0
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1 /*
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2 * Copyright 1997-2007 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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3 * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
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4 *
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5 * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
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6 * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
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7 * published by the Free Software Foundation.
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8 *
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9 * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
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10 * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
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11 * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
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12 * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
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13 * accompanied this code).
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14 *
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15 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
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16 * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
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17 * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
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18 *
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19 * Please contact Sun Microsystems, Inc., 4150 Network Circle, Santa Clara,
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20 * CA 95054 USA or visit www.sun.com if you need additional information or
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21 * have any questions.
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22 *
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23 */
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24
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25 #ifdef _WIN64
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26 // Must be at least Windows 2000 or XP to use VectoredExceptions
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27 #define _WIN32_WINNT 0x500
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28 #endif
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29
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30 // do not include precompiled header file
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31 # include "incls/_os_windows.cpp.incl"
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32
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33 #ifdef _DEBUG
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34 #include <crtdbg.h>
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35 #endif
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36
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37
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38 #include <windows.h>
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39 #include <sys/types.h>
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40 #include <sys/stat.h>
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41 #include <sys/timeb.h>
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42 #include <objidl.h>
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43 #include <shlobj.h>
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44
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45 #include <malloc.h>
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46 #include <signal.h>
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47 #include <direct.h>
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48 #include <errno.h>
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49 #include <fcntl.h>
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50 #include <io.h>
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51 #include <process.h> // For _beginthreadex(), _endthreadex()
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52 #include <imagehlp.h> // For os::dll_address_to_function_name
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53
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54 /* for enumerating dll libraries */
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55 #include <tlhelp32.h>
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56 #include <vdmdbg.h>
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57
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58 // for timer info max values which include all bits
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59 #define ALL_64_BITS CONST64(0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF)
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60
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61 // For DLL loading/load error detection
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62 // Values of PE COFF
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63 #define IMAGE_FILE_PTR_TO_SIGNATURE 0x3c
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64 #define IMAGE_FILE_SIGNATURE_LENGTH 4
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65
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66 static HANDLE main_process;
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67 static HANDLE main_thread;
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68 static int main_thread_id;
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69
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70 static FILETIME process_creation_time;
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71 static FILETIME process_exit_time;
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72 static FILETIME process_user_time;
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73 static FILETIME process_kernel_time;
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74
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75 #ifdef _WIN64
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76 PVOID topLevelVectoredExceptionHandler = NULL;
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77 #endif
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78
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79 #ifdef _M_IA64
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80 #define __CPU__ ia64
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81 #elif _M_AMD64
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82 #define __CPU__ amd64
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83 #else
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84 #define __CPU__ i486
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85 #endif
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86
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87 // save DLL module handle, used by GetModuleFileName
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88
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89 HINSTANCE vm_lib_handle;
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90 static int getLastErrorString(char *buf, size_t len);
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91
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92 BOOL WINAPI DllMain(HINSTANCE hinst, DWORD reason, LPVOID reserved) {
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93 switch (reason) {
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94 case DLL_PROCESS_ATTACH:
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95 vm_lib_handle = hinst;
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96 if(ForceTimeHighResolution)
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97 timeBeginPeriod(1L);
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98 break;
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99 case DLL_PROCESS_DETACH:
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100 if(ForceTimeHighResolution)
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101 timeEndPeriod(1L);
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102 #ifdef _WIN64
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103 if (topLevelVectoredExceptionHandler != NULL) {
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104 RemoveVectoredExceptionHandler(topLevelVectoredExceptionHandler);
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105 topLevelVectoredExceptionHandler = NULL;
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106 }
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107 #endif
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108 break;
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109 default:
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110 break;
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111 }
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112 return true;
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113 }
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114
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115 static inline double fileTimeAsDouble(FILETIME* time) {
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116 const double high = (double) ((unsigned int) ~0);
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117 const double split = 10000000.0;
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118 double result = (time->dwLowDateTime / split) +
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119 time->dwHighDateTime * (high/split);
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120 return result;
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121 }
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122
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123 // Implementation of os
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124
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125 bool os::getenv(const char* name, char* buffer, int len) {
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126 int result = GetEnvironmentVariable(name, buffer, len);
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127 return result > 0 && result < len;
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128 }
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129
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130
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131 // No setuid programs under Windows.
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132 bool os::have_special_privileges() {
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133 return false;
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134 }
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135
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136
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137 // This method is a periodic task to check for misbehaving JNI applications
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138 // under CheckJNI, we can add any periodic checks here.
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139 // For Windows at the moment does nothing
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140 void os::run_periodic_checks() {
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141 return;
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142 }
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143
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144 #ifndef _WIN64
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145 LONG WINAPI Handle_FLT_Exception(struct _EXCEPTION_POINTERS* exceptionInfo);
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146 #endif
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147 void os::init_system_properties_values() {
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148 /* sysclasspath, java_home, dll_dir */
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149 {
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150 char *home_path;
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151 char *dll_path;
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152 char *pslash;
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153 char *bin = "\\bin";
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154 char home_dir[MAX_PATH];
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155
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156 if (!getenv("_ALT_JAVA_HOME_DIR", home_dir, MAX_PATH)) {
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157 os::jvm_path(home_dir, sizeof(home_dir));
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158 // Found the full path to jvm[_g].dll.
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159 // Now cut the path to <java_home>/jre if we can.
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160 *(strrchr(home_dir, '\\')) = '\0'; /* get rid of \jvm.dll */
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161 pslash = strrchr(home_dir, '\\');
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162 if (pslash != NULL) {
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163 *pslash = '\0'; /* get rid of \{client|server} */
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164 pslash = strrchr(home_dir, '\\');
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165 if (pslash != NULL)
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166 *pslash = '\0'; /* get rid of \bin */
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167 }
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168 }
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169
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170 home_path = NEW_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char, strlen(home_dir) + 1);
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171 if (home_path == NULL)
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172 return;
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173 strcpy(home_path, home_dir);
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174 Arguments::set_java_home(home_path);
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175
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176 dll_path = NEW_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char, strlen(home_dir) + strlen(bin) + 1);
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177 if (dll_path == NULL)
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178 return;
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179 strcpy(dll_path, home_dir);
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180 strcat(dll_path, bin);
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181 Arguments::set_dll_dir(dll_path);
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182
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183 if (!set_boot_path('\\', ';'))
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184 return;
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185 }
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186
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187 /* library_path */
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188 #define EXT_DIR "\\lib\\ext"
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189 #define BIN_DIR "\\bin"
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190 #define PACKAGE_DIR "\\Sun\\Java"
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191 {
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192 /* Win32 library search order (See the documentation for LoadLibrary):
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193 *
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194 * 1. The directory from which application is loaded.
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195 * 2. The current directory
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196 * 3. The system wide Java Extensions directory (Java only)
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197 * 4. System directory (GetSystemDirectory)
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198 * 5. Windows directory (GetWindowsDirectory)
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199 * 6. The PATH environment variable
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200 */
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201
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202 char *library_path;
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203 char tmp[MAX_PATH];
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204 char *path_str = ::getenv("PATH");
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205
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206 library_path = NEW_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char, MAX_PATH * 5 + sizeof(PACKAGE_DIR) +
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207 sizeof(BIN_DIR) + (path_str ? strlen(path_str) : 0) + 10);
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208
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209 library_path[0] = '\0';
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210
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211 GetModuleFileName(NULL, tmp, sizeof(tmp));
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212 *(strrchr(tmp, '\\')) = '\0';
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213 strcat(library_path, tmp);
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214
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215 strcat(library_path, ";.");
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216
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217 GetWindowsDirectory(tmp, sizeof(tmp));
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218 strcat(library_path, ";");
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219 strcat(library_path, tmp);
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220 strcat(library_path, PACKAGE_DIR BIN_DIR);
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221
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222 GetSystemDirectory(tmp, sizeof(tmp));
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223 strcat(library_path, ";");
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224 strcat(library_path, tmp);
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225
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226 GetWindowsDirectory(tmp, sizeof(tmp));
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227 strcat(library_path, ";");
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228 strcat(library_path, tmp);
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229
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230 if (path_str) {
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231 strcat(library_path, ";");
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232 strcat(library_path, path_str);
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233 }
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234
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235 Arguments::set_library_path(library_path);
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236 FREE_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char, library_path);
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237 }
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238
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239 /* Default extensions directory */
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240 {
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241 char path[MAX_PATH];
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242 char buf[2 * MAX_PATH + 2 * sizeof(EXT_DIR) + sizeof(PACKAGE_DIR) + 1];
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243 GetWindowsDirectory(path, MAX_PATH);
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244 sprintf(buf, "%s%s;%s%s%s", Arguments::get_java_home(), EXT_DIR,
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245 path, PACKAGE_DIR, EXT_DIR);
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246 Arguments::set_ext_dirs(buf);
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247 }
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248 #undef EXT_DIR
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249 #undef BIN_DIR
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250 #undef PACKAGE_DIR
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251
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252 /* Default endorsed standards directory. */
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253 {
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254 #define ENDORSED_DIR "\\lib\\endorsed"
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255 size_t len = strlen(Arguments::get_java_home()) + sizeof(ENDORSED_DIR);
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256 char * buf = NEW_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char, len);
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257 sprintf(buf, "%s%s", Arguments::get_java_home(), ENDORSED_DIR);
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258 Arguments::set_endorsed_dirs(buf);
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259 #undef ENDORSED_DIR
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260 }
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261
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262 #ifndef _WIN64
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263 SetUnhandledExceptionFilter(Handle_FLT_Exception);
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264 #endif
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265
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266 // Done
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267 return;
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268 }
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269
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270 void os::breakpoint() {
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271 DebugBreak();
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272 }
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273
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274 // Invoked from the BREAKPOINT Macro
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275 extern "C" void breakpoint() {
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276 os::breakpoint();
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277 }
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278
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279 // Returns an estimate of the current stack pointer. Result must be guaranteed
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280 // to point into the calling threads stack, and be no lower than the current
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281 // stack pointer.
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282
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283 address os::current_stack_pointer() {
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284 int dummy;
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285 address sp = (address)&dummy;
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286 return sp;
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287 }
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288
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289 // os::current_stack_base()
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290 //
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291 // Returns the base of the stack, which is the stack's
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292 // starting address. This function must be called
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293 // while running on the stack of the thread being queried.
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294
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295 address os::current_stack_base() {
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296 MEMORY_BASIC_INFORMATION minfo;
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297 address stack_bottom;
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298 size_t stack_size;
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299
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300 VirtualQuery(&minfo, &minfo, sizeof(minfo));
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301 stack_bottom = (address)minfo.AllocationBase;
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302 stack_size = minfo.RegionSize;
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303
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304 // Add up the sizes of all the regions with the same
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305 // AllocationBase.
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306 while( 1 )
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307 {
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308 VirtualQuery(stack_bottom+stack_size, &minfo, sizeof(minfo));
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309 if ( stack_bottom == (address)minfo.AllocationBase )
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310 stack_size += minfo.RegionSize;
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311 else
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312 break;
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313 }
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314
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315 #ifdef _M_IA64
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316 // IA64 has memory and register stacks
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317 stack_size = stack_size / 2;
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318 #endif
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319 return stack_bottom + stack_size;
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320 }
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321
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322 size_t os::current_stack_size() {
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323 size_t sz;
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324 MEMORY_BASIC_INFORMATION minfo;
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325 VirtualQuery(&minfo, &minfo, sizeof(minfo));
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326 sz = (size_t)os::current_stack_base() - (size_t)minfo.AllocationBase;
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327 return sz;
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328 }
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329
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330
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331 LONG WINAPI topLevelExceptionFilter(struct _EXCEPTION_POINTERS* exceptionInfo);
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332
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333 // Thread start routine for all new Java threads
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334 static unsigned __stdcall java_start(Thread* thread) {
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335 // Try to randomize the cache line index of hot stack frames.
