0
|
1 /*
|
|
2 * Copyright 1997-2007 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
|
|
3 * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
|
|
4 *
|
|
5 * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
|
|
6 * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
|
|
7 * published by the Free Software Foundation.
|
|
8 *
|
|
9 * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
|
|
10 * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
|
|
11 * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
|
|
12 * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
|
|
13 * accompanied this code).
|
|
14 *
|
|
15 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
|
|
16 * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
|
|
17 * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
|
|
18 *
|
|
19 * Please contact Sun Microsystems, Inc., 4150 Network Circle, Santa Clara,
|
|
20 * CA 95054 USA or visit www.sun.com if you need additional information or
|
|
21 * have any questions.
|
|
22 *
|
|
23 */
|
|
24
|
|
25 # include "incls/_precompiled.incl"
|
|
26 # include "incls/_os.cpp.incl"
|
|
27
|
|
28 # include <signal.h>
|
|
29
|
|
30 OSThread* os::_starting_thread = NULL;
|
|
31 address os::_polling_page = NULL;
|
|
32 volatile int32_t* os::_mem_serialize_page = NULL;
|
|
33 uintptr_t os::_serialize_page_mask = 0;
|
|
34 long os::_rand_seed = 1;
|
|
35 int os::_processor_count = 0;
|
|
36 volatile jlong os::_global_time = 0;
|
|
37 volatile int os::_global_time_lock = 0;
|
|
38 bool os::_use_global_time = false;
|
|
39 size_t os::_page_sizes[os::page_sizes_max];
|
|
40
|
|
41 #ifndef PRODUCT
|
|
42 int os::num_mallocs = 0; // # of calls to malloc/realloc
|
|
43 size_t os::alloc_bytes = 0; // # of bytes allocated
|
|
44 int os::num_frees = 0; // # of calls to free
|
|
45 #endif
|
|
46
|
|
47 // Atomic read of a jlong is assured by a seqlock; see update_global_time()
|
|
48 jlong os::read_global_time() {
|
|
49 #ifdef _LP64
|
|
50 return _global_time;
|
|
51 #else
|
|
52 volatile int lock;
|
|
53 volatile jlong current_time;
|
|
54 int ctr = 0;
|
|
55
|
|
56 for (;;) {
|
|
57 lock = _global_time_lock;
|
|
58
|
|
59 // spin while locked
|
|
60 while ((lock & 0x1) != 0) {
|
|
61 ++ctr;
|
|
62 if ((ctr & 0xFFF) == 0) {
|
|
63 // Guarantee writer progress. Can't use yield; yield is advisory
|
|
64 // and has almost no effect on some platforms. Don't need a state
|
|
65 // transition - the park call will return promptly.
|
|
66 assert(Thread::current() != NULL, "TLS not initialized");
|
|
67 assert(Thread::current()->_ParkEvent != NULL, "sync not initialized");
|
|
68 Thread::current()->_ParkEvent->park(1);
|
|
69 }
|
|
70 lock = _global_time_lock;
|
|
71 }
|
|
72
|
|
73 OrderAccess::loadload();
|
|
74 current_time = _global_time;
|
|
75 OrderAccess::loadload();
|
|
76
|
|
77 // ratify seqlock value
|
|
78 if (lock == _global_time_lock) {
|
|
79 return current_time;
|
|
80 }
|
|
81 }
|
|
82 #endif
|
|
83 }
|
|
84
|
|
85 //
|
|
86 // NOTE - Assumes only one writer thread!
|
|
87 //
|
|
88 // We use a seqlock to guarantee that jlong _global_time is updated
|
|
89 // atomically on 32-bit platforms. A locked value is indicated by
|
|
90 // the lock variable LSB == 1. Readers will initially read the lock
|
|
91 // value, spinning until the LSB == 0. They then speculatively read
|
|
92 // the global time value, then re-read the lock value to ensure that
|
|
93 // it hasn't changed. If the lock value has changed, the entire read
|
|
94 // sequence is retried.
|
|
95 //
|
|
96 // Writers simply set the LSB = 1 (i.e. increment the variable),
|
|
97 // update the global time, then release the lock and bump the version
|
|
98 // number (i.e. increment the variable again.) In this case we don't
|
|
99 // even need a CAS since we ensure there's only one writer.
|
|
100 //
|
|
101 void os::update_global_time() {
|
|
102 #ifdef _LP64
|
|
103 _global_time = timeofday();
|
|
104 #else
|
|
105 assert((_global_time_lock & 0x1) == 0, "multiple writers?");
|
|
106 jlong current_time = timeofday();
|
|
107 _global_time_lock++; // lock
|
|
108 OrderAccess::storestore();
|
|
109 _global_time = current_time;
|
|
110 OrderAccess::storestore();
|
|
111 _global_time_lock++; // unlock
|
|
112 #endif
|
|
113 }
|
|
114
|
|
115 // Fill in buffer with current local time as an ISO-8601 string.
|
|
116 // E.g., yyyy-mm-ddThh:mm:ss-zzzz.
|
|
117 // Returns buffer, or NULL if it failed.
|
|
118 // This would mostly be a call to
|
|
119 // strftime(...., "%Y-%m-%d" "T" "%H:%M:%S" "%z", ....)
|
|
120 // except that on Windows the %z behaves badly, so we do it ourselves.
|
|
121 // Also, people wanted milliseconds on there,
|
|
122 // and strftime doesn't do milliseconds.
|
|
123 char* os::iso8601_time(char* buffer, size_t buffer_length) {
|
|
124 // Output will be of the form "YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.mmm+zzzz\0"
|
|
125 // 1 2
|
|
126 // 12345678901234567890123456789
|
|
127 static const char* iso8601_format =
|
|
128 "%04d-%02d-%02dT%02d:%02d:%02d.%03d%c%02d%02d";
|
|
129 static const size_t needed_buffer = 29;
|
|
130
|
|
131 // Sanity check the arguments
|
|
132 if (buffer == NULL) {
|
|
133 assert(false, "NULL buffer");
|
|
134 return NULL;
|
|
135 }
|
|
136 if (buffer_length < needed_buffer) {
|
|
137 assert(false, "buffer_length too small");
|
|
138 return NULL;
|
|
139 }
|
|
140 // Get the current time
|
|
141 jlong milliseconds_since_19700101 = timeofday();
|
|
142 const int milliseconds_per_microsecond = 1000;
|
|
143 const time_t seconds_since_19700101 =
|
|
144 milliseconds_since_19700101 / milliseconds_per_microsecond;
|
|
145 const int milliseconds_after_second =
|
|
146 milliseconds_since_19700101 % milliseconds_per_microsecond;
|
|
147 // Convert the time value to a tm and timezone variable
|
|
148 const struct tm *time_struct_temp = localtime(&seconds_since_19700101);
|
|
149 if (time_struct_temp == NULL) {
|
|
150 assert(false, "Failed localtime");
|
|
151 return NULL;
|
|
152 }
|
|
153 // Save the results of localtime
|
|
154 const struct tm time_struct = *time_struct_temp;
|
|
155 const time_t zone = timezone;
|
|
156
|
|
157 // If daylight savings time is in effect,
|
|
158 // we are 1 hour East of our time zone
|
|
159 const time_t seconds_per_minute = 60;
|
|
160 const time_t minutes_per_hour = 60;
|
|
161 const time_t seconds_per_hour = seconds_per_minute * minutes_per_hour;
|
|
162 time_t UTC_to_local = zone;
|
|
163 if (time_struct.tm_isdst > 0) {
|
|
164 UTC_to_local = UTC_to_local - seconds_per_hour;
|
|
165 }
|
|
166 // Compute the time zone offset.
