ``gc.statepoint``. The ``gc.result`` |
| 302 | intrinsic is actually a family of three intrinsics due to an |
| 303 | implementation limitation. Other than the type of the return value, |
| 304 | the semantics are the same. |
| 305 | |
| 306 | Operands: |
| 307 | """"""""" |
| 308 | |
| 309 | The first and only argument is the ``gc.statepoint`` which starts |
| 310 | the safepoint sequence of which this ``gc.result`` is a part. |
| 311 | Despite the typing of this as a generic i32, *only* the value defined |
| 312 | by a ``gc.statepoint`` is legal here. |
| 313 | |
| 314 | Semantics: |
| 315 | """""""""" |
| 316 | |
| 317 | The ``gc.result`` represents the return value of the call target of |
| 318 | the ``statepoint``. The type of the ``gc.result`` must exactly match |
| 319 | the type of the target. If the call target returns void, there will |
| 320 | be no ``gc.result``. |
| 321 | |
| 322 | A ``gc.result`` is modeled as a 'readnone' pure function. It has no |
| 323 | side effects since it is just a projection of the return value of the |
| 324 | previous call represented by the ``gc.statepoint``. |
| 325 | |
| 326 | 'llvm.experimental.gc.relocate' Intrinsic |
| 327 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 328 | |
| 329 | Syntax: |
| 330 | """"""" |
| 331 | |
| 332 | :: |
| 333 | |
| 334 | declare <pointer type> |
| 335 | @llvm.experimental.gc.relocate(i32 %statepoint_token, |
| 336 | i32 %base_offset, |
| 337 | i32 %pointer_offset) |
| 338 | |
| 339 | Overview: |
| 340 | """"""""" |
| 341 | |
| 342 | A ``gc.relocate`` returns the potentially relocated value of a pointer |
| 343 | at the safepoint. |
| 344 | |
| 345 | Operands: |
| 346 | """"""""" |
| 347 | |
| 348 | The first argument is the ``gc.statepoint`` which starts the |
| 349 | safepoint sequence of which this ``gc.relocation`` is a part. |
| 350 | Despite the typing of this as a generic i32, *only* the value defined |
| 351 | by a ``gc.statepoint`` is legal here. |
| 352 | |
| 353 | The second argument is an index into the statepoints list of arguments |
| 354 | which specifies the base pointer for the pointer being relocated. |
| 355 | This index must land within the 'gc parameter' section of the |
| 356 | statepoint's argument list. |
| 357 | |
| 358 | The third argument is an index into the statepoint's list of arguments |
| 359 | which specify the (potentially) derived pointer being relocated. It |
| 360 | is legal for this index to be the same as the second argument |
| 361 | if-and-only-if a base pointer is being relocated. This index must land |
| 362 | within the 'gc parameter' section of the statepoint's argument list. |
| 363 | |
| 364 | Semantics: |
| 365 | """""""""" |
| 366 | |
| 367 | The return value of ``gc.relocate`` is the potentially relocated value |
| 368 | of the pointer specified by it's arguments. It is unspecified how the |
| 369 | value of the returned pointer relates to the argument to the |
| 370 | ``gc.statepoint`` other than that a) it points to the same source |
| 371 | language object with the same offset, and b) the 'based-on' |
| 372 | relationship of the newly relocated pointers is a projection of the |
| 373 | unrelocated pointers. In particular, the integer value of the pointer |
| 374 | returned is unspecified. |
| 375 | |
| 376 | A ``gc.relocate`` is modeled as a ``readnone`` pure function. It has no |
| 377 | side effects since it is just a way to extract information about work |
| 378 | done during the actual call modeled by the ``gc.statepoint``. |
| 379 | |
| 380 | .. _statepoint-stackmap-format: |
| 381 | |
| 382 | Stack Map Format |
| 383 | ================ |
| 384 | |
| 385 | Locations for each pointer value which may need read and/or updated by |
| 386 | the runtime or collector are provided via the :ref:`Stack Map format |
| 387 | <stackmap-format>` specified in the PatchPoint documentation. |
| 388 | |
| 389 | Each statepoint generates the following Locations: |
| 390 | |
| 391 | * Constant which describes number of following deopt *Locations* (not |
| 392 | operands) |
| 393 | * Variable number of Locations, one for each deopt parameter listed in |
| 394 | the IR statepoint (same number as described by previous Constant) |
| 395 | * Variable number of Locations pairs, one pair for each unique pointer |
| 396 | which needs relocated. The first Location in each pair describes |
| 397 | the base pointer for the object. The second is the derived pointer |
| 398 | actually being relocated. It is guaranteed that the base pointer |
| 399 | must also appear explicitly as a relocation pair if used after the |
| 400 | statepoint. There may be fewer pairs then gc parameters in the IR |
| 401 | statepoint. Each *unique* pair will occur at least once; duplicates |
| 402 | are possible. |
| 403 | |
| 404 | Note that the Locations used in each section may describe the same |
