RFR: 8331553: Windows JVM leaks Event and Thread handles when multiple threads are used [v2]
Thomas Stuefe
stuefe at openjdk.org
Thu Jun 20 06:09:11 UTC 2024
On Wed, 19 Jun 2024 16:50:22 GMT, Daniel Jeliński <djelinski at openjdk.org> wrote:
>> We use 2 ParkEvent instances per thread. The ParkEvent objects are never freed, but they are recycled when a thread dies, so the number of live ParkEvent instances is proportional to the maximum number of threads that were live at any time.
>>
>> On Windows, the ParkEvent object wraps a kernel Event object. Kernel objects are a limited and costly resource. In this PR, I replace the use of kernel events with user-space synchronization.
>>
>> The new implementation uses WaitOnAddress and WakeByAddressSingle methods to implement synchronization. The methods are available since Windows 8. We only support Windows 10 and newer, so OS support should not be a problem.
>>
>> WaitOnAddress was observed to return spuriously, so I added the necessary code to recalculate the timeout and continue waiting.
>>
>> Tier1-5 tests passed. Performance tests were... inconclusive. For example, `ThreadOnSpinWaitProducerConsumer` reported 30% better results, while `LockUnlock.testContendedLock` results were 50% worse.
>>
>> Thoughts?
>
> Daniel Jeliński has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional commit since the last revision:
>
> Update comment
What I don't understand:
Events are kernel events. We can release Events. WaitOnAddress builds up a kernel-side hash table, but is there a way to ever release these addresses and shrink the table, if you don't need the synchronization anymore? Can you ever release the underlying memory?
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PR Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/19778#issuecomment-2179889219
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