1 /*
2 * Copyright (C) 2009 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 */
16
17 #ifndef DALVIK_INDIRECTREFTABLE_H_
18 #define DALVIK_INDIRECTREFTABLE_H_
19
20 /*
21 * Maintain a table of indirect references. Used for local/global JNI
22 * references.
23 *
24 * The table contains object references that are part of the GC root set.
25 * When an object is added we return an IndirectRef that is not a valid
26 * pointer but can be used to find the original value in O(1) time.
27 * Conversions to and from indirect refs are performed on JNI method calls
28 * in and out of the VM, so they need to be very fast.
29 *
30 * To be efficient for JNI local variable storage, we need to provide
31 * operations that allow us to operate on segments of the table, where
32 * segments are pushed and popped as if on a stack. For example, deletion
33 * of an entry should only succeed if it appears in the current segment,
34 * and we want to be able to strip off the current segment quickly when
35 * a method returns. Additions to the table must be made in the current
36 * segment even if space is available in an earlier area.
37 *
38 * A new segment is created when we call into native code from interpreted
39 * code, or when we handle the JNI PushLocalFrame function.
40 *
41 * The GC must be able to scan the entire table quickly.
42 *
43 * In summary, these must be very fast:
44 * - adding or removing a segment
45 * - adding references to a new segment
46 * - converting an indirect reference back to an Object
47 * These can be a little slower, but must still be pretty quick:
48 * - adding references to a "mature" segment
49 * - removing individual references
50 * - scanning the entire table straight through
51 *
52 * If there's more than one segment, we don't guarantee that the table
53 * will fill completely before we fail due to lack of space. We do ensure
54 * that the current segment will pack tightly, which should satisfy JNI
55 * requirements (e.g. EnsureLocalCapacity).
56 *
57 * To make everything fit nicely in 32-bit integers, the maximum size of
58 * the table is capped at 64K.
59 *
60 * None of the table functions are synchronized.
61 */
62
63 /*
64 * Indirect reference definition. This must be interchangeable with JNI's
65 * jobject, and it's convenient to let null be null, so we use void*.
66 *
67 * We need a 16-bit table index and a 2-bit reference type (global, local,
68 * weak global). Real object pointers will have zeroes in the low 2 or 3
69 * bits (4- or 8-byte alignment), so it's useful to put the ref type
70 * in the low bits and reserve zero as an invalid value.
71 *
72 * The remaining 14 bits can be used to detect stale indirect references.
73 * For example, if objects don't move, we can use a hash of the original
74 * Object* to make sure the entry hasn't been re-used. (If the Object*
75 * we find there doesn't match because of heap movement, we could do a
76 * secondary check on the preserved hash value; this implies that creating
77 * a global/local ref queries the hash value and forces it to be saved.)
78 *
79 * A more rigorous approach would be to put a serial number in the extra
80 * bits, and keep a copy of the serial number in a parallel table. This is
81 * easier when objects can move, but requires 2x the memory and additional
82 * memory accesses on add/get. It will catch additional problems, e.g.:
83 * create iref1 for obj, delete iref1, create iref2 for same obj, lookup
84 * iref1. A pattern based on object bits will miss this.
85 *
86 * For now, we use a serial number.
87 */
88 typedef void* IndirectRef;
89
90 /* magic failure value; must not pass dvmIsHeapAddress() */
91 #define kInvalidIndirectRefObject reinterpret_cast<Object*>(0xdead4321)
92
93 #define kClearedJniWeakGlobal reinterpret_cast<Object*>(0xdead1234)
94
95 /*
96 * Indirect reference kind, used as the two low bits of IndirectRef.
97 *
98 * For convenience these match up with enum jobjectRefType from jni.h.
99 */
100 enum IndirectRefKind {
101 kIndirectKindInvalid = 0,
102 kIndirectKindLocal = 1,
103 kIndirectKindGlobal = 2,
104 kIndirectKindWeakGlobal = 3
105 };
106 const char* indirectRefKindToString(IndirectRefKind kind);
107
108 /*
109 * Determine what kind of indirect reference this is.
110 */
indirectRefKind(IndirectRef iref)111 INLINE IndirectRefKind indirectRefKind(IndirectRef iref)
112 {
113 return (IndirectRefKind)((u4) iref & 0x03);
114 }
115
116 /*
117 * Information we store for each slot in the reference table.
118 */
119 struct IndirectRefSlot {
120 Object* obj; /* object pointer itself, NULL if the slot is unused */
121 u4 serial; /* slot serial number */
122 };
123
124 /* use as initial value for "cookie", and when table has only one segment */
125 #define IRT_FIRST_SEGMENT 0
126
127 /*
128 * Table definition.
