8a9f2a6bbd
Compiling with LTO revealed a number of cases in the runtime and standard library where C and Go disagreed about the type of an object or function (or where Go and code generated by the compiler disagreed). In all cases the underlying representation was the same (e.g., uintptr vs. void*), so this wasn't causing actual problems, but it did result in a number of annoying warnings when compiling with LTO. Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/160700 From-SVN: r268923
2248 lines
73 KiB
Go
2248 lines
73 KiB
Go
// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
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// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
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// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
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// Garbage collector (GC).
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//
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// The GC runs concurrently with mutator threads, is type accurate (aka precise), allows multiple
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// GC thread to run in parallel. It is a concurrent mark and sweep that uses a write barrier. It is
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// non-generational and non-compacting. Allocation is done using size segregated per P allocation
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// areas to minimize fragmentation while eliminating locks in the common case.
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//
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// The algorithm decomposes into several steps.
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// This is a high level description of the algorithm being used. For an overview of GC a good
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// place to start is Richard Jones' gchandbook.org.
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//
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// The algorithm's intellectual heritage includes Dijkstra's on-the-fly algorithm, see
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// Edsger W. Dijkstra, Leslie Lamport, A. J. Martin, C. S. Scholten, and E. F. M. Steffens. 1978.
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// On-the-fly garbage collection: an exercise in cooperation. Commun. ACM 21, 11 (November 1978),
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// 966-975.
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// For journal quality proofs that these steps are complete, correct, and terminate see
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// Hudson, R., and Moss, J.E.B. Copying Garbage Collection without stopping the world.
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// Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience 15(3-5), 2003.
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//
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// 1. GC performs sweep termination.
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//
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// a. Stop the world. This causes all Ps to reach a GC safe-point.
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//
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// b. Sweep any unswept spans. There will only be unswept spans if
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// this GC cycle was forced before the expected time.
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//
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// 2. GC performs the mark phase.
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//
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// a. Prepare for the mark phase by setting gcphase to _GCmark
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// (from _GCoff), enabling the write barrier, enabling mutator
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// assists, and enqueueing root mark jobs. No objects may be
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// scanned until all Ps have enabled the write barrier, which is
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// accomplished using STW.
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//
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// b. Start the world. From this point, GC work is done by mark
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// workers started by the scheduler and by assists performed as
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// part of allocation. The write barrier shades both the
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// overwritten pointer and the new pointer value for any pointer
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// writes (see mbarrier.go for details). Newly allocated objects
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// are immediately marked black.
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//
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// c. GC performs root marking jobs. This includes scanning all
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// stacks, shading all globals, and shading any heap pointers in
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// off-heap runtime data structures. Scanning a stack stops a
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// goroutine, shades any pointers found on its stack, and then
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// resumes the goroutine.
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//
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// d. GC drains the work queue of grey objects, scanning each grey
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// object to black and shading all pointers found in the object
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// (which in turn may add those pointers to the work queue).
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//
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// e. Because GC work is spread across local caches, GC uses a
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// distributed termination algorithm to detect when there are no
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// more root marking jobs or grey objects (see gcMarkDone). At this
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// point, GC transitions to mark termination.
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//
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// 3. GC performs mark termination.
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//
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// a. Stop the world.
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//
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// b. Set gcphase to _GCmarktermination, and disable workers and
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// assists.
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//
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// c. Perform housekeeping like flushing mcaches.
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//
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// 4. GC performs the sweep phase.
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//
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// a. Prepare for the sweep phase by setting gcphase to _GCoff,
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// setting up sweep state and disabling the write barrier.
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//
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// b. Start the world. From this point on, newly allocated objects
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// are white, and allocating sweeps spans before use if necessary.
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//
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// c. GC does concurrent sweeping in the background and in response
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// to allocation. See description below.
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//
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// 5. When sufficient allocation has taken place, replay the sequence
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// starting with 1 above. See discussion of GC rate below.
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// Concurrent sweep.
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//
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// The sweep phase proceeds concurrently with normal program execution.
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// The heap is swept span-by-span both lazily (when a goroutine needs another span)
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// and concurrently in a background goroutine (this helps programs that are not CPU bound).
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// At the end of STW mark termination all spans are marked as "needs sweeping".
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//
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// The background sweeper goroutine simply sweeps spans one-by-one.
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//
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// To avoid requesting more OS memory while there are unswept spans, when a
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// goroutine needs another span, it first attempts to reclaim that much memory
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// by sweeping. When a goroutine needs to allocate a new small-object span, it
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// sweeps small-object spans for the same object size until it frees at least
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// one object. When a goroutine needs to allocate large-object span from heap,
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// it sweeps spans until it frees at least that many pages into heap. There is
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// one case where this may not suffice: if a goroutine sweeps and frees two
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// nonadjacent one-page spans to the heap, it will allocate a new two-page
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// span, but there can still be other one-page unswept spans which could be
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// combined into a two-page span.
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//
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// It's critical to ensure that no operations proceed on unswept spans (that would corrupt
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// mark bits in GC bitmap). During GC all mcaches are flushed into the central cache,
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// so they are empty. When a goroutine grabs a new span into mcache, it sweeps it.
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// When a goroutine explicitly frees an object or sets a finalizer, it ensures that
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// the span is swept (either by sweeping it, or by waiting for the concurrent sweep to finish).
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// The finalizer goroutine is kicked off only when all spans are swept.
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// When the next GC starts, it sweeps all not-yet-swept spans (if any).
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// GC rate.
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// Next GC is after we've allocated an extra amount of memory proportional to
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// the amount already in use. The proportion is controlled by GOGC environment variable
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// (100 by default). If GOGC=100 and we're using 4M, we'll GC again when we get to 8M
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// (this mark is tracked in next_gc variable). This keeps the GC cost in linear
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// proportion to the allocation cost. Adjusting GOGC just changes the linear constant
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// (and also the amount of extra memory used).
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// Oblets
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//
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// In order to prevent long pauses while scanning large objects and to
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// improve parallelism, the garbage collector breaks up scan jobs for
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// objects larger than maxObletBytes into "oblets" of at most
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// maxObletBytes. When scanning encounters the beginning of a large
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// object, it scans only the first oblet and enqueues the remaining
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// oblets as new scan jobs.
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package runtime
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import (
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"internal/cpu"
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"runtime/internal/atomic"
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"unsafe"
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)
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const (
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_DebugGC = 0
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_ConcurrentSweep = true
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_FinBlockSize = 4 * 1024
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// sweepMinHeapDistance is a lower bound on the heap distance
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// (in bytes) reserved for concurrent sweeping between GC
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// cycles. This will be scaled by gcpercent/100.
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sweepMinHeapDistance = 1024 * 1024
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)
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// heapminimum is the minimum heap size at which to trigger GC.
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// For small heaps, this overrides the usual GOGC*live set rule.
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//
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// When there is a very small live set but a lot of allocation, simply
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// collecting when the heap reaches GOGC*live results in many GC
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// cycles and high total per-GC overhead. This minimum amortizes this
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// per-GC overhead while keeping the heap reasonably small.
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//
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// During initialization this is set to 4MB*GOGC/100. In the case of
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// GOGC==0, this will set heapminimum to 0, resulting in constant
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// collection even when the heap size is small, which is useful for
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// debugging.
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var heapminimum uint64 = defaultHeapMinimum
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// defaultHeapMinimum is the value of heapminimum for GOGC==100.
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const defaultHeapMinimum = 4 << 20
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// Initialized from $GOGC. GOGC=off means no GC.
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var gcpercent int32
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func gcinit() {
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if unsafe.Sizeof(workbuf{}) != _WorkbufSize {
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throw("size of Workbuf is suboptimal")
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}
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// No sweep on the first cycle.
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mheap_.sweepdone = 1
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// Set a reasonable initial GC trigger.
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memstats.triggerRatio = 7 / 8.0
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// Fake a heap_marked value so it looks like a trigger at
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// heapminimum is the appropriate growth from heap_marked.
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// This will go into computing the initial GC goal.
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memstats.heap_marked = uint64(float64(heapminimum) / (1 + memstats.triggerRatio))
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// Set gcpercent from the environment. This will also compute
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// and set the GC trigger and goal.
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_ = setGCPercent(readgogc())
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work.startSema = 1
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work.markDoneSema = 1
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}
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func readgogc() int32 {
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p := gogetenv("GOGC")
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if p == "off" {
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return -1
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}
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if n, ok := atoi32(p); ok {
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return n
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}
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return 100
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}
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// gcenable is called after the bulk of the runtime initialization,
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// just before we're about to start letting user code run.
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// It kicks off the background sweeper goroutine and enables GC.
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func gcenable() {
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c := make(chan int, 1)
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expectSystemGoroutine()
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go bgsweep(c)
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<-c
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memstats.enablegc = true // now that runtime is initialized, GC is okay
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}
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//go:linkname setGCPercent runtime..z2fdebug.setGCPercent
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func setGCPercent(in int32) (out int32) {
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lock(&mheap_.lock)
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out = gcpercent
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if in < 0 {
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in = -1
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}
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gcpercent = in
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heapminimum = defaultHeapMinimum * uint64(gcpercent) / 100
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// Update pacing in response to gcpercent change.
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gcSetTriggerRatio(memstats.triggerRatio)
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unlock(&mheap_.lock)
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// If we just disabled GC, wait for any concurrent GC mark to
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// finish so we always return with no GC running.
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if in < 0 {
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gcWaitOnMark(atomic.Load(&work.cycles))
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}
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return out
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}
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// Garbage collector phase.
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// Indicates to write barrier and synchronization task to perform.
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var gcphase uint32
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// The compiler knows about this variable.
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// If you change it, you must change gofrontend/wb.cc, too.
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// If you change the first four bytes, you must also change the write
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// barrier insertion code.
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var writeBarrier struct {
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enabled bool // compiler emits a check of this before calling write barrier
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pad [3]byte // compiler uses 32-bit load for "enabled" field
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needed bool // whether we need a write barrier for current GC phase
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cgo bool // whether we need a write barrier for a cgo check
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alignme uint64 // guarantee alignment so that compiler can use a 32 or 64-bit load
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}
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// gcBlackenEnabled is 1 if mutator assists and background mark
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// workers are allowed to blacken objects. This must only be set when
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// gcphase == _GCmark.
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var gcBlackenEnabled uint32
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const (
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_GCoff = iota // GC not running; sweeping in background, write barrier disabled
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_GCmark // GC marking roots and workbufs: allocate black, write barrier ENABLED
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_GCmarktermination // GC mark termination: allocate black, P's help GC, write barrier ENABLED
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)
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//go:nosplit
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func setGCPhase(x uint32) {
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atomic.Store(&gcphase, x)
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writeBarrier.needed = gcphase == _GCmark || gcphase == _GCmarktermination
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writeBarrier.enabled = writeBarrier.needed || writeBarrier.cgo
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}
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// gcMarkWorkerMode represents the mode that a concurrent mark worker
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// should operate in.
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//
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// Concurrent marking happens through four different mechanisms. One
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// is mutator assists, which happen in response to allocations and are
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// not scheduled. The other three are variations in the per-P mark
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// workers and are distinguished by gcMarkWorkerMode.
