Win32AttachOperationRequest seems to be using global new?
David Holmes
david.holmes at oracle.com
Thu Nov 14 08:24:09 UTC 2024
It was added by JDK-8339289 so cc'ing Alex.
David
On 14/11/2024 5:33 pm, Julian Waters wrote:
> Bumping, I'm still curious about this issue
>
> best regards,
> Julian
>
> On Tue, Nov 12, 2024 at 10:20 PM Julian Waters <tanksherman27 at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> Win32AttachOperationRequest is created via new, but doesn't specify a custom new inside the class definition. The result seems to be that we use global new on Windows:
>>
>> for (int i=0; i<max_enqueued_operations; i++) {
>> Win32AttachOperationRequest* op = new Win32AttachOperationRequest();
>> f1: b9 28 0d 00 00 mov ecx,0xd28
>> f6: e8 00 00 00 00 call fb <Win32AttachListener::init()+0x7b>
>> f7: IMAGE_REL_AMD64_REL32 operator new(unsigned long long)
>>
>> Stepping away from gcc's objdump and using the Microsoft dumpbin alongside cl.exe instead, the result is this:
>>
>> 0000000000000264: B9 28 0D 00 00 mov ecx,0D28h
>> 0000000000000269: E8 00 00 00 00 call ??2 at YAPEAX_K@Z
>> 000000000000026E: 48 89 44 24 28 mov qword ptr [rsp+28h],rax
>> 0000000000000273: 48 83 7C 24 28 00 cmp qword ptr [rsp+28h],0
>> 0000000000000279: 74 11 je 000000000000028C
>> 000000000000027B: 48 8B 4C 24 28 mov rcx,qword ptr [rsp+28h]
>> 0000000000000280: E8 00 00 00 00 call ??0Win32AttachOperationRequest@@QEAA at XZ
>>
>> undname "??2 at YAPEAX_K@Z"
>> Microsoft (R) C++ Name Undecorator
>> Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
>>
>> Undecoration of :- "??2 at YAPEAX_K@Z"
>> is :- "void * __ptr64 __cdecl operator new(unsigned __int64)"
>>
>> undname "??0Win32AttachOperationRequest@@QEAA at XZ"
>> Microsoft (R) C++ Name Undecorator
>> Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
>>
>> Undecoration of :- "??0Win32AttachOperationRequest@@QEAA at XZ"
>> is :- "public: __cdecl Win32AttachOperationRequest::Win32AttachOperationRequest(void) __ptr64"
>>
>> Visual Studio, lacking the nm utility, obviously doesn't catch this. What was more surprising is that the gcc Link Time check also fails to catch it as well. I had to manually check the output of nm after an unrelated failure and happened to stumble across the symbols _Znwy and _ZdlPvy which both correspond to
>>
>> operator new(unsigned long long)
>> operator delete(void*, unsigned long long)
>>
>> The delete can be ignored, it's the result of a bug on my experimental branch (It was first discovered there, then I tested it on master). I'm more interested about the new, since it seems to be violating a HotSpot rule. Is this an intentional exception to the rule, or an oversight?
>>
>> best regards,
>> Julian
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