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336 // This helps when threads of the same stack traces evict each other's
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337 // cache lines. The threads can be either from the same JVM instance, or
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338 // from different JVM instances. The benefit is especially true for
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339 // processors with hyperthreading technology.
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340 static int counter = 0;
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341 int pid = os::current_process_id();
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342 _alloca(((pid ^ counter++) & 7) * 128);
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343
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344 OSThread* osthr = thread->osthread();
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345 assert(osthr->get_state() == RUNNABLE, "invalid os thread state");
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346
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347 if (UseNUMA) {
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348 int lgrp_id = os::numa_get_group_id();
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349 if (lgrp_id != -1) {
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350 thread->set_lgrp_id(lgrp_id);
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351 }
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352 }
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353
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354
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355 if (UseVectoredExceptions) {
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356 // If we are using vectored exception we don't need to set a SEH
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357 thread->run();
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358 }
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359 else {
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360 // Install a win32 structured exception handler around every thread created
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361 // by VM, so VM can genrate error dump when an exception occurred in non-
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362 // Java thread (e.g. VM thread).
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363 __try {
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364 thread->run();
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365 } __except(topLevelExceptionFilter(
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366 (_EXCEPTION_POINTERS*)_exception_info())) {
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367 // Nothing to do.
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368 }
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369 }
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370
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371 // One less thread is executing
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372 // When the VMThread gets here, the main thread may have already exited
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373 // which frees the CodeHeap containing the Atomic::add code
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374 if (thread != VMThread::vm_thread() && VMThread::vm_thread() != NULL) {
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375 Atomic::dec_ptr((intptr_t*)&os::win32::_os_thread_count);
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376 }
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377
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378 return 0;
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379 }
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380
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381 static OSThread* create_os_thread(Thread* thread, HANDLE thread_handle, int thread_id) {
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382 // Allocate the OSThread object
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383 OSThread* osthread = new OSThread(NULL, NULL);
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384 if (osthread == NULL) return NULL;
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385
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386 // Initialize support for Java interrupts
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387 HANDLE interrupt_event = CreateEvent(NULL, true, false, NULL);
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388 if (interrupt_event == NULL) {
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389 delete osthread;
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390 return NULL;
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391 }
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392 osthread->set_interrupt_event(interrupt_event);
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393
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394 // Store info on the Win32 thread into the OSThread
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395 osthread->set_thread_handle(thread_handle);
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396 osthread->set_thread_id(thread_id);
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397
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398 if (UseNUMA) {
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399 int lgrp_id = os::numa_get_group_id();
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400 if (lgrp_id != -1) {
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401 thread->set_lgrp_id(lgrp_id);
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402 }
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403 }
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404
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405 // Initial thread state is INITIALIZED, not SUSPENDED
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406 osthread->set_state(INITIALIZED);
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407
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408 return osthread;
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409 }
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410
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411
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412 bool os::create_attached_thread(JavaThread* thread) {
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413 #ifdef ASSERT
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414 thread->verify_not_published();
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415 #endif
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416 HANDLE thread_h;
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417 if (!DuplicateHandle(main_process, GetCurrentThread(), GetCurrentProcess(),
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418 &thread_h, THREAD_ALL_ACCESS, false, 0)) {
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419 fatal("DuplicateHandle failed\n");
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420 }
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421 OSThread* osthread = create_os_thread(thread, thread_h,
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422 (int)current_thread_id());
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423 if (osthread == NULL) {
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424 return false;
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425 }
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426
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427 // Initial thread state is RUNNABLE
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428 osthread->set_state(RUNNABLE);
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429
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430 thread->set_osthread(osthread);
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431 return true;
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432 }
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433
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434 bool os::create_main_thread(JavaThread* thread) {
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435 #ifdef ASSERT
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436 thread->verify_not_published();
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437 #endif
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438 if (_starting_thread == NULL) {
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439 _starting_thread = create_os_thread(thread, main_thread, main_thread_id);
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440 if (_starting_thread == NULL) {
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441 return false;
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442 }
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443 }
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444
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445 // The primordial thread is runnable from the start)
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446 _starting_thread->set_state(RUNNABLE);
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447
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448 thread->set_osthread(_starting_thread);
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449 return true;
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450 }
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451
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452 // Allocate and initialize a new OSThread
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453 bool os::create_thread(Thread* thread, ThreadType thr_type, size_t stack_size) {
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454 unsigned thread_id;
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455
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456 // Allocate the OSThread object
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457 OSThread* osthread = new OSThread(NULL, NULL);
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458 if (osthread == NULL) {
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459 return false;
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460 }
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461
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462 // Initialize support for Java interrupts
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463 HANDLE interrupt_event = CreateEvent(NULL, true, false, NULL);
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464 if (interrupt_event == NULL) {
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465 delete osthread;
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466 return NULL;
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467 }
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468 osthread->set_interrupt_event(interrupt_event);
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469 osthread->set_interrupted(false);
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470
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471 thread->set_osthread(osthread);
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472
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473 if (stack_size == 0) {
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474 switch (thr_type) {
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475 case os::java_thread:
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476 // Java threads use ThreadStackSize which default value can be changed with the flag -Xss
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477 if (JavaThread::stack_size_at_create() > 0)
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478 stack_size = JavaThread::stack_size_at_create();
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479 break;
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480 case os::compiler_thread:
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481 if (CompilerThreadStackSize > 0) {
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482 stack_size = (size_t)(CompilerThreadStackSize * K);
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483 break;
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484 } // else fall through:
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485 // use VMThreadStackSize if CompilerThreadStackSize is not defined
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486 case os::vm_thread:
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487 case os::pgc_thread:
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488 case os::cgc_thread:
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489 case os::watcher_thread:
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|
490 if (VMThreadStackSize > 0) stack_size = (size_t)(VMThreadStackSize * K);
|
|
491 break;
|
|
492 }
|
|
493 }
|
|
494
|
|
495 // Create the Win32 thread
|
|
496 //
|
|
497 // Contrary to what MSDN document says, "stack_size" in _beginthreadex()
|
|
498 // does not specify stack size. Instead, it specifies the size of
|
|
499 // initially committed space. The stack size is determined by
|
|
500 // PE header in the executable. If the committed "stack_size" is larger
|
|
501 // than default value in the PE header, the stack is rounded up to the
|
|
502 // nearest multiple of 1MB. For example if the launcher has default
|
|
503 // stack size of 320k, specifying any size less than 320k does not
|
|
504 // affect the actual stack size at all, it only affects the initial
|
|
505 // commitment. On the other hand, specifying 'stack_size' larger than
|
|
506 // default value may cause significant increase in memory usage, because
|
|
507 // not only the stack space will be rounded up to MB, but also the
|
|
508 // entire space is committed upfront.
|
|
509 //
|
|
510 // Finally Windows XP added a new flag 'STACK_SIZE_PARAM_IS_A_RESERVATION'
|
|
511 // for CreateThread() that can treat 'stack_size' as stack size. However we
|
|
512 // are not supposed to call CreateThread() directly according to MSDN
|
|
513 // document because JVM uses C runtime library. The good news is that the
|
|
514 // flag appears to work with _beginthredex() as well.
|
|
515
|
|
516 #ifndef STACK_SIZE_PARAM_IS_A_RESERVATION
|
|
517 #define STACK_SIZE_PARAM_IS_A_RESERVATION (0x10000)
|
|
518 #endif
|
|
519
|
|
520 HANDLE thread_handle =
|
|
521 (HANDLE)_beginthreadex(NULL,
|
|
522 (unsigned)stack_size,
|
|
523 (unsigned (__stdcall *)(void*)) java_start,
|
|
524 thread,
|
|
525 CREATE_SUSPENDED | STACK_SIZE_PARAM_IS_A_RESERVATION,
|
|
526 &thread_id);
|
|
527 if (thread_handle == NULL) {
|
|
528 // perhaps STACK_SIZE_PARAM_IS_A_RESERVATION is not supported, try again
|
|
529 // without the flag.
|
|
530 thread_handle =
|
|
531 (HANDLE)_beginthreadex(NULL,
|
|
532 (unsigned)stack_size,
|
|
533 (unsigned (__stdcall *)(void*)) java_start,
|
|
534 thread,
|
|
535 CREATE_SUSPENDED,
|
|
536 &thread_id);
|
|
537 }
|
|
538 if (thread_handle == NULL) {
|
|
539 // Need to clean up stuff we've allocated so far
|
|
540 CloseHandle(osthread->interrupt_event());
|
|
541 thread->set_osthread(NULL);
|
|
542 delete osthread;
|
|
543 return NULL;
|
|
544 }
|
|
545
|
|
546 Atomic::inc_ptr((intptr_t*)&os::win32::_os_thread_count);
|
|
547
|
|
548 // Store info on the Win32 thread into the OSThread
|
|
549 osthread->set_thread_handle(thread_handle);
|
|
550 osthread->set_thread_id(thread_id);
|
|
551
|
|
552 // Initial thread state is INITIALIZED, not SUSPENDED
|
|
553 osthread->set_state(INITIALIZED);
|
|
554
|
|
555 // The thread is returned suspended (in state INITIALIZED), and is started higher up in the call chain
|
|
556 return true;
|
|
557 }
|
|
558
|
|
559
|
|
560 // Free Win32 resources related to the OSThread
|
|
561 void os::free_thread(OSThread* osthread) {
|
|
562 assert(osthread != NULL, "osthread not set");
|
|
563 CloseHandle(osthread->thread_handle());
|
|
564 CloseHandle(osthread->interrupt_event());
|
|
565 delete osthread;
|
|
566 }
|
|
567
|
|
568
|
|
569 static int has_performance_count = 0;
|
|
570 static jlong first_filetime;
|
|
571 static jlong initial_performance_count;
|
|
572 static jlong performance_frequency;
|
|
573
|
|
574
|
|
575 jlong as_long(LARGE_INTEGER x) {
|
|
576 jlong result = 0; // initialization to avoid warning
|
|
577 set_high(&result, x.HighPart);
|
|
578 set_low(&result, x.LowPart);
|
|
579 return result;
|
|
580 }
|
|
581
|
|
582
|
|
583 jlong os::elapsed_counter() {
|
|
584 LARGE_INTEGER count;
|
|
585 if (has_performance_count) {
|
|
586 QueryPerformanceCounter(&count);
|
|
587 return as_long(count) - initial_performance_count;
|
|
588 } else {
|
|
589 FILETIME wt;
|
|
590 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&wt);
|
|
591 return (jlong_from(wt.dwHighDateTime, wt.dwLowDateTime) - first_filetime);
|
|
592 }
|
|
593 }
|
|
594
|
|
595
|
|
596 jlong os::elapsed_frequency() {
|
|
597 if (has_performance_count) {
|
|
598 return performance_frequency;
|
|
599 } else {
|
|
600 // the FILETIME time is the number of 100-nanosecond intervals since January 1,1601.
|
|
601 return 10000000;
|
|
602 }
|
|
603 }
|
|
604
|
|
605
|
|
606 julong os::available_memory() {
|
|
607 return win32::available_memory();
|
|
608 }
|
|
609
|
|
610 julong os::win32::available_memory() {
|
|
611 // FIXME: GlobalMemoryStatus() may return incorrect value if total memory
|
|
612 // is larger than 4GB
|
|
613 MEMORYSTATUS ms;
|
|
614 GlobalMemoryStatus(&ms);
|
|
615
|
|
616 return (julong)ms.dwAvailPhys;
|
|
617 }
|
|
618
|
|
619 julong os::physical_memory() {
|
|
620 return win32::physical_memory();
|
|
621 }
|
|
622
|
|
623 julong os::allocatable_physical_memory(julong size) {
|
|
624 return MIN2(size, (julong)1400*M);
|
|
625 }
|
|
626
|
|
627 // VC6 lacks DWORD_PTR
|
|
628 #if _MSC_VER < 1300
|
|
629 typedef UINT_PTR DWORD_PTR;
|
|
630 #endif
|
|
631
|
|
632 int os::active_processor_count() {
|
|
633 DWORD_PTR lpProcessAffinityMask = 0;
|
|
634 DWORD_PTR lpSystemAffinityMask = 0;
|
|
635 int proc_count = processor_count();
|
|
636 if (proc_count <= sizeof(UINT_PTR) * BitsPerByte &&
|
|
637 GetProcessAffinityMask(GetCurrentProcess(), &lpProcessAffinityMask, &lpSystemAffinityMask)) {
|
|
638 // Nof active processors is number of bits in process affinity mask
|
|
639 int bitcount = 0;
|
|
640 while (lpProcessAffinityMask != 0) {
|
|
641 lpProcessAffinityMask = lpProcessAffinityMask & (lpProcessAffinityMask-1);
|
|
642 bitcount++;
|
|
643 }
|
|
644 return bitcount;
|
|
645 } else {
|
|
646 return proc_count;
|
|
647 }
|
|
648 }
|
|
649
|
|
650 bool os::distribute_processes(uint length, uint* distribution) {
|
|
651 // Not yet implemented.