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type gcMarkWorkerMode int
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const (
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// gcMarkWorkerDedicatedMode indicates that the P of a mark
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// worker is dedicated to running that mark worker. The mark
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// worker should run without preemption.
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gcMarkWorkerDedicatedMode gcMarkWorkerMode = iota
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// gcMarkWorkerFractionalMode indicates that a P is currently
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// running the "fractional" mark worker. The fractional worker
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// is necessary when GOMAXPROCS*gcBackgroundUtilization is not
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// an integer. The fractional worker should run until it is
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// preempted and will be scheduled to pick up the fractional
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// part of GOMAXPROCS*gcBackgroundUtilization.
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gcMarkWorkerFractionalMode
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// gcMarkWorkerIdleMode indicates that a P is running the mark
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// worker because it has nothing else to do. The idle worker
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// should run until it is preempted and account its time
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// against gcController.idleMarkTime.
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gcMarkWorkerIdleMode
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)
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// gcMarkWorkerModeStrings are the strings labels of gcMarkWorkerModes
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// to use in execution traces.
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var gcMarkWorkerModeStrings = [...]string{
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"GC (dedicated)",
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"GC (fractional)",
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"GC (idle)",
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}
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// gcController implements the GC pacing controller that determines
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// when to trigger concurrent garbage collection and how much marking
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// work to do in mutator assists and background marking.
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//
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// It uses a feedback control algorithm to adjust the memstats.gc_trigger
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// trigger based on the heap growth and GC CPU utilization each cycle.
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// This algorithm optimizes for heap growth to match GOGC and for CPU
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// utilization between assist and background marking to be 25% of
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// GOMAXPROCS. The high-level design of this algorithm is documented
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// at https://golang.org/s/go15gcpacing.
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//
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// All fields of gcController are used only during a single mark
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// cycle.
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var gcController gcControllerState
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type gcControllerState struct {
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// scanWork is the total scan work performed this cycle. This
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// is updated atomically during the cycle. Updates occur in
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// bounded batches, since it is both written and read
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// throughout the cycle. At the end of the cycle, this is how
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// much of the retained heap is scannable.
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//
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// Currently this is the bytes of heap scanned. For most uses,
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// this is an opaque unit of work, but for estimation the
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// definition is important.
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scanWork int64
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// bgScanCredit is the scan work credit accumulated by the
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// concurrent background scan. This credit is accumulated by
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// the background scan and stolen by mutator assists. This is
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// updated atomically. Updates occur in bounded batches, since
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// it is both written and read throughout the cycle.
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bgScanCredit int64
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// assistTime is the nanoseconds spent in mutator assists
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// during this cycle. This is updated atomically. Updates
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// occur in bounded batches, since it is both written and read
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// throughout the cycle.
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assistTime int64
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// dedicatedMarkTime is the nanoseconds spent in dedicated
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// mark workers during this cycle. This is updated atomically
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// at the end of the concurrent mark phase.
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dedicatedMarkTime int64
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// fractionalMarkTime is the nanoseconds spent in the
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// fractional mark worker during this cycle. This is updated
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// atomically throughout the cycle and will be up-to-date if
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// the fractional mark worker is not currently running.
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fractionalMarkTime int64
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// idleMarkTime is the nanoseconds spent in idle marking
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// during this cycle. This is updated atomically throughout
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// the cycle.
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idleMarkTime int64
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// markStartTime is the absolute start time in nanoseconds
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// that assists and background mark workers started.
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markStartTime int64
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// dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded is the number of dedicated mark
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// workers that need to be started. This is computed at the
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// beginning of each cycle and decremented atomically as
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// dedicated mark workers get started.
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dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded int64
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// assistWorkPerByte is the ratio of scan work to allocated
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// bytes that should be performed by mutator assists. This is
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// computed at the beginning of each cycle and updated every
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// time heap_scan is updated.
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assistWorkPerByte float64
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// assistBytesPerWork is 1/assistWorkPerByte.
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assistBytesPerWork float64
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// fractionalUtilizationGoal is the fraction of wall clock
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// time that should be spent in the fractional mark worker on
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// each P that isn't running a dedicated worker.
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//
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// For example, if the utilization goal is 25% and there are
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// no dedicated workers, this will be 0.25. If the goal is
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// 25%, there is one dedicated worker, and GOMAXPROCS is 5,
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// this will be 0.05 to make up the missing 5%.
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//
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// If this is zero, no fractional workers are needed.
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fractionalUtilizationGoal float64
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_ cpu.CacheLinePad
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}
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// startCycle resets the GC controller's state and computes estimates
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// for a new GC cycle. The caller must hold worldsema.
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func (c *gcControllerState) startCycle() {
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c.scanWork = 0
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c.bgScanCredit = 0
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c.assistTime = 0
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c.dedicatedMarkTime = 0
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c.fractionalMarkTime = 0
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c.idleMarkTime = 0
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// If this is the first GC cycle or we're operating on a very
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// small heap, fake heap_marked so it looks like gc_trigger is
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// the appropriate growth from heap_marked, even though the
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// real heap_marked may not have a meaningful value (on the
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// first cycle) or may be much smaller (resulting in a large
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// error response).
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if memstats.gc_trigger <= heapminimum {
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memstats.heap_marked = uint64(float64(memstats.gc_trigger) / (1 + memstats.triggerRatio))
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}
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// Re-compute the heap goal for this cycle in case something
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// changed. This is the same calculation we use elsewhere.
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memstats.next_gc = memstats.heap_marked + memstats.heap_marked*uint64(gcpercent)/100
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if gcpercent < 0 {
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memstats.next_gc = ^uint64(0)
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}
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// Ensure that the heap goal is at least a little larger than
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// the current live heap size. This may not be the case if GC
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// start is delayed or if the allocation that pushed heap_live
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// over gc_trigger is large or if the trigger is really close to
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// GOGC. Assist is proportional to this distance, so enforce a
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// minimum distance, even if it means going over the GOGC goal
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// by a tiny bit.
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if memstats.next_gc < memstats.heap_live+1024*1024 {
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memstats.next_gc = memstats.heap_live + 1024*1024
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}
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// Compute the background mark utilization goal. In general,
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// this may not come out exactly. We round the number of
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// dedicated workers so that the utilization is closest to
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// 25%. For small GOMAXPROCS, this would introduce too much
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// error, so we add fractional workers in that case.
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totalUtilizationGoal := float64(gomaxprocs) * gcBackgroundUtilization
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c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded = int64(totalUtilizationGoal + 0.5)
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utilError := float64(c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded)/totalUtilizationGoal - 1
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const maxUtilError = 0.3
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if utilError < -maxUtilError || utilError > maxUtilError {
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// Rounding put us more than 30% off our goal. With
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// gcBackgroundUtilization of 25%, this happens for
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// GOMAXPROCS<=3 or GOMAXPROCS=6. Enable fractional
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// workers to compensate.
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if float64(c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded) > totalUtilizationGoal {
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// Too many dedicated workers.
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c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded--
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}
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c.fractionalUtilizationGoal = (totalUtilizationGoal - float64(c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded)) / float64(gomaxprocs)
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} else {
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c.fractionalUtilizationGoal = 0
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}
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// In STW mode, we just want dedicated workers.
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if debug.gcstoptheworld > 0 {
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c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded = int64(gomaxprocs)
|
|
c.fractionalUtilizationGoal = 0
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Clear per-P state
|
|
for _, p := range allp {
|
|
p.gcAssistTime = 0
|
|
p.gcFractionalMarkTime = 0
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Compute initial values for controls that are updated
|
|
// throughout the cycle.
|
|
c.revise()
|
|
|
|
if debug.gcpacertrace > 0 {
|
|
print("pacer: assist ratio=", c.assistWorkPerByte,
|
|
" (scan ", memstats.heap_scan>>20, " MB in ",
|
|
work.initialHeapLive>>20, "->",
|
|
memstats.next_gc>>20, " MB)",
|
|
" workers=", c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded,
|
|
"+", c.fractionalUtilizationGoal, "\n")
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// revise updates the assist ratio during the GC cycle to account for
|
|
// improved estimates. This should be called either under STW or
|
|
// whenever memstats.heap_scan, memstats.heap_live, or
|
|
// memstats.next_gc is updated (with mheap_.lock held).
|
|
//
|
|
// It should only be called when gcBlackenEnabled != 0 (because this
|
|
// is when assists are enabled and the necessary statistics are
|
|
// available).
|
|
func (c *gcControllerState) revise() {
|
|
gcpercent := gcpercent
|
|
if gcpercent < 0 {
|
|
// If GC is disabled but we're running a forced GC,
|
|
// act like GOGC is huge for the below calculations.
|
|
gcpercent = 100000
|
|
}
|
|
live := atomic.Load64(&memstats.heap_live)
|
|
|
|
var heapGoal, scanWorkExpected int64
|
|
if live <= memstats.next_gc {
|
|
// We're under the soft goal. Pace GC to complete at
|
|
// next_gc assuming the heap is in steady-state.
|
|
heapGoal = int64(memstats.next_gc)
|
|
|
|
// Compute the expected scan work remaining.
|
|
//
|
|
// This is estimated based on the expected
|
|
// steady-state scannable heap. For example, with
|
|
// GOGC=100, only half of the scannable heap is
|
|
// expected to be live, so that's what we target.
|
|
//
|
|
// (This is a float calculation to avoid overflowing on
|
|
// 100*heap_scan.)
|
|
scanWorkExpected = int64(float64(memstats.heap_scan) * 100 / float64(100+gcpercent))
|
|
} else {
|
|
// We're past the soft goal. Pace GC so that in the
|
|
// worst case it will complete by the hard goal.
|
|
const maxOvershoot = 1.1
|
|
heapGoal = int64(float64(memstats.next_gc) * maxOvershoot)
|
|
|
|
// Compute the upper bound on the scan work remaining.
|
|
scanWorkExpected = int64(memstats.heap_scan)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Compute the remaining scan work estimate.
|
|
//
|
|
// Note that we currently count allocations during GC as both
|
|
// scannable heap (heap_scan) and scan work completed
|
|
// (scanWork), so allocation will change this difference will
|
|
// slowly in the soft regime and not at all in the hard
|
|
// regime.
|
|
scanWorkRemaining := scanWorkExpected - c.scanWork
|
|
if scanWorkRemaining < 1000 {
|
|
// We set a somewhat arbitrary lower bound on
|
|
// remaining scan work since if we aim a little high,
|
|
// we can miss by a little.
|
|
//
|
|
// We *do* need to enforce that this is at least 1,
|
|
// since marking is racy and double-scanning objects
|
|
// may legitimately make the remaining scan work
|
|
// negative, even in the hard goal regime.
|
|
scanWorkRemaining = 1000
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Compute the heap distance remaining.
|
|
heapRemaining := heapGoal - int64(live)
|
|
if heapRemaining <= 0 {
|
|
// This shouldn't happen, but if it does, avoid
|
|
// dividing by zero or setting the assist negative.
|
|
heapRemaining = 1
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Compute the mutator assist ratio so by the time the mutator
|
|
// allocates the remaining heap bytes up to next_gc, it will
|
|
// have done (or stolen) the remaining amount of scan work.
