RFR: 8283710: JVMTI: Use BitSet for object marking [v8]

Roman Kennke rkennke at openjdk.java.net
Mon Apr 11 14:54:45 UTC 2022


On Mon, 11 Apr 2022 11:55:33 GMT, Roman Kennke <rkennke at openjdk.org> wrote:

>> JVMTI heap walking marks objects in order to track which have been visited already. In order to do that, it uses bits in the object header. Those are the same bits that are also used by some GCs to mark objects (the lowest two bits, also used by locking code). Some GCs also use the bits in order to indicate 'forwarded' objects, where the upper bits of the header represent the forward-pointer. In the case of Shenandoah, it's even more problematic because this happens concurrently, even while JVMTI heap walks can intercept. So far we carefully worked around that problem, but it becomes very problematic in Lilliput, where accesses to the Klass* also requires to decode the header, and figure out what bits means what.
>> 
>> In addition to that, marking objects in their header requires that the original header gets saved and restored. We only do that for 'interesting' headers, that is headers that have a stack-lock, monitor or hash-code. All other headers are reset to their default value. This means we are losing object's GC age. This is not catastrophic, but nontheless interferes with GC. 
>> 
>> JFR already has a datastructure called BitSet to support object marking without messing with object's headers. We can use that in JVMTI too.
>> 
>> Testing:
>>  - [x] tier1
>>  - [x] tier2
>>  - [x] tier3
>>  - [x] serviceability/jvmti
>>  - [x] vmTestbase/nsk/jvmti
>
> Roman Kennke has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional commit since the last revision:
> 
>   Add some basic tests for ObjectBitSet

Thank you all! GHA are green too, so I'll

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PR: https://git.openjdk.java.net/jdk/pull/7964


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