| 405 | physical location. e.g. A stack slot may appear as a deopt location, |
| 406 | a gc base pointer, and a gc derived pointer. |
| 407 | |
| 408 | The ID field of the 'StkMapRecord' for a statepoint is meaningless and |
| 409 | it's value is explicitly unspecified. |
| 410 | |
| 411 | The LiveOut section of the StkMapRecord will be empty for a statepoint |
| 412 | record. |
| 413 | |
| 414 | Safepoint Semantics & Verification |
| 415 | ================================== |
| 416 | |
| 417 | The fundamental correctness property for the compiled code's |
| 418 | correctness w.r.t. the garbage collector is a dynamic one. It must be |
| 419 | the case that there is no dynamic trace such that a operation |
| 420 | involving a potentially relocated pointer is observably-after a |
| 421 | safepoint which could relocate it. 'observably-after' is this usage |
| 422 | means that an outside observer could observe this sequence of events |
| 423 | in a way which precludes the operation being performed before the |
| 424 | safepoint. |
| 425 | |
| 426 | To understand why this 'observable-after' property is required, |
| 427 | consider a null comparison performed on the original copy of a |
| 428 | relocated pointer. Assuming that control flow follows the safepoint, |
| 429 | there is no way to observe externally whether the null comparison is |
| 430 | performed before or after the safepoint. (Remember, the original |
| 431 | Value is unmodified by the safepoint.) The compiler is free to make |
| 432 | either scheduling choice. |
| 433 | |
| 434 | The actual correctness property implemented is slightly stronger than |
| 435 | this. We require that there be no *static path* on which a |
| 436 | potentially relocated pointer is 'observably-after' it may have been |
| 437 | relocated. This is slightly stronger than is strictly necessary (and |
| 438 | thus may disallow some otherwise valid programs), but greatly |
| 439 | simplifies reasoning about correctness of the compiled code. |
| 440 | |
| 441 | By construction, this property will be upheld by the optimizer if |
| 442 | correctly established in the source IR. This is a key invariant of |
| 443 | the design. |
| 444 | |
| 445 | The existing IR Verifier pass has been extended to check most of the |
| 446 | local restrictions on the intrinsics mentioned in their respective |
| 447 | documentation. The current implementation in LLVM does not check the |
| 448 | key relocation invariant, but this is ongoing work on developing such |
| 449 | a verifier. Please ask on llvmdev if you're interested in |
| 450 | experimenting with the current version. |
| 451 | |
| 452 | .. _statepoint-utilities: |
| 453 | |
| 454 | Utility Passes for Safepoint Insertion |
| 455 | ====================================== |
| 456 | |
| 457 | .. _RewriteStatepointsForGC: |
| 458 | |
| 459 | RewriteStatepointsForGC |
| 460 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 461 | |
| 462 | The pass RewriteStatepointsForGC transforms a functions IR by replacing a |
| 463 | ``gc.statepoint`` (with an optional ``gc.result``) with a full relocation |
| 464 | sequence, including all required ``gc.relocates``. To function, the pass |
| 465 | requires that the GC strategy specified for the function be able to reliably |
| 466 | distinguish between GC references and non-GC references in IR it is given. |
| 467 | |
| 468 | As an example, given this code: |
| 469 | |
| 470 | .. code-block:: llvm |
| 471 | |
| 472 | define i8 addrspace(1)* @test1(i8 addrspace(1)* %obj) |
| 473 | gc "statepoint-example" { |
| 474 | call i32 (void ()*, i32, i32, ...)* @llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint.p0f_isVoidf(void ()* @foo, i32 0, i32 0, i32 5, i32 0, i32 -1, i32 0, i32 0, i32 0) |
| 475 | ret i8 addrspace(1)* %obj |
| 476 | } |
| 477 | |
| 478 | The pass would produce this IR: |
| 479 | |
| 480 | .. code-block:: llvm |
| 481 | |
| 482 | define i8 addrspace(1)* @test1(i8 addrspace(1)* %obj) |
| 483 | gc "statepoint-example" { |
| 484 | %0 = call i32 (void ()*, i32, i32, ...)* @llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint.p0f_isVoidf(void ()* @foo, i32 0, i32 0, i32 5, i32 0, i32 -1, i32 0, i32 0, i32 0, i8 addrspace(1)* %obj) |
| 485 | %obj.relocated = call coldcc i8 addrspace(1)* @llvm.experimental.gc.relocate.p1i8(i32 %0, i32 9, i32 9) |
| 486 | ret i8 addrspace(1)* %obj.relocated |
| 487 | } |
| 488 | |
| 489 | In the above examples, the addrspace(1) marker on the pointers is the mechanism |
| 490 | that the ``statepoint-example`` GC strategy uses to distinguish references from |
| 491 | non references. Address space 1 is not globally reserved for this purpose. |
| 492 | |
| 493 | This pass can be used an utility function by a language frontend that doesn't |
