RFR: 8012902: remove use of global operator new - take 2
Yumin Qi
yumin.qi at oracle.com
Wed May 1 08:20:22 PDT 2013
Hi, the link in fact directs to old webrev, you need to copy the text
in browser to open the new link, or follow
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~minqi/8012902/webrev1/
Thanks
Yumin
On 5/1/2013 7:56 AM, Yumin Qi wrote:
> Hi,
>
> This revised version replace CATCH_OPERATOR_NEW_USAGE with
> ALLOW_OPERATOR_NEW_USAGE. For platforms on which operator new called
> from other source other than jvm, define this macro to enable global
> operator new instead.
>
> Also fixed KlassHandle creation in ciReplay.cpp, that still use
> global operator new.
>
> http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~minqi/8012902/webrev1/
> <http://cr.openjdk.java.net/%7Eminqi/8012902/webrev/>
>
> Tested: vm.quick.testlist, jtreg, runThese, JPRT
>
> Thanks
> Yumin
>
> *
>
>
> *
> On 4/29/2013 10:08 AM, Yumin Qi wrote:
>> Coleen and David,
>>
>> On 4/29/2013 6:36 AM, Coleen Phillimore wrote:
>>>
>>> David,
>>>
>>> I think Yumin has some additional operator new[] calls that he
>>> hasn't fixed yet so I'm expecting another webrev. I agree it's a
>>> more complicated change than originally thought, but it's
>>> progressing so I don't think quitting now is a good idea. The main
>>> change helps resolve a fundamental problem that has recently broken
>>> the VM. Yumin's change makes it harder to do this.
>>>
>> Yes, I think if we stop here, this one will not be revisited for long
>> time --- more dangerous code will be added then. To prevent this from
>> happening, better to stop them as soon as we can.
>>> On 04/29/2013 09:00 AM, David Holmes wrote:
>>>> Hi Yumin,
>>>>
>>>> I think we need to pull back on this until we can address the
>>>> broader issues:
>>>>
>>>> a) there are a number of classes that don't obey the rules about
>>>> extending one of the allocation types
>>>
>>> This will always be the case. This shouldn't be a blocker.
>> Those classes (most of them) are used as stack obj, currently did not
>> find any used as heap obj. For VALUE_OBJ_CLASS_SPEC, since it is
>> empty on linux, every class which take it as parent will come from
>> nothing that is similar to those classes not obey the rules --- This
>> is why I asked if we should make it _ValueObj on linux but you think
>> that will add more bytes to the objects.
>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>> b) adding additional operator new/new[] for explicit C-Heap usage
>>>> conflicts with the use of the existing macros/functions documented
>>>> in allocation.hpp (I still think I prefer NEW_C_HEAP_OBJ + global
>>>> placement new to invoke the correct constructor). If you stick with
>>>> your approach then the documentation in allocation.hpp needs
>>>> rewriting.
>>>
>>> I think the documentation in allocation.hpp describes how we want
>>> this to work. The exceptional cases should be documented where
>>> they exist. I don't really have an opinion whether NEW_C_HEAP_OBJ
>>> vs. adding new and new[] to the exceptional classes is better. Both
>>> have their pros and cons.
>>>
>> Using macro and calling constructors need carefulness, which caused
>> too much concern, so if the use case is simple, I would like to use
>> macros, but if it is complex, implementing operator new is preferable
>> I think.
>>>>
>>>> c) there seem to be other global array allocations still lurking
>>>>
>>>
>>> Yes, the ones we know about should be fixed. And do due diligence
>>> to find them all. The purpose of the assert is to find any that
>>> might leak in after this exercise.
>>
>> I found one more case using nm on linux. Do you know what it will be
>> on solaris? I tried to code a small program, but could not locate
>> 'new' in the output. For shared code, linux will output all the
>> unsettled operator new, what I am concerning here is some platform
>> specific code.
>>
>>>
>>>> d) the effect of the hotspot global operator new on the other
>>>> libraries needs to be better understood and dealt with. If I
>>>> understand your fix as it stands you will abort in product mode,
>>>> and warn in debug - yet we know this problem exists so this will
>>>> simply force an abort. I would not expect to see the
>>>> ShouldNotReachHere() variants.
>>>>
>>>
>>> I think the logic is reversed in the new code. #ifndef
>>> CATCH_OPERATOR_NEW_USAGE should just revert to the global operators
>>> new/new[]/delete/delete[], ie be empty. The code under CATCH_*
>>> should assert and return AllocateHeap() in product quietly.
>>> ShouldNotReachHere() gives a fatal error in product mode too, so it
>>> should be avoided.
>> Yes, the logic here now is on macosx (currently I did not find any
>> other platform the global operator new switched to jvm 'new'), only
>> gives warnings for the operator first time called, and return
>> AllocateHeap, no stop here.
>>
>> BTW, when I tried to test on Windows to find if they will fail on
>> new[] (a lot of new[] used in awt, swing etc), the demo did not crash
>> on new[] but there is a failure in awt code, Hashtable.cpp
>>
>>
>>
>> This comes not only my fastdebug version, but all other debug
>> versions on Windows. It is an awt related error. It happens on my
>> desktop whenever you type characters in input area of the testing
>> program interface.
>>
>> Thanks
>> Yumin
>
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