|
|
c.assistWorkPerByte = float64(scanWorkRemaining) / float64(heapRemaining)
|
|
c.assistBytesPerWork = float64(heapRemaining) / float64(scanWorkRemaining)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// endCycle computes the trigger ratio for the next cycle.
|
|
func (c *gcControllerState) endCycle() float64 {
|
|
if work.userForced {
|
|
// Forced GC means this cycle didn't start at the
|
|
// trigger, so where it finished isn't good
|
|
// information about how to adjust the trigger.
|
|
// Just leave it where it is.
|
|
return memstats.triggerRatio
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Proportional response gain for the trigger controller. Must
|
|
// be in [0, 1]. Lower values smooth out transient effects but
|
|
// take longer to respond to phase changes. Higher values
|
|
// react to phase changes quickly, but are more affected by
|
|
// transient changes. Values near 1 may be unstable.
|
|
const triggerGain = 0.5
|
|
|
|
// Compute next cycle trigger ratio. First, this computes the
|
|
// "error" for this cycle; that is, how far off the trigger
|
|
// was from what it should have been, accounting for both heap
|
|
// growth and GC CPU utilization. We compute the actual heap
|
|
// growth during this cycle and scale that by how far off from
|
|
// the goal CPU utilization we were (to estimate the heap
|
|
// growth if we had the desired CPU utilization). The
|
|
// difference between this estimate and the GOGC-based goal
|
|
// heap growth is the error.
|
|
goalGrowthRatio := float64(gcpercent) / 100
|
|
actualGrowthRatio := float64(memstats.heap_live)/float64(memstats.heap_marked) - 1
|
|
assistDuration := nanotime() - c.markStartTime
|
|
|
|
// Assume background mark hit its utilization goal.
|
|
utilization := gcBackgroundUtilization
|
|
// Add assist utilization; avoid divide by zero.
|
|
if assistDuration > 0 {
|
|
utilization += float64(c.assistTime) / float64(assistDuration*int64(gomaxprocs))
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
triggerError := goalGrowthRatio - memstats.triggerRatio - utilization/gcGoalUtilization*(actualGrowthRatio-memstats.triggerRatio)
|
|
|
|
// Finally, we adjust the trigger for next time by this error,
|
|
// damped by the proportional gain.
|
|
triggerRatio := memstats.triggerRatio + triggerGain*triggerError
|
|
|
|
if debug.gcpacertrace > 0 {
|
|
// Print controller state in terms of the design
|
|
// document.
|
|
H_m_prev := memstats.heap_marked
|
|
h_t := memstats.triggerRatio
|
|
H_T := memstats.gc_trigger
|
|
h_a := actualGrowthRatio
|
|
H_a := memstats.heap_live
|
|
h_g := goalGrowthRatio
|
|
H_g := int64(float64(H_m_prev) * (1 + h_g))
|
|
u_a := utilization
|
|
u_g := gcGoalUtilization
|
|
W_a := c.scanWork
|
|
print("pacer: H_m_prev=", H_m_prev,
|
|
" h_t=", h_t, " H_T=", H_T,
|
|
" h_a=", h_a, " H_a=", H_a,
|
|
" h_g=", h_g, " H_g=", H_g,
|
|
" u_a=", u_a, " u_g=", u_g,
|
|
" W_a=", W_a,
|
|
" goalΔ=", goalGrowthRatio-h_t,
|
|
" actualΔ=", h_a-h_t,
|
|
" u_a/u_g=", u_a/u_g,
|
|
"\n")
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return triggerRatio
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// enlistWorker encourages another dedicated mark worker to start on
|
|
// another P if there are spare worker slots. It is used by putfull
|
|
// when more work is made available.
|
|
//
|
|
//go:nowritebarrier
|
|
func (c *gcControllerState) enlistWorker() {
|
|
// If there are idle Ps, wake one so it will run an idle worker.
|
|
// NOTE: This is suspected of causing deadlocks. See golang.org/issue/19112.
|
|
//
|
|
// if atomic.Load(&sched.npidle) != 0 && atomic.Load(&sched.nmspinning) == 0 {
|
|
// wakep()
|
|
// return
|
|
// }
|
|
|
|
// There are no idle Ps. If we need more dedicated workers,
|
|
// try to preempt a running P so it will switch to a worker.
|
|
if c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded <= 0 {
|
|
return
|
|
}
|
|
// Pick a random other P to preempt.
|
|
if gomaxprocs <= 1 {
|
|
return
|
|
}
|
|
gp := getg()
|
|
if gp == nil || gp.m == nil || gp.m.p == 0 {
|
|
return
|
|
}
|
|
myID := gp.m.p.ptr().id
|
|
for tries := 0; tries < 5; tries++ {
|
|
id := int32(fastrandn(uint32(gomaxprocs - 1)))
|
|
if id >= myID {
|
|
id++
|
|
}
|
|
p := allp[id]
|
|
if p.status != _Prunning {
|
|
continue
|
|
}
|
|
if preemptone(p) {
|
|
return
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// findRunnableGCWorker returns the background mark worker for _p_ if it
|
|
// should be run. This must only be called when gcBlackenEnabled != 0.
|
|
func (c *gcControllerState) findRunnableGCWorker(_p_ *p) *g {
|
|
if gcBlackenEnabled == 0 {
|
|
throw("gcControllerState.findRunnable: blackening not enabled")
|
|
}
|
|
if _p_.gcBgMarkWorker == 0 {
|
|
// The mark worker associated with this P is blocked
|
|
// performing a mark transition. We can't run it
|
|
// because it may be on some other run or wait queue.
|
|
return nil
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if !gcMarkWorkAvailable(_p_) {
|
|
// No work to be done right now. This can happen at
|
|
// the end of the mark phase when there are still
|
|
// assists tapering off. Don't bother running a worker
|
|
// now because it'll just return immediately.
|
|
return nil
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
decIfPositive := func(ptr *int64) bool {
|
|
if *ptr > 0 {
|
|
if atomic.Xaddint64(ptr, -1) >= 0 {
|
|
return true
|
|
}
|
|
// We lost a race
|
|
atomic.Xaddint64(ptr, +1)
|
|
}
|
|
return false
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if decIfPositive(&c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded) {
|
|
// This P is now dedicated to marking until the end of
|
|
// the concurrent mark phase.
|
|
_p_.gcMarkWorkerMode = gcMarkWorkerDedicatedMode
|
|
} else if c.fractionalUtilizationGoal == 0 {
|
|
// No need for fractional workers.
|
|
return nil
|
|
} else {
|
|
// Is this P behind on the fractional utilization
|
|
// goal?
|
|
//
|
|
// This should be kept in sync with pollFractionalWorkerExit.
|
|
delta := nanotime() - gcController.markStartTime
|
|
if delta > 0 && float64(_p_.gcFractionalMarkTime)/float64(delta) > c.fractionalUtilizationGoal {
|
|
// Nope. No need to run a fractional worker.
|
|
return nil
|
|
}
|
|
// Run a fractional worker.
|
|
_p_.gcMarkWorkerMode = gcMarkWorkerFractionalMode
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Run the background mark worker
|
|
gp := _p_.gcBgMarkWorker.ptr()
|
|
casgstatus(gp, _Gwaiting, _Grunnable)
|
|
if trace.enabled {
|
|
traceGoUnpark(gp, 0)
|
|
}
|
|
return gp
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// pollFractionalWorkerExit reports whether a fractional mark worker
|
|
// should self-preempt. It assumes it is called from the fractional
|
|
// worker.
|
|
func pollFractionalWorkerExit() bool {
|
|
// This should be kept in sync with the fractional worker
|
|
// scheduler logic in findRunnableGCWorker.
|
|
now := nanotime()
|
|
delta := now - gcController.markStartTime
|
|
if delta <= 0 {
|
|
return true
|
|
}
|
|
p := getg().m.p.ptr()
|
|
selfTime := p.gcFractionalMarkTime + (now - p.gcMarkWorkerStartTime)
|
|
// Add some slack to the utilization goal so that the
|
|
// fractional worker isn't behind again the instant it exits.
|
|
return float64(selfTime)/float64(delta) > 1.2*gcController.fractionalUtilizationGoal
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// gcSetTriggerRatio sets the trigger ratio and updates everything
|
|
// derived from it: the absolute trigger, the heap goal, mark pacing,
|
|
// and sweep pacing.
|
|
//
|
|
// This can be called any time. If GC is the in the middle of a
|
|
// concurrent phase, it will adjust the pacing of that phase.
|
|
//
|
|
// This depends on gcpercent, memstats.heap_marked, and
|
|
// memstats.heap_live. These must be up to date.
|
|
//
|
|
// mheap_.lock must be held or the world must be stopped.
|
|
func gcSetTriggerRatio(triggerRatio float64) {
|
|
// Set the trigger ratio, capped to reasonable bounds.
|
|
if triggerRatio < 0 {
|
|
// This can happen if the mutator is allocating very
|
|
// quickly or the GC is scanning very slowly.
|
|
triggerRatio = 0
|
|
} else if gcpercent >= 0 {
|
|
// Ensure there's always a little margin so that the
|
|
// mutator assist ratio isn't infinity.
|
|
maxTriggerRatio := 0.95 * float64(gcpercent) / 100
|
|
if triggerRatio > maxTriggerRatio {
|
|
triggerRatio = maxTriggerRatio
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
memstats.triggerRatio = triggerRatio
|
|
|
|
// Compute the absolute GC trigger from the trigger ratio.
|
|
//
|
|
// We trigger the next GC cycle when the allocated heap has
|
|
// grown by the trigger ratio over the marked heap size.
|
|
trigger := ^uint64(0)
|
|
if gcpercent >= 0 {
|
|
trigger = uint64(float64(memstats.heap_marked) * (1 + triggerRatio))
|
|
// Don't trigger below the minimum heap size.
|
|
minTrigger := heapminimum
|
|
if !isSweepDone() {
|
|
// Concurrent sweep happens in the heap growth
|
|
// from heap_live to gc_trigger, so ensure
|
|
// that concurrent sweep has some heap growth
|
|
// in which to perform sweeping before we
|
|
// start the next GC cycle.
|
|
sweepMin := atomic.Load64(&memstats.heap_live) + sweepMinHeapDistance*uint64(gcpercent)/100
|
|
if sweepMin > minTrigger {
|
|
minTrigger = sweepMin
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
if trigger < minTrigger {
|
|
trigger = minTrigger
|
|
}
|
|
if int64(trigger) < 0 {
|
|
print("runtime: next_gc=", memstats.next_gc, " heap_marked=", memstats.heap_marked, " heap_live=", memstats.heap_live, " initialHeapLive=", work.initialHeapLive, "triggerRatio=", triggerRatio, " minTrigger=", minTrigger, "\n")
|
|
throw("gc_trigger underflow")
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
memstats.gc_trigger = trigger
|
|
|
|
// Compute the next GC goal, which is when the allocated heap
|
|
// has grown by GOGC/100 over the heap marked by the last
|
|
// cycle.
|
|
goal := ^uint64(0)
|
|
if gcpercent >= 0 {
|
|
goal = memstats.heap_marked + memstats.heap_marked*uint64(gcpercent)/100
|
|
if goal < trigger {
|
|
// The trigger ratio is always less than GOGC/100, but
|
|
// other bounds on the trigger may have raised it.
|
|
// Push up the goal, too.
