RFR: 8160404: RelocationHolder constructors have bugs [v3]

John R Rose jrose at openjdk.org
Fri Dec 16 02:22:09 UTC 2022


On Fri, 16 Dec 2022 02:03:27 GMT, Kim Barrett <kbarrett at openjdk.org> wrote:

>> Please review this change to construction and copying of the Relocation and
>> RelocationHolder classes, to eliminate some questionable C++ usage.
>> 
>> The array type for RelocationHandle::_relocbuf is changed from void* to char,
>> because using a char array for raw memory is countenanced by the standard,
>> while not so much for an array of void*.  The desired alignment is maintained
>> via a union, since using alignas is not (yet) permitted in HotSpot code.
>> 
>> There is also now a comment discussing the use of _relocbuf in more detail,
>> including some areas of continued sketchiness wrto standard conformance and
>> reliance on implementation dependent behavior. 
>> 
>> No longer use trivial copy and assignment for RelocationHolder, since that
>> isn't technically correct.  The Relocation in the holder is not trivially
>> copyable, since it is polymorphic.  It seemed to work in practice with the
>> supported compilers, but we shouldn't (and don't need to) rely on it.  Instead
>> we have a new virtual function Relocation::copy_into that copies the most
>> derived object into the holder's _relocbuf using placement new.
>> 
>> Eliminated the implict conversion constructor from Relocation to holder that
>> wordwise copied (to possibly beyond the end of) the Relocation into the
>> holder's _relocbuf.  We could have implemented this more carefully with the
>> new approach (using copy_into), but we don't actually need this conversion.
>> The only use of it was actually a wasted copy (in assembler_x86.cpp).
>> 
>> Eliminated the use of placement new syntax via operator new with a holder
>> argument to copy a Resource object into a holder.  This included runtime
>> verification that the size of the object is not greater than the size of
>> _relocbuf; we now do corresponding verification at compile-time.  This also
>> included an incorrect attempt at a runtime check that the Relocation base
>> class would be at the same address as the derived class being constructed; we
>> now perform that check correctly.  We also discuss in a comment the layout
>> assumption being made (that isn't required by the standard but is provided by
>> all supported compilers), and what to do if we encounter a compiler that
>> behaves differently.
>> 
>> Eliminated the idiom of making a default-constructed holder and then
>> overwriting its held relocation with a newly constructed one, using the afore
>> mentioned (and eliminated) operator new.  Instead, RelocationHolder now has a
>> factory function template (construct<T>) for creating holders with a given
>> relocation type, constructed using provided arguments.  (The arguments are taken
>> as const-ref rather than using perfect forwarding, as the tools for the latter
>> are not (yet) approved for use in HotSpot. Using const-ref is good enough in
>> this case.)
>> 
>> Describe and verify other assumptions being made, such as all Relocation
>> classes being trivially destructible.
>> 
>> Testing:
>> mach5 tier1-5
>> 
>> Future work:
>> 
>> * RelocationHolder::reloc isn't const-correct.  Making it so will require
>> adjustment of some callers.  I'll follow up with an RFE to address this.
>> 
>> * Relocation classes have many virtual function overrides that are unmarked.
>> I'll follow up with an RFE to add "override" specifiers.
>> 
>> Potential issue: The removal of RelocationHolder(Relocation*) might not work
>> for some platforms.  I've tested on platforms supported by Oracle (where there
>> was only one (mistaken) use).  There might be uses by other platforms.
>
> Kim Barrett has updated the pull request incrementally with two additional commits since the last revision:
> 
>  - use alignas
>  - simplify per jvernee

Marked as reviewed by jrose (Reviewer).

-------------

PR: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/11618


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