|
|
167 // localtime(3C) sets timezone to the difference (in seconds)
|
|
168 // between UTC and and local time.
|
|
169 // ISO 8601 says we need the difference between local time and UTC,
|
|
170 // we change the sign of the localtime(3C) result.
|
|
171 const time_t local_to_UTC = -(UTC_to_local);
|
|
172 // Then we have to figure out if if we are ahead (+) or behind (-) UTC.
|
|
173 char sign_local_to_UTC = '+';
|
|
174 time_t abs_local_to_UTC = local_to_UTC;
|
|
175 if (local_to_UTC < 0) {
|
|
176 sign_local_to_UTC = '-';
|
|
177 abs_local_to_UTC = -(abs_local_to_UTC);
|
|
178 }
|
|
179 // Convert time zone offset seconds to hours and minutes.
|
|
180 const time_t zone_hours = (abs_local_to_UTC / seconds_per_hour);
|
|
181 const time_t zone_min =
|
|
182 ((abs_local_to_UTC % seconds_per_hour) / seconds_per_minute);
|
|
183
|
|
184 // Print an ISO 8601 date and time stamp into the buffer
|
|
185 const int year = 1900 + time_struct.tm_year;
|
|
186 const int month = 1 + time_struct.tm_mon;
|
|
187 const int printed = jio_snprintf(buffer, buffer_length, iso8601_format,
|
|
188 year,
|
|
189 month,
|
|
190 time_struct.tm_mday,
|
|
191 time_struct.tm_hour,
|
|
192 time_struct.tm_min,
|
|
193 time_struct.tm_sec,
|
|
194 milliseconds_after_second,
|
|
195 sign_local_to_UTC,
|
|
196 zone_hours,
|
|
197 zone_min);
|
|
198 if (printed == 0) {
|
|
199 assert(false, "Failed jio_printf");
|
|
200 return NULL;
|
|
201 }
|
|
202 return buffer;
|
|
203 }
|
|
204
|
|
205 OSReturn os::set_priority(Thread* thread, ThreadPriority p) {
|
|
206 #ifdef ASSERT
|
|
207 if (!(!thread->is_Java_thread() ||
|
|
208 Thread::current() == thread ||
|
|
209 Threads_lock->owned_by_self()
|
|
210 || thread->is_Compiler_thread()
|
|
211 )) {
|
|
212 assert(false, "possibility of dangling Thread pointer");
|
|
213 }
|
|
214 #endif
|
|
215
|
|
216 if (p >= MinPriority && p <= MaxPriority) {
|
|
217 int priority = java_to_os_priority[p];
|
|
218 return set_native_priority(thread, priority);
|
|
219 } else {
|
|
220 assert(false, "Should not happen");
|
|
221 return OS_ERR;
|
|
222 }
|
|
223 }
|
|
224
|
|
225
|
|
226 OSReturn os::get_priority(const Thread* const thread, ThreadPriority& priority) {
|
|
227 int p;
|
|
228 int os_prio;
|
|
229 OSReturn ret = get_native_priority(thread, &os_prio);
|
|
230 if (ret != OS_OK) return ret;
|
|
231
|
|
232 for (p = MaxPriority; p > MinPriority && java_to_os_priority[p] > os_prio; p--) ;
|
|
233 priority = (ThreadPriority)p;
|
|
234 return OS_OK;
|
|
235 }
|
|
236
|
|
237
|
|
238 // --------------------- sun.misc.Signal (optional) ---------------------
|
|
239
|
|
240
|
|
241 // SIGBREAK is sent by the keyboard to query the VM state
|
|
242 #ifndef SIGBREAK
|
|
243 #define SIGBREAK SIGQUIT
|
|
244 #endif
|
|
245
|
|
246 // sigexitnum_pd is a platform-specific special signal used for terminating the Signal thread.
|
|
247
|
|
248
|
|
249 static void signal_thread_entry(JavaThread* thread, TRAPS) {
|
|
250 os::set_priority(thread, NearMaxPriority);
|
|
251 while (true) {
|
|
252 int sig;
|
|
253 {
|
|
254 // FIXME : Currently we have not decieded what should be the status
|
|
255 // for this java thread blocked here. Once we decide about
|
|
256 // that we should fix this.
|
|
257 sig = os::signal_wait();
|
|
258 }
|
|
259 if (sig == os::sigexitnum_pd()) {
|
|
260 // Terminate the signal thread
|
|
261 return;
|
|
262 }
|
|
263
|
|
264 switch (sig) {
|
|
265 case SIGBREAK: {
|
|
266 // Check if the signal is a trigger to start the Attach Listener - in that
|
|
267 // case don't print stack traces.
|
|
268 if (!DisableAttachMechanism && AttachListener::is_init_trigger()) {
|
|
269 continue;
|
|
270 }
|
|
271 // Print stack traces
|
|
272 // Any SIGBREAK operations added here should make sure to flush
|
|
273 // the output stream (e.g. tty->flush()) after output. See 4803766.
|
|
274 // Each module also prints an extra carriage return after its output.
