RFR: 8291555: Implement alternative fast-locking scheme [v48]

Thomas Stuefe stuefe at openjdk.org
Fri Mar 31 14:41:52 UTC 2023


On Fri, 31 Mar 2023 13:54:47 GMT, Roman Kennke <rkennke at openjdk.org> wrote:

>> This change adds a fast-locking scheme as an alternative to the current stack-locking implementation. It retains the advantages of stack-locking (namely fast locking in uncontended code-paths), while avoiding the overload of the mark word. That overloading causes massive problems with Lilliput, because it means we have to check and deal with this situation when trying to access the mark-word. And because of the very racy nature, this turns out to be very complex and would involve a variant of the inflation protocol to ensure that the object header is stable. (The current implementation of setting/fetching the i-hash provides a glimpse into the complexity).
>> 
>> What the original stack-locking does is basically to push a stack-lock onto the stack which consists only of the displaced header, and CAS a pointer to this stack location into the object header (the lowest two header bits being 00 indicate 'stack-locked'). The pointer into the stack can then be used to identify which thread currently owns the lock.
>> 
>> This change basically reverses stack-locking: It still CASes the lowest two header bits to 00 to indicate 'fast-locked' but does *not* overload the upper bits with a stack-pointer. Instead, it pushes the object-reference to a thread-local lock-stack. This is a new structure which is basically a small array of oops that is associated with each thread. Experience shows that this array typcially remains very small (3-5 elements). Using this lock stack, it is possible to query which threads own which locks. Most importantly, the most common question 'does the current thread own me?' is very quickly answered by doing a quick scan of the array. More complex queries like 'which thread owns X?' are not performed in very performance-critical paths (usually in code like JVMTI or deadlock detection) where it is ok to do more complex operations (and we already do). The lock-stack is also a new set of GC roots, and would be scanned during thread scanning, possibly concurrently, via the normal 
 protocols.
>> 
>> The lock-stack is fixed size, currently with 8 elements. According to my experiments with various workloads, this covers the vast majority of workloads (in-fact, most workloads seem to never exceed 5 active locks per thread at a time). We check for overflow in the fast-paths and when the lock-stack is full, we take the slow-path, which would inflate the lock to a monitor. That case should be very rare.
>> 
>> In contrast to stack-locking, fast-locking does *not* support recursive locking (yet). When that happens, the fast-lock gets inflated to a full monitor. It is not clear if it is worth to add support for recursive fast-locking.
>> 
>> One trouble is that when a contending thread arrives at a fast-locked object, it must inflate the fast-lock to a full monitor. Normally, we need to know the current owning thread, and record that in the monitor, so that the contending thread can wait for the current owner to properly exit the monitor. However, fast-locking doesn't have this information. What we do instead is to record a special marker ANONYMOUS_OWNER. When the thread that currently holds the lock arrives at monitorexit, and observes ANONYMOUS_OWNER, it knows it must be itself, fixes the owner to be itself, and then properly exits the monitor, and thus handing over to the contending thread.
>> 
>> As an alternative, I considered to remove stack-locking altogether, and only use heavy monitors. In most workloads this did not show measurable regressions. However, in a few workloads, I have observed severe regressions. All of them have been using old synchronized Java collections (Vector, Stack), StringBuffer or similar code. The combination of two conditions leads to regressions without stack- or fast-locking: 1. The workload synchronizes on uncontended locks (e.g. single-threaded use of Vector or StringBuffer) and 2. The workload churns such locks. IOW, uncontended use of Vector, StringBuffer, etc as such is ok, but creating lots of such single-use, single-threaded-locked objects leads to massive ObjectMonitor churn, which can lead to a significant performance impact. But alas, such code exists, and we probably don't want to punish it if we can avoid it.
>> 
>> This change enables to simplify (and speed-up!) a lot of code:
>> 
>> - The inflation protocol is no longer necessary: we can directly CAS the (tagged) ObjectMonitor pointer to the object header.
>> - Accessing the hashcode could now be done in the fastpath always, if the hashcode has been installed. Fast-locked headers can be used directly, for monitor-locked objects we can easily reach-through to the displaced header. This is safe because Java threads participate in monitor deflation protocol. This would be implemented in a separate PR
>> 
>> 
>> Testing:
>>  - [x] tier1 x86_64 x aarch64 x +UseFastLocking
>>  - [x] tier2 x86_64 x aarch64 x +UseFastLocking
>>  - [x] tier3 x86_64 x aarch64 x +UseFastLocking
>>  - [x] tier4 x86_64 x aarch64 x +UseFastLocking
>>  - [x] tier1 x86_64 x aarch64 x -UseFastLocking
>>  - [x] tier2 x86_64 x aarch64 x -UseFastLocking
>>  - [x] tier3 x86_64 x aarch64 x -UseFastLocking
>>  - [x] tier4 x86_64 x aarch64 x -UseFastLocking
>>  - [x] Several real-world applications have been tested with this change in tandem with Lilliput without any problems, yet
>> 
>> ### Performance
>> 
>> #### Simple Microbenchmark
>> 
>> The microbenchmark exercises only the locking primitives for monitorenter and monitorexit, without contention. The benchmark can be found (here)[https://github.com/rkennke/fastlockbench]. Numbers are in ns/ops.
>> 
>> |  | x86_64 | aarch64 |
>> | -- | -- | -- |
>> | -UseFastLocking | 20.651 | 20.764 |
>> | +UseFastLocking | 18.896 | 18.908 |
>> 
>> 
>> #### Renaissance
>> 
>>   | x86_64 |   |   |   | aarch64 |   |  
>> -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | --
>>   | stack-locking | fast-locking |   |   | stack-locking | fast-locking |  
>> AkkaUct | 841.884 | 836.948 | 0.59% |   | 1475.774 | 1465.647 | 0.69%
>> Reactors | 11041.427 | 11181.451 | -1.25% |   | 11381.751 | 11521.318 | -1.21%
>> Als | 1367.183 | 1359.358 | 0.58% |   | 1678.103 | 1688.067 | -0.59%
>> ChiSquare | 577.021 | 577.398 | -0.07% |   | 986.619 | 988.063 | -0.15%
>> GaussMix | 817.459 | 819.073 | -0.20% |   | 1154.293 | 1155.522 | -0.11%
>> LogRegression | 598.343 | 603.371 | -0.83% |   | 638.052 | 644.306 | -0.97%
>> MovieLens | 8248.116 | 8314.576 | -0.80% |   | 7569.219 | 7646.828 | -1.01%%
>> NaiveBayes | 587.607 | 581.608 | 1.03% |   | 541.583 | 550.059 | -1.54%
>> PageRank | 3260.553 | 3263.472 | -0.09% |   | 4376.405 | 4381.101 | -0.11%
>> FjKmeans | 979.978 | 976.122 | 0.40% |   | 774.312 | 771.235 | 0.40%
>> FutureGenetic | 2187.369 | 2183.271 | 0.19% |   | 2685.722 | 2689.056 | -0.12%
>> ParMnemonics | 2434.551 | 2468.763 | -1.39% |   | 4278.225 | 4263.863 | 0.34%
>> Scrabble | 111.882 | 111.768 | 0.10% |   | 151.796 | 153.959 | -1.40%
>> RxScrabble | 210.252 | 211.38 | -0.53% |   | 310.116 | 315.594 | -1.74%
>> Dotty | 750.415 | 752.658 | -0.30% |   | 1033.636 | 1036.168 | -0.24%
>> ScalaDoku | 3072.05 | 3051.2 | 0.68% |   | 3711.506 | 3690.04 | 0.58%
>> ScalaKmeans | 211.427 | 209.957 | 0.70% |   | 264.38 | 265.788 | -0.53%
>> ScalaStmBench7 | 1017.795 | 1018.869 | -0.11% |   | 1088.182 | 1092.266 | -0.37%
>> Philosophers | 6450.124 | 6565.705 | -1.76% |   | 12017.964 | 11902.559 | 0.97%
>> FinagleChirper | 3953.623 | 3972.647 | -0.48% |   | 4750.751 | 4769.274 | -0.39%
>> FinagleHttp | 3970.526 | 4005.341 | -0.87% |   | 5294.125 | 5296.224 | -0.04%
>
> Roman Kennke has updated the pull request incrementally with two additional commits since the last revision:
> 
>  - Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/JDK-8291555-v2' into JDK-8291555-v2
>  - Check underflow, top-of-stack and mark-bits for sanity, in fast_unlock() (aarch64)

