gcc/libgo/go/sync/pool.go
Ian Lance Taylor f8d9fa9e80 libgo, compiler: Upgrade libgo to Go 1.4, except for runtime.
This upgrades all of libgo other than the runtime package to
the Go 1.4 release.  In Go 1.4 much of the runtime was
rewritten into Go.  Merging that code will take more time and
will not change the API, so I'm putting it off for now.

There are a few runtime changes anyhow, to accomodate other
packages that rely on minor modifications to the runtime
support.

The compiler changes slightly to add a one-bit flag to each
type descriptor kind that is stored directly in an interface,
which for gccgo is currently only pointer types.  Another
one-bit flag (gcprog) is reserved because it is used by the gc
compiler, but gccgo does not currently use it.

There is another error check in the compiler since I ran
across it during testing.

gotools/:
	* Makefile.am (go_cmd_go_files): Sort entries.  Add generate.go.
	* Makefile.in: Rebuild.

From-SVN: r219627
2015-01-15 00:27:56 +00:00

226 lines
6.4 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2013 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package sync
import (
"runtime"
"sync/atomic"
"unsafe"
)
// A Pool is a set of temporary objects that may be individually saved and
// retrieved.
//
// Any item stored in the Pool may be removed automatically at any time without
// notification. If the Pool holds the only reference when this happens, the
// item might be deallocated.
//
// A Pool is safe for use by multiple goroutines simultaneously.
//
// Pool's purpose is to cache allocated but unused items for later reuse,
// relieving pressure on the garbage collector. That is, it makes it easy to
// build efficient, thread-safe free lists. However, it is not suitable for all
// free lists.
//
// An appropriate use of a Pool is to manage a group of temporary items
// silently shared among and potentially reused by concurrent independent
// clients of a package. Pool provides a way to amortize allocation overhead
// across many clients.
//
// An example of good use of a Pool is in the fmt package, which maintains a
// dynamically-sized store of temporary output buffers. The store scales under
// load (when many goroutines are actively printing) and shrinks when
// quiescent.
//
// On the other hand, a free list maintained as part of a short-lived object is
// not a suitable use for a Pool, since the overhead does not amortize well in
// that scenario. It is more efficient to have such objects implement their own
// free list.
//
type Pool struct {
local unsafe.Pointer // local fixed-size per-P pool, actual type is [P]poolLocal
localSize uintptr // size of the local array
// New optionally specifies a function to generate
// a value when Get would otherwise return nil.
// It may not be changed concurrently with calls to Get.
New func() interface{}
}
// Local per-P Pool appendix.
type poolLocal struct {
private interface{} // Can be used only by the respective P.
shared []interface{} // Can be used by any P.
Mutex // Protects shared.
pad [128]byte // Prevents false sharing.
}
// Put adds x to the pool.
func (p *Pool) Put(x interface{}) {
if raceenabled {
// Under race detector the Pool degenerates into no-op.
// It's conforming, simple and does not introduce excessive
// happens-before edges between unrelated goroutines.
return
}
if x == nil {
return
}
l := p.pin()
if l.private == nil {
l.private = x
x = nil
}
runtime_procUnpin()
if x == nil {
return
}
l.Lock()
l.shared = append(l.shared, x)
l.Unlock()
}
// Get selects an arbitrary item from the Pool, removes it from the
// Pool, and returns it to the caller.
// Get may choose to ignore the pool and treat it as empty.
// Callers should not assume any relation between values passed to Put and
// the values returned by Get.
//
// If Get would otherwise return nil and p.New is non-nil, Get returns
// the result of calling p.New.
func (p *Pool) Get() interface{} {
if raceenabled {
if p.New != nil {
return p.New()
}
return nil
}
l := p.pin()
x := l.private
l.private = nil
runtime_procUnpin()
if x != nil {
return x
}
l.Lock()
last := len(l.shared) - 1
if last >= 0 {
x = l.shared[last]
l.shared = l.shared[:last]
}
l.Unlock()
if x != nil {
return x
}
return p.getSlow()
}
func (p *Pool) getSlow() (x interface{}) {
// See the comment in pin regarding ordering of the loads.
size := atomic.LoadUintptr(&p.localSize) // load-acquire
local := p.local // load-consume
// Try to steal one element from other procs.
pid := runtime_procPin()
runtime_procUnpin()
for i := 0; i < int(size); i++ {
l := indexLocal(local, (pid+i+1)%int(size))
l.Lock()
last := len(l.shared) - 1
if last >= 0 {
x = l.shared[last]
l.shared = l.shared[:last]
l.Unlock()
break
}
l.Unlock()
}
if x == nil && p.New != nil {
x = p.New()
}
return x
}
// pin pins the current goroutine to P, disables preemption and returns poolLocal pool for the P.
// Caller must call runtime_procUnpin() when done with the pool.
func (p *Pool) pin() *poolLocal {
pid := runtime_procPin()
// In pinSlow we store to localSize and then to local, here we load in opposite order.
// Since we've disabled preemption, GC can not happen in between.
// Thus here we must observe local at least as large localSize.
// We can observe a newer/larger local, it is fine (we must observe its zero-initialized-ness).
s := atomic.LoadUintptr(&p.localSize) // load-acquire
l := p.local // load-consume
if uintptr(pid) < s {
return indexLocal(l, pid)
}
return p.pinSlow()
}
func (p *Pool) pinSlow() *poolLocal {
// Retry under the mutex.
// Can not lock the mutex while pinned.
runtime_procUnpin()
allPoolsMu.Lock()
defer allPoolsMu.Unlock()
pid := runtime_procPin()
// poolCleanup won't be called while we are pinned.
s := p.localSize
l := p.local
if uintptr(pid) < s {
return indexLocal(l, pid)
}
if p.local == nil {
allPools = append(allPools, p)
}
// If GOMAXPROCS changes between GCs, we re-allocate the array and lose the old one.
size := runtime.GOMAXPROCS(0)
local := make([]poolLocal, size)
atomic.StorePointer((*unsafe.Pointer)(&p.local), unsafe.Pointer(&local[0])) // store-release
atomic.StoreUintptr(&p.localSize, uintptr(size)) // store-release
return &local[pid]
}
func poolCleanup() {
// This function is called with the world stopped, at the beginning of a garbage collection.
// It must not allocate and probably should not call any runtime functions.
// Defensively zero out everything, 2 reasons:
// 1. To prevent false retention of whole Pools.
// 2. If GC happens while a goroutine works with l.shared in Put/Get,
// it will retain whole Pool. So next cycle memory consumption would be doubled.
for i, p := range allPools {
allPools[i] = nil
for i := 0; i < int(p.localSize); i++ {
l := indexLocal(p.local, i)
l.private = nil
for j := range l.shared {
l.shared[j] = nil
}
l.shared = nil
}
p.local = nil
p.localSize = 0
}
allPools = []*Pool{}
}
var (
allPoolsMu Mutex
allPools []*Pool
)
func init() {
runtime_registerPoolCleanup(poolCleanup)
}
func indexLocal(l unsafe.Pointer, i int) *poolLocal {
return &(*[1000000]poolLocal)(l)[i]
}
// Implemented in runtime.
func runtime_registerPoolCleanup(cleanup func())
func runtime_procPin() int
func runtime_procUnpin()