[14] RFR 8230765: Implement nmethod barrier for x86_32 platforms
Erik Österlund
erik.osterlund at oracle.com
Tue Nov 26 18:43:00 UTC 2019
Hi Zhengyu,
Looks good; ship it.
Thanks
/Erik
> On 26 Nov 2019, at 19:07, Zhengyu Gu <zgu at redhat.com> wrote:
>
> Hi Erik,
>
> On 11/26/19 8:24 AM, Zhengyu Gu wrote:
>>> Here is a patch with my proposed cleanup:
>>> http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~eosterlund/8230765/webrev.02/
>>>
>>> Incremental:
>>> http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~eosterlund/8230765/webrev.01_02/
>>>
>> Yes, this indeed a much cleaner approach. I will take your proposed cleanup and run through submit.
>
> I took your patch. There is just one little hiccup: compiler expects intptr_t instead of int* on x86_32, the fix is straightforward.
>
> __ push(tmp);
> - __ movptr(tmp, bs_nm->disarmed_value_address());
> + __ movptr(tmp, (intptr_t)bs_nm->disarmed_value_address());
> Address disarmed_addr(tmp, 0);
> __ align(4);
> __ cmpl(disarmed_addr, 0);
>
>
> Full webrev: http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~zgu/JDK-8230765/webrev.02/
>
> and patch passed submit tests.
>
> Okay to push?
>
> Thanks,
>
> -Zhengyu
>
>
>> -Zhengyu
>>> Thanks,
>>> /Erik
>>>
>>>> On 11/25/19 9:35 PM, Zhengyu Gu wrote:
>>>>> Hi all,
>>>>>
>>>>> Please review this implementation of nmethod barrier for x86_32 platforms.
>>>>>
>>>>> x86_32 implementation mirrors x86_64's. The only difference is where it reads nmethod disarmed value.
>>>>>
>>>>> Unlike 64-bits, 32-bits platform does not have a dedicated register for current thread. So that it is cheaper to read disarmed value from global location than from per-thread GC data.
>>>>>
>>>>> Currently, only Shenandoah GC uses the implementation for its concurrent class unloading. This implementation, along with Shenandoah concurrent class unloading, has been baked in shenandoah/jdk repo for some time now, they are ready for integration.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Bug: https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8230765
>>>>> Webrev: http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~zgu/JDK-8230765/webrev.01/
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Test:
>>>>> hotspot_gc with x86_64 and x86_32 JVM on Linux
>>>>> Submit test.
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>>
>>>>> -Zhengyu
>>>>>
>>>
>
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