|
|
275 VM_PrintThreads op;
|
|
276 VMThread::execute(&op);
|
|
277 VM_PrintJNI jni_op;
|
|
278 VMThread::execute(&jni_op);
|
|
279 VM_FindDeadlocks op1(tty);
|
|
280 VMThread::execute(&op1);
|
|
281 Universe::print_heap_at_SIGBREAK();
|
|
282 if (PrintClassHistogram) {
|
|
283 VM_GC_HeapInspection op1(gclog_or_tty, true /* force full GC before heap inspection */);
|
|
284 VMThread::execute(&op1);
|
|
285 }
|
|
286 if (JvmtiExport::should_post_data_dump()) {
|
|
287 JvmtiExport::post_data_dump();
|
|
288 }
|
|
289 break;
|
|
290 }
|
|
291 default: {
|
|
292 // Dispatch the signal to java
|
|
293 HandleMark hm(THREAD);
|
|
294 klassOop k = SystemDictionary::resolve_or_null(vmSymbolHandles::sun_misc_Signal(), THREAD);
|
|
295 KlassHandle klass (THREAD, k);
|
|
296 if (klass.not_null()) {
|
|
297 JavaValue result(T_VOID);
|
|
298 JavaCallArguments args;
|
|
299 args.push_int(sig);
|
|
300 JavaCalls::call_static(
|
|
301 &result,
|
|
302 klass,
|
|
303 vmSymbolHandles::dispatch_name(),
|
|
304 vmSymbolHandles::int_void_signature(),
|
|
305 &args,
|
|
306 THREAD
|
|
307 );
|
|
308 }
|
|
309 if (HAS_PENDING_EXCEPTION) {
|
|
310 // tty is initialized early so we don't expect it to be null, but
|
|
311 // if it is we can't risk doing an initialization that might
|
|
312 // trigger additional out-of-memory conditions
|
|
313 if (tty != NULL) {
|
|
314 char klass_name[256];
|
|
315 char tmp_sig_name[16];
|
|
316 const char* sig_name = "UNKNOWN";
|
|
317 instanceKlass::cast(PENDING_EXCEPTION->klass())->
|
|
318 name()->as_klass_external_name(klass_name, 256);
|
|
319 if (os::exception_name(sig, tmp_sig_name, 16) != NULL)
|
|
320 sig_name = tmp_sig_name;
|
|
321 warning("Exception %s occurred dispatching signal %s to handler"
|
|
322 "- the VM may need to be forcibly terminated",
|
|
323 klass_name, sig_name );
|
|
324 }
|
|
325 CLEAR_PENDING_EXCEPTION;
|
|
326 }
|
|
327 }
|
|
328 }
|
|
329 }
|
|
330 }
|
|
331
|
|
332
|
|
333 void os::signal_init() {
|
|
334 if (!ReduceSignalUsage) {
|
|
335 // Setup JavaThread for processing signals
|
|
336 EXCEPTION_MARK;
|
|
337 klassOop k = SystemDictionary::resolve_or_fail(vmSymbolHandles::java_lang_Thread(), true, CHECK);
|
|
338 instanceKlassHandle klass (THREAD, k);
|
|
339 instanceHandle thread_oop = klass->allocate_instance_handle(CHECK);
|
|
340
|
|
341 const char thread_name[] = "Signal Dispatcher";
|
|
342 Handle string = java_lang_String::create_from_str(thread_name, CHECK);
|
|
343
|
|
344 // Initialize thread_oop to put it into the system threadGroup
|
|
345 Handle thread_group (THREAD, Universe::system_thread_group());
|
|
346 JavaValue result(T_VOID);
|
|
347 JavaCalls::call_special(&result, thread_oop,
|
|
348 klass,
|
|
349 vmSymbolHandles::object_initializer_name(),
|
|
350 vmSymbolHandles::threadgroup_string_void_signature(),
|
|
351 thread_group,
|
|
352 string,
|
|
353 CHECK);
|
|
354
|
|
355 KlassHandle group(THREAD, SystemDictionary::threadGroup_klass());
|
|
356 JavaCalls::call_special(&result,
|
|
357 thread_group,
|
|
358 group,
|
|
359 vmSymbolHandles::add_method_name(),
|
|
360 vmSymbolHandles::thread_void_signature(),
|
|
361 thread_oop, // ARG 1
|
|
362 CHECK);
|
|
363
|
|
364 os::signal_init_pd();
|
|
365
|
|
366 { MutexLocker mu(Threads_lock);
|
|
367 JavaThread* signal_thread = new JavaThread(&signal_thread_entry);
|
|
368
|
|
369 // At this point it may be possible that no osthread was created for the
|
|
370 // JavaThread due to lack of memory. We would have to throw an exception
|
|
371 // in that case. However, since this must work and we do not allow
|
|
372 // exceptions anyway, check and abort if this fails.
|
|
373 if (signal_thread == NULL || signal_thread->osthread() == NULL) {
|
|
374 vm_exit_during_initialization("java.lang.OutOfMemoryError",
|
|
375 "unable to create new native thread");
|
|
376 }
|
|
377
|
|
378 java_lang_Thread::set_thread(thread_oop(), signal_thread);
|
|
379 java_lang_Thread::set_priority(thread_oop(), NearMaxPriority);
|
|
380 java_lang_Thread::set_daemon(thread_oop());
|
|
381
|
|
382 signal_thread->set_threadObj(thread_oop());
|
|
383 Threads::add(signal_thread);
|
|
384 Thread::start(signal_thread);
|
|
385 }
|
|
386 // Handle ^BREAK
|
|
387 os::signal(SIGBREAK, os::user_handler());
|
|
388 }
|
|
389 }
|
|
390
|
|
391
|
|
392 void os::terminate_signal_thread() {
|
|
393 if (!ReduceSignalUsage)
|
|
394 signal_notify(sigexitnum_pd());
|
|
395 }
|
|
396
|
|
397
|
|
398 // --------------------- loading libraries ---------------------
|
|
399
|
|
400 typedef jint (JNICALL *JNI_OnLoad_t)(JavaVM *, void *);
|
|
401 extern struct JavaVM_ main_vm;
|
|
402
|
|
403 static void* _native_java_library = NULL;
|
|
404
|
|
405 void* os::native_java_library() {
|
|
406 if (_native_java_library == NULL) {
|
|
407 char buffer[JVM_MAXPATHLEN];
|
|
408 char ebuf[1024];
|
|
409
|
|
410 // Try to load verify dll first. In 1.3 java dll depends on it and is not always
|
|
411 // able to find it when the loading executable is outside the JDK.
|
|
412 // In order to keep working with 1.2 we ignore any loading errors.