|
|
goal = trigger
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
memstats.next_gc = goal
|
|
if trace.enabled {
|
|
traceNextGC()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Update mark pacing.
|
|
if gcphase != _GCoff {
|
|
gcController.revise()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Update sweep pacing.
|
|
if isSweepDone() {
|
|
mheap_.sweepPagesPerByte = 0
|
|
} else {
|
|
// Concurrent sweep needs to sweep all of the in-use
|
|
// pages by the time the allocated heap reaches the GC
|
|
// trigger. Compute the ratio of in-use pages to sweep
|
|
// per byte allocated, accounting for the fact that
|
|
// some might already be swept.
|
|
heapLiveBasis := atomic.Load64(&memstats.heap_live)
|
|
heapDistance := int64(trigger) - int64(heapLiveBasis)
|
|
// Add a little margin so rounding errors and
|
|
// concurrent sweep are less likely to leave pages
|
|
// unswept when GC starts.
|
|
heapDistance -= 1024 * 1024
|
|
if heapDistance < _PageSize {
|
|
// Avoid setting the sweep ratio extremely high
|
|
heapDistance = _PageSize
|
|
}
|
|
pagesSwept := atomic.Load64(&mheap_.pagesSwept)
|
|
sweepDistancePages := int64(mheap_.pagesInUse) - int64(pagesSwept)
|
|
if sweepDistancePages <= 0 {
|
|
mheap_.sweepPagesPerByte = 0
|
|
} else {
|
|
mheap_.sweepPagesPerByte = float64(sweepDistancePages) / float64(heapDistance)
|
|
mheap_.sweepHeapLiveBasis = heapLiveBasis
|
|
// Write pagesSweptBasis last, since this
|
|
// signals concurrent sweeps to recompute
|
|
// their debt.
|
|
atomic.Store64(&mheap_.pagesSweptBasis, pagesSwept)
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// gcGoalUtilization is the goal CPU utilization for
|
|
// marking as a fraction of GOMAXPROCS.
|
|
const gcGoalUtilization = 0.30
|
|
|
|
// gcBackgroundUtilization is the fixed CPU utilization for background
|
|
// marking. It must be <= gcGoalUtilization. The difference between
|
|
// gcGoalUtilization and gcBackgroundUtilization will be made up by
|
|
// mark assists. The scheduler will aim to use within 50% of this
|
|
// goal.
|
|
//
|
|
// Setting this to < gcGoalUtilization avoids saturating the trigger
|
|
// feedback controller when there are no assists, which allows it to
|
|
// better control CPU and heap growth. However, the larger the gap,
|
|
// the more mutator assists are expected to happen, which impact
|
|
// mutator latency.
|
|
const gcBackgroundUtilization = 0.25
|
|
|
|
// gcCreditSlack is the amount of scan work credit that can
|
|
// accumulate locally before updating gcController.scanWork and,
|
|
// optionally, gcController.bgScanCredit. Lower values give a more
|
|
// accurate assist ratio and make it more likely that assists will
|
|
// successfully steal background credit. Higher values reduce memory
|
|
// contention.
|
|
const gcCreditSlack = 2000
|
|
|
|
// gcAssistTimeSlack is the nanoseconds of mutator assist time that
|
|
// can accumulate on a P before updating gcController.assistTime.
|
|
const gcAssistTimeSlack = 5000
|
|
|
|
// gcOverAssistWork determines how many extra units of scan work a GC
|
|
// assist does when an assist happens. This amortizes the cost of an
|
|
// assist by pre-paying for this many bytes of future allocations.
|
|
const gcOverAssistWork = 64 << 10
|
|
|
|
var work struct {
|
|
full lfstack // lock-free list of full blocks workbuf
|
|
empty lfstack // lock-free list of empty blocks workbuf
|
|
pad0 cpu.CacheLinePad // prevents false-sharing between full/empty and nproc/nwait
|
|
|
|
wbufSpans struct {
|
|
lock mutex
|
|
// free is a list of spans dedicated to workbufs, but
|
|
// that don't currently contain any workbufs.
|
|
free mSpanList
|
|
// busy is a list of all spans containing workbufs on
|
|
// one of the workbuf lists.
|
|
busy mSpanList
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Restore 64-bit alignment on 32-bit.
|
|
_ uint32
|
|
|
|
// bytesMarked is the number of bytes marked this cycle. This
|
|
// includes bytes blackened in scanned objects, noscan objects
|
|
// that go straight to black, and permagrey objects scanned by
|
|
// markroot during the concurrent scan phase. This is updated
|
|
// atomically during the cycle. Updates may be batched
|
|
// arbitrarily, since the value is only read at the end of the
|
|
// cycle.
|
|
//
|
|
// Because of benign races during marking, this number may not
|
|
// be the exact number of marked bytes, but it should be very
|
|
// close.
|
|
//
|
|
// Put this field here because it needs 64-bit atomic access
|
|
// (and thus 8-byte alignment even on 32-bit architectures).
|
|
bytesMarked uint64
|
|
|
|
markrootNext uint32 // next markroot job
|
|
markrootJobs uint32 // number of markroot jobs
|
|
|
|
nproc uint32
|
|
tstart int64
|
|
nwait uint32
|
|
ndone uint32
|
|
|
|
// Number of roots of various root types. Set by gcMarkRootPrepare.
|
|
nFlushCacheRoots int
|
|
nDataRoots, nSpanRoots, nStackRoots int
|
|
|
|
// Each type of GC state transition is protected by a lock.
|
|
// Since multiple threads can simultaneously detect the state
|
|
// transition condition, any thread that detects a transition
|
|
// condition must acquire the appropriate transition lock,
|
|
// re-check the transition condition and return if it no
|
|
// longer holds or perform the transition if it does.
|
|
// Likewise, any transition must invalidate the transition
|
|
// condition before releasing the lock. This ensures that each
|
|
// transition is performed by exactly one thread and threads
|
|
// that need the transition to happen block until it has
|
|
// happened.
|
|
//
|
|
// startSema protects the transition from "off" to mark or
|
|
// mark termination.
|
|
startSema uint32
|
|
// markDoneSema protects transitions from mark to mark termination.
|
|
markDoneSema uint32
|
|
|
|
bgMarkReady note // signal background mark worker has started
|
|
bgMarkDone uint32 // cas to 1 when at a background mark completion point
|
|
// Background mark completion signaling
|
|
|
|
// mode is the concurrency mode of the current GC cycle.
|
|
mode gcMode
|
|
|
|
// userForced indicates the current GC cycle was forced by an
|
|
// explicit user call.
|
|
userForced bool
|
|
|
|
// totaltime is the CPU nanoseconds spent in GC since the
|
|
// program started if debug.gctrace > 0.
|
|
totaltime int64
|
|
|
|
// initialHeapLive is the value of memstats.heap_live at the
|
|
// beginning of this GC cycle.
|
|
initialHeapLive uint64
|
|
|
|
// assistQueue is a queue of assists that are blocked because
|
|
// there was neither enough credit to steal or enough work to
|
|
// do.
|
|
assistQueue struct {
|
|
lock mutex
|
|
q gQueue
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// sweepWaiters is a list of blocked goroutines to wake when
|
|
// we transition from mark termination to sweep.
|
|
sweepWaiters struct {
|
|
lock mutex
|
|
list gList
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// cycles is the number of completed GC cycles, where a GC
|
|
// cycle is sweep termination, mark, mark termination, and
|
|
// sweep. This differs from memstats.numgc, which is
|
|
// incremented at mark termination.
|
|
cycles uint32
|
|
|
|
// Timing/utilization stats for this cycle.
|
|
stwprocs, maxprocs int32
|
|
tSweepTerm, tMark, tMarkTerm, tEnd int64 // nanotime() of phase start
|
|
|
|
pauseNS int64 // total STW time this cycle
|
|
pauseStart int64 // nanotime() of last STW
|
|
|
|
// debug.gctrace heap sizes for this cycle.
|
|
heap0, heap1, heap2, heapGoal uint64
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// GC runs a garbage collection and blocks the caller until the
|
|
// garbage collection is complete. It may also block the entire
|
|
// program.
|
|
func GC() {
|
|
// We consider a cycle to be: sweep termination, mark, mark
|
|
// termination, and sweep. This function shouldn't return
|
|
// until a full cycle has been completed, from beginning to
|
|
// end. Hence, we always want to finish up the current cycle
|
|
// and start a new one. That means:
|
|
//
|
|
// 1. In sweep termination, mark, or mark termination of cycle
|
|
// N, wait until mark termination N completes and transitions
|
|
// to sweep N.
|
|
//
|
|
// 2. In sweep N, help with sweep N.
|
|
//
|
|
// At this point we can begin a full cycle N+1.
|
|
//
|
|
// 3. Trigger cycle N+1 by starting sweep termination N+1.
|
|
//
|
|
// 4. Wait for mark termination N+1 to complete.
|
|
//
|
|
// 5. Help with sweep N+1 until it's done.
|
|
//
|
|
// This all has to be written to deal with the fact that the
|
|
// GC may move ahead on its own. For example, when we block
|
|
// until mark termination N, we may wake up in cycle N+2.
|
|
|
|
// Wait until the current sweep termination, mark, and mark
|
|
// termination complete.
|
|
n := atomic.Load(&work.cycles)
|
|
gcWaitOnMark(n)
|
|
|
|
// We're now in sweep N or later. Trigger GC cycle N+1, which
|
|
// will first finish sweep N if necessary and then enter sweep
|
|
// termination N+1.
|
|
gcStart(gcTrigger{kind: gcTriggerCycle, n: n + 1})
|
|
|
|
// Wait for mark termination N+1 to complete.
|
|
gcWaitOnMark(n + 1)
|
|
|
|
// Finish sweep N+1 before returning. We do this both to
|
|
// complete the cycle and because runtime.GC() is often used
|
|
// as part of tests and benchmarks to get the system into a
|
|
// relatively stable and isolated state.
|
|
for atomic.Load(&work.cycles) == n+1 && sweepone() != ^uintptr(0) {
|
|
sweep.nbgsweep++
|
|
Gosched()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Callers may assume that the heap profile reflects the
|
|
// just-completed cycle when this returns (historically this
|
|
// happened because this was a STW GC), but right now the
|
|
// profile still reflects mark termination N, not N+1.
|
|
//
|
|
// As soon as all of the sweep frees from cycle N+1 are done,
|
|
// we can go ahead and publish the heap profile.
|
|
//
|
|
// First, wait for sweeping to finish. (We know there are no
|
|
// more spans on the sweep queue, but we may be concurrently
|
|
// sweeping spans, so we have to wait.)
|
|
for atomic.Load(&work.cycles) == n+1 && atomic.Load(&mheap_.sweepers) != 0 {
|
|
Gosched()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Now we're really done with sweeping, so we can publish the
|
|
// stable heap profile. Only do this if we haven't already hit
|
|
// another mark termination.
|
|
mp := acquirem()
|
|
cycle := atomic.Load(&work.cycles)
|
|
if cycle == n+1 || (gcphase == _GCmark && cycle == n+2) {
|
|
mProf_PostSweep()
|
|
}
|
|
releasem(mp)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// gcWaitOnMark blocks until GC finishes the Nth mark phase. If GC has
|
|
// already completed this mark phase, it returns immediately.