129 *
130 * For the global reference table, the expected common operations are
131 * adding a new entry and removing a recently-added entry (usually the
132 * most-recently-added entry). For JNI local references, the common
133 * operations are adding a new entry and removing an entire table segment.
134 *
135 * If "alloc_entries_" is not equal to "max_entries_", the table may expand
136 * when entries are added, which means the memory may move. If you want
137 * to keep pointers into "table" rather than offsets, you must use a
138 * fixed-size table.
139 *
140 * If we delete entries from the middle of the list, we will be left with
141 * "holes". We track the number of holes so that, when adding new elements,
142 * we can quickly decide to do a trivial append or go slot-hunting.
143 *
144 * When the top-most entry is removed, any holes immediately below it are
145 * also removed. Thus, deletion of an entry may reduce "topIndex" by more
146 * than one.
147 *
148 * To get the desired behavior for JNI locals, we need to know the bottom
149 * and top of the current "segment". The top is managed internally, and
150 * the bottom is passed in as a function argument (the VM keeps it in a
151 * slot in the interpreted stack frame). When we call a native method or
152 * push a local frame, the current top index gets pushed on, and serves
153 * as the new bottom. When we pop a frame off, the value from the stack
154 * becomes the new top index, and the value stored in the previous frame
155 * becomes the new bottom.
156 *
157 * To avoid having to re-scan the table after a pop, we want to push the
158 * number of holes in the table onto the stack. Because of our 64K-entry
159 * cap, we can combine the two into a single unsigned 32-bit value.
160 * Instead of a "bottom" argument we take a "cookie", which includes the
161 * bottom index and the count of holes below the bottom.
162 *
163 * We need to minimize method call/return overhead. If we store the
164 * "cookie" externally, on the interpreted call stack, the VM can handle
165 * pushes and pops with a single 4-byte load and store. (We could also
166 * store it internally in a public structure, but the local JNI refs are
167 * logically tied to interpreted stack frames anyway.)
168 *
169 * Common alternative implementation: make IndirectRef a pointer to the
170 * actual reference slot. Instead of getting a table and doing a lookup,
171 * the lookup can be done instantly. Operations like determining the
172 * type and deleting the reference are more expensive because the table
173 * must be hunted for (i.e. you have to do a pointer comparison to see
174 * which table it's in), you can't move the table when expanding it (so
175 * realloc() is out), and tricks like serial number checking to detect
176 * stale references aren't possible (though we may be able to get similar
177 * benefits with other approaches).
178 *
179 * TODO: consider a "lastDeleteIndex" for quick hole-filling when an
180 * add immediately follows a delete; must invalidate after segment pop
181 * (which could increase the cost/complexity of method call/return).
182 * Might be worth only using it for JNI globals.
183 *
184 * TODO: may want completely different add/remove algorithms for global
185 * and local refs to improve performance. A large circular buffer might
186 * reduce the amortized cost of adding global references.
187 *
188 * TODO: if we can guarantee that the underlying storage doesn't move,
189 * e.g. by using oversized mmap regions to handle expanding tables, we may
190 * be able to avoid having to synchronize lookups. Might make sense to
191 * add a "synchronized lookup" call that takes the mutex as an argument,
192 * and either locks or doesn't lock based on internal details.
193 */
194 union IRTSegmentState {
195 u4 all;
196 struct {
197 u4 topIndex:16; /* index of first unused entry */
198 u4 numHoles:16; /* #of holes in entire table */
199 } parts;
200 };
201
202 class iref_iterator {
203 public:
iref_iterator(IndirectRefSlot * table,size_t i,size_t capacity)204 explicit iref_iterator(IndirectRefSlot* table, size_t i, size_t capacity) :
205 table_(table), i_(i), capacity_(capacity) {
206 skipNullsAndTombstones();
207 }
208
209 iref_iterator& operator++() {
210 ++i_;
211 skipNullsAndTombstones();
212 return *this;
213 }
214
215 Object** operator*() {
216 return &table_[i_].obj;
217 }
218
equals(const iref_iterator & rhs)219 bool equals(const iref_iterator& rhs) const {
220 return (i_ == rhs.i_ && table_ == rhs.table_);
221 }
222
223 private:
skipNullsAndTombstones()224 void skipNullsAndTombstones() {
225 // We skip NULLs and tombstones. Clients don't want to see implementation details.