|
|
413 hpi::dll_build_name(buffer, sizeof(buffer), Arguments::get_dll_dir(), "verify");
|
|
414 hpi::dll_load(buffer, ebuf, sizeof(ebuf));
|
|
415
|
|
416 // Load java dll
|
|
417 hpi::dll_build_name(buffer, sizeof(buffer), Arguments::get_dll_dir(), "java");
|
|
418 _native_java_library = hpi::dll_load(buffer, ebuf, sizeof(ebuf));
|
|
419 if (_native_java_library == NULL) {
|
|
420 vm_exit_during_initialization("Unable to load native library", ebuf);
|
|
421 }
|
|
422 // The JNI_OnLoad handling is normally done by method load in java.lang.ClassLoader$NativeLibrary,
|
|
423 // but the VM loads the base library explicitly so we have to check for JNI_OnLoad as well
|
|
424 const char *onLoadSymbols[] = JNI_ONLOAD_SYMBOLS;
|
|
425 JNI_OnLoad_t JNI_OnLoad = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(JNI_OnLoad_t, hpi::dll_lookup(_native_java_library, onLoadSymbols[0]));
|
|
426 if (JNI_OnLoad != NULL) {
|
|
427 JavaThread* thread = JavaThread::current();
|
|
428 ThreadToNativeFromVM ttn(thread);
|
|
429 HandleMark hm(thread);
|
|
430 jint ver = (*JNI_OnLoad)(&main_vm, NULL);
|
|
431 if (!Threads::is_supported_jni_version_including_1_1(ver)) {
|
|
432 vm_exit_during_initialization("Unsupported JNI version");
|
|
433 }
|
|
434 }
|
|
435 }
|
|
436 return _native_java_library;
|
|
437 }
|
|
438
|
|
439 // --------------------- heap allocation utilities ---------------------
|
|
440
|
|
441 char *os::strdup(const char *str) {
|
|
442 size_t size = strlen(str);
|
|
443 char *dup_str = (char *)malloc(size + 1);
|
|
444 if (dup_str == NULL) return NULL;
|
|
445 strcpy(dup_str, str);
|
|
446 return dup_str;
|
|
447 }
|
|
448
|
|
449
|
|
450
|
|
451 #ifdef ASSERT
|
|
452 #define space_before (MallocCushion + sizeof(double))
|
|
453 #define space_after MallocCushion
|
|
454 #define size_addr_from_base(p) (size_t*)(p + space_before - sizeof(size_t))
|
|
455 #define size_addr_from_obj(p) ((size_t*)p - 1)
|
|
456 // MallocCushion: size of extra cushion allocated around objects with +UseMallocOnly
|
|
457 // NB: cannot be debug variable, because these aren't set from the command line until
|
|
458 // *after* the first few allocs already happened
|
|
459 #define MallocCushion 16
|
|
460 #else
|
|
461 #define space_before 0
|
|
462 #define space_after 0
|
|
463 #define size_addr_from_base(p) should not use w/o ASSERT
|
|
464 #define size_addr_from_obj(p) should not use w/o ASSERT
|
|
465 #define MallocCushion 0
|
|
466 #endif
|
|
467 #define paranoid 0 /* only set to 1 if you suspect checking code has bug */
|
|
468
|
|
469 #ifdef ASSERT
|
|
470 inline size_t get_size(void* obj) {
|
|
471 size_t size = *size_addr_from_obj(obj);
|
|
472 if (size < 0 )
|
|
473 fatal2("free: size field of object #%p was overwritten (%lu)", obj, size);
|
|
474 return size;
|
|
475 }
|
|
476
|
|
477 u_char* find_cushion_backwards(u_char* start) {
|
|
478 u_char* p = start;
|
|
479 while (p[ 0] != badResourceValue || p[-1] != badResourceValue ||
|
|
480 p[-2] != badResourceValue || p[-3] != badResourceValue) p--;
|
|
481 // ok, we have four consecutive marker bytes; find start
|
|
482 u_char* q = p - 4;
|
|
483 while (*q == badResourceValue) q--;
|
|
484 return q + 1;
|
|
485 }
|
|
486
|
|
487 u_char* find_cushion_forwards(u_char* start) {
|
|
488 u_char* p = start;
|
|
489 while (p[0] != badResourceValue || p[1] != badResourceValue ||
|
|
490 p[2] != badResourceValue || p[3] != badResourceValue) p++;
|
|
491 // ok, we have four consecutive marker bytes; find end of cushion
|
|
492 u_char* q = p + 4;
|
|
493 while (*q == badResourceValue) q++;
|
|
494 return q - MallocCushion;
|
|
495 }
|
|
496
|
|
497 void print_neighbor_blocks(void* ptr) {
|
|
498 // find block allocated before ptr (not entirely crash-proof)
|
|
499 if (MallocCushion < 4) {
|
|
500 tty->print_cr("### cannot find previous block (MallocCushion < 4)");
|
|
501 return;
|
|
502 }
|
|
503 u_char* start_of_this_block = (u_char*)ptr - space_before;
|
|
504 u_char* end_of_prev_block_data = start_of_this_block - space_after -1;
|
|
505 // look for cushion in front of prev. block
|
|
506 u_char* start_of_prev_block = find_cushion_backwards(end_of_prev_block_data);
|
|
507 ptrdiff_t size = *size_addr_from_base(start_of_prev_block);
|
|
508 u_char* obj = start_of_prev_block + space_before;
|
|
509 if (size <= 0 ) {
|
|
510 // start is bad; mayhave been confused by OS data inbetween objects
|
|
511 // search one more backwards
|
|
512 start_of_prev_block = find_cushion_backwards(start_of_prev_block);
|
|
513 size = *size_addr_from_base(start_of_prev_block);
|
|
514 obj = start_of_prev_block + space_before;
|
|
515 }
|
|
516
|
|
517 if (start_of_prev_block + space_before + size + space_after == start_of_this_block) {
|
|
518 tty->print_cr("### previous object: %p (%ld bytes)", obj, size);
|
|
519 } else {
|
|
520 tty->print_cr("### previous object (not sure if correct): %p (%ld bytes)", obj, size);
|
|
521 }
|
|
522
|
|
523 // now find successor block
|
|
524 u_char* start_of_next_block = (u_char*)ptr + *size_addr_from_obj(ptr) + space_after;
|
|
525 start_of_next_block = find_cushion_forwards(start_of_next_block);
|
|
526 u_char* next_obj = start_of_next_block + space_before;
|
|
527 ptrdiff_t next_size = *size_addr_from_base(start_of_next_block);
|
|
528 if (start_of_next_block[0] == badResourceValue &&
|
|
529 start_of_next_block[1] == badResourceValue &&
|
|
530 start_of_next_block[2] == badResourceValue &&
|
|
531 start_of_next_block[3] == badResourceValue) {
|
|
532 tty->print_cr("### next object: %p (%ld bytes)", next_obj, next_size);
|
|
533 } else {
|
|
534 tty->print_cr("### next object (not sure if correct): %p (%ld bytes)", next_obj, next_size);
|
|
535 }
|
|
536 }
|
|
537
|
|
538
|
|
539 void report_heap_error(void* memblock, void* bad, const char* where) {
|
|
540 tty->print_cr("## nof_mallocs = %d, nof_frees = %d", os::num_mallocs, os::num_frees);
|
|
541 tty->print_cr("## memory stomp: byte at %p %s object %p", bad, where, memblock);
|
|
542 print_neighbor_blocks(memblock);
|
|
543 fatal("memory stomping error");
|
|
544 }
|
|
545
|
|
546 void verify_block(void* memblock) {
|
|
547 size_t size = get_size(memblock);
|
|
548 if (MallocCushion) {
|
|
549 u_char* ptr = (u_char*)memblock - space_before;
|
|
550 for (int i = 0; i < MallocCushion; i++) {
|
|
551 if (ptr[i] != badResourceValue) {
|
|
552 report_heap_error(memblock, ptr+i, "in front of");
|
|
553 }
|
|
554 }
|
|
555 u_char* end = (u_char*)memblock + size + space_after;
|
|
556 for (int j = -MallocCushion; j < 0; j++) {
|
|
557 if (end[j] != badResourceValue) {
|
|
558 report_heap_error(memblock, end+j, "after");
|
|
559 }
|
|
560 }
|
|
561 }
|
|
562 }
|
|
563 #endif
|
|
564
|
|
565 void* os::malloc(size_t size) {
|
|
566 NOT_PRODUCT(num_mallocs++);
|
|
567 NOT_PRODUCT(alloc_bytes += size);
|
|
568
|
|
569 if (size == 0) {
|
|
570 // return a valid pointer if size is zero
|
|
571 // if NULL is returned the calling functions assume out of memory.
