[9] RFR (M): 8027827: Improve performance of catchException combinator
Vladimir Ivanov
vladimir.x.ivanov at oracle.com
Mon Mar 3 02:31:40 PST 2014
Sigh, it's not so simple... I forgot about 8034120 [1].
The problem is that MH.invoke/invokeWithArguments have unpleasant effect
for VarargsCollector. It introduces a difference in behavior between
interpreting LF and executing compiled version.
Filed 8036117 to track the problem.
Best regards,
Vladimir Ivanov
[1] https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8034120
[2] https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8036117
On 2/28/14 12:39 AM, John Rose wrote:
> On Feb 26, 2014, at 3:44 AM, Vladimir Ivanov
> <vladimir.x.ivanov at oracle.com <mailto:vladimir.x.ivanov at oracle.com>> wrote:
>
>>>
>>> Maybe use invokeWithArguments with target and catcher? That at least is
>>> a one-liner, and probably more efficient.
>>
>> Yes, that's a good idea! At least, it considerably simplifies the code.
>>
>> Updated webrev:
>> http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~vlivanov/8027827/final/webrev.03/
>
> Thumbs up.
>
> Your use of invokeWithArguments in the unspecialized code is a good
> design pattern. The semantics are clear in the original method. This
> in turn gives a clear basis for specializing for each combination of
> argument arities and types. Specialization should be done using
> low-level, high-leverage mechanisms like bytecode spinning or even JIT
> optimizations.
>
> Put another way, if we have reasonable bytecode-generation intrinsics,
> feeding to good JIT optimizations, we don't need top-level
> specializations in the source code. The need for those has always been
> a mark of weakness in the HotSpot implementation of MHs. (Fredrik's
> JRockit implementation did it all in the JIT!) We will continue to push
> down specializations to lower layers.
>
> — John
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