|
|
652 return false;
|
|
653 }
|
|
654
|
|
655 bool os::bind_to_processor(uint processor_id) {
|
|
656 // Not yet implemented.
|
|
657 return false;
|
|
658 }
|
|
659
|
|
660 static void initialize_performance_counter() {
|
|
661 LARGE_INTEGER count;
|
|
662 if (QueryPerformanceFrequency(&count)) {
|
|
663 has_performance_count = 1;
|
|
664 performance_frequency = as_long(count);
|
|
665 QueryPerformanceCounter(&count);
|
|
666 initial_performance_count = as_long(count);
|
|
667 } else {
|
|
668 has_performance_count = 0;
|
|
669 FILETIME wt;
|
|
670 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&wt);
|
|
671 first_filetime = jlong_from(wt.dwHighDateTime, wt.dwLowDateTime);
|
|
672 }
|
|
673 }
|
|
674
|
|
675
|
|
676 double os::elapsedTime() {
|
|
677 return (double) elapsed_counter() / (double) elapsed_frequency();
|
|
678 }
|
|
679
|
|
680
|
|
681 // Windows format:
|
|
682 // The FILETIME structure is a 64-bit value representing the number of 100-nanosecond intervals since January 1, 1601.
|
|
683 // Java format:
|
|
684 // Java standards require the number of milliseconds since 1/1/1970
|
|
685
|
|
686 // Constant offset - calculated using offset()
|
|
687 static jlong _offset = 116444736000000000;
|
|
688 // Fake time counter for reproducible results when debugging
|
|
689 static jlong fake_time = 0;
|
|
690
|
|
691 #ifdef ASSERT
|
|
692 // Just to be safe, recalculate the offset in debug mode
|
|
693 static jlong _calculated_offset = 0;
|
|
694 static int _has_calculated_offset = 0;
|
|
695
|
|
696 jlong offset() {
|
|
697 if (_has_calculated_offset) return _calculated_offset;
|
|
698 SYSTEMTIME java_origin;
|
|
699 java_origin.wYear = 1970;
|
|
700 java_origin.wMonth = 1;
|
|
701 java_origin.wDayOfWeek = 0; // ignored
|
|
702 java_origin.wDay = 1;
|
|
703 java_origin.wHour = 0;
|
|
704 java_origin.wMinute = 0;
|
|
705 java_origin.wSecond = 0;
|
|
706 java_origin.wMilliseconds = 0;
|
|
707 FILETIME jot;
|
|
708 if (!SystemTimeToFileTime(&java_origin, &jot)) {
|
|
709 fatal1("Error = %d\nWindows error", GetLastError());
|
|
710 }
|
|
711 _calculated_offset = jlong_from(jot.dwHighDateTime, jot.dwLowDateTime);
|
|
712 _has_calculated_offset = 1;
|
|
713 assert(_calculated_offset == _offset, "Calculated and constant time offsets must be equal");
|
|
714 return _calculated_offset;
|
|
715 }
|
|
716 #else
|
|
717 jlong offset() {
|
|
718 return _offset;
|
|
719 }
|
|
720 #endif
|
|
721
|
|
722 jlong windows_to_java_time(FILETIME wt) {
|
|
723 jlong a = jlong_from(wt.dwHighDateTime, wt.dwLowDateTime);
|
|
724 return (a - offset()) / 10000;
|
|
725 }
|
|
726
|
|
727 FILETIME java_to_windows_time(jlong l) {
|
|
728 jlong a = (l * 10000) + offset();
|
|
729 FILETIME result;
|
|
730 result.dwHighDateTime = high(a);
|
|
731 result.dwLowDateTime = low(a);
|
|
732 return result;
|
|
733 }
|
|
734
|
|
735 jlong os::javaTimeMillis() {
|
|
736 if (UseFakeTimers) {
|
|
737 return fake_time++;
|
|
738 } else {
|
61
|
739 FILETIME wt;
|
|
740 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&wt);
|
|
741 return windows_to_java_time(wt);
|
0
|
742 }
|
|
743 }
|
|
744
|
|
745 #define NANOS_PER_SEC CONST64(1000000000)
|
|
746 #define NANOS_PER_MILLISEC 1000000
|
|
747 jlong os::javaTimeNanos() {
|
|
748 if (!has_performance_count) {
|
|
749 return javaTimeMillis() * NANOS_PER_MILLISEC; // the best we can do.
|
|
750 } else {
|
|
751 LARGE_INTEGER current_count;
|
|
752 QueryPerformanceCounter(¤t_count);
|
|
753 double current = as_long(current_count);
|
|
754 double freq = performance_frequency;
|
|
755 jlong time = (jlong)((current/freq) * NANOS_PER_SEC);
|
|
756 return time;
|
|
757 }
|
|
758 }
|
|
759
|
|
760 void os::javaTimeNanos_info(jvmtiTimerInfo *info_ptr) {
|
|
761 if (!has_performance_count) {
|
|
762 // javaTimeMillis() doesn't have much percision,
|
|
763 // but it is not going to wrap -- so all 64 bits
|
|
764 info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS;
|
|
765
|
|
766 // this is a wall clock timer, so may skip
|
|
767 info_ptr->may_skip_backward = true;
|
|
768 info_ptr->may_skip_forward = true;
|
|
769 } else {
|
|
770 jlong freq = performance_frequency;
|
|
771 if (freq < NANOS_PER_SEC) {
|
|
772 // the performance counter is 64 bits and we will
|
|
773 // be multiplying it -- so no wrap in 64 bits
|
|
774 info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS;
|
|
775 } else if (freq > NANOS_PER_SEC) {
|
|
776 // use the max value the counter can reach to
|
|
777 // determine the max value which could be returned
|
|
778 julong max_counter = (julong)ALL_64_BITS;
|
|
779 info_ptr->max_value = (jlong)(max_counter / (freq / NANOS_PER_SEC));
|
|
780 } else {
|
|
781 // the performance counter is 64 bits and we will
|
|
782 // be using it directly -- so no wrap in 64 bits
|
|
783 info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS;
|
|
784 }
|
|
785
|
|
786 // using a counter, so no skipping
|
|
787 info_ptr->may_skip_backward = false;
|
|
788 info_ptr->may_skip_forward = false;
|
|
789 }
|
|
790 info_ptr->kind = JVMTI_TIMER_ELAPSED; // elapsed not CPU time
|
|
791 }
|
|
792
|
|
793 char* os::local_time_string(char *buf, size_t buflen) {
|
|
794 SYSTEMTIME st;
|
|
795 GetLocalTime(&st);
|
|
796 jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, "%d-%02d-%02d %02d:%02d:%02d",
|
|
797 st.wYear, st.wMonth, st.wDay, st.wHour, st.wMinute, st.wSecond);
|
|
798 return buf;
|
|
799 }
|
|
800
|
|
801 bool os::getTimesSecs(double* process_real_time,
|
|
802 double* process_user_time,
|
|
803 double* process_system_time) {
|
|
804 HANDLE h_process = GetCurrentProcess();
|
|
805 FILETIME create_time, exit_time, kernel_time, user_time;
|
|
806 BOOL result = GetProcessTimes(h_process,
|
|
807 &create_time,
|
|
808 &exit_time,
|
|
809 &kernel_time,
|
|
810 &user_time);
|
|
811 if (result != 0) {
|
|
812 FILETIME wt;
|
|
813 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&wt);
|
|
814 jlong rtc_millis = windows_to_java_time(wt);
|
|
815 jlong user_millis = windows_to_java_time(user_time);
|
|
816 jlong system_millis = windows_to_java_time(kernel_time);
|
|
817 *process_real_time = ((double) rtc_millis) / ((double) MILLIUNITS);
|
|
818 *process_user_time = ((double) user_millis) / ((double) MILLIUNITS);
|
|
819 *process_system_time = ((double) system_millis) / ((double) MILLIUNITS);
|
|
820 return true;
|
|
821 } else {
|
|
822 return false;
|
|
823 }
|
|
824 }
|
|
825
|
|
826 void os::shutdown() {
|
|
827
|
|
828 // allow PerfMemory to attempt cleanup of any persistent resources
|
|
829 perfMemory_exit();
|
|
830
|
|
831 // flush buffered output, finish log files
|
|
832 ostream_abort();
|
|
833
|
|
834 // Check for abort hook
|
|
835 abort_hook_t abort_hook = Arguments::abort_hook();
|
|
836 if (abort_hook != NULL) {
|
|
837 abort_hook();
|
|
838 }
|
|
839 }
|
|
840
|
|
841 void os::abort(bool dump_core)
|
|
842 {
|
|
843 os::shutdown();
|
|
844 // no core dump on Windows
|
|
845 ::exit(1);
|
|
846 }
|
|
847
|
|
848 // Die immediately, no exit hook, no abort hook, no cleanup.
|
|
849 void os::die() {
|
|
850 _exit(-1);
|
|
851 }
|
|
852
|
|
853 // Directory routines copied from src/win32/native/java/io/dirent_md.c
|
|
854 // * dirent_md.c 1.15 00/02/02
|
|
855 //
|
|
856 // The declarations for DIR and struct dirent are in jvm_win32.h.
|
|
857
|
|
858 /* Caller must have already run dirname through JVM_NativePath, which removes
|
|
859 duplicate slashes and converts all instances of '/' into '\\'. */
|
|
860
|
|
861 DIR *
|
|
862 os::opendir(const char *dirname)
|
|
863 {
|
|
864 assert(dirname != NULL, "just checking"); // hotspot change
|
|
865 DIR *dirp = (DIR *)malloc(sizeof(DIR));
|
|
866 DWORD fattr; // hotspot change
|
|
867 char alt_dirname[4] = { 0, 0, 0, 0 };
|
|
868
|
|
869 if (dirp == 0) {
|
|
870 errno = ENOMEM;
|
|
871 return 0;
|
|
872 }
|
|
873
|
|
874 /*
|
|
875 * Win32 accepts "\" in its POSIX stat(), but refuses to treat it
|
|
876 * as a directory in FindFirstFile(). We detect this case here and
|
|
877 * prepend the current drive name.