|
|
572 size = 1;
|
|
573 }
|
|
574
|
|
575 NOT_PRODUCT(if (MallocVerifyInterval > 0) check_heap());
|
|
576 u_char* ptr = (u_char*)::malloc(size + space_before + space_after);
|
|
577 #ifdef ASSERT
|
|
578 if (ptr == NULL) return NULL;
|
|
579 if (MallocCushion) {
|
|
580 for (u_char* p = ptr; p < ptr + MallocCushion; p++) *p = (u_char)badResourceValue;
|
|
581 u_char* end = ptr + space_before + size;
|
|
582 for (u_char* pq = ptr+MallocCushion; pq < end; pq++) *pq = (u_char)uninitBlockPad;
|
|
583 for (u_char* q = end; q < end + MallocCushion; q++) *q = (u_char)badResourceValue;
|
|
584 }
|
|
585 // put size just before data
|
|
586 *size_addr_from_base(ptr) = size;
|
|
587 #endif
|
|
588 u_char* memblock = ptr + space_before;
|
|
589 if ((intptr_t)memblock == (intptr_t)MallocCatchPtr) {
|
|
590 tty->print_cr("os::malloc caught, %lu bytes --> %p", size, memblock);
|
|
591 breakpoint();
|
|
592 }
|
|
593 debug_only(if (paranoid) verify_block(memblock));
|
|
594 if (PrintMalloc && tty != NULL) tty->print_cr("os::malloc %lu bytes --> %p", size, memblock);
|
|
595 return memblock;
|
|
596 }
|
|
597
|
|
598
|
|
599 void* os::realloc(void *memblock, size_t size) {
|
|
600 NOT_PRODUCT(num_mallocs++);
|
|
601 NOT_PRODUCT(alloc_bytes += size);
|
|
602 #ifndef ASSERT
|
|
603 return ::realloc(memblock, size);
|
|
604 #else
|
|
605 if (memblock == NULL) {
|
|
606 return os::malloc(size);
|
|
607 }
|
|
608 if ((intptr_t)memblock == (intptr_t)MallocCatchPtr) {
|
|
609 tty->print_cr("os::realloc caught %p", memblock);
|
|
610 breakpoint();
|
|
611 }
|
|
612 verify_block(memblock);
|
|
613 NOT_PRODUCT(if (MallocVerifyInterval > 0) check_heap());
|
|
614 if (size == 0) return NULL;
|
|
615 // always move the block
|
|
616 void* ptr = malloc(size);
|
|
617 if (PrintMalloc) tty->print_cr("os::remalloc %lu bytes, %p --> %p", size, memblock, ptr);
|
|
618 // Copy to new memory if malloc didn't fail
|
|
619 if ( ptr != NULL ) {
|
|
620 memcpy(ptr, memblock, MIN2(size, get_size(memblock)));
|
|
621 if (paranoid) verify_block(ptr);
|
|
622 if ((intptr_t)ptr == (intptr_t)MallocCatchPtr) {
|
|
623 tty->print_cr("os::realloc caught, %lu bytes --> %p", size, ptr);
|
|
624 breakpoint();
|
|
625 }
|
|
626 free(memblock);
|
|
627 }
|
|
628 return ptr;
|
|
629 #endif
|
|
630 }
|
|
631
|
|
632
|
|
633 void os::free(void *memblock) {
|
|
634 NOT_PRODUCT(num_frees++);
|
|
635 #ifdef ASSERT
|
|
636 if (memblock == NULL) return;
|
|
637 if ((intptr_t)memblock == (intptr_t)MallocCatchPtr) {
|
|
638 if (tty != NULL) tty->print_cr("os::free caught %p", memblock);
|
|
639 breakpoint();
|
|
640 }
|
|
641 verify_block(memblock);
|
|
642 if (PrintMalloc && tty != NULL)
|
|
643 // tty->print_cr("os::free %p", memblock);
|
|
644 fprintf(stderr, "os::free %p\n", memblock);
|
|
645 NOT_PRODUCT(if (MallocVerifyInterval > 0) check_heap());
|
|
646 // Added by detlefs.
|
|
647 if (MallocCushion) {
|
|
648 u_char* ptr = (u_char*)memblock - space_before;
|
|
649 for (u_char* p = ptr; p < ptr + MallocCushion; p++) {
|
|
650 guarantee(*p == badResourceValue,
|
|
651 "Thing freed should be malloc result.");
|
|
652 *p = (u_char)freeBlockPad;
|
|
653 }
|
|
654 size_t size = get_size(memblock);
|
|
655 u_char* end = ptr + space_before + size;
|
|
656 for (u_char* q = end; q < end + MallocCushion; q++) {
|
|
657 guarantee(*q == badResourceValue,
|
|
658 "Thing freed should be malloc result.");
|
|
659 *q = (u_char)freeBlockPad;
|
|
660 }
|
|
661 }
|
|
662 #endif
|
|
663 ::free((char*)memblock - space_before);
|
|
664 }
|
|
665
|
|
666 void os::init_random(long initval) {
|
|
667 _rand_seed = initval;
|
|
668 }
|
|
669
|
|
670
|
|
671 long os::random() {
|
|
672 /* standard, well-known linear congruential random generator with
|
|
673 * next_rand = (16807*seed) mod (2**31-1)
|
|
674 * see
|
|
675 * (1) "Random Number Generators: Good Ones Are Hard to Find",
|
|
676 * S.K. Park and K.W. Miller, Communications of the ACM 31:10 (Oct 1988),
|
|
677 * (2) "Two Fast Implementations of the 'Minimal Standard' Random
|
|
678 * Number Generator", David G. Carta, Comm. ACM 33, 1 (Jan 1990), pp. 87-88.
|
|
679 */
|
|
680 const long a = 16807;
|
|
681 const unsigned long m = 2147483647;
|
|
682 const long q = m / a; assert(q == 127773, "weird math");
|
|
683 const long r = m % a; assert(r == 2836, "weird math");
|
|
684
|
|
685 // compute az=2^31p+q
|
|
686 unsigned long lo = a * (long)(_rand_seed & 0xFFFF);
|
|
687 unsigned long hi = a * (long)((unsigned long)_rand_seed >> 16);
|
|
688 lo += (hi & 0x7FFF) << 16;
|
|
689
|
|
690 // if q overflowed, ignore the overflow and increment q
|
|
691 if (lo > m) {
|
|
692 lo &= m;
|
|
693 ++lo;
|
|
694 }
|
|
695 lo += hi >> 15;
|
|
696
|
|
697 // if (p+q) overflowed, ignore the overflow and increment (p+q)
|
|
698 if (lo > m) {
|
|
699 lo &= m;
|
|
700 ++lo;
|
|
701 }
|
|
702 return (_rand_seed = lo);
|
|
703 }
|
|
704
|
|
705 // The INITIALIZED state is distinguished from the SUSPENDED state because the
|
|
706 // conditions in which a thread is first started are different from those in which
|
|
707 // a suspension is resumed. These differences make it hard for us to apply the
|
|
708 // tougher checks when starting threads that we want to do when resuming them.
