/* * Copyright (c) 2000, 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER. * * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as * published by the Free Software Foundation. * * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that * accompanied this code). * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. * * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any * questions. * */ #ifndef SHARE_VM_MEMORY_SHAREDHEAP_HPP #define SHARE_VM_MEMORY_SHAREDHEAP_HPP #include "gc_interface/collectedHeap.hpp" #include "memory/generation.hpp" // A "SharedHeap" is an implementation of a java heap for HotSpot. This // is an abstract class: there may be many different kinds of heaps. This // class defines the functions that a heap must implement, and contains // infrastructure common to all heaps. class Generation; class BarrierSet; class GenRemSet; class Space; class SpaceClosure; class OopClosure; class OopsInGenClosure; class ObjectClosure; class SubTasksDone; class WorkGang; class FlexibleWorkGang; class CollectorPolicy; class KlassClosure; // Note on use of FlexibleWorkGang's for GC. // There are three places where task completion is determined. // In // 1) ParallelTaskTerminator::offer_termination() where _n_threads // must be set to the correct value so that count of workers that // have offered termination will exactly match the number // working on the task. Tasks such as those derived from GCTask // use ParallelTaskTerminator's. Tasks that want load balancing // by work stealing use this method to gauge completion. // 2) SubTasksDone has a variable _n_threads that is used in // all_tasks_completed() to determine completion. all_tasks_complete() // counts the number of tasks that have been done and then reset // the SubTasksDone so that it can be used again. When the number of // tasks is set to the number of GC workers, then _n_threads must // be set to the number of active GC workers. G1RootProcessor and // GenCollectedHeap have SubTasksDone. // 3) SequentialSubTasksDone has an _n_threads that is used in // a way similar to SubTasksDone and has the same dependency on the // number of active GC workers. CompactibleFreeListSpace and Space // have SequentialSubTasksDone's. // // Examples of using SubTasksDone and SequentialSubTasksDone: // G1RootProcessor and GenCollectedHeap::process_roots() use // SubTasksDone* _process_strong_tasks to claim tasks for workers // // GenCollectedHeap::gen_process_roots() calls // rem_set()->younger_refs_iterate() // to scan the card table and which eventually calls down into // CardTableModRefBS::par_non_clean_card_iterate_work(). This method // uses SequentialSubTasksDone* _pst to claim tasks. // Both SubTasksDone and SequentialSubTasksDone call their method // all_tasks_completed() to count the number of GC workers that have // finished their work. That logic is "when all the workers are // finished the tasks are finished". // // The pattern that appears in the code is to set _n_threads // to a value > 1 before a task that you would like executed in parallel // and then to set it to 0 after that task has completed. A value of // 0 is a "special" value in set_n_threads() which translates to // setting _n_threads to 1. // // Some code uses _n_termination to decide if work should be done in // parallel. The notorious possibly_parallel_oops_do() in threads.cpp // is an example of such code. Look for variable "is_par" for other // examples. // // The active_workers is not reset to 0 after a parallel phase. It's // value may be used in later phases and in one instance at least // (the parallel remark) it has to be used (the parallel remark depends // on the partitioning done in the previous parallel scavenge). class SharedHeap : public CollectedHeap { friend class VMStructs; friend class VM_GC_Operation; friend class VM_CGC_Operation; protected: // If we're doing parallel GC, use this gang of threads. FlexibleWorkGang* _workers; // Full initialization is done in a concrete subtype's "initialize" // function. SharedHeap(); public: // Iteration functions. void oop_iterate(ExtendedOopClosure* cl) = 0; // Iterate over all spaces in use in the heap, in an undefined order. virtual void space_iterate(SpaceClosure* cl) = 0; // A SharedHeap will contain some number of spaces. This finds the // space whose reserved area contains the given address, or else returns // NULL. virtual Space* space_containing(const void* addr) const = 0; bool no_gc_in_progress() { return !is_gc_active(); } // Note, the below comment needs to be updated to reflect the changes // introduced by JDK-8076225. This should be done as part of JDK-8076289. // //Some collectors will perform "process_strong_roots" in parallel. // Such a call will involve claiming some fine-grained tasks, such as // scanning of threads. To make this process simpler, we provide the // "strong_roots_parity()" method. Collectors that start parallel tasks // whose threads invoke "process_strong_roots" must // call "change_strong_roots_parity" in sequential code starting such a // task. (This also means that a parallel thread may only call // process_strong_roots once.) // // For calls to process_roots by sequential code, the parity is // updated automatically. // // The idea is that objects representing fine-grained tasks, such as // threads, will contain a "parity" field. A task will is claimed in the // current "process_roots" call only if its parity field is the // same as the "strong_roots_parity"; task claiming is accomplished by // updating the parity field to the strong_roots_parity with a CAS. // // If the client meats this spec, then strong_roots_parity() will have // the following properties: // a) to return a different value than was returned before the last // call to change_strong_roots_parity, and // c) to never return a distinguished value (zero) with which such // task-claiming variables may be initialized, to indicate "never // claimed". public: // Call these in sequential code around process_roots. // strong_roots_prologue calls change_strong_roots_parity, if // parallel tasks are enabled. class StrongRootsScope : public MarkingCodeBlobClosure::MarkScope { SharedHeap* _sh; public: StrongRootsScope(SharedHeap* heap, bool activate = true); ~StrongRootsScope(); }; private: public: FlexibleWorkGang* workers() const { return _workers; } // The functions below are helper functions that a subclass of // "SharedHeap" can use in the implementation of its virtual // functions. public: // Sets the number of parallel threads that will be doing tasks // (such as process roots) subsequently. virtual void set_par_threads(uint t); }; #endif // SHARE_VM_MEMORY_SHAREDHEAP_HPP