|
|
func gcWaitOnMark(n uint32) {
|
|
for {
|
|
// Disable phase transitions.
|
|
lock(&work.sweepWaiters.lock)
|
|
nMarks := atomic.Load(&work.cycles)
|
|
if gcphase != _GCmark {
|
|
// We've already completed this cycle's mark.
|
|
nMarks++
|
|
}
|
|
if nMarks > n {
|
|
// We're done.
|
|
unlock(&work.sweepWaiters.lock)
|
|
return
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Wait until sweep termination, mark, and mark
|
|
// termination of cycle N complete.
|
|
work.sweepWaiters.list.push(getg())
|
|
goparkunlock(&work.sweepWaiters.lock, waitReasonWaitForGCCycle, traceEvGoBlock, 1)
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// gcMode indicates how concurrent a GC cycle should be.
|
|
type gcMode int
|
|
|
|
const (
|
|
gcBackgroundMode gcMode = iota // concurrent GC and sweep
|
|
gcForceMode // stop-the-world GC now, concurrent sweep
|
|
gcForceBlockMode // stop-the-world GC now and STW sweep (forced by user)
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
// A gcTrigger is a predicate for starting a GC cycle. Specifically,
|
|
// it is an exit condition for the _GCoff phase.
|
|
type gcTrigger struct {
|
|
kind gcTriggerKind
|
|
now int64 // gcTriggerTime: current time
|
|
n uint32 // gcTriggerCycle: cycle number to start
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
type gcTriggerKind int
|
|
|
|
const (
|
|
// gcTriggerAlways indicates that a cycle should be started
|
|
// unconditionally, even if GOGC is off or we're in a cycle
|
|
// right now. This cannot be consolidated with other cycles.
|
|
gcTriggerAlways gcTriggerKind = iota
|
|
|
|
// gcTriggerHeap indicates that a cycle should be started when
|
|
// the heap size reaches the trigger heap size computed by the
|
|
// controller.
|
|
gcTriggerHeap
|
|
|
|
// gcTriggerTime indicates that a cycle should be started when
|
|
// it's been more than forcegcperiod nanoseconds since the
|
|
// previous GC cycle.
|
|
gcTriggerTime
|
|
|
|
// gcTriggerCycle indicates that a cycle should be started if
|
|
// we have not yet started cycle number gcTrigger.n (relative
|
|
// to work.cycles).
|
|
gcTriggerCycle
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
// test reports whether the trigger condition is satisfied, meaning
|
|
// that the exit condition for the _GCoff phase has been met. The exit
|
|
// condition should be tested when allocating.
|
|
func (t gcTrigger) test() bool {
|
|
if !memstats.enablegc || panicking != 0 {
|
|
return false
|
|
}
|
|
if t.kind == gcTriggerAlways {
|
|
return true
|
|
}
|
|
if gcphase != _GCoff {
|
|
return false
|
|
}
|
|
switch t.kind {
|
|
case gcTriggerHeap:
|
|
// Non-atomic access to heap_live for performance. If
|
|
// we are going to trigger on this, this thread just
|
|
// atomically wrote heap_live anyway and we'll see our
|
|
// own write.
|
|
return memstats.heap_live >= memstats.gc_trigger
|
|
case gcTriggerTime:
|
|
if gcpercent < 0 {
|
|
return false
|
|
}
|
|
lastgc := int64(atomic.Load64(&memstats.last_gc_nanotime))
|
|
return lastgc != 0 && t.now-lastgc > forcegcperiod
|
|
case gcTriggerCycle:
|
|
// t.n > work.cycles, but accounting for wraparound.
|
|
return int32(t.n-work.cycles) > 0
|
|
}
|
|
return true
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// gcStart starts the GC. It transitions from _GCoff to _GCmark (if
|
|
// debug.gcstoptheworld == 0) or performs all of GC (if
|
|
// debug.gcstoptheworld != 0).
|
|
//
|
|
// This may return without performing this transition in some cases,
|
|
// such as when called on a system stack or with locks held.
|
|
func gcStart(trigger gcTrigger) {
|
|
// Since this is called from malloc and malloc is called in
|
|
// the guts of a number of libraries that might be holding
|
|
// locks, don't attempt to start GC in non-preemptible or
|
|
// potentially unstable situations.
|
|
mp := acquirem()
|
|
if gp := getg(); gp == mp.g0 || mp.locks > 1 || mp.preemptoff != "" {
|
|
releasem(mp)
|
|
return
|
|
}
|
|
releasem(mp)
|
|
mp = nil
|
|
|
|
// Pick up the remaining unswept/not being swept spans concurrently
|
|
//
|
|
// This shouldn't happen if we're being invoked in background
|
|
// mode since proportional sweep should have just finished
|
|
// sweeping everything, but rounding errors, etc, may leave a
|
|
// few spans unswept. In forced mode, this is necessary since
|
|
// GC can be forced at any point in the sweeping cycle.
|
|
//
|
|
// We check the transition condition continuously here in case
|
|
// this G gets delayed in to the next GC cycle.
|
|
for trigger.test() && sweepone() != ^uintptr(0) {
|
|
sweep.nbgsweep++
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Perform GC initialization and the sweep termination
|
|
// transition.
|
|
semacquire(&work.startSema)
|
|
// Re-check transition condition under transition lock.
|
|
if !trigger.test() {
|
|
semrelease(&work.startSema)
|
|
return
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// For stats, check if this GC was forced by the user.
|
|
work.userForced = trigger.kind == gcTriggerAlways || trigger.kind == gcTriggerCycle
|
|
|
|
// In gcstoptheworld debug mode, upgrade the mode accordingly.
|
|
// We do this after re-checking the transition condition so
|
|
// that multiple goroutines that detect the heap trigger don't
|
|
// start multiple STW GCs.
|
|
mode := gcBackgroundMode
|
|
if debug.gcstoptheworld == 1 {
|
|
mode = gcForceMode
|
|
} else if debug.gcstoptheworld == 2 {
|
|
mode = gcForceBlockMode
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Ok, we're doing it! Stop everybody else
|
|
semacquire(&worldsema)
|
|
|
|
if trace.enabled {
|
|
traceGCStart()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Check that all Ps have finished deferred mcache flushes.
|
|
for _, p := range allp {
|
|
if fg := atomic.Load(&p.mcache.flushGen); fg != mheap_.sweepgen {
|
|
println("runtime: p", p.id, "flushGen", fg, "!= sweepgen", mheap_.sweepgen)
|
|
throw("p mcache not flushed")
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
gcBgMarkStartWorkers()
|
|
|
|
gcResetMarkState()
|
|
|
|
work.stwprocs, work.maxprocs = gomaxprocs, gomaxprocs
|
|
if work.stwprocs > ncpu {
|
|
// This is used to compute CPU time of the STW phases,
|
|
// so it can't be more than ncpu, even if GOMAXPROCS is.
|
|
work.stwprocs = ncpu
|
|
}
|
|
work.heap0 = atomic.Load64(&memstats.heap_live)
|
|
work.pauseNS = 0
|
|
work.mode = mode
|
|
|
|
now := nanotime()
|
|
work.tSweepTerm = now
|
|
work.pauseStart = now
|
|
if trace.enabled {
|
|
traceGCSTWStart(1)
|
|
}
|
|
systemstack(stopTheWorldWithSema)
|
|
// Finish sweep before we start concurrent scan.
|
|
systemstack(func() {
|
|
finishsweep_m()
|
|
})
|
|
// clearpools before we start the GC. If we wait they memory will not be
|
|
// reclaimed until the next GC cycle.
|
|
clearpools()
|
|
|
|
work.cycles++
|
|
|
|
gcController.startCycle()
|
|
work.heapGoal = memstats.next_gc
|
|
|
|
// In STW mode, disable scheduling of user Gs. This may also
|
|
// disable scheduling of this goroutine, so it may block as
|
|
// soon as we start the world again.
|
|
if mode != gcBackgroundMode {
|
|
schedEnableUser(false)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Enter concurrent mark phase and enable
|
|
// write barriers.
|
|
//
|
|
// Because the world is stopped, all Ps will
|
|
// observe that write barriers are enabled by
|
|
// the time we start the world and begin
|
|
// scanning.
|
|
//
|
|
// Write barriers must be enabled before assists are
|
|
// enabled because they must be enabled before
|
|
// any non-leaf heap objects are marked. Since
|
|
// allocations are blocked until assists can
|
|
// happen, we want enable assists as early as
|
|
// possible.
|
|
setGCPhase(_GCmark)
|
|
|
|
gcBgMarkPrepare() // Must happen before assist enable.
|
|
gcMarkRootPrepare()
|
|
|
|
// Mark all active tinyalloc blocks. Since we're
|
|
// allocating from these, they need to be black like
|
|
// other allocations. The alternative is to blacken
|
|
// the tiny block on every allocation from it, which
|
|
// would slow down the tiny allocator.
|
|
gcMarkTinyAllocs()
|
|
|
|
// At this point all Ps have enabled the write
|
|
// barrier, thus maintaining the no white to
|
|
// black invariant. Enable mutator assists to
|
|
// put back-pressure on fast allocating
|
|
// mutators.
|
|
atomic.Store(&gcBlackenEnabled, 1)
|
|
|
|
// Assists and workers can start the moment we start
|
|
// the world.
|
|
gcController.markStartTime = now
|
|
|
|
// Concurrent mark.
|
|
systemstack(func() {
|
|
now = startTheWorldWithSema(trace.enabled)
|
|
work.pauseNS += now - work.pauseStart
|
|
work.tMark = now
|
|
})
|
|
// In STW mode, we could block the instant systemstack
|
|
// returns, so don't do anything important here. Make sure we
|
|
// block rather than returning to user code.
|
|
if mode != gcBackgroundMode {
|
|
Gosched()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
semrelease(&work.startSema)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// gcMarkDoneFlushed counts the number of P's with flushed work.
|
|
//
|
|
// Ideally this would be a captured local in gcMarkDone, but forEachP
|
|
// escapes its callback closure, so it can't capture anything.
|
|
//
|
|
// This is protected by markDoneSema.
|
|
var gcMarkDoneFlushed uint32
|
|
|
|
// debugCachedWork enables extra checks for debugging premature mark
|
|
// termination.
|
|
//
|
|
// For debugging issue #27993.
|
|
const debugCachedWork = false
|
|
|
|
// gcWorkPauseGen is for debugging the mark completion algorithm.
|
|
// gcWork put operations spin while gcWork.pauseGen == gcWorkPauseGen.
|
|
// Only used if debugCachedWork is true.
|
|
//
|
|
// For debugging issue #27993.
|
|
var gcWorkPauseGen uint32 = 1
|
|
|
|
// gcMarkDone transitions the GC from mark to mark termination if all
|
|
// reachable objects have been marked (that is, there are no grey
|
|
// objects and can be no more in the future). Otherwise, it flushes
|
|
// all local work to the global queues where it can be discovered by
|
|
// other workers.
|
|
//
|
|
// This should be called when all local mark work has been drained and
|
|
// there are no remaining workers. Specifically, when
|
|
//
|
|
// work.nwait == work.nproc && !gcMarkWorkAvailable(p)
|
|
//
|
|
// The calling context must be preemptible.