|
|
709 // However, when start_thread is called as a result of Thread.start, on a Java
|
|
710 // thread, the operation is synchronized on the Java Thread object. So there
|
|
711 // cannot be a race to start the thread and hence for the thread to exit while
|
|
712 // we are working on it. Non-Java threads that start Java threads either have
|
|
713 // to do so in a context in which races are impossible, or should do appropriate
|
|
714 // locking.
|
|
715
|
|
716 void os::start_thread(Thread* thread) {
|
|
717 // guard suspend/resume
|
|
718 MutexLockerEx ml(thread->SR_lock(), Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag);
|
|
719 OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread();
|
|
720 osthread->set_state(RUNNABLE);
|
|
721 pd_start_thread(thread);
|
|
722 }
|
|
723
|
|
724 //---------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
725 // Helper functions for fatal error handler
|
|
726
|
|
727 void os::print_hex_dump(outputStream* st, address start, address end, int unitsize) {
|
|
728 assert(unitsize == 1 || unitsize == 2 || unitsize == 4 || unitsize == 8, "just checking");
|
|
729
|
|
730 int cols = 0;
|
|
731 int cols_per_line = 0;
|
|
732 switch (unitsize) {
|
|
733 case 1: cols_per_line = 16; break;
|
|
734 case 2: cols_per_line = 8; break;
|
|
735 case 4: cols_per_line = 4; break;
|
|
736 case 8: cols_per_line = 2; break;
|
|
737 default: return;
|
|
738 }
|
|
739
|
|
740 address p = start;
|
|
741 st->print(PTR_FORMAT ": ", start);
|
|
742 while (p < end) {
|
|
743 switch (unitsize) {
|
|
744 case 1: st->print("%02x", *(u1*)p); break;
|
|
745 case 2: st->print("%04x", *(u2*)p); break;
|
|
746 case 4: st->print("%08x", *(u4*)p); break;
|
|
747 case 8: st->print("%016" FORMAT64_MODIFIER "x", *(u8*)p); break;
|
|
748 }
|
|
749 p += unitsize;
|
|
750 cols++;
|
|
751 if (cols >= cols_per_line && p < end) {
|
|
752 cols = 0;
|
|
753 st->cr();
|
|
754 st->print(PTR_FORMAT ": ", p);
|
|
755 } else {
|
|
756 st->print(" ");
|
|
757 }
|
|
758 }
|
|
759 st->cr();
|
|
760 }
|
|
761
|
|
762 void os::print_environment_variables(outputStream* st, const char** env_list,
|
|
763 char* buffer, int len) {
|
|
764 if (env_list) {
|
|
765 st->print_cr("Environment Variables:");
|
|
766
|
|
767 for (int i = 0; env_list[i] != NULL; i++) {
|
|
768 if (getenv(env_list[i], buffer, len)) {
|
|
769 st->print(env_list[i]);
|
|
770 st->print("=");
|
|
771 st->print_cr(buffer);
|
|
772 }
|
|
773 }
|
|
774 }
|
|
775 }
|
|
776
|
|
777 void os::print_cpu_info(outputStream* st) {
|
|
778 // cpu
|
|
779 st->print("CPU:");
|
|
780 st->print("total %d", os::processor_count());
|
|
781 // It's not safe to query number of active processors after crash
|
|
782 // st->print("(active %d)", os::active_processor_count());
|
|
783 st->print(" %s", VM_Version::cpu_features());
|
|
784 st->cr();
|
|
785 }
|
|
786
|
|
787 void os::print_date_and_time(outputStream *st) {
|
|
788 time_t tloc;
|
|
789 (void)time(&tloc);
|
|
790 st->print("time: %s", ctime(&tloc)); // ctime adds newline.
|
|
791
|
|
792 double t = os::elapsedTime();
|
|
793 // NOTE: It tends to crash after a SEGV if we want to printf("%f",...) in
|
|
794 // Linux. Must be a bug in glibc ? Workaround is to round "t" to int
|
|
795 // before printf. We lost some precision, but who cares?
|
|
796 st->print_cr("elapsed time: %d seconds", (int)t);
|
|
797 }
|
|
798
|
|
799
|
|
800 // Looks like all platforms except IA64 can use the same function to check
|
|
801 // if C stack is walkable beyond current frame. The check for fp() is not
|
|
802 // necessary on Sparc, but it's harmless.
|
|
803 bool os::is_first_C_frame(frame* fr) {
|
|
804 #ifdef IA64
|
|
805 // In order to walk native frames on Itanium, we need to access the unwind
|
|
806 // table, which is inside ELF. We don't want to parse ELF after fatal error,
|
|
807 // so return true for IA64. If we need to support C stack walking on IA64,
|
|
808 // this function needs to be moved to CPU specific files, as fp() on IA64
|
|
809 // is register stack, which grows towards higher memory address.
|
|
810 return true;
|
|
811 #endif
|
|
812
|
|
813 // Load up sp, fp, sender sp and sender fp, check for reasonable values.
|
|
814 // Check usp first, because if that's bad the other accessors may fault
|
|
815 // on some architectures. Ditto ufp second, etc.
|
|
816 uintptr_t fp_align_mask = (uintptr_t)(sizeof(address)-1);
|
|
817 // sp on amd can be 32 bit aligned.
|
|
818 uintptr_t sp_align_mask = (uintptr_t)(sizeof(int)-1);
|
|
819
|
|
820 uintptr_t usp = (uintptr_t)fr->sp();
|
|
821 if ((usp & sp_align_mask) != 0) return true;
|
|
822
|
|
823 uintptr_t ufp = (uintptr_t)fr->fp();
|
|
824 if ((ufp & fp_align_mask) != 0) return true;
|
|
825
|
|
826 uintptr_t old_sp = (uintptr_t)fr->sender_sp();
|
|
827 if ((old_sp & sp_align_mask) != 0) return true;
|
|
828 if (old_sp == 0 || old_sp == (uintptr_t)-1) return true;
|
|
829
|
|
830 uintptr_t old_fp = (uintptr_t)fr->link();
|
|
831 if ((old_fp & fp_align_mask) != 0) return true;
|
|
832 if (old_fp == 0 || old_fp == (uintptr_t)-1 || old_fp == ufp) return true;
|
|
833
|
|
834 // stack grows downwards; if old_fp is below current fp or if the stack
|
|
835 // frame is too large, either the stack is corrupted or fp is not saved
|
|
836 // on stack (i.e. on x86, ebp may be used as general register). The stack
|
|
837 // is not walkable beyond current frame.