|
|
878 */
|
|
879 if (dirname[1] == '\0' && dirname[0] == '\\') {
|
|
880 alt_dirname[0] = _getdrive() + 'A' - 1;
|
|
881 alt_dirname[1] = ':';
|
|
882 alt_dirname[2] = '\\';
|
|
883 alt_dirname[3] = '\0';
|
|
884 dirname = alt_dirname;
|
|
885 }
|
|
886
|
|
887 dirp->path = (char *)malloc(strlen(dirname) + 5);
|
|
888 if (dirp->path == 0) {
|
|
889 free(dirp);
|
|
890 errno = ENOMEM;
|
|
891 return 0;
|
|
892 }
|
|
893 strcpy(dirp->path, dirname);
|
|
894
|
|
895 fattr = GetFileAttributes(dirp->path);
|
|
896 if (fattr == 0xffffffff) {
|
|
897 free(dirp->path);
|
|
898 free(dirp);
|
|
899 errno = ENOENT;
|
|
900 return 0;
|
|
901 } else if ((fattr & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) == 0) {
|
|
902 free(dirp->path);
|
|
903 free(dirp);
|
|
904 errno = ENOTDIR;
|
|
905 return 0;
|
|
906 }
|
|
907
|
|
908 /* Append "*.*", or possibly "\\*.*", to path */
|
|
909 if (dirp->path[1] == ':'
|
|
910 && (dirp->path[2] == '\0'
|
|
911 || (dirp->path[2] == '\\' && dirp->path[3] == '\0'))) {
|
|
912 /* No '\\' needed for cases like "Z:" or "Z:\" */
|
|
913 strcat(dirp->path, "*.*");
|
|
914 } else {
|
|
915 strcat(dirp->path, "\\*.*");
|
|
916 }
|
|
917
|
|
918 dirp->handle = FindFirstFile(dirp->path, &dirp->find_data);
|
|
919 if (dirp->handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
|
920 if (GetLastError() != ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND) {
|
|
921 free(dirp->path);
|
|
922 free(dirp);
|
|
923 errno = EACCES;
|
|
924 return 0;
|
|
925 }
|
|
926 }
|
|
927 return dirp;
|
|
928 }
|
|
929
|
|
930 /* parameter dbuf unused on Windows */
|
|
931
|
|
932 struct dirent *
|
|
933 os::readdir(DIR *dirp, dirent *dbuf)
|
|
934 {
|
|
935 assert(dirp != NULL, "just checking"); // hotspot change
|
|
936 if (dirp->handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
|
937 return 0;
|
|
938 }
|
|
939
|
|
940 strcpy(dirp->dirent.d_name, dirp->find_data.cFileName);
|
|
941
|
|
942 if (!FindNextFile(dirp->handle, &dirp->find_data)) {
|
|
943 if (GetLastError() == ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE) {
|
|
944 errno = EBADF;
|
|
945 return 0;
|
|
946 }
|
|
947 FindClose(dirp->handle);
|
|
948 dirp->handle = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
|
|
949 }
|
|
950
|
|
951 return &dirp->dirent;
|
|
952 }
|
|
953
|
|
954 int
|
|
955 os::closedir(DIR *dirp)
|
|
956 {
|
|
957 assert(dirp != NULL, "just checking"); // hotspot change
|
|
958 if (dirp->handle != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
|
959 if (!FindClose(dirp->handle)) {
|
|
960 errno = EBADF;
|
|
961 return -1;
|
|
962 }
|
|
963 dirp->handle = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
|
|
964 }
|
|
965 free(dirp->path);
|
|
966 free(dirp);
|
|
967 return 0;
|
|
968 }
|
|
969
|
|
970 const char* os::dll_file_extension() { return ".dll"; }
|
|
971
|
|
972 const char * os::get_temp_directory()
|
|
973 {
|
|
974 static char path_buf[MAX_PATH];
|
|
975 if (GetTempPath(MAX_PATH, path_buf)>0)
|
|
976 return path_buf;
|
|
977 else{
|
|
978 path_buf[0]='\0';
|
|
979 return path_buf;
|
|
980 }
|
|
981 }
|
|
982
|
|
983 // Needs to be in os specific directory because windows requires another
|
|
984 // header file <direct.h>
|
|
985 const char* os::get_current_directory(char *buf, int buflen) {
|
|
986 return _getcwd(buf, buflen);
|
|
987 }
|
|
988
|
|
989 //-----------------------------------------------------------
|
|
990 // Helper functions for fatal error handler
|
|
991
|
|
992 // The following library functions are resolved dynamically at runtime:
|
|
993
|
|
994 // PSAPI functions, for Windows NT, 2000, XP
|
|
995
|
|
996 // psapi.h doesn't come with Visual Studio 6; it can be downloaded as Platform
|
|
997 // SDK from Microsoft. Here are the definitions copied from psapi.h
|
|
998 typedef struct _MODULEINFO {
|
|
999 LPVOID lpBaseOfDll;
|
|
1000 DWORD SizeOfImage;
|
|
1001 LPVOID EntryPoint;
|
|
1002 } MODULEINFO, *LPMODULEINFO;
|
|
1003
|
|
1004 static BOOL (WINAPI *_EnumProcessModules) ( HANDLE, HMODULE *, DWORD, LPDWORD );
|
|
1005 static DWORD (WINAPI *_GetModuleFileNameEx) ( HANDLE, HMODULE, LPTSTR, DWORD );
|
|
1006 static BOOL (WINAPI *_GetModuleInformation)( HANDLE, HMODULE, LPMODULEINFO, DWORD );
|
|
1007
|
|
1008 // ToolHelp Functions, for Windows 95, 98 and ME
|
|
1009
|
|
1010 static HANDLE(WINAPI *_CreateToolhelp32Snapshot)(DWORD,DWORD) ;
|
|
1011 static BOOL (WINAPI *_Module32First) (HANDLE,LPMODULEENTRY32) ;
|
|
1012 static BOOL (WINAPI *_Module32Next) (HANDLE,LPMODULEENTRY32) ;
|
|
1013
|
|
1014 bool _has_psapi;
|
|
1015 bool _psapi_init = false;
|
|
1016 bool _has_toolhelp;
|
|
1017
|
|
1018 static bool _init_psapi() {
|
|
1019 HINSTANCE psapi = LoadLibrary( "PSAPI.DLL" ) ;
|
|
1020 if( psapi == NULL ) return false ;
|
|
1021
|
|
1022 _EnumProcessModules = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(
|
|
1023 BOOL(WINAPI *)(HANDLE, HMODULE *, DWORD, LPDWORD),
|
|
1024 GetProcAddress(psapi, "EnumProcessModules")) ;
|
|
1025 _GetModuleFileNameEx = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(
|
|
1026 DWORD (WINAPI *)(HANDLE, HMODULE, LPTSTR, DWORD),
|
|
1027 GetProcAddress(psapi, "GetModuleFileNameExA"));
|
|
1028 _GetModuleInformation = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(
|
|
1029 BOOL (WINAPI *)(HANDLE, HMODULE, LPMODULEINFO, DWORD),
|
|
1030 GetProcAddress(psapi, "GetModuleInformation"));
|
|
1031
|
|
1032 _has_psapi = (_EnumProcessModules && _GetModuleFileNameEx && _GetModuleInformation);
|
|
1033 _psapi_init = true;
|
|
1034 return _has_psapi;
|
|
1035 }
|
|
1036
|
|
1037 static bool _init_toolhelp() {
|
|
1038 HINSTANCE kernel32 = LoadLibrary("Kernel32.DLL") ;
|
|
1039 if (kernel32 == NULL) return false ;
|
|
1040
|
|
1041 _CreateToolhelp32Snapshot = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(
|
|
1042 HANDLE(WINAPI *)(DWORD,DWORD),
|
|
1043 GetProcAddress(kernel32, "CreateToolhelp32Snapshot"));
|
|
1044 _Module32First = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(
|
|
1045 BOOL(WINAPI *)(HANDLE,LPMODULEENTRY32),
|
|
1046 GetProcAddress(kernel32, "Module32First" ));
|
|
1047 _Module32Next = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(
|
|
1048 BOOL(WINAPI *)(HANDLE,LPMODULEENTRY32),
|
|
1049 GetProcAddress(kernel32, "Module32Next" ));
|
|
1050
|
|
1051 _has_toolhelp = (_CreateToolhelp32Snapshot && _Module32First && _Module32Next);
|
|
1052 return _has_toolhelp;
|
|
1053 }
|
|
1054
|
|
1055 #ifdef _WIN64
|
|
1056 // Helper routine which returns true if address in
|
|
1057 // within the NTDLL address space.
|
|
1058 //
|
|
1059 static bool _addr_in_ntdll( address addr )
|
|
1060 {
|
|
1061 HMODULE hmod;
|
|
1062 MODULEINFO minfo;
|
|
1063
|
|
1064 hmod = GetModuleHandle("NTDLL.DLL");
|
|
1065 if ( hmod == NULL ) return false;
|
|
1066 if ( !_GetModuleInformation( GetCurrentProcess(), hmod,
|
|
1067 &minfo, sizeof(MODULEINFO)) )
|
|
1068 return false;
|
|
1069
|
|
1070 if ( (addr >= minfo.lpBaseOfDll) &&
|
|
1071 (addr < (address)((uintptr_t)minfo.lpBaseOfDll + (uintptr_t)minfo.SizeOfImage)))
|
|
1072 return true;
|
|
1073 else
|
|
1074 return false;
|
|
1075 }
|
|
1076 #endif
|
|
1077
|
|
1078
|
|
1079 // Enumerate all modules for a given process ID
|
|
1080 //
|
|
1081 // Notice that Windows 95/98/Me and Windows NT/2000/XP have
|
|
1082 // different API for doing this. We use PSAPI.DLL on NT based
|
|
1083 // Windows and ToolHelp on 95/98/Me.
|
|
1084
|
|
1085 // Callback function that is called by enumerate_modules() on
|
|
1086 // every DLL module.
|
|
1087 // Input parameters:
|
|
1088 // int pid,
|
|
1089 // char* module_file_name,
|
|
1090 // address module_base_addr,
|
|
1091 // unsigned module_size,
|
|
1092 // void* param
|
|
1093 typedef int (*EnumModulesCallbackFunc)(int, char *, address, unsigned, void *);
|
|
1094
|
|
1095 // enumerate_modules for Windows NT, using PSAPI
|
|
1096 static int _enumerate_modules_winnt( int pid, EnumModulesCallbackFunc func, void * param)
|
|
1097 {
|
|
1098 HANDLE hProcess ;
|
|
1099
|
|
1100 # define MAX_NUM_MODULES 128
|
|
1101 HMODULE modules[MAX_NUM_MODULES];
|
|
1102 static char filename[ MAX_PATH ];
|
|
1103 int result = 0;
|
|
1104
|
|
1105 if (!_has_psapi && (_psapi_init || !_init_psapi())) return 0;
|
|
1106
|
|
1107 hProcess = OpenProcess(PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION | PROCESS_VM_READ,
|
|
1108 FALSE, pid ) ;
|
|
1109 if (hProcess == NULL) return 0;
|
|
1110
|
|
1111 DWORD size_needed;
|
|
1112 if (!_EnumProcessModules(hProcess, modules,
|
|
1113 sizeof(modules), &size_needed)) {
|
|
1114 CloseHandle( hProcess );
|
|
1115 return 0;
|
|
1116 }
|
|
1117
|
|
1118 // number of modules that are currently loaded
|
|
1119 int num_modules = size_needed / sizeof(HMODULE);
|
|
1120
|
|
1121 for (int i = 0; i < MIN2(num_modules, MAX_NUM_MODULES); i++) {
|
|
1122 // Get Full pathname:
|
|
1123 if(!_GetModuleFileNameEx(hProcess, modules[i],
|
|
1124 filename, sizeof(filename))) {
|
|
1125 filename[0] = '\0';
|
|
1126 }
|
|
1127
|
|
1128 MODULEINFO modinfo;
|
|
1129 if (!_GetModuleInformation(hProcess, modules[i],
|
|
1130 &modinfo, sizeof(modinfo))) {
|
|
1131 modinfo.lpBaseOfDll = NULL;
|
|
1132 modinfo.SizeOfImage = 0;
|
|
1133 }
|
|
1134
|
|
1135 // Invoke callback function
|
|
1136 result = func(pid, filename, (address)modinfo.lpBaseOfDll,
|
|
1137 modinfo.SizeOfImage, param);
|
|
1138 if (result) break;
|
|
1139 }
|
|
1140
|
|
1141 CloseHandle( hProcess ) ;
|
|
1142 return result;
|
|
1143 }
|
|
1144
|
|
1145
|
|
1146 // enumerate_modules for Windows 95/98/ME, using TOOLHELP
|
|
1147 static int _enumerate_modules_windows( int pid, EnumModulesCallbackFunc func, void *param)
|
|
1148 {
|
|
1149 HANDLE hSnapShot ;
|
|
1150 static MODULEENTRY32 modentry ;
|
|
1151 int result = 0;
|
|
1152
|
|
1153 if (!_has_toolhelp) return 0;
|
|
1154
|
|
1155 // Get a handle to a Toolhelp snapshot of the system
|
|
1156 hSnapShot = _CreateToolhelp32Snapshot(TH32CS_SNAPMODULE, pid ) ;
|
|
1157 if( hSnapShot == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE ) {
|
|
1158 return FALSE ;
|
|
1159 }
|
|
1160
|
|
1161 // iterate through all modules
|
|
1162 modentry.dwSize = sizeof(MODULEENTRY32) ;
|
|
1163 bool not_done = _Module32First( hSnapShot, &modentry ) != 0;
|
|
1164
|
|
1165 while( not_done ) {
|
|
1166 // invoke the callback
|
|
1167 result=func(pid, modentry.szExePath, (address)modentry.modBaseAddr,
|
|
1168 modentry.modBaseSize, param);
|
|
1169 if (result) break;
|
|
1170
|
|
1171 modentry.dwSize = sizeof(MODULEENTRY32) ;
|
|
1172 not_done = _Module32Next( hSnapShot, &modentry ) != 0;
|
|
1173 }
|
|
1174
|
|
1175 CloseHandle(hSnapShot);
|
|
1176 return result;
|
|
1177 }
|
|
1178
|
|
1179 int enumerate_modules( int pid, EnumModulesCallbackFunc func, void * param )
|
|
1180 {
|
|
1181 // Get current process ID if caller doesn't provide it.