|
|
//
|
|
// Flushing local work is important because idle Ps may have local
|
|
// work queued. This is the only way to make that work visible and
|
|
// drive GC to completion.
|
|
//
|
|
// It is explicitly okay to have write barriers in this function. If
|
|
// it does transition to mark termination, then all reachable objects
|
|
// have been marked, so the write barrier cannot shade any more
|
|
// objects.
|
|
func gcMarkDone() {
|
|
// Ensure only one thread is running the ragged barrier at a
|
|
// time.
|
|
semacquire(&work.markDoneSema)
|
|
|
|
top:
|
|
// Re-check transition condition under transition lock.
|
|
//
|
|
// It's critical that this checks the global work queues are
|
|
// empty before performing the ragged barrier. Otherwise,
|
|
// there could be global work that a P could take after the P
|
|
// has passed the ragged barrier.
|
|
if !(gcphase == _GCmark && work.nwait == work.nproc && !gcMarkWorkAvailable(nil)) {
|
|
semrelease(&work.markDoneSema)
|
|
return
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Flush all local buffers and collect flushedWork flags.
|
|
gcMarkDoneFlushed = 0
|
|
systemstack(func() {
|
|
gp := getg().m.curg
|
|
// Mark the user stack as preemptible so that it may be scanned.
|
|
// Otherwise, our attempt to force all P's to a safepoint could
|
|
// result in a deadlock as we attempt to preempt a worker that's
|
|
// trying to preempt us (e.g. for a stack scan).
|
|
casgstatus(gp, _Grunning, _Gwaiting)
|
|
forEachP(func(_p_ *p) {
|
|
// Flush the write barrier buffer, since this may add
|
|
// work to the gcWork.
|
|
wbBufFlush1(_p_)
|
|
// For debugging, shrink the write barrier
|
|
// buffer so it flushes immediately.
|
|
// wbBuf.reset will keep it at this size as
|
|
// long as throwOnGCWork is set.
|
|
if debugCachedWork {
|
|
b := &_p_.wbBuf
|
|
b.end = uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&b.buf[wbBufEntryPointers]))
|
|
b.debugGen = gcWorkPauseGen
|
|
}
|
|
// Flush the gcWork, since this may create global work
|
|
// and set the flushedWork flag.
|
|
//
|
|
// TODO(austin): Break up these workbufs to
|
|
// better distribute work.
|
|
_p_.gcw.dispose()
|
|
// Collect the flushedWork flag.
|
|
if _p_.gcw.flushedWork {
|
|
atomic.Xadd(&gcMarkDoneFlushed, 1)
|
|
_p_.gcw.flushedWork = false
|
|
} else if debugCachedWork {
|
|
// For debugging, freeze the gcWork
|
|
// until we know whether we've reached
|
|
// completion or not. If we think
|
|
// we've reached completion, but
|
|
// there's a paused gcWork, then
|
|
// that's a bug.
|
|
_p_.gcw.pauseGen = gcWorkPauseGen
|
|
// Capture the G's stack.
|
|
for i := range _p_.gcw.pauseStack {
|
|
_p_.gcw.pauseStack[i].pc = 0
|
|
}
|
|
callers(1, _p_.gcw.pauseStack[:])
|
|
}
|
|
})
|
|
casgstatus(gp, _Gwaiting, _Grunning)
|
|
})
|
|
|
|
if gcMarkDoneFlushed != 0 {
|
|
if debugCachedWork {
|
|
// Release paused gcWorks.
|
|
atomic.Xadd(&gcWorkPauseGen, 1)
|
|
}
|
|
// More grey objects were discovered since the
|
|
// previous termination check, so there may be more
|
|
// work to do. Keep going. It's possible the
|
|
// transition condition became true again during the
|
|
// ragged barrier, so re-check it.
|
|
goto top
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if debugCachedWork {
|
|
throwOnGCWork = true
|
|
// Release paused gcWorks. If there are any, they
|
|
// should now observe throwOnGCWork and panic.
|
|
atomic.Xadd(&gcWorkPauseGen, 1)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// There was no global work, no local work, and no Ps
|
|
// communicated work since we took markDoneSema. Therefore
|
|
// there are no grey objects and no more objects can be
|
|
// shaded. Transition to mark termination.
|
|
now := nanotime()
|
|
work.tMarkTerm = now
|
|
work.pauseStart = now
|
|
getg().m.preemptoff = "gcing"
|
|
if trace.enabled {
|
|
traceGCSTWStart(0)
|
|
}
|
|
systemstack(stopTheWorldWithSema)
|
|
// The gcphase is _GCmark, it will transition to _GCmarktermination
|
|
// below. The important thing is that the wb remains active until
|
|
// all marking is complete. This includes writes made by the GC.
|
|
|
|
if debugCachedWork {
|
|
// For debugging, double check that no work was added after we
|
|
// went around above and disable write barrier buffering.
|
|
for _, p := range allp {
|
|
gcw := &p.gcw
|
|
if !gcw.empty() {
|
|
printlock()
|
|
print("runtime: P ", p.id, " flushedWork ", gcw.flushedWork)
|
|
if gcw.wbuf1 == nil {
|
|
print(" wbuf1=<nil>")
|
|
} else {
|
|
print(" wbuf1.n=", gcw.wbuf1.nobj)
|
|
}
|
|
if gcw.wbuf2 == nil {
|
|
print(" wbuf2=<nil>")
|
|
} else {
|
|
print(" wbuf2.n=", gcw.wbuf2.nobj)
|
|
}
|
|
print("\n")
|
|
if gcw.pauseGen == gcw.putGen {
|
|
println("runtime: checkPut already failed at this generation")
|
|
}
|
|
throw("throwOnGCWork")
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
} else {
|
|
// For unknown reasons (see issue #27993), there is
|
|
// sometimes work left over when we enter mark
|
|
// termination. Detect this and resume concurrent
|
|
// mark. This is obviously unfortunate.
|
|
//
|
|
// Switch to the system stack to call wbBufFlush1,
|
|
// though in this case it doesn't matter because we're
|
|
// non-preemptible anyway.
|
|
restart := false
|
|
systemstack(func() {
|
|
for _, p := range allp {
|
|
wbBufFlush1(p)
|
|
if !p.gcw.empty() {
|
|
restart = true
|
|
break
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
})
|
|
if restart {
|
|
getg().m.preemptoff = ""
|
|
systemstack(func() {
|
|
now := startTheWorldWithSema(true)
|
|
work.pauseNS += now - work.pauseStart
|
|
})
|
|
goto top
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Disable assists and background workers. We must do
|
|
// this before waking blocked assists.
|
|
atomic.Store(&gcBlackenEnabled, 0)
|
|
|
|
// Wake all blocked assists. These will run when we
|
|
// start the world again.
|
|
gcWakeAllAssists()
|
|
|
|
// Likewise, release the transition lock. Blocked
|
|
// workers and assists will run when we start the
|
|
// world again.
|
|
semrelease(&work.markDoneSema)
|
|
|
|
// In STW mode, re-enable user goroutines. These will be
|
|
// queued to run after we start the world.
|
|
schedEnableUser(true)
|
|
|
|
// endCycle depends on all gcWork cache stats being flushed.
|
|
// The termination algorithm above ensured that up to
|
|
// allocations since the ragged barrier.
|
|
nextTriggerRatio := gcController.endCycle()
|
|
|
|
// Perform mark termination. This will restart the world.
|
|
gcMarkTermination(nextTriggerRatio)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
func gcMarkTermination(nextTriggerRatio float64) {
|
|
// World is stopped.
|
|
// Start marktermination which includes enabling the write barrier.
|
|
atomic.Store(&gcBlackenEnabled, 0)
|
|
setGCPhase(_GCmarktermination)
|
|
|
|
work.heap1 = memstats.heap_live
|
|
startTime := nanotime()
|
|
|
|
mp := acquirem()
|
|
mp.preemptoff = "gcing"
|
|
_g_ := getg()
|
|
_g_.m.traceback = 2
|
|
gp := _g_.m.curg
|
|
casgstatus(gp, _Grunning, _Gwaiting)
|
|
gp.waitreason = waitReasonGarbageCollection
|
|
|
|
// Run gc on the g0 stack. We do this so that the g stack
|
|
// we're currently running on will no longer change. Cuts
|
|
// the root set down a bit (g0 stacks are not scanned, and
|
|
// we don't need to scan gc's internal state). We also
|
|
// need to switch to g0 so we can shrink the stack.
|
|
systemstack(func() {
|
|
gcMark(startTime)
|
|
// Must return immediately.
|
|
// The outer function's stack may have moved
|
|
// during gcMark (it shrinks stacks, including the
|
|
// outer function's stack), so we must not refer
|
|
// to any of its variables. Return back to the
|
|
// non-system stack to pick up the new addresses
|
|
// before continuing.
|
|
})
|
|
|
|
systemstack(func() {
|
|
work.heap2 = work.bytesMarked
|
|
if debug.gccheckmark > 0 {
|
|
// Run a full non-parallel, stop-the-world
|
|
// mark using checkmark bits, to check that we
|
|
// didn't forget to mark anything during the
|
|
// concurrent mark process.
|
|
gcResetMarkState()
|
|
initCheckmarks()
|
|
gcw := &getg().m.p.ptr().gcw
|
|
gcDrain(gcw, 0)
|
|
wbBufFlush1(getg().m.p.ptr())
|
|
gcw.dispose()
|
|
clearCheckmarks()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// marking is complete so we can turn the write barrier off
|
|
setGCPhase(_GCoff)
|
|
gcSweep(work.mode)
|
|
})
|
|
|
|
_g_.m.traceback = 0
|
|
casgstatus(gp, _Gwaiting, _Grunning)
|
|
|
|
if trace.enabled {
|
|
traceGCDone()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// all done
|
|
mp.preemptoff = ""
|
|
|
|
if gcphase != _GCoff {
|
|
throw("gc done but gcphase != _GCoff")
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Update GC trigger and pacing for the next cycle.
|
|
gcSetTriggerRatio(nextTriggerRatio)
|
|
|
|
// Update timing memstats
|
|
now := nanotime()
|
|
sec, nsec, _ := time_now()
|
|
unixNow := sec*1e9 + int64(nsec)
|
|
work.pauseNS += now - work.pauseStart
|
|
work.tEnd = now
|
|
atomic.Store64(&memstats.last_gc_unix, uint64(unixNow)) // must be Unix time to make sense to user
|
|
atomic.Store64(&memstats.last_gc_nanotime, uint64(now)) // monotonic time for us
|
|
memstats.pause_ns[memstats.numgc%uint32(len(memstats.pause_ns))] = uint64(work.pauseNS)
|
|
memstats.pause_end[memstats.numgc%uint32(len(memstats.pause_end))] = uint64(unixNow)
|
|
memstats.pause_total_ns += uint64(work.pauseNS)
|
|
|
|
// Update work.totaltime.
|
|
sweepTermCpu := int64(work.stwprocs) * (work.tMark - work.tSweepTerm)
|
|
// We report idle marking time below, but omit it from the
|
|
// overall utilization here since it's "free".