226 while (i_ < capacity_ && (table_[i_].obj == NULL
227 || table_[i_].obj == kClearedJniWeakGlobal)) {
228 ++i_;
229 }
230 }
231
232 IndirectRefSlot* table_;
233 size_t i_;
234 size_t capacity_;
235 };
236
237 bool inline operator!=(const iref_iterator& lhs, const iref_iterator& rhs) {
238 return !lhs.equals(rhs);
239 }
240
241 struct IndirectRefTable {
242 public:
243 typedef iref_iterator iterator;
244
245 /* semi-public - read/write by interpreter in native call handler */
246 IRTSegmentState segmentState;
247
248 /*
249 * private:
250 *
251 * TODO: we can't make these private as long as the interpreter
252 * uses offsetof, since private member data makes us non-POD.
253 */
254 /* bottom of the stack */
255 IndirectRefSlot* table_;
256 /* bit mask, ORed into all irefs */
257 IndirectRefKind kind_;
258 /* #of entries we have space for */
259 size_t alloc_entries_;
260 /* max #of entries allowed */
261 size_t max_entries_;
262
263 // TODO: want hole-filling stats (#of holes filled, total entries scanned)
264 // for performance evaluation.
265
266 /*
267 * Add a new entry. "obj" must be a valid non-NULL object reference
268 * (though it's okay if it's not fully-formed, e.g. the result from
269 * dvmMalloc doesn't have obj->clazz set).
270 *
271 * Returns NULL if the table is full (max entries reached, or alloc
272 * failed during expansion).
273 */
274 IndirectRef add(u4 cookie, Object* obj);
275
276 /*
277 * Given an IndirectRef in the table, return the Object it refers to.
278 *
279 * Returns kInvalidIndirectRefObject if iref is invalid.
280 */
281 Object* get(IndirectRef iref) const;
282
283 /*
284 * Returns true if the table contains a reference to this object.
285 */
286 bool contains(const Object* obj) const;
287
288 /*
289 * Remove an existing entry.
290 *
291 * If the entry is not between the current top index and the bottom index
292 * specified by the cookie, we don't remove anything. This is the behavior
293 * required by JNI's DeleteLocalRef function.
294 *
295 * Returns "false" if nothing was removed.
296 */
297 bool remove(u4 cookie, IndirectRef iref);
298
299 /*
300 * Initialize an IndirectRefTable.
301 *
302 * If "initialCount" != "maxCount", the table will expand as required.
303 *
304 * "kind" should be Local or Global. The Global table may also hold
305 * WeakGlobal refs.
306 *
307 * Returns "false" if table allocation fails.
308 */
309 bool init(size_t initialCount, size_t maxCount, IndirectRefKind kind);
310
311 /*
312 * Clear out the contents, freeing allocated storage.
313 *
314 * You must call dvmInitReferenceTable() before you can re-use this table.
315 *
316 * TODO: this should be a destructor.
317 */
318 void destroy();
319
320 /*
321 * Dump the contents of a reference table to the log file.
322 *
323 * The caller should lock any external sync before calling.
324 *
325 * TODO: we should name the table in a constructor and remove
326 * the argument here.
327 */
328 void dump(const char* descr) const;
329
330 /*
331 * Return the #of entries in the entire table. This includes holes, and
332 * so may be larger than the actual number of "live" entries.
333 */
capacityIndirectRefTable334 size_t capacity() const {
335 return segmentState.parts.topIndex;
336 }
337
beginIndirectRefTable338 iterator begin() {
339 return iterator(table_, 0, capacity());
340 }
341
endIndirectRefTable342 iterator end() {
343 return iterator(table_, capacity(), capacity());
344 }
345
346 private:
extractIndexIndirectRefTable347 static inline u4 extractIndex(IndirectRef iref) {
348 u4 uref = (u4) iref;
349 return (uref >> 2) & 0xffff;
350 }
351
extractSerialIndirectRefTable352 static inline u4 extractSerial(IndirectRef iref) {
353 u4 uref = (u4) iref;
354 return uref >> 20;
355 }
356
nextSerialIndirectRefTable357 static inline u4 nextSerial(u4 serial) {
358 return (serial + 1) & 0xfff;
359 }
360
toIndirectRefIndirectRefTable361 static inline IndirectRef toIndirectRef(u4 index, u4 serial, IndirectRefKind kind) {
362 assert(index < 65536);
363 return reinterpret_cast<IndirectRef>((serial << 20) | (index << 2) | kind);
364 }
365 };
366
367 #endif // DALVIK_INDIRECTREFTABLE_H_
368