|
|
1182 if (!pid) pid = os::current_process_id();
|
|
1183
|
|
1184 if (os::win32::is_nt()) return _enumerate_modules_winnt (pid, func, param);
|
|
1185 else return _enumerate_modules_windows(pid, func, param);
|
|
1186 }
|
|
1187
|
|
1188 struct _modinfo {
|
|
1189 address addr;
|
|
1190 char* full_path; // point to a char buffer
|
|
1191 int buflen; // size of the buffer
|
|
1192 address base_addr;
|
|
1193 };
|
|
1194
|
|
1195 static int _locate_module_by_addr(int pid, char * mod_fname, address base_addr,
|
|
1196 unsigned size, void * param) {
|
|
1197 struct _modinfo *pmod = (struct _modinfo *)param;
|
|
1198 if (!pmod) return -1;
|
|
1199
|
|
1200 if (base_addr <= pmod->addr &&
|
|
1201 base_addr+size > pmod->addr) {
|
|
1202 // if a buffer is provided, copy path name to the buffer
|
|
1203 if (pmod->full_path) {
|
|
1204 jio_snprintf(pmod->full_path, pmod->buflen, "%s", mod_fname);
|
|
1205 }
|
|
1206 pmod->base_addr = base_addr;
|
|
1207 return 1;
|
|
1208 }
|
|
1209 return 0;
|
|
1210 }
|
|
1211
|
|
1212 bool os::dll_address_to_library_name(address addr, char* buf,
|
|
1213 int buflen, int* offset) {
|
|
1214 // NOTE: the reason we don't use SymGetModuleInfo() is it doesn't always
|
|
1215 // return the full path to the DLL file, sometimes it returns path
|
|
1216 // to the corresponding PDB file (debug info); sometimes it only
|
|
1217 // returns partial path, which makes life painful.
|
|
1218
|
|
1219 struct _modinfo mi;
|
|
1220 mi.addr = addr;
|
|
1221 mi.full_path = buf;
|
|
1222 mi.buflen = buflen;
|
|
1223 int pid = os::current_process_id();
|
|
1224 if (enumerate_modules(pid, _locate_module_by_addr, (void *)&mi)) {
|
|
1225 // buf already contains path name
|
|
1226 if (offset) *offset = addr - mi.base_addr;
|
|
1227 return true;
|
|
1228 } else {
|
|
1229 if (buf) buf[0] = '\0';
|
|
1230 if (offset) *offset = -1;
|
|
1231 return false;
|
|
1232 }
|
|
1233 }
|
|
1234
|
|
1235 bool os::dll_address_to_function_name(address addr, char *buf,
|
|
1236 int buflen, int *offset) {
|
|
1237 // Unimplemented on Windows - in order to use SymGetSymFromAddr(),
|
|
1238 // we need to initialize imagehlp/dbghelp, then load symbol table
|
|
1239 // for every module. That's too much work to do after a fatal error.
|
|
1240 // For an example on how to implement this function, see 1.4.2.
|
|
1241 if (offset) *offset = -1;
|
|
1242 if (buf) buf[0] = '\0';
|
|
1243 return false;
|
|
1244 }
|
|
1245
|
|
1246 // save the start and end address of jvm.dll into param[0] and param[1]
|
|
1247 static int _locate_jvm_dll(int pid, char* mod_fname, address base_addr,
|
|
1248 unsigned size, void * param) {
|
|
1249 if (!param) return -1;
|
|
1250
|
|
1251 if (base_addr <= (address)_locate_jvm_dll &&
|
|
1252 base_addr+size > (address)_locate_jvm_dll) {
|
|
1253 ((address*)param)[0] = base_addr;
|
|
1254 ((address*)param)[1] = base_addr + size;
|
|
1255 return 1;
|
|
1256 }
|
|
1257 return 0;
|
|
1258 }
|
|
1259
|
|
1260 address vm_lib_location[2]; // start and end address of jvm.dll
|
|
1261
|
|
1262 // check if addr is inside jvm.dll
|
|
1263 bool os::address_is_in_vm(address addr) {
|
|
1264 if (!vm_lib_location[0] || !vm_lib_location[1]) {
|
|
1265 int pid = os::current_process_id();
|
|
1266 if (!enumerate_modules(pid, _locate_jvm_dll, (void *)vm_lib_location)) {
|
|
1267 assert(false, "Can't find jvm module.");
|
|
1268 return false;
|
|
1269 }
|
|
1270 }
|
|
1271
|
|
1272 return (vm_lib_location[0] <= addr) && (addr < vm_lib_location[1]);
|
|
1273 }
|
|
1274
|
|
1275 // print module info; param is outputStream*
|
|
1276 static int _print_module(int pid, char* fname, address base,
|
|
1277 unsigned size, void* param) {
|
|
1278 if (!param) return -1;
|
|
1279
|
|
1280 outputStream* st = (outputStream*)param;
|
|
1281
|
|
1282 address end_addr = base + size;
|
|
1283 st->print(PTR_FORMAT " - " PTR_FORMAT " \t%s\n", base, end_addr, fname);
|
|
1284 return 0;
|
|
1285 }
|
|
1286
|
|
1287 // Loads .dll/.so and
|
|
1288 // in case of error it checks if .dll/.so was built for the
|
|
1289 // same architecture as Hotspot is running on
|
|
1290 void * os::dll_load(const char *name, char *ebuf, int ebuflen)
|
|
1291 {
|
|
1292 void * result = LoadLibrary(name);
|
|
1293 if (result != NULL)
|
|
1294 {
|
|
1295 return result;
|
|
1296 }
|
|
1297
|
|
1298 long errcode = GetLastError();
|
|
1299 if (errcode == ERROR_MOD_NOT_FOUND) {
|
|
1300 strncpy(ebuf, "Can't find dependent libraries", ebuflen-1);
|
|
1301 ebuf[ebuflen-1]='\0';
|
|
1302 return NULL;
|
|
1303 }
|
|
1304
|
|
1305 // Parsing dll below
|
|
1306 // If we can read dll-info and find that dll was built
|
|
1307 // for an architecture other than Hotspot is running in
|
|
1308 // - then print to buffer "DLL was built for a different architecture"
|
|
1309 // else call getLastErrorString to obtain system error message
|
|
1310
|
|
1311 // Read system error message into ebuf
|
|
1312 // It may or may not be overwritten below (in the for loop and just above)
|
|
1313 getLastErrorString(ebuf, (size_t) ebuflen);
|
|
1314 ebuf[ebuflen-1]='\0';
|
|
1315 int file_descriptor=::open(name, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY, 0);
|
|
1316 if (file_descriptor<0)
|
|
1317 {
|
|
1318 return NULL;
|
|
1319 }
|
|
1320
|
|
1321 uint32_t signature_offset;
|
|
1322 uint16_t lib_arch=0;
|
|
1323 bool failed_to_get_lib_arch=
|
|
1324 (
|
|
1325 //Go to position 3c in the dll
|
|
1326 (os::seek_to_file_offset(file_descriptor,IMAGE_FILE_PTR_TO_SIGNATURE)<0)
|
|
1327 ||
|
|
1328 // Read loacation of signature
|
|
1329 (sizeof(signature_offset)!=
|
|
1330 (os::read(file_descriptor, (void*)&signature_offset,sizeof(signature_offset))))
|
|
1331 ||
|
|
1332 //Go to COFF File Header in dll
|
|
1333 //that is located after"signature" (4 bytes long)
|
|
1334 (os::seek_to_file_offset(file_descriptor,
|
|
1335 signature_offset+IMAGE_FILE_SIGNATURE_LENGTH)<0)
|
|
1336 ||
|
|
1337 //Read field that contains code of architecture
|
|
1338 // that dll was build for
|
|
1339 (sizeof(lib_arch)!=
|
|
1340 (os::read(file_descriptor, (void*)&lib_arch,sizeof(lib_arch))))
|
|
1341 );
|
|
1342
|
|
1343 ::close(file_descriptor);
|
|
1344 if (failed_to_get_lib_arch)
|
|
1345 {
|
|
1346 // file i/o error - report getLastErrorString(...) msg
|
|
1347 return NULL;
|
|
1348 }
|
|
1349
|
|
1350 typedef struct
|
|
1351 {
|
|
1352 uint16_t arch_code;
|
|
1353 char* arch_name;
|
|
1354 } arch_t;
|
|
1355
|
|
1356 static const arch_t arch_array[]={
|
|
1357 {IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_I386, (char*)"IA 32"},
|
|
1358 {IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_AMD64, (char*)"AMD 64"},
|
|
1359 {IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_IA64, (char*)"IA 64"}
|
|
1360 };
|
|
1361 #if (defined _M_IA64)
|
|
1362 static const uint16_t running_arch=IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_IA64;
|
|
1363 #elif (defined _M_AMD64)
|
|
1364 static const uint16_t running_arch=IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_AMD64;
|
|
1365 #elif (defined _M_IX86)
|
|
1366 static const uint16_t running_arch=IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_I386;
|
|
1367 #else
|
|
1368 #error Method os::dll_load requires that one of following \
|
|
1369 is defined :_M_IA64,_M_AMD64 or _M_IX86
|
|
1370 #endif
|
|
1371
|
|
1372
|
|
1373 // Obtain a string for printf operation
|
|
1374 // lib_arch_str shall contain string what platform this .dll was built for
|
|
1375 // running_arch_str shall string contain what platform Hotspot was built for
|
|
1376 char *running_arch_str=NULL,*lib_arch_str=NULL;
|
|
1377 for (unsigned int i=0;i<ARRAY_SIZE(arch_array);i++)
|
|
1378 {
|
|
1379 if (lib_arch==arch_array[i].arch_code)
|
|
1380 lib_arch_str=arch_array[i].arch_name;
|
|
1381 if (running_arch==arch_array[i].arch_code)
|
|
1382 running_arch_str=arch_array[i].arch_name;
|
|
1383 }
|
|
1384
|
|
1385 assert(running_arch_str,
|
|
1386 "Didn't find runing architecture code in arch_array");
|
|
1387
|
|
1388 // If the architure is right
|
|
1389 // but some other error took place - report getLastErrorString(...) msg
|
|
1390 if (lib_arch == running_arch)
|
|
1391 {
|
|
1392 return NULL;
|
|
1393 }
|
|
1394
|
|
1395 if (lib_arch_str!=NULL)
|
|
1396 {
|
|
1397 ::_snprintf(ebuf, ebuflen-1,
|
|
1398 "Can't load %s-bit .dll on a %s-bit platform",
|
|
1399 lib_arch_str,running_arch_str);
|
|
1400 }
|
|
1401 else
|
|
1402 {
|
|
1403 // don't know what architecture this dll was build for
|
|
1404 ::_snprintf(ebuf, ebuflen-1,
|
|
1405 "Can't load this .dll (machine code=0x%x) on a %s-bit platform",
|
|
1406 lib_arch,running_arch_str);
|
|
1407 }
|
|
1408
|
|
1409 return NULL;
|
|
1410 }
|
|
1411
|
|
1412
|
|
1413 void os::print_dll_info(outputStream *st) {
|
|
1414 int pid = os::current_process_id();
|
|
1415 st->print_cr("Dynamic libraries:");
