RFR: 8257831: Suspend with handshakes [v4]

Richard Reingruber rrich at openjdk.java.net
Mon Apr 12 08:03:30 UTC 2021


On Thu, 8 Apr 2021 07:17:48 GMT, Robbin Ehn <rehn at openjdk.org> wrote:

>> A suspend request is done by handshaking thread target thread(s). When executing the handshake operation we know the target mutator thread is in a dormant state (as in safepoint safe state). We have a guarantee that it will check it's poll before leaving the dormant state. To stop the thread from leaving the the dormant state we install a second asynchronous handshake to be executed by the targeted thread. The asynchronous handshake will wait on a monitor while the thread is suspended. The target thread cannot not leave the dormant state without a resume request.
>> 
>> Per thread suspend requests are naturally serialized by the per thread HandshakeState lock (we can only execute one handshake at a time per thread).
>> Instead of having a separate lock we use this to our advantage and use HandshakeState lock for serializing access to the suspend flag and for wait/notify. 
>> 
>> Suspend:
>> Requesting thread -> synchronous handshake -> target thread
>> Inside synchronus handshake (HandshakeState lock is locked while
>> executing any handshake):
>> 	- Set suspended flag
>> 	- Install asynchronous handshake
>> 
>> Target thread -> tries to leave dormant state -> Executes handshakes
>> Target only executes asynchronous handshake:
>> 	- While suspended
>> 	- Go to blocked
>> 	- Wait on HandshakeState lock
>> 
>> Resume:
>> Resuming thread:
>> 	- Lock HandshakeState lock
>> 	- Clear suspended flag
>> 	- Notify HandshakeState lock
>> 	- Unlock HandshakeState lock
>> 
>> The "suspend requested" flag is an optimization, without it a dormant thread could be suspended and resumed many times and each would add a new asynchronous handshake. Suspend requested flag means there is already an asynchronous suspend handshake in queue which can be re-used, only the suspend flag needs to be set.
>> 
>> ----
>> Some code can be simplified or done in a smarter way but I refrained from doing such changes instead tried to keep existing code as is as far as possible. This concerns especially raw monitors.
>> 
>> ----
>> Regarding the changed test, the documentation says:
>> "If the calling thread is specified in the request_list array, this function will not return until some other thread resumes it."
>> 
>> But the code:
>>   LOG("suspendTestedThreads: before JVMTI SuspendThreadList");
>>   err = jvmti->SuspendThreadList(threads_count, threads, results);
>>   ...
>>   // Allow the Main thread to inspect the result of tested threads suspension	
>>   agent_unlock(jni);
>>   
>> The thread will never return from SuspendThreadList until resumed, so it cannot unlock with agent_unlock().
>> Thus main thread is stuck forever on:
>>   // Block until the suspender thread competes the tested threads suspension	
>>   agent_lock(jni);
>> 
>> And never checks and resumes the threads. So I removed that lock instead just sleep and check until all thread have the expected suspended state.
>> 
>> ----
>> 
>> This version already contains updates after pre-review comments from @dcubed-ojdk, @pchilano, @coleenp.
>> (Pre-review comments here:
>> https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/pull/2625)
>> 
>> ---- 
>> Testing t1-t8, nsk_jdi/nsk_jvmti/jdk_jdi/tck, KS24, RunThese and
>> combinations like running with -XX:ZCollectionInterval=0.01 -
>> XX:ZFragmentationLimit=0.
>> Running above some of above concurrently (load ~240), slow debug,
>> etc...
>
> Robbin Ehn has updated the pull request with a new target base due to a merge or a rebase. The pull request now contains six commits:
> 
>  - White space fixes
>  - Merge branch 'master' into SuspendInHandshake
>  - Review fixes
>  - Merge branch 'master' into SuspendInHandshake
>  - Merge branch 'master' into SuspendInHandshake
>  - 8257831: Suspend with handshake (review baseline)

Nice ��
Richard.

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

Marked as reviewed by rrich (Reviewer).

PR: https://git.openjdk.java.net/jdk/pull/3191


More information about the hotspot-runtime-dev mailing list