|
|
838 if (old_fp < ufp) return true;
|
|
839 if (old_fp - ufp > 64 * K) return true;
|
|
840
|
|
841 return false;
|
|
842 }
|
|
843
|
|
844 #ifdef ASSERT
|
|
845 extern "C" void test_random() {
|
|
846 const double m = 2147483647;
|
|
847 double mean = 0.0, variance = 0.0, t;
|
|
848 long reps = 10000;
|
|
849 unsigned long seed = 1;
|
|
850
|
|
851 tty->print_cr("seed %ld for %ld repeats...", seed, reps);
|
|
852 os::init_random(seed);
|
|
853 long num;
|
|
854 for (int k = 0; k < reps; k++) {
|
|
855 num = os::random();
|
|
856 double u = (double)num / m;
|
|
857 assert(u >= 0.0 && u <= 1.0, "bad random number!");
|
|
858
|
|
859 // calculate mean and variance of the random sequence
|
|
860 mean += u;
|
|
861 variance += (u*u);
|
|
862 }
|
|
863 mean /= reps;
|
|
864 variance /= (reps - 1);
|
|
865
|
|
866 assert(num == 1043618065, "bad seed");
|
|
867 tty->print_cr("mean of the 1st 10000 numbers: %f", mean);
|
|
868 tty->print_cr("variance of the 1st 10000 numbers: %f", variance);
|
|
869 const double eps = 0.0001;
|
|
870 t = fabsd(mean - 0.5018);
|
|
871 assert(t < eps, "bad mean");
|
|
872 t = (variance - 0.3355) < 0.0 ? -(variance - 0.3355) : variance - 0.3355;
|
|
873 assert(t < eps, "bad variance");
|
|
874 }
|
|
875 #endif
|
|
876
|
|
877
|
|
878 // Set up the boot classpath.
|
|
879
|
|
880 char* os::format_boot_path(const char* format_string,
|
|
881 const char* home,
|
|
882 int home_len,
|
|
883 char fileSep,
|
|
884 char pathSep) {
|
|
885 assert((fileSep == '/' && pathSep == ':') ||
|
|
886 (fileSep == '\\' && pathSep == ';'), "unexpected seperator chars");
|
|
887
|
|
888 // Scan the format string to determine the length of the actual
|
|
889 // boot classpath, and handle platform dependencies as well.
|
|
890 int formatted_path_len = 0;
|
|
891 const char* p;
|
|
892 for (p = format_string; *p != 0; ++p) {
|
|
893 if (*p == '%') formatted_path_len += home_len - 1;
|
|
894 ++formatted_path_len;
|
|
895 }
|
|
896
|
|
897 char* formatted_path = NEW_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char, formatted_path_len + 1);
|
|
898 if (formatted_path == NULL) {
|
|
899 return NULL;
|
|
900 }
|
|
901
|
|
902 // Create boot classpath from format, substituting separator chars and
|
|
903 // java home directory.
|
|
904 char* q = formatted_path;
|
|
905 for (p = format_string; *p != 0; ++p) {
|
|
906 switch (*p) {
|
|
907 case '%':
|
|
908 strcpy(q, home);
|
|
909 q += home_len;
|
|
910 break;
|
|
911 case '/':
|
|
912 *q++ = fileSep;
|
|
913 break;
|
|
914 case ':':
|
|
915 *q++ = pathSep;
|
|
916 break;
|
|
917 default:
|
|
918 *q++ = *p;
|
|
919 }
|
|
920 }
|
|
921 *q = '\0';
|
|
922
|
|
923 assert((q - formatted_path) == formatted_path_len, "formatted_path size botched");
|
|
924 return formatted_path;
|
|
925 }
|
|
926
|
|
927
|
|
928 bool os::set_boot_path(char fileSep, char pathSep) {
|
|
929
|
|
930 const char* home = Arguments::get_java_home();
|
|
931 int home_len = (int)strlen(home);
|
|
932
|
|
933 static const char* meta_index_dir_format = "%/lib/";
|
|
934 static const char* meta_index_format = "%/lib/meta-index";
|
|
935 char* meta_index = format_boot_path(meta_index_format, home, home_len, fileSep, pathSep);
|
|
936 if (meta_index == NULL) return false;
|
|
937 char* meta_index_dir = format_boot_path(meta_index_dir_format, home, home_len, fileSep, pathSep);
|
|
938 if (meta_index_dir == NULL) return false;
|
|
939 Arguments::set_meta_index_path(meta_index, meta_index_dir);
|
|
940
|
|
941 // Any modification to the JAR-file list, for the boot classpath must be
|
|
942 // aligned with install/install/make/common/Pack.gmk. Note: boot class
|
|
943 // path class JARs, are stripped for StackMapTable to reduce download size.
|
|
944 static const char classpath_format[] =
|
|
945 "%/lib/resources.jar:"
|
|
946 "%/lib/rt.jar:"
|
|
947 "%/lib/sunrsasign.jar:"
|
|
948 "%/lib/jsse.jar:"
|
|
949 "%/lib/jce.jar:"
|
|
950 "%/lib/charsets.jar:"
|
|
951 "%/classes";
|
|
952 char* sysclasspath = format_boot_path(classpath_format, home, home_len, fileSep, pathSep);
|
|
953 if (sysclasspath == NULL) return false;
|
|
954 Arguments::set_sysclasspath(sysclasspath);
|
|
955
|
|
956 return true;
|
|
957 }
|
|
958
|
|
959
|
|
960 void os::set_memory_serialize_page(address page) {
|
|
961 int count = log2_intptr(sizeof(class JavaThread)) - log2_intptr(64);
|
|
962 _mem_serialize_page = (volatile int32_t *)page;
|
|
963 // We initialize the serialization page shift count here
|
|
964 // We assume a cache line size of 64 bytes
|
|
965 assert(SerializePageShiftCount == count,
|
|
966 "thread size changed, fix SerializePageShiftCount constant");
|
|
967 set_serialize_page_mask((uintptr_t)(vm_page_size() - sizeof(int32_t)));
|
|
968 }
|
|
969
|
|
970 // This method is called from signal handler when SIGSEGV occurs while the current
|
|
971 // thread tries to store to the "read-only" memory serialize page during state
|
|
972 // transition.
|
|
973 void os::block_on_serialize_page_trap() {
|
|
974 if (TraceSafepoint) {
|
|
975 tty->print_cr("Block until the serialize page permission restored");
|
|
976 }
|
|
977 // When VMThread is holding the SerializePage_lock during modifying the
|
|
978 // access permission of the memory serialize page, the following call
|
|
979 // will block until the permission of that page is restored to rw.