|
|
1416 enumerate_modules(pid, _print_module, (void *)st);
|
|
1417 }
|
|
1418
|
|
1419 void os::print_os_info(outputStream* st) {
|
|
1420 st->print("OS:");
|
|
1421
|
|
1422 OSVERSIONINFOEX osvi;
|
|
1423 ZeroMemory(&osvi, sizeof(OSVERSIONINFOEX));
|
|
1424 osvi.dwOSVersionInfoSize = sizeof(OSVERSIONINFOEX);
|
|
1425
|
|
1426 if (!GetVersionEx((OSVERSIONINFO *)&osvi)) {
|
|
1427 st->print_cr("N/A");
|
|
1428 return;
|
|
1429 }
|
|
1430
|
|
1431 int os_vers = osvi.dwMajorVersion * 1000 + osvi.dwMinorVersion;
|
|
1432
|
|
1433 if (osvi.dwPlatformId == VER_PLATFORM_WIN32_NT) {
|
|
1434 switch (os_vers) {
|
|
1435 case 3051: st->print(" Windows NT 3.51"); break;
|
|
1436 case 4000: st->print(" Windows NT 4.0"); break;
|
|
1437 case 5000: st->print(" Windows 2000"); break;
|
|
1438 case 5001: st->print(" Windows XP"); break;
|
|
1439 case 5002: st->print(" Windows Server 2003 family"); break;
|
|
1440 case 6000: st->print(" Windows Vista"); break;
|
|
1441 default: // future windows, print out its major and minor versions
|
|
1442 st->print(" Windows NT %d.%d", osvi.dwMajorVersion, osvi.dwMinorVersion);
|
|
1443 }
|
|
1444 } else {
|
|
1445 switch (os_vers) {
|
|
1446 case 4000: st->print(" Windows 95"); break;
|
|
1447 case 4010: st->print(" Windows 98"); break;
|
|
1448 case 4090: st->print(" Windows Me"); break;
|
|
1449 default: // future windows, print out its major and minor versions
|
|
1450 st->print(" Windows %d.%d", osvi.dwMajorVersion, osvi.dwMinorVersion);
|
|
1451 }
|
|
1452 }
|
|
1453
|
|
1454 st->print(" Build %d", osvi.dwBuildNumber);
|
|
1455 st->print(" %s", osvi.szCSDVersion); // service pack
|
|
1456 st->cr();
|
|
1457 }
|
|
1458
|
|
1459 void os::print_memory_info(outputStream* st) {
|
|
1460 st->print("Memory:");
|
|
1461 st->print(" %dk page", os::vm_page_size()>>10);
|
|
1462
|
|
1463 // FIXME: GlobalMemoryStatus() may return incorrect value if total memory
|
|
1464 // is larger than 4GB
|
|
1465 MEMORYSTATUS ms;
|
|
1466 GlobalMemoryStatus(&ms);
|
|
1467
|
|
1468 st->print(", physical %uk", os::physical_memory() >> 10);
|
|
1469 st->print("(%uk free)", os::available_memory() >> 10);
|
|
1470
|
|
1471 st->print(", swap %uk", ms.dwTotalPageFile >> 10);
|
|
1472 st->print("(%uk free)", ms.dwAvailPageFile >> 10);
|
|
1473 st->cr();
|
|
1474 }
|
|
1475
|
|
1476 void os::print_siginfo(outputStream *st, void *siginfo) {
|
|
1477 EXCEPTION_RECORD* er = (EXCEPTION_RECORD*)siginfo;
|
|
1478 st->print("siginfo:");
|
|
1479 st->print(" ExceptionCode=0x%x", er->ExceptionCode);
|
|
1480
|
|
1481 if (er->ExceptionCode == EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION &&
|
|
1482 er->NumberParameters >= 2) {
|
|
1483 switch (er->ExceptionInformation[0]) {
|
|
1484 case 0: st->print(", reading address"); break;
|
|
1485 case 1: st->print(", writing address"); break;
|
|
1486 default: st->print(", ExceptionInformation=" INTPTR_FORMAT,
|
|
1487 er->ExceptionInformation[0]);
|
|
1488 }
|
|
1489 st->print(" " INTPTR_FORMAT, er->ExceptionInformation[1]);
|
|
1490 } else if (er->ExceptionCode == EXCEPTION_IN_PAGE_ERROR &&
|
|
1491 er->NumberParameters >= 2 && UseSharedSpaces) {
|
|
1492 FileMapInfo* mapinfo = FileMapInfo::current_info();
|
|
1493 if (mapinfo->is_in_shared_space((void*)er->ExceptionInformation[1])) {
|
|
1494 st->print("\n\nError accessing class data sharing archive." \
|
|
1495 " Mapped file inaccessible during execution, " \
|
|
1496 " possible disk/network problem.");
|
|
1497 }
|
|
1498 } else {
|
|
1499 int num = er->NumberParameters;
|
|
1500 if (num > 0) {
|
|
1501 st->print(", ExceptionInformation=");
|
|
1502 for (int i = 0; i < num; i++) {
|
|
1503 st->print(INTPTR_FORMAT " ", er->ExceptionInformation[i]);
|
|
1504 }
|
|
1505 }
|
|
1506 }
|
|
1507 st->cr();
|
|
1508 }
|
|
1509
|
|
1510 void os::print_signal_handlers(outputStream* st, char* buf, size_t buflen) {
|
|
1511 // do nothing
|
|
1512 }
|
|
1513
|
|
1514 static char saved_jvm_path[MAX_PATH] = {0};
|
|
1515
|
|
1516 // Find the full path to the current module, jvm.dll or jvm_g.dll
|
|
1517 void os::jvm_path(char *buf, jint buflen) {
|
|
1518 // Error checking.
|
|
1519 if (buflen < MAX_PATH) {
|
|
1520 assert(false, "must use a large-enough buffer");
|
|
1521 buf[0] = '\0';
|
|
1522 return;
|
|
1523 }
|
|
1524 // Lazy resolve the path to current module.
|
|
1525 if (saved_jvm_path[0] != 0) {
|
|
1526 strcpy(buf, saved_jvm_path);
|
|
1527 return;
|
|
1528 }
|
|
1529
|
|
1530 GetModuleFileName(vm_lib_handle, buf, buflen);
|
|
1531 strcpy(saved_jvm_path, buf);
|
|
1532 }
|
|
1533
|
|
1534
|
|
1535 void os::print_jni_name_prefix_on(outputStream* st, int args_size) {
|
|
1536 #ifndef _WIN64
|
|
1537 st->print("_");
|
|
1538 #endif
|
|
1539 }
|
|
1540
|
|
1541
|
|
1542 void os::print_jni_name_suffix_on(outputStream* st, int args_size) {
|
|
1543 #ifndef _WIN64
|
|
1544 st->print("@%d", args_size * sizeof(int));
|
|
1545 #endif
|
|
1546 }
|
|
1547
|
|
1548 // sun.misc.Signal
|
|
1549 // NOTE that this is a workaround for an apparent kernel bug where if
|
|
1550 // a signal handler for SIGBREAK is installed then that signal handler
|
|
1551 // takes priority over the console control handler for CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT.
|
|
1552 // See bug 4416763.
|
|
1553 static void (*sigbreakHandler)(int) = NULL;
|
|
1554
|
|
1555 static void UserHandler(int sig, void *siginfo, void *context) {
|
|
1556 os::signal_notify(sig);
|
|
1557 // We need to reinstate the signal handler each time...
|
|
1558 os::signal(sig, (void*)UserHandler);
|
|
1559 }
|
|
1560
|
|
1561 void* os::user_handler() {
|
|
1562 return (void*) UserHandler;
|
|
1563 }
|
|
1564
|
|
1565 void* os::signal(int signal_number, void* handler) {
|
|
1566 if ((signal_number == SIGBREAK) && (!ReduceSignalUsage)) {
|
|
1567 void (*oldHandler)(int) = sigbreakHandler;
|
|
1568 sigbreakHandler = (void (*)(int)) handler;
|
|
1569 return (void*) oldHandler;
|
|
1570 } else {
|
|
1571 return (void*)::signal(signal_number, (void (*)(int))handler);
|
|
1572 }
|
|
1573 }
|
|
1574
|
|
1575 void os::signal_raise(int signal_number) {
|
|
1576 raise(signal_number);
|
|
1577 }
|
|
1578
|
|
1579 // The Win32 C runtime library maps all console control events other than ^C
|
|
1580 // into SIGBREAK, which makes it impossible to distinguish ^BREAK from close,
|
|
1581 // logoff, and shutdown events. We therefore install our own console handler
|
|
1582 // that raises SIGTERM for the latter cases.
|
|
1583 //
|
|
1584 static BOOL WINAPI consoleHandler(DWORD event) {
|
|
1585 switch(event) {
|
|
1586 case CTRL_C_EVENT:
|
|
1587 if (is_error_reported()) {
|
|
1588 // Ctrl-C is pressed during error reporting, likely because the error
|
|
1589 // handler fails to abort. Let VM die immediately.
|
|
1590 os::die();
|
|
1591 }
|
|
1592
|
|
1593 os::signal_raise(SIGINT);
|
|
1594 return TRUE;
|
|
1595 break;
|
|
1596 case CTRL_BREAK_EVENT:
|
|
1597 if (sigbreakHandler != NULL) {
|
|
1598 (*sigbreakHandler)(SIGBREAK);
|
|
1599 }
|
|
1600 return TRUE;
|
|
1601 break;
|
|
1602 case CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT:
|
|
1603 case CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT:
|
|
1604 case CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT:
|
|
1605 os::signal_raise(SIGTERM);
|
|
1606 return TRUE;
|
|
1607 break;
|
|
1608 default:
|
|
1609 break;
|
|
1610 }
|
|
1611 return FALSE;
|
|
1612 }
|
|
1613
|
|
1614 /*
|
|
1615 * The following code is moved from os.cpp for making this
|
|
1616 * code platform specific, which it is by its very nature.
|
|
1617 */
|
|
1618
|
|
1619 // Return maximum OS signal used + 1 for internal use only
|
|
1620 // Used as exit signal for signal_thread
|
|
1621 int os::sigexitnum_pd(){
|
|
1622 return NSIG;
|
|
1623 }
|
|
1624
|
|
1625 // a counter for each possible signal value, including signal_thread exit signal
|
|
1626 static volatile jint pending_signals[NSIG+1] = { 0 };
|
|
1627 static HANDLE sig_sem;
|
|
1628
|
|
1629 void os::signal_init_pd() {
|
|
1630 // Initialize signal structures
|
|
1631 memset((void*)pending_signals, 0, sizeof(pending_signals));
|
|
1632
|
|
1633 sig_sem = ::CreateSemaphore(NULL, 0, NSIG+1, NULL);
|
|
1634
|
|
1635 // Programs embedding the VM do not want it to attempt to receive
|
|
1636 // events like CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT, which are used to implement the
|
|
1637 // shutdown hooks mechanism introduced in 1.3. For example, when
|
|
1638 // the VM is run as part of a Windows NT service (i.e., a servlet
|
|
1639 // engine in a web server), the correct behavior is for any console
|
|
1640 // control handler to return FALSE, not TRUE, because the OS's
|
|
1641 // "final" handler for such events allows the process to continue if
|
|
1642 // it is a service (while terminating it if it is not a service).