|
|
markCpu := gcController.assistTime + gcController.dedicatedMarkTime + gcController.fractionalMarkTime
|
|
markTermCpu := int64(work.stwprocs) * (work.tEnd - work.tMarkTerm)
|
|
cycleCpu := sweepTermCpu + markCpu + markTermCpu
|
|
work.totaltime += cycleCpu
|
|
|
|
// Compute overall GC CPU utilization.
|
|
totalCpu := sched.totaltime + (now-sched.procresizetime)*int64(gomaxprocs)
|
|
memstats.gc_cpu_fraction = float64(work.totaltime) / float64(totalCpu)
|
|
|
|
// Reset sweep state.
|
|
sweep.nbgsweep = 0
|
|
sweep.npausesweep = 0
|
|
|
|
if work.userForced {
|
|
memstats.numforcedgc++
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Bump GC cycle count and wake goroutines waiting on sweep.
|
|
lock(&work.sweepWaiters.lock)
|
|
memstats.numgc++
|
|
injectglist(&work.sweepWaiters.list)
|
|
unlock(&work.sweepWaiters.lock)
|
|
|
|
// Finish the current heap profiling cycle and start a new
|
|
// heap profiling cycle. We do this before starting the world
|
|
// so events don't leak into the wrong cycle.
|
|
mProf_NextCycle()
|
|
|
|
systemstack(func() { startTheWorldWithSema(true) })
|
|
|
|
// Flush the heap profile so we can start a new cycle next GC.
|
|
// This is relatively expensive, so we don't do it with the
|
|
// world stopped.
|
|
mProf_Flush()
|
|
|
|
// Prepare workbufs for freeing by the sweeper. We do this
|
|
// asynchronously because it can take non-trivial time.
|
|
prepareFreeWorkbufs()
|
|
|
|
// Ensure all mcaches are flushed. Each P will flush its own
|
|
// mcache before allocating, but idle Ps may not. Since this
|
|
// is necessary to sweep all spans, we need to ensure all
|
|
// mcaches are flushed before we start the next GC cycle.
|
|
systemstack(func() {
|
|
forEachP(func(_p_ *p) {
|
|
_p_.mcache.prepareForSweep()
|
|
})
|
|
})
|
|
|
|
// Print gctrace before dropping worldsema. As soon as we drop
|
|
// worldsema another cycle could start and smash the stats
|
|
// we're trying to print.
|
|
if debug.gctrace > 0 {
|
|
util := int(memstats.gc_cpu_fraction * 100)
|
|
|
|
var sbuf [24]byte
|
|
printlock()
|
|
print("gc ", memstats.numgc,
|
|
" @", string(itoaDiv(sbuf[:], uint64(work.tSweepTerm-runtimeInitTime)/1e6, 3)), "s ",
|
|
util, "%: ")
|
|
prev := work.tSweepTerm
|
|
for i, ns := range []int64{work.tMark, work.tMarkTerm, work.tEnd} {
|
|
if i != 0 {
|
|
print("+")
|
|
}
|
|
print(string(fmtNSAsMS(sbuf[:], uint64(ns-prev))))
|
|
prev = ns
|
|
}
|
|
print(" ms clock, ")
|
|
for i, ns := range []int64{sweepTermCpu, gcController.assistTime, gcController.dedicatedMarkTime + gcController.fractionalMarkTime, gcController.idleMarkTime, markTermCpu} {
|
|
if i == 2 || i == 3 {
|
|
// Separate mark time components with /.
|
|
print("/")
|
|
} else if i != 0 {
|
|
print("+")
|
|
}
|
|
print(string(fmtNSAsMS(sbuf[:], uint64(ns))))
|
|
}
|
|
print(" ms cpu, ",
|
|
work.heap0>>20, "->", work.heap1>>20, "->", work.heap2>>20, " MB, ",
|
|
work.heapGoal>>20, " MB goal, ",
|
|
work.maxprocs, " P")
|
|
if work.userForced {
|
|
print(" (forced)")
|
|
}
|
|
print("\n")
|
|
printunlock()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
semrelease(&worldsema)
|
|
// Careful: another GC cycle may start now.
|
|
|
|
releasem(mp)
|
|
mp = nil
|
|
|
|
// now that gc is done, kick off finalizer thread if needed
|
|
if !concurrentSweep {
|
|
// give the queued finalizers, if any, a chance to run
|
|
Gosched()
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// gcBgMarkStartWorkers prepares background mark worker goroutines.
|
|
// These goroutines will not run until the mark phase, but they must
|
|
// be started while the work is not stopped and from a regular G
|
|
// stack. The caller must hold worldsema.
|
|
func gcBgMarkStartWorkers() {
|
|
// Background marking is performed by per-P G's. Ensure that
|
|
// each P has a background GC G.
|
|
for _, p := range allp {
|
|
if p.gcBgMarkWorker == 0 {
|
|
expectSystemGoroutine()
|
|
go gcBgMarkWorker(p)
|
|
notetsleepg(&work.bgMarkReady, -1)
|
|
noteclear(&work.bgMarkReady)
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// gcBgMarkPrepare sets up state for background marking.
|
|
// Mutator assists must not yet be enabled.
|
|
func gcBgMarkPrepare() {
|
|
// Background marking will stop when the work queues are empty
|
|
// and there are no more workers (note that, since this is
|
|
// concurrent, this may be a transient state, but mark
|
|
// termination will clean it up). Between background workers
|
|
// and assists, we don't really know how many workers there
|
|
// will be, so we pretend to have an arbitrarily large number
|
|
// of workers, almost all of which are "waiting". While a
|
|
// worker is working it decrements nwait. If nproc == nwait,
|
|
// there are no workers.
|
|
work.nproc = ^uint32(0)
|
|
work.nwait = ^uint32(0)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
func gcBgMarkWorker(_p_ *p) {
|
|
setSystemGoroutine()
|
|
|
|
gp := getg()
|
|
|
|
type parkInfo struct {
|
|
m muintptr // Release this m on park.
|
|
attach puintptr // If non-nil, attach to this p on park.
|
|
}
|
|
// We pass park to a gopark unlock function, so it can't be on
|
|
// the stack (see gopark). Prevent deadlock from recursively
|
|
// starting GC by disabling preemption.
|
|
gp.m.preemptoff = "GC worker init"
|
|
park := new(parkInfo)
|
|
gp.m.preemptoff = ""
|
|
|
|
park.m.set(acquirem())
|
|
park.attach.set(_p_)
|
|
// Inform gcBgMarkStartWorkers that this worker is ready.
|
|
// After this point, the background mark worker is scheduled
|
|
// cooperatively by gcController.findRunnable. Hence, it must
|
|
// never be preempted, as this would put it into _Grunnable
|
|
// and put it on a run queue. Instead, when the preempt flag
|
|
// is set, this puts itself into _Gwaiting to be woken up by
|
|
// gcController.findRunnable at the appropriate time.
|
|
notewakeup(&work.bgMarkReady)
|
|
|
|
for {
|
|
// Go to sleep until woken by gcController.findRunnable.
|
|
// We can't releasem yet since even the call to gopark
|
|
// may be preempted.
|
|
gopark(func(g *g, parkp unsafe.Pointer) bool {
|
|
park := (*parkInfo)(parkp)
|
|
|
|
// The worker G is no longer running, so it's
|
|
// now safe to allow preemption.
|
|
releasem(park.m.ptr())
|
|
|
|
// If the worker isn't attached to its P,
|
|
// attach now. During initialization and after
|
|
// a phase change, the worker may have been
|
|
// running on a different P. As soon as we
|
|
// attach, the owner P may schedule the
|
|
// worker, so this must be done after the G is
|
|
// stopped.
|
|
if park.attach != 0 {
|
|
p := park.attach.ptr()
|
|
park.attach.set(nil)
|
|
// cas the worker because we may be
|
|
// racing with a new worker starting
|
|
// on this P.
|
|
if !p.gcBgMarkWorker.cas(0, guintptr(unsafe.Pointer(g))) {
|
|
// The P got a new worker.
|
|
// Exit this worker.
|
|
return false
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
return true
|
|
}, unsafe.Pointer(park), waitReasonGCWorkerIdle, traceEvGoBlock, 0)
|
|
|
|
// Loop until the P dies and disassociates this
|
|
// worker (the P may later be reused, in which case
|
|
// it will get a new worker) or we failed to associate.
|
|
if _p_.gcBgMarkWorker.ptr() != gp {
|
|
break
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Disable preemption so we can use the gcw. If the
|
|
// scheduler wants to preempt us, we'll stop draining,
|
|
// dispose the gcw, and then preempt.
|
|
park.m.set(acquirem())
|
|
|
|
if gcBlackenEnabled == 0 {
|
|
throw("gcBgMarkWorker: blackening not enabled")
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
startTime := nanotime()
|
|
_p_.gcMarkWorkerStartTime = startTime
|
|
|
|
decnwait := atomic.Xadd(&work.nwait, -1)
|
|
if decnwait == work.nproc {
|
|
println("runtime: work.nwait=", decnwait, "work.nproc=", work.nproc)
|
|
throw("work.nwait was > work.nproc")
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
systemstack(func() {
|
|
// Mark our goroutine preemptible so its stack
|
|
// can be scanned. This lets two mark workers
|
|
// scan each other (otherwise, they would
|
|
// deadlock). We must not modify anything on
|
|
// the G stack. However, stack shrinking is
|
|
// disabled for mark workers, so it is safe to
|
|
// read from the G stack.
|
|
casgstatus(gp, _Grunning, _Gwaiting)
|
|
switch _p_.gcMarkWorkerMode {
|
|
default:
|
|
throw("gcBgMarkWorker: unexpected gcMarkWorkerMode")
|
|
case gcMarkWorkerDedicatedMode:
|
|
gcDrain(&_p_.gcw, gcDrainUntilPreempt|gcDrainFlushBgCredit)
|
|
if gp.preempt {
|
|
// We were preempted. This is
|
|
// a useful signal to kick
|
|
// everything out of the run
|
|
// queue so it can run
|
|
// somewhere else.
|
|
lock(&sched.lock)
|
|
for {
|
|
gp, _ := runqget(_p_)
|
|
if gp == nil {
|
|
break
|
|
}
|
|
globrunqput(gp)
|
|
}
|
|
unlock(&sched.lock)
|
|
}
|
|
// Go back to draining, this time
|
|
// without preemption.
|
|
gcDrain(&_p_.gcw, gcDrainFlushBgCredit)
|
|
case gcMarkWorkerFractionalMode:
|
|
gcDrain(&_p_.gcw, gcDrainFractional|gcDrainUntilPreempt|gcDrainFlushBgCredit)
|
|
case gcMarkWorkerIdleMode:
|
|
gcDrain(&_p_.gcw, gcDrainIdle|gcDrainUntilPreempt|gcDrainFlushBgCredit)
|
|
}
|
|
casgstatus(gp, _Gwaiting, _Grunning)
|
|
})
|
|
|
|
// Account for time.
|
|
duration := nanotime() - startTime
|
|
switch _p_.gcMarkWorkerMode {
|
|
case gcMarkWorkerDedicatedMode:
|
|
atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.dedicatedMarkTime, duration)
|
|
atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded, 1)
|
|
case gcMarkWorkerFractionalMode:
|
|
atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.fractionalMarkTime, duration)
|
|
atomic.Xaddint64(&_p_.gcFractionalMarkTime, duration)
|
|
case gcMarkWorkerIdleMode:
|
|
atomic.Xaddint64(&gcController.idleMarkTime, duration)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Was this the last worker and did we run out
|
|
// of work?