|
|
980 // Generally, it is unsafe to manipulate locks in signal handlers, but in
|
|
981 // this case, it's OK as the signal is synchronous and we know precisely when
|
|
982 // it can occur. SerializePage_lock is a transiently-held leaf lock, so
|
|
983 // lock_without_safepoint_check should be safe.
|
|
984 SerializePage_lock->lock_without_safepoint_check();
|
|
985 SerializePage_lock->unlock();
|
|
986 }
|
|
987
|
|
988 // Serialize all thread state variables
|
|
989 void os::serialize_thread_states() {
|
|
990 // On some platforms such as Solaris & Linux, the time duration of the page
|
|
991 // permission restoration is observed to be much longer than expected due to
|
|
992 // scheduler starvation problem etc. To avoid the long synchronization
|
|
993 // time and expensive page trap spinning, 'SerializePage_lock' is used to block
|
|
994 // the mutator thread if such case is encountered. Since this method is always
|
|
995 // called by VMThread during safepoint, lock_without_safepoint_check is used
|
|
996 // instead. See bug 6546278.
|
|
997 SerializePage_lock->lock_without_safepoint_check();
|
|
998 os::protect_memory( (char *)os::get_memory_serialize_page(), os::vm_page_size() );
|
|
999 os::unguard_memory( (char *)os::get_memory_serialize_page(), os::vm_page_size() );
|
|
1000 SerializePage_lock->unlock();
|
|
1001 }
|
|
1002
|
|
1003 // Returns true if the current stack pointer is above the stack shadow
|
|
1004 // pages, false otherwise.
|
|
1005
|
|
1006 bool os::stack_shadow_pages_available(Thread *thread, methodHandle method) {
|
|
1007 assert(StackRedPages > 0 && StackYellowPages > 0,"Sanity check");
|
|
1008 address sp = current_stack_pointer();
|
|
1009 // Check if we have StackShadowPages above the yellow zone. This parameter
|
|
1010 // is dependant on the depth of the maximum VM call stack possible from
|
|
1011 // the handler for stack overflow. 'instanceof' in the stack overflow
|
|
1012 // handler or a println uses at least 8k stack of VM and native code
|
|
1013 // respectively.
|
|
1014 const int framesize_in_bytes =
|
|
1015 Interpreter::size_top_interpreter_activation(method()) * wordSize;
|
|
1016 int reserved_area = ((StackShadowPages + StackRedPages + StackYellowPages)
|
|
1017 * vm_page_size()) + framesize_in_bytes;
|
|
1018 // The very lower end of the stack
|
|
1019 address stack_limit = thread->stack_base() - thread->stack_size();
|
|
1020 return (sp > (stack_limit + reserved_area));
|
|
1021 }
|
|
1022
|
|
1023 size_t os::page_size_for_region(size_t region_min_size, size_t region_max_size,
|
|
1024 uint min_pages)
|
|
1025 {
|
|
1026 assert(min_pages > 0, "sanity");
|
|
1027 if (UseLargePages) {
|
|
1028 const size_t max_page_size = region_max_size / min_pages;
|
|
1029
|
|
1030 for (unsigned int i = 0; _page_sizes[i] != 0; ++i) {
|
|
1031 const size_t sz = _page_sizes[i];
|
|
1032 const size_t mask = sz - 1;
|
|
1033 if ((region_min_size & mask) == 0 && (region_max_size & mask) == 0) {
|
|
1034 // The largest page size with no fragmentation.
|
|
1035 return sz;
|
|
1036 }
|
|
1037
|
|
1038 if (sz <= max_page_size) {
|
|
1039 // The largest page size that satisfies the min_pages requirement.
|
|
1040 return sz;
|
|
1041 }
|
|
1042 }
|
|
1043 }
|
|
1044
|
|
1045 return vm_page_size();
|
|
1046 }
|
|
1047
|
|
1048 #ifndef PRODUCT
|
|
1049 void os::trace_page_sizes(const char* str, const size_t region_min_size,
|
|
1050 const size_t region_max_size, const size_t page_size,
|
|
1051 const char* base, const size_t size)
|
|
1052 {
|
|
1053 if (TracePageSizes) {
|
|
1054 tty->print_cr("%s: min=" SIZE_FORMAT " max=" SIZE_FORMAT
|
|
1055 " pg_sz=" SIZE_FORMAT " base=" PTR_FORMAT
|
|
1056 " size=" SIZE_FORMAT,
|
|
1057 str, region_min_size, region_max_size,
|
|
1058 page_size, base, size);
|
|
1059 }
|
|
1060 }
|
|
1061 #endif // #ifndef PRODUCT
|
|
1062
|
|
1063 // This is the working definition of a server class machine:
|
|
1064 // >= 2 physical CPU's and >=2GB of memory, with some fuzz
|
|
1065 // because the graphics memory (?) sometimes masks physical memory.
|
|
1066 // If you want to change the definition of a server class machine
|
|
1067 // on some OS or platform, e.g., >=4GB on Windohs platforms,
|
|
1068 // then you'll have to parameterize this method based on that state,
|
|
1069 // as was done for logical processors here, or replicate and
|
|
1070 // specialize this method for each platform. (Or fix os to have
|
|
1071 // some inheritance structure and use subclassing. Sigh.)
|
|
1072 // If you want some platform to always or never behave as a server
|
|
1073 // class machine, change the setting of AlwaysActAsServerClassMachine
|
|
1074 // and NeverActAsServerClassMachine in globals*.hpp.
|
|
1075 bool os::is_server_class_machine() {
|
|
1076 // First check for the early returns
|
|
1077 if (NeverActAsServerClassMachine) {
|
|
1078 return false;
|
|
1079 }
|
|
1080 if (AlwaysActAsServerClassMachine) {
|
|
1081 return true;
|
|
1082 }
|
|
1083 // Then actually look at the machine
|
|
1084 bool result = false;
|
|
1085 const unsigned int server_processors = 2;
|
|
1086 const julong server_memory = 2UL * G;
|
|
1087 // We seem not to get our full complement of memory.
|
|
1088 // We allow some part (1/8?) of the memory to be "missing",
|
|
1089 // based on the sizes of DIMMs, and maybe graphics cards.
|
|
1090 const julong missing_memory = 256UL * M;
|
|
1091
|
|
1092 /* Is this a server class machine? */
|
|
1093 if ((os::active_processor_count() >= (int)server_processors) &&
|
|
1094 (os::physical_memory() >= (server_memory - missing_memory))) {
|
|
1095 const unsigned int logical_processors =
|
|
1096 VM_Version::logical_processors_per_package();
|
|
1097 if (logical_processors > 1) {
|
|
1098 const unsigned int physical_packages =
|
|
1099 os::active_processor_count() / logical_processors;
|
|
1100 if (physical_packages > server_processors) {
|
|
1101 result = true;
|
|
1102 }
|
|
1103 } else {
|
|
1104 result = true;
|
|
1105 }
|
|
1106 }
|
|
1107 return result;
|
|
1108 }
|