|
|
1643 // To make this behavior uniform and the mechanism simpler, we
|
|
1644 // completely disable the VM's usage of these console events if -Xrs
|
|
1645 // (=ReduceSignalUsage) is specified. This means, for example, that
|
|
1646 // the CTRL-BREAK thread dump mechanism is also disabled in this
|
|
1647 // case. See bugs 4323062, 4345157, and related bugs.
|
|
1648
|
|
1649 if (!ReduceSignalUsage) {
|
|
1650 // Add a CTRL-C handler
|
|
1651 SetConsoleCtrlHandler(consoleHandler, TRUE);
|
|
1652 }
|
|
1653 }
|
|
1654
|
|
1655 void os::signal_notify(int signal_number) {
|
|
1656 BOOL ret;
|
|
1657
|
|
1658 Atomic::inc(&pending_signals[signal_number]);
|
|
1659 ret = ::ReleaseSemaphore(sig_sem, 1, NULL);
|
|
1660 assert(ret != 0, "ReleaseSemaphore() failed");
|
|
1661 }
|
|
1662
|
|
1663 static int check_pending_signals(bool wait_for_signal) {
|
|
1664 DWORD ret;
|
|
1665 while (true) {
|
|
1666 for (int i = 0; i < NSIG + 1; i++) {
|
|
1667 jint n = pending_signals[i];
|
|
1668 if (n > 0 && n == Atomic::cmpxchg(n - 1, &pending_signals[i], n)) {
|
|
1669 return i;
|
|
1670 }
|
|
1671 }
|
|
1672 if (!wait_for_signal) {
|
|
1673 return -1;
|
|
1674 }
|
|
1675
|
|
1676 JavaThread *thread = JavaThread::current();
|
|
1677
|
|
1678 ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(thread);
|
|
1679
|
|
1680 bool threadIsSuspended;
|
|
1681 do {
|
|
1682 thread->set_suspend_equivalent();
|
|
1683 // cleared by handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition() or java_suspend_self()
|
|
1684 ret = ::WaitForSingleObject(sig_sem, INFINITE);
|
|
1685 assert(ret == WAIT_OBJECT_0, "WaitForSingleObject() failed");
|
|
1686
|
|
1687 // were we externally suspended while we were waiting?
|
|
1688 threadIsSuspended = thread->handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition();
|
|
1689 if (threadIsSuspended) {
|
|
1690 //
|
|
1691 // The semaphore has been incremented, but while we were waiting
|
|
1692 // another thread suspended us. We don't want to continue running
|
|
1693 // while suspended because that would surprise the thread that
|
|
1694 // suspended us.
|
|
1695 //
|
|
1696 ret = ::ReleaseSemaphore(sig_sem, 1, NULL);
|
|
1697 assert(ret != 0, "ReleaseSemaphore() failed");
|
|
1698
|
|
1699 thread->java_suspend_self();
|
|
1700 }
|
|
1701 } while (threadIsSuspended);
|
|
1702 }
|
|
1703 }
|
|
1704
|
|
1705 int os::signal_lookup() {
|
|
1706 return check_pending_signals(false);
|
|
1707 }
|
|
1708
|
|
1709 int os::signal_wait() {
|
|
1710 return check_pending_signals(true);
|
|
1711 }
|
|
1712
|
|
1713 // Implicit OS exception handling
|
|
1714
|
|
1715 LONG Handle_Exception(struct _EXCEPTION_POINTERS* exceptionInfo, address handler) {
|
|
1716 JavaThread* thread = JavaThread::current();
|
|
1717 // Save pc in thread
|
|
1718 #ifdef _M_IA64
|
|
1719 thread->set_saved_exception_pc((address)exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->StIIP);
|
|
1720 // Set pc to handler
|
|
1721 exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->StIIP = (DWORD64)handler;
|
|
1722 #elif _M_AMD64
|
|
1723 thread->set_saved_exception_pc((address)exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->Rip);
|
|
1724 // Set pc to handler
|
|
1725 exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->Rip = (DWORD64)handler;
|
|
1726 #else
|
|
1727 thread->set_saved_exception_pc((address)exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->Eip);
|
|
1728 // Set pc to handler
|
|
1729 exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->Eip = (LONG)handler;
|
|
1730 #endif
|
|
1731
|
|
1732 // Continue the execution
|
|
1733 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
1734 }
|
|
1735
|
|
1736
|
|
1737 // Used for PostMortemDump
|
|
1738 extern "C" void safepoints();
|
|
1739 extern "C" void find(int x);
|
|
1740 extern "C" void events();
|
|
1741
|
|
1742 // According to Windows API documentation, an illegal instruction sequence should generate
|
|
1743 // the 0xC000001C exception code. However, real world experience shows that occasionnaly
|
|
1744 // the execution of an illegal instruction can generate the exception code 0xC000001E. This
|
|
1745 // seems to be an undocumented feature of Win NT 4.0 (and probably other Windows systems).
|
|
1746
|
|
1747 #define EXCEPTION_ILLEGAL_INSTRUCTION_2 0xC000001E
|
|
1748
|
|
1749 // From "Execution Protection in the Windows Operating System" draft 0.35
|
|
1750 // Once a system header becomes available, the "real" define should be
|
|
1751 // included or copied here.
|
|
1752 #define EXCEPTION_INFO_EXEC_VIOLATION 0x08
|
|
1753
|
|
1754 #define def_excpt(val) #val, val
|
|
1755
|
|
1756 struct siglabel {
|
|
1757 char *name;
|
|
1758 int number;
|
|
1759 };
|
|
1760
|
|
1761 struct siglabel exceptlabels[] = {
|
|
1762 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION),
|
|
1763 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_DATATYPE_MISALIGNMENT),
|
|
1764 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_BREAKPOINT),
|
|
1765 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_SINGLE_STEP),
|
|
1766 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_ARRAY_BOUNDS_EXCEEDED),
|
|
1767 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_FLT_DENORMAL_OPERAND),
|
|
1768 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_FLT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO),
|
|
1769 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_FLT_INEXACT_RESULT),
|
|
1770 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_FLT_INVALID_OPERATION),
|
|
1771 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_FLT_OVERFLOW),
|
|
1772 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_FLT_STACK_CHECK),
|
|
1773 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_FLT_UNDERFLOW),
|
|
1774 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_INT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO),
|
|
1775 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_INT_OVERFLOW),
|
|
1776 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_PRIV_INSTRUCTION),
|
|
1777 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_IN_PAGE_ERROR),
|
|
1778 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_ILLEGAL_INSTRUCTION),
|
|
1779 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_ILLEGAL_INSTRUCTION_2),
|
|
1780 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_NONCONTINUABLE_EXCEPTION),
|
|
1781 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_STACK_OVERFLOW),
|
|
1782 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_INVALID_DISPOSITION),
|
|
1783 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_GUARD_PAGE),
|
|
1784 def_excpt(EXCEPTION_INVALID_HANDLE),
|
|
1785 NULL, 0
|
|
1786 };
|
|
1787
|
|
1788 const char* os::exception_name(int exception_code, char *buf, size_t size) {
|
|
1789 for (int i = 0; exceptlabels[i].name != NULL; i++) {
|
|
1790 if (exceptlabels[i].number == exception_code) {
|
|
1791 jio_snprintf(buf, size, "%s", exceptlabels[i].name);
|
|
1792 return buf;
|
|
1793 }
|
|
1794 }
|
|
1795
|
|
1796 return NULL;
|
|
1797 }
|
|
1798
|
|
1799 //-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1800 LONG Handle_IDiv_Exception(struct _EXCEPTION_POINTERS* exceptionInfo) {
|
|
1801 // handle exception caused by idiv; should only happen for -MinInt/-1
|
|
1802 // (division by zero is handled explicitly)
|
|
1803 #ifdef _M_IA64
|
|
1804 assert(0, "Fix Handle_IDiv_Exception");
|
|
1805 #elif _M_AMD64
|
|
1806 PCONTEXT ctx = exceptionInfo->ContextRecord;
|
|
1807 address pc = (address)ctx->Rip;
|
|
1808 NOT_PRODUCT(Events::log("idiv overflow exception at " INTPTR_FORMAT , pc));
|
|
1809 assert(pc[0] == 0xF7, "not an idiv opcode");
|
|
1810 assert((pc[1] & ~0x7) == 0xF8, "cannot handle non-register operands");
|
|
1811 assert(ctx->Rax == min_jint, "unexpected idiv exception");
|
|
1812 // set correct result values and continue after idiv instruction
|
|
1813 ctx->Rip = (DWORD)pc + 2; // idiv reg, reg is 2 bytes
|
|
1814 ctx->Rax = (DWORD)min_jint; // result
|
|
1815 ctx->Rdx = (DWORD)0; // remainder
|
|
1816 // Continue the execution
|
|
1817 #else
|
|
1818 PCONTEXT ctx = exceptionInfo->ContextRecord;
|
|
1819 address pc = (address)ctx->Eip;
|
|
1820 NOT_PRODUCT(Events::log("idiv overflow exception at " INTPTR_FORMAT , pc));
|
|
1821 assert(pc[0] == 0xF7, "not an idiv opcode");
|
|
1822 assert((pc[1] & ~0x7) == 0xF8, "cannot handle non-register operands");
|
|
1823 assert(ctx->Eax == min_jint, "unexpected idiv exception");
|
|
1824 // set correct result values and continue after idiv instruction
|
|
1825 ctx->Eip = (DWORD)pc + 2; // idiv reg, reg is 2 bytes
|
|
1826 ctx->Eax = (DWORD)min_jint; // result
|
|
1827 ctx->Edx = (DWORD)0; // remainder
|
|
1828 // Continue the execution
|
|
1829 #endif
|
|
1830 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
1831 }
|
|
1832
|
|
1833 #ifndef _WIN64
|
|
1834 //-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1835 LONG WINAPI Handle_FLT_Exception(struct _EXCEPTION_POINTERS* exceptionInfo) {
|
|
1836 // handle exception caused by native mothod modifying control word
|
|
1837 PCONTEXT ctx = exceptionInfo->ContextRecord;
|
|
1838 DWORD exception_code = exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord->ExceptionCode;
|
|
1839
|
|
1840 switch (exception_code) {
|
|
1841 case EXCEPTION_FLT_DENORMAL_OPERAND:
|
|
1842 case EXCEPTION_FLT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO:
|
|
1843 case EXCEPTION_FLT_INEXACT_RESULT:
|
|
1844 case EXCEPTION_FLT_INVALID_OPERATION:
|
|
1845 case EXCEPTION_FLT_OVERFLOW:
|
|
1846 case EXCEPTION_FLT_STACK_CHECK:
|
|
1847 case EXCEPTION_FLT_UNDERFLOW:
|
|
1848 jint fp_control_word = (* (jint*) StubRoutines::addr_fpu_cntrl_wrd_std());
|
|
1849 if (fp_control_word != ctx->FloatSave.ControlWord) {
|
|
1850 // Restore FPCW and mask out FLT exceptions
|
|
1851 ctx->FloatSave.ControlWord = fp_control_word | 0xffffffc0;
|
|
1852 // Mask out pending FLT exceptions
|
|
1853 ctx->FloatSave.StatusWord &= 0xffffff00;
|
|
1854 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
1855 }
|
|
1856 }
|
|
1857 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
1858 }
|
|
1859 #else //_WIN64
|
|
1860 /*
|
|
1861 On Windows, the mxcsr control bits are non-volatile across calls
|
|
1862 See also CR 6192333
|
|
1863 If EXCEPTION_FLT_* happened after some native method modified
|
|
1864 mxcsr - it is not a jvm fault.
