RFR: 8238761: Asynchronous handshakes [v5]

Coleen Phillimore coleenp at openjdk.java.net
Tue Sep 22 12:24:11 UTC 2020


On Tue, 22 Sep 2020 07:54:57 GMT, Robbin Ehn <rehn at openjdk.org> wrote:

>> This patch implements asynchronous handshake, which changes how handshakes works by default. Asynchronous handshakes
>> are target only executed, which they may never be executed. (target may block on socket for the rest of VM lifetime)
>> Since we have several use-cases for them we can have many handshake pending. (should be very rare) To be able handle an
>> arbitrary amount of handshakes this patch adds a per JavaThread queue and heap allocated HandshakeOperations. It's a
>> singly linked list where you push/insert to the end and pop/get from the front. Inserts are done via CAS on first
>> pointer, no lock needed. Pops are done while holding the per handshake state lock, and when working on the first
>> pointer also CAS.  The thread grabbing the handshake state lock for a JavaThread will pop and execute all handshake
>> operations matching the filter. The JavaThread itself uses no filter and any other thread uses the filter of everything
>> except asynchronous handshakes. In this initial change-set there is no need to do any other filtering. If needed
>> filtering can easily be exposed as a virtual method on the HandshakeClosure, but note that filtering causes handshake
>> operation to be done out-order. Since the filter determins who execute the operation and not the invoked method, there
>> is now only one method to call when handshaking one thread.  Some comments about the changes:
>> - HandshakeClosure uses ThreadClosure, since it neat to use the same closure for both alla JavThreads do and Handshake
>>   all threads. With heap allocating it cannot extends StackObj. I tested several ways to fix this, but those very much
>>   worse then this.
>> 
>> - I added a is_handshake_safe_for for checking if it's current thread is operating on itself or the handshaker of that
>>   thread.
>> 
>> - Simplified JVM TI with a JvmtiHandshakeClosure and also made them not needing a JavaThread when executing as a
>>   handshaker on a JavaThread, e.g. VM Thread can execute the handshake operation.
>> 
>> - Added WB testing method.
>> 
>> - Removed VM_HandshakeOneThread, the VM thread uses the same call path as direct handshakes did.
>> 
>> - Changed the handshake semaphores to mutex to be able to handle deadlocks with lock ranking.
>> 
>> - VM_HandshakeAllThreadsis still a VM operation, since we do support half of the threads being handshaked before a
>>   safepoint and half of them after, in many handshake all operations.
>> 
>> - ThreadInVMForHandshake do not need to do a fenced transistion since this is always a transistion from unsafe to unsafe.
>> 
>> - Added NoSafepointVerifyer, we are thinking about supporting safepoints inside handshake, but it's not needed at the
>>   moment. To make sure that gets well tested if added the NoSafepointVerifyer will raise eyebrows.
>> 
>> - Added ttyLocker::break_tty_lock_for_safepoint(os::current_thread_id()); due to lock rank.
>> 
>> - Added filtered queue and gtest for it.
>> 
>> Passes multiple t1-8 runs.
>> Been through some pre-reviwing.
>
> Robbin Ehn has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional commit since the last revision:
> 
>   Update after Coleen

Just one comment that needs an answer if you can find it :)

src/hotspot/share/prims/whitebox.cpp line 2050:

> 2048:     JavaThread* target = java_lang_Thread::thread(thread_oop);
> 2049:     TraceSelfClosure* tsc = new TraceSelfClosure(target);
> 2050:     Handshake::execute(tsc, target);

I know it's a whitebox test, but should this delete TraceSelfClosure sometime?

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

Changes requested by coleenp (Reviewer).

PR: https://git.openjdk.java.net/jdk/pull/151


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