| 494 | want to manually reason about liveness, base pointers, or relocation when |
| 495 | constructing IR. As currently implemented, RewriteStatepointsForGC must be |
| 496 | run after SSA construction (i.e. mem2ref). |
| 497 | |
| 498 | |
| 499 | In practice, RewriteStatepointsForGC can be run much later in the pass |
| 500 | pipeline, after most optimization is already done. This helps to improve |
| 501 | the quality of the generated code when compiled with garbage collection support. |
| 502 | In the long run, this is the intended usage model. At this time, a few details |
| 503 | have yet to be worked out about the semantic model required to guarantee this |
| 504 | is always correct. As such, please use with caution and report bugs. |
| 505 | |
| 506 | .. _PlaceSafepoints: |
| 507 | |
| 508 | PlaceSafepoints |
| 509 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 510 | |
| 511 | The pass PlaceSafepoints transforms a function's IR by replacing any call or |
| 512 | invoke instructions with appropriate ``gc.statepoint`` and ``gc.result`` pairs, |
| 513 | and inserting safepoint polls sufficient to ensure running code checks for a |
| 514 | safepoint request on a timely manner. This pass is expected to be run before |
| 515 | RewriteStatepointsForGC and thus does not produce full relocation sequences. |
| 516 | |
| 517 | As an example, given input IR of the following: |
| 518 | |
| 519 | .. code-block:: llvm |
| 520 | |
| 521 | define void @test() gc "statepoint-example" { |
| 522 | call void @foo() |
| 523 | ret void |
| 524 | } |
| 525 | |
| 526 | declare void @do_safepoint() |
| 527 | define void @gc.safepoint_poll() { |
| 528 | call void @do_safepoint() |
| 529 | ret void |
| 530 | } |
| 531 | |
| 532 | |
| 533 | This pass would produce the following IR: |
| 534 | |
| 535 | .. code-block:: llvm |
| 536 | |
| 537 | define void @test() gc "statepoint-example" { |
| 538 | %safepoint_token = call i32 (void ()*, i32, i32, ...)* @llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint.p0f_isVoidf(void ()* @do_safepoint, i32 0, i32 0, i32 0) |
| 539 | %safepoint_token1 = call i32 (void ()*, i32, i32, ...)* @llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint.p0f_isVoidf(void ()* @foo, i32 0, i32 0, i32 0) |
| 540 | ret void |
| 541 | } |
| 542 | |
| 543 | In this case, we've added an (unconditional) entry safepoint poll and converted the call into a ``gc.statepoint``. Note that despite appearances, the entry poll is not necessarily redundant. We'd have to know that ``foo`` and ``test`` were not mutually recursive for the poll to be redundant. In practice, you'd probably want to your poll definition to contain a conditional branch of some form. |
| 544 | |
| 545 | |
| 546 | At the moment, PlaceSafepoints can insert safepoint polls at method entry and |
| 547 | loop backedges locations. Extending this to work with return polls would be |
| 548 | straight forward if desired. |
| 549 | |
| 550 | PlaceSafepoints includes a number of optimizations to avoid placing safepoint |
| 551 | polls at particular sites unless needed to ensure timely execution of a poll |
| 552 | under normal conditions. PlaceSafepoints does not attempt to ensure timely |
| 553 | execution of a poll under worst case conditions such as heavy system paging. |
| 554 | |
| 555 | The implementation of a safepoint poll action is specified by looking up a |
| 556 | function of the name ``gc.safepoint_poll`` in the containing Module. The body |
| 557 | of this function is inserted at each poll site desired. While calls or invokes |
| 558 | inside this method are transformed to a ``gc.statepoints``, recursive poll |
| 559 | insertion is not performed. |
| 560 | |
| 561 | If you are scheduling the RewriteStatepointsForGC pass late in the pass order, |
| 562 | you should probably schedule this pass immediately before it. The exception |
| 563 | would be if you need to preserve abstract frame information (e.g. for |
| 564 | deoptimization or introspection) at safepoints. In that case, ask on the |
| 565 | llvmdev mailing list for suggestions. |
| 566 | |
| 567 | |
| 568 | Bugs and Enhancements |
| 569 | ===================== |
| 570 | |
| 571 | Currently known bugs and enhancements under consideration can be |
| 572 | tracked by performing a `bugzilla search |
| 573 | <http://llvm.org/bugs/buglist.cgi?cmdtype=runnamed&namedcmd=Statepoint%20Bugs&list_id=64342>`_ |
| 574 | for [Statepoint] in the summary field. When filing new bugs, please |
| 575 | use this tag so that interested parties see the newly filed bug. As |
| 576 | with most LLVM features, design discussions take place on `llvmdev |
| 577 | <http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev>`_, and patches |
| 578 | should be sent to `llvm-commits |
| 579 | <http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvm-commits>`_ for review. |
| 580 | |