|
|
incnwait := atomic.Xadd(&work.nwait, +1)
|
|
if incnwait > work.nproc {
|
|
println("runtime: p.gcMarkWorkerMode=", _p_.gcMarkWorkerMode,
|
|
"work.nwait=", incnwait, "work.nproc=", work.nproc)
|
|
throw("work.nwait > work.nproc")
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// If this worker reached a background mark completion
|
|
// point, signal the main GC goroutine.
|
|
if incnwait == work.nproc && !gcMarkWorkAvailable(nil) {
|
|
// Make this G preemptible and disassociate it
|
|
// as the worker for this P so
|
|
// findRunnableGCWorker doesn't try to
|
|
// schedule it.
|
|
_p_.gcBgMarkWorker.set(nil)
|
|
releasem(park.m.ptr())
|
|
|
|
gcMarkDone()
|
|
|
|
// Disable preemption and prepare to reattach
|
|
// to the P.
|
|
//
|
|
// We may be running on a different P at this
|
|
// point, so we can't reattach until this G is
|
|
// parked.
|
|
park.m.set(acquirem())
|
|
park.attach.set(_p_)
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// gcMarkWorkAvailable reports whether executing a mark worker
|
|
// on p is potentially useful. p may be nil, in which case it only
|
|
// checks the global sources of work.
|
|
func gcMarkWorkAvailable(p *p) bool {
|
|
if p != nil && !p.gcw.empty() {
|
|
return true
|
|
}
|
|
if !work.full.empty() {
|
|
return true // global work available
|
|
}
|
|
if work.markrootNext < work.markrootJobs {
|
|
return true // root scan work available
|
|
}
|
|
return false
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// gcMark runs the mark (or, for concurrent GC, mark termination)
|
|
// All gcWork caches must be empty.
|
|
// STW is in effect at this point.
|
|
//TODO go:nowritebarrier
|
|
func gcMark(start_time int64) {
|
|
if debug.allocfreetrace > 0 {
|
|
tracegc()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if gcphase != _GCmarktermination {
|
|
throw("in gcMark expecting to see gcphase as _GCmarktermination")
|
|
}
|
|
work.tstart = start_time
|
|
|
|
// Check that there's no marking work remaining.
|
|
if work.full != 0 || work.markrootNext < work.markrootJobs {
|
|
print("runtime: full=", hex(work.full), " next=", work.markrootNext, " jobs=", work.markrootJobs, " nDataRoots=", work.nDataRoots, " nSpanRoots=", work.nSpanRoots, " nStackRoots=", work.nStackRoots, "\n")
|
|
panic("non-empty mark queue after concurrent mark")
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if debug.gccheckmark > 0 {
|
|
// This is expensive when there's a large number of
|
|
// Gs, so only do it if checkmark is also enabled.
|
|
gcMarkRootCheck()
|
|
}
|
|
if work.full != 0 {
|
|
throw("work.full != 0")
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Clear out buffers and double-check that all gcWork caches
|
|
// are empty. This should be ensured by gcMarkDone before we
|
|
// enter mark termination.
|
|
//
|
|
// TODO: We could clear out buffers just before mark if this
|
|
// has a non-negligible impact on STW time.
|
|
for _, p := range allp {
|
|
// The write barrier may have buffered pointers since
|
|
// the gcMarkDone barrier. However, since the barrier
|
|
// ensured all reachable objects were marked, all of
|
|
// these must be pointers to black objects. Hence we
|
|
// can just discard the write barrier buffer.
|
|
if debug.gccheckmark > 0 || throwOnGCWork {
|
|
// For debugging, flush the buffer and make
|
|
// sure it really was all marked.
|
|
wbBufFlush1(p)
|
|
} else {
|
|
p.wbBuf.reset()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
gcw := &p.gcw
|
|
if !gcw.empty() {
|
|
printlock()
|
|
print("runtime: P ", p.id, " flushedWork ", gcw.flushedWork)
|
|
if gcw.wbuf1 == nil {
|
|
print(" wbuf1=<nil>")
|
|
} else {
|
|
print(" wbuf1.n=", gcw.wbuf1.nobj)
|
|
}
|
|
if gcw.wbuf2 == nil {
|
|
print(" wbuf2=<nil>")
|
|
} else {
|
|
print(" wbuf2.n=", gcw.wbuf2.nobj)
|
|
}
|
|
print("\n")
|
|
throw("P has cached GC work at end of mark termination")
|
|
}
|
|
// There may still be cached empty buffers, which we
|
|
// need to flush since we're going to free them. Also,
|
|
// there may be non-zero stats because we allocated
|
|
// black after the gcMarkDone barrier.
|
|
gcw.dispose()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
throwOnGCWork = false
|
|
|
|
cachestats()
|
|
|
|
// Update the marked heap stat.
|
|
memstats.heap_marked = work.bytesMarked
|
|
|
|
// Update other GC heap size stats. This must happen after
|
|
// cachestats (which flushes local statistics to these) and
|
|
// flushallmcaches (which modifies heap_live).
|
|
memstats.heap_live = work.bytesMarked
|
|
memstats.heap_scan = uint64(gcController.scanWork)
|
|
|
|
if trace.enabled {
|
|
traceHeapAlloc()
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
func gcSweep(mode gcMode) {
|
|
if gcphase != _GCoff {
|
|
throw("gcSweep being done but phase is not GCoff")
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
lock(&mheap_.lock)
|
|
mheap_.sweepgen += 2
|
|
mheap_.sweepdone = 0
|
|
if mheap_.sweepSpans[mheap_.sweepgen/2%2].index != 0 {
|
|
// We should have drained this list during the last
|
|
// sweep phase. We certainly need to start this phase
|
|
// with an empty swept list.
|
|
throw("non-empty swept list")
|
|
}
|
|
mheap_.pagesSwept = 0
|
|
mheap_.sweepArenas = mheap_.allArenas
|
|
mheap_.reclaimIndex = 0
|
|
mheap_.reclaimCredit = 0
|
|
unlock(&mheap_.lock)
|
|
|
|
if !_ConcurrentSweep || mode == gcForceBlockMode {
|
|
// Special case synchronous sweep.
|
|
// Record that no proportional sweeping has to happen.
|
|
lock(&mheap_.lock)
|
|
mheap_.sweepPagesPerByte = 0
|
|
unlock(&mheap_.lock)
|
|
// Sweep all spans eagerly.
|
|
for sweepone() != ^uintptr(0) {
|
|
sweep.npausesweep++
|
|
}
|
|
// Free workbufs eagerly.
|
|
prepareFreeWorkbufs()
|
|
for freeSomeWbufs(false) {
|
|
}
|
|
// All "free" events for this mark/sweep cycle have
|
|
// now happened, so we can make this profile cycle
|
|
// available immediately.
|
|
mProf_NextCycle()
|
|
mProf_Flush()
|
|
return
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Background sweep.
|
|
lock(&sweep.lock)
|
|
if sweep.parked {
|
|
sweep.parked = false
|
|
ready(sweep.g, 0, true)
|
|
}
|
|
unlock(&sweep.lock)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// gcResetMarkState resets global state prior to marking (concurrent
|
|
// or STW) and resets the stack scan state of all Gs.
|
|
//
|
|
// This is safe to do without the world stopped because any Gs created
|
|
// during or after this will start out in the reset state.
|
|
func gcResetMarkState() {
|
|
// This may be called during a concurrent phase, so make sure
|
|
// allgs doesn't change.
|
|
lock(&allglock)
|
|
for _, gp := range allgs {
|
|
gp.gcscandone = false // set to true in gcphasework
|
|
gp.gcscanvalid = false // stack has not been scanned
|
|
gp.gcAssistBytes = 0
|
|
}
|
|
unlock(&allglock)
|
|
|
|
// Clear page marks. This is just 1MB per 64GB of heap, so the
|
|
// time here is pretty trivial.
|
|
lock(&mheap_.lock)
|
|
arenas := mheap_.allArenas
|
|
unlock(&mheap_.lock)
|
|
for _, ai := range arenas {
|
|
ha := mheap_.arenas[ai.l1()][ai.l2()]
|
|
for i := range ha.pageMarks {
|
|
ha.pageMarks[i] = 0
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
work.bytesMarked = 0
|
|
work.initialHeapLive = atomic.Load64(&memstats.heap_live)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Hooks for other packages
|
|
|
|
var poolcleanup func()
|
|
|
|
//go:linkname sync_runtime_registerPoolCleanup sync.runtime_registerPoolCleanup
|
|
func sync_runtime_registerPoolCleanup(f func()) {
|
|
poolcleanup = f
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
func clearpools() {
|
|
// clear sync.Pools
|
|
if poolcleanup != nil {
|
|
poolcleanup()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Clear central sudog cache.
|
|
// Leave per-P caches alone, they have strictly bounded size.
|
|
// Disconnect cached list before dropping it on the floor,
|
|
// so that a dangling ref to one entry does not pin all of them.
|
|
lock(&sched.sudoglock)
|
|
var sg, sgnext *sudog
|
|
for sg = sched.sudogcache; sg != nil; sg = sgnext {
|
|
sgnext = sg.next
|
|
sg.next = nil
|
|
}
|
|
sched.sudogcache = nil
|
|
unlock(&sched.sudoglock)
|
|
|
|
// Clear central defer pools.
|
|
// Leave per-P pools alone, they have strictly bounded size.
|
|
lock(&sched.deferlock)
|
|
// disconnect cached list before dropping it on the floor,
|
|
// so that a dangling ref to one entry does not pin all of them.
|
|
var d, dlink *_defer
|
|
for d = sched.deferpool; d != nil; d = dlink {
|
|
dlink = d.link
|
|
d.link = nil
|
|
}
|
|
sched.deferpool = nil
|
|
unlock(&sched.deferlock)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Timing
|
|
|
|
// itoaDiv formats val/(10**dec) into buf.
|
|
func itoaDiv(buf []byte, val uint64, dec int) []byte {
|
|
i := len(buf) - 1
|
|
idec := i - dec
|
|
for val >= 10 || i >= idec {
|
|
buf[i] = byte(val%10 + '0')
|
|
i--
|
|
if i == idec {
|
|
buf[i] = '.'
|
|
i--
|
|
}
|
|
val /= 10
|
|
}
|
|
buf[i] = byte(val + '0')
|
|
return buf[i:]
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// fmtNSAsMS nicely formats ns nanoseconds as milliseconds.
|
|
func fmtNSAsMS(buf []byte, ns uint64) []byte {
|
|
if ns >= 10e6 {
|
|
// Format as whole milliseconds.
|
|
return itoaDiv(buf, ns/1e6, 0)
|
|
}
|
|
// Format two digits of precision, with at most three decimal places.
|
|
x := ns / 1e3
|
|
if x == 0 {
|
|
buf[0] = '0'
|
|
return buf[:1]
|
|
}
|
|
dec := 3
|
|
for x >= 100 {
|
|
x /= 10
|
|
dec--
|
|
}
|
|
return itoaDiv(buf, x, dec)
|
|
}
|