RFR (S): JEP-142: Reduce Cache Contention on Specified Fields

Remi Forax forax at univ-mlv.fr
Fri Nov 23 08:15:03 PST 2012


On 11/23/2012 05:05 PM, Kirk Pepperdine wrote:
> My only comment on this is how is one to know what is contended and what isn't.. and what if the programmer gets it wrong... or conditions change? My hope is that would be handled with less intervention in the code.

Do you have an idea to how to do that automatically ?

> -- Kirk

Rémi

> On 2012-11-22, at 10:33 PM, Aleksey Shipilev <aleksey.shipilev at oracle.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> After some internal discussions with Doug Lea, Dave Dice and others, I
>> would like to solicit the initial feedback on the implementation of
>> JEP-142, aka @Contended [1]:
>>   http://openjdk.java.net/jeps/142
>>
>> The webrev for the initial version is here:
>>   http://shipilev.net/pub/jdk/hotspot/contended/webrev-2/
>>
>> Implementation overview. Hotspot code is currently laying out the fields
>> to optimize the memory footprint, rearranging fields freely to both
>> satisfy alignment requirements for fields and making the less gaps
>> possible. We leverage the same infrastructure to exempt specific fields
>> from the packing, and pushing them outside the dense packed block at
>> sparse offsets, naturally making up the appropriate padding.
>>
>> In order to demarcate the specific classes and/or fields eligible for
>> such the padding, we use new @Contended annotation. Runtime discovery of
>> annotations reuses the code John (?) laid out for some of
>> JSR292-specific annotations.
>>
>> The behavior of this annotation is as follows:
>>
>> A. Marking the class as contended:
>>
>>     @Contended
>>     public static class ContendedTest2 {
>>         private Object plainField1;
>>         private Object plainField2;
>>         private Object plainField3;
>>         private Object plainField4;
>>     }
>>
>> ...makes the entire field block to be padded from the both sides:
>> (below is the output of new tracing -XX:+PrintFieldLayout)
>>
>>   TestContended$ContendedTest2: field layout
>>     Entire class is marked contended
>>      @140 --- instance fields start ---
>>      @140 "plainField1" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @144 "plainField2" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @148 "plainField3" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @152 "plainField4" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @288 --- instance fields end ---
>>      @288 --- instance ends ---
>>
>> Note that we use 128 bytes, twice the cache line size on most hardware
>> to adjust for adjacent sector prefetchers extending the false sharing
>> collisions to two cache lines.
>>
>> B. Marking the field as contended:
>>
>>     public static class ContendedTest1 {
>>         @Contended
>>         private Object contendedField1;
>>         private Object plainField1;
>>         private Object plainField2;
>>         private Object plainField3;
>>         private Object plainField4;
>>     }
>>
>> ...pushes the field out of dense block and effectively applies padding:
>>
>>    TestContended$ContendedTest1: field layout
>>      @ 12 --- instance fields start ---
>>      @ 12 "plainField1" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @ 16 "plainField2" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @ 20 "plainField3" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @ 24 "plainField4" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @156 "contendedField1" Ljava.lang.Object; (contended, group = 0)
>>      @288 --- instance fields end ---
>>      @288 --- instance ends ---
>>
>> C. Marking multiple fields makes each field padded:
>>
>>     public static class ContendedTest4 {
>>         @Contended
>>         private Object contendedField1;
>>
>>         @Contended
>>         private Object contendedField2;
>>
>>         private Object plainField3;
>>         private Object plainField4;
>>     }
>>
>> ...pushes both fields with individual padding for each:
>>
>>    TestContended$ContendedTest4: field layout
>>      @ 12 --- instance fields start ---
>>      @ 12 "plainField3" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @ 16 "plainField4" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @148 "contendedField1" Ljava.lang.Object; (contended, group = 0)
>>      @280 "contendedField2" Ljava.lang.Object; (contended, group = 0)
>>      @416 --- instance fields end ---
>>      @416 --- instance ends ---
>>
>> *** IV. Contention groups
>>
>> There are cases where you want to separate the *group* of fields that
>> are experiencing contention with everything else but not pairwise. This
>> is the usual thing for some of the code updating two fields at once.
>> While marking both with @Contended would be sufficient, we can optimize
>> the memory footprint by not applying padding between them. In order to
>> demarcate these groups, we have the parameter in the annotation
>> describing the equivalence class for contention group.
>>
>> So that:
>>
>>     public static class ContendedTest5 {
>>         @Contended("updater1")
>>         private Object contendedField1;
>>
>>         @Contended("updater1")
>>         private Object contendedField2;
>>
>>         @Contended("updater2")
>>         private Object contendedField3;
>>
>>         private Object plainField5;
>>         private Object plainField6;
>>     }
>>
>> ...is laid out as:
>>
>>    TestContended$ContendedTest5: field layout
>>      @ 12 --- instance fields start ---
>>      @ 12 "plainField5" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @ 16 "plainField6" Ljava.lang.Object;
>>      @148 "contendedField1" Ljava.lang.Object; (contended, group = 12)
>>      @152 "contendedField2" Ljava.lang.Object; (contended, group = 12)
>>      @284 "contendedField3" Ljava.lang.Object; (contended, group = 15)
>>      @416 --- instance fields end ---
>>      @416 --- instance ends ---
>>
>> Note $contendedField1 and $contendedField2 are padded from everything
>> else, but still densely packed with each other.
>>
>> The code is known to work at least on Linux x86-64, tested with a few
>> microtests. The layout of fields without @Contended is not affected, so
>> this is presumably a safe change. I will try to run more tests against
>> this implementation with JPRT, but will appreciate the design, API, and
>> draft implementation review meanwhile...
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Aleksey.



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