Here the ARM port. Applies cleanly atop of 0e3662066ead1bc8883fc0c32dce9f795ecd7c9d.

https://github.com/tstuefe/jdk/tree/ARM-port-8291555

https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/commit/4c6f5abec58d6a10d3f1eb010f10d00c3cabb43a

Differences to other ports:

- I don't have as many registers (only 15). Therefore I almost always need to push at least one. My variants of MA::fast_(un)lock take care of this - you pass in a save mask to tell it which temps to save, also handy for error analysis. Multi-pushes are not combined though, but I don't think there is no need to make this more elaborate).
- I moved the MW loads down into MA::fast_(un)lock. No need to do this at the caller site, nothing saved by that.
- In MA::fast_lock, I use a combination of `bic` and `orr` to prepare new and old headers. The advantage is that it gives me added safety against accidentally passing in "11" marked MWs, at no added cost.
- In MA::fast_unlock, I also use `bic`, since it allows denser opcode. I cannot express easily ~lockmask immediate.
- In MA::fast_(un)lock, I poison supposed temp regs in debug. I leave them alone in release.

Performance:

With C2, a lot better than the old solution - about 30%. The reason is a bug in the old solution that causes the JVM to enter the slow path for every monitorexit. Should fix this separately.

I tested the ARM port based on an older version of your patch; however, unfortunately ARM is broken due to an unrelated problem (https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/pull/12778), therefore I cannot test it against your new patch variant.

-------------

PR Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/10907#issuecomment-1492026658


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