|
|
1865 However should we decide to restore of mxcsr after a faulty
|
|
1866 native method we can uncomment following code
|
|
1867 jint MxCsr = INITIAL_MXCSR;
|
|
1868 // we can't use StubRoutines::addr_mxcsr_std()
|
|
1869 // because in Win64 mxcsr is not saved there
|
|
1870 if (MxCsr != ctx->MxCsr) {
|
|
1871 ctx->MxCsr = MxCsr;
|
|
1872 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
1873 }
|
|
1874
|
|
1875 */
|
|
1876 #endif //_WIN64
|
|
1877
|
|
1878
|
|
1879 // Fatal error reporting is single threaded so we can make this a
|
|
1880 // static and preallocated. If it's more than MAX_PATH silently ignore
|
|
1881 // it.
|
|
1882 static char saved_error_file[MAX_PATH] = {0};
|
|
1883
|
|
1884 void os::set_error_file(const char *logfile) {
|
|
1885 if (strlen(logfile) <= MAX_PATH) {
|
|
1886 strncpy(saved_error_file, logfile, MAX_PATH);
|
|
1887 }
|
|
1888 }
|
|
1889
|
|
1890 static inline void report_error(Thread* t, DWORD exception_code,
|
|
1891 address addr, void* siginfo, void* context) {
|
|
1892 VMError err(t, exception_code, addr, siginfo, context);
|
|
1893 err.report_and_die();
|
|
1894
|
|
1895 // If UseOsErrorReporting, this will return here and save the error file
|
|
1896 // somewhere where we can find it in the minidump.
|
|
1897 }
|
|
1898
|
|
1899 //-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1900 LONG WINAPI topLevelExceptionFilter(struct _EXCEPTION_POINTERS* exceptionInfo) {
|
|
1901 if (InterceptOSException) return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
1902 DWORD exception_code = exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord->ExceptionCode;
|
|
1903 #ifdef _M_IA64
|
|
1904 address pc = (address) exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->StIIP;
|
|
1905 #elif _M_AMD64
|
|
1906 address pc = (address) exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->Rip;
|
|
1907 #else
|
|
1908 address pc = (address) exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->Eip;
|
|
1909 #endif
|
|
1910 Thread* t = ThreadLocalStorage::get_thread_slow(); // slow & steady
|
|
1911
|
|
1912 #ifndef _WIN64
|
|
1913 // Execution protection violation - win32 running on AMD64 only
|
|
1914 // Handled first to avoid misdiagnosis as a "normal" access violation;
|
|
1915 // This is safe to do because we have a new/unique ExceptionInformation
|
|
1916 // code for this condition.
|
|
1917 if (exception_code == EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION) {
|
|
1918 PEXCEPTION_RECORD exceptionRecord = exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord;
|
|
1919 int exception_subcode = (int) exceptionRecord->ExceptionInformation[0];
|
|
1920 address addr = (address) exceptionRecord->ExceptionInformation[1];
|
|
1921
|
|
1922 if (exception_subcode == EXCEPTION_INFO_EXEC_VIOLATION) {
|
|
1923 int page_size = os::vm_page_size();
|
|
1924
|
|
1925 // Make sure the pc and the faulting address are sane.
|
|
1926 //
|
|
1927 // If an instruction spans a page boundary, and the page containing
|
|
1928 // the beginning of the instruction is executable but the following
|
|
1929 // page is not, the pc and the faulting address might be slightly
|
|
1930 // different - we still want to unguard the 2nd page in this case.
|
|
1931 //
|
|
1932 // 15 bytes seems to be a (very) safe value for max instruction size.
|
|
1933 bool pc_is_near_addr =
|
|
1934 (pointer_delta((void*) addr, (void*) pc, sizeof(char)) < 15);
|
|
1935 bool instr_spans_page_boundary =
|
|
1936 (align_size_down((intptr_t) pc ^ (intptr_t) addr,
|
|
1937 (intptr_t) page_size) > 0);
|
|
1938
|
|
1939 if (pc == addr || (pc_is_near_addr && instr_spans_page_boundary)) {
|
|
1940 static volatile address last_addr =
|
|
1941 (address) os::non_memory_address_word();
|
|
1942
|
|
1943 // In conservative mode, don't unguard unless the address is in the VM
|
|
1944 if (UnguardOnExecutionViolation > 0 && addr != last_addr &&
|
|
1945 (UnguardOnExecutionViolation > 1 || os::address_is_in_vm(addr))) {
|
|
1946
|
|
1947 // Unguard and retry
|
|
1948 address page_start =
|
|
1949 (address) align_size_down((intptr_t) addr, (intptr_t) page_size);
|
|
1950 bool res = os::unguard_memory((char*) page_start, page_size);
|
|
1951
|
|
1952 if (PrintMiscellaneous && Verbose) {
|
|
1953 char buf[256];
|
|
1954 jio_snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "Execution protection violation "
|
|
1955 "at " INTPTR_FORMAT
|
|
1956 ", unguarding " INTPTR_FORMAT ": %s", addr,
|
|
1957 page_start, (res ? "success" : strerror(errno)));
|
|
1958 tty->print_raw_cr(buf);
|
|
1959 }
|
|
1960
|
|
1961 // Set last_addr so if we fault again at the same address, we don't
|
|
1962 // end up in an endless loop.
|
|
1963 //
|
|
1964 // There are two potential complications here. Two threads trapping
|
|
1965 // at the same address at the same time could cause one of the
|
|
1966 // threads to think it already unguarded, and abort the VM. Likely
|
|
1967 // very rare.
|
|
1968 //
|
|
1969 // The other race involves two threads alternately trapping at
|
|
1970 // different addresses and failing to unguard the page, resulting in
|
|
1971 // an endless loop. This condition is probably even more unlikely
|
|
1972 // than the first.
|
|
1973 //
|
|
1974 // Although both cases could be avoided by using locks or thread
|
|
1975 // local last_addr, these solutions are unnecessary complication:
|
|
1976 // this handler is a best-effort safety net, not a complete solution.
|
|
1977 // It is disabled by default and should only be used as a workaround
|
|
1978 // in case we missed any no-execute-unsafe VM code.
|
|
1979
|
|
1980 last_addr = addr;
|
|
1981
|
|
1982 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
1983 }
|
|
1984 }
|
|
1985
|
|
1986 // Last unguard failed or not unguarding
|
|
1987 tty->print_raw_cr("Execution protection violation");
|
|
1988 report_error(t, exception_code, addr, exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord,
|
|
1989 exceptionInfo->ContextRecord);
|
|
1990 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
1991 }
|
|
1992 }
|
|
1993 #endif // _WIN64
|
|
1994
|
|
1995 // Check to see if we caught the safepoint code in the
|
|
1996 // process of write protecting the memory serialization page.
|
|
1997 // It write enables the page immediately after protecting it
|
|
1998 // so just return.
|
|
1999 if ( exception_code == EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION ) {
|
|
2000 JavaThread* thread = (JavaThread*) t;
|
|
2001 PEXCEPTION_RECORD exceptionRecord = exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord;
|
|
2002 address addr = (address) exceptionRecord->ExceptionInformation[1];
|
|
2003 if ( os::is_memory_serialize_page(thread, addr) ) {
|
|
2004 // Block current thread until the memory serialize page permission restored.
|
|
2005 os::block_on_serialize_page_trap();
|
|
2006 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
2007 }
|
|
2008 }
|
|
2009
|
|
2010
|
|
2011 if (t != NULL && t->is_Java_thread()) {
|
|
2012 JavaThread* thread = (JavaThread*) t;
|
|
2013 bool in_java = thread->thread_state() == _thread_in_Java;
|
|
2014
|
|
2015 // Handle potential stack overflows up front.
|
|
2016 if (exception_code == EXCEPTION_STACK_OVERFLOW) {
|
|
2017 if (os::uses_stack_guard_pages()) {
|
|
2018 #ifdef _M_IA64
|
|
2019 //
|
|
2020 // If it's a legal stack address continue, Windows will map it in.
|
|
2021 //
|
|
2022 PEXCEPTION_RECORD exceptionRecord = exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord;
|
|
2023 address addr = (address) exceptionRecord->ExceptionInformation[1];
|
|
2024 if (addr > thread->stack_yellow_zone_base() && addr < thread->stack_base() )
|
|
2025 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
2026
|
|
2027 // The register save area is the same size as the memory stack
|
|
2028 // and starts at the page just above the start of the memory stack.
|
|
2029 // If we get a fault in this area, we've run out of register
|
|
2030 // stack. If we are in java, try throwing a stack overflow exception.
|
|
2031 if (addr > thread->stack_base() &&
|
|
2032 addr <= (thread->stack_base()+thread->stack_size()) ) {
|
|
2033 char buf[256];
|
|
2034 jio_snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf),
|
|
2035 "Register stack overflow, addr:%p, stack_base:%p\n",
|
|
2036 addr, thread->stack_base() );
|
|
2037 tty->print_raw_cr(buf);
|
|
2038 // If not in java code, return and hope for the best.
|
|
2039 return in_java ? Handle_Exception(exceptionInfo,
|
|
2040 SharedRuntime::continuation_for_implicit_exception(thread, pc, SharedRuntime::STACK_OVERFLOW))
|
|
2041 : EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
2042 }
|
|
2043 #endif
|
|
2044 if (thread->stack_yellow_zone_enabled()) {
|
|
2045 // Yellow zone violation. The o/s has unprotected the first yellow
|
|
2046 // zone page for us. Note: must call disable_stack_yellow_zone to
|
|
2047 // update the enabled status, even if the zone contains only one page.
|
|
2048 thread->disable_stack_yellow_zone();
|
|
2049 // If not in java code, return and hope for the best.
|
|
2050 return in_java ? Handle_Exception(exceptionInfo,
|
|
2051 SharedRuntime::continuation_for_implicit_exception(thread, pc, SharedRuntime::STACK_OVERFLOW))
|
|
2052 : EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
2053 } else {
|
|
2054 // Fatal red zone violation.
|
|
2055 thread->disable_stack_red_zone();
|
|
2056 tty->print_raw_cr("An unrecoverable stack overflow has occurred.");
|
|
2057 report_error(t, exception_code, pc, exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord,
|
|
2058 exceptionInfo->ContextRecord);
|
|
2059 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
2060 }
|
|
2061 } else if (in_java) {
|
|
2062 // JVM-managed guard pages cannot be used on win95/98. The o/s provides
|
|
2063 // a one-time-only guard page, which it has released to us. The next
|
|
2064 // stack overflow on this thread will result in an ACCESS_VIOLATION.
|
|
2065 return Handle_Exception(exceptionInfo,
|
|
2066 SharedRuntime::continuation_for_implicit_exception(thread, pc, SharedRuntime::STACK_OVERFLOW));
|
|
2067 } else {
|
|
2068 // Can only return and hope for the best. Further stack growth will
|
|
2069 // result in an ACCESS_VIOLATION.
|
|
2070 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
2071 }
|
|
2072 } else if (exception_code == EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION) {
|
|
2073 // Either stack overflow or null pointer exception.
|
|
2074 if (in_java) {
|
|
2075 PEXCEPTION_RECORD exceptionRecord = exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord;
|
|
2076 address addr = (address) exceptionRecord->ExceptionInformation[1];
|
|
2077 address stack_end = thread->stack_base() - thread->stack_size();
|
|
2078 if (addr < stack_end && addr >= stack_end - os::vm_page_size()) {
|
|
2079 // Stack overflow.
|
|
2080 assert(!os::uses_stack_guard_pages(),
|
|
2081 "should be caught by red zone code above.");
|
|
2082 return Handle_Exception(exceptionInfo,
|
|
2083 SharedRuntime::continuation_for_implicit_exception(thread, pc, SharedRuntime::STACK_OVERFLOW));
|
|
2084 }
|
|
2085 //
|
|
2086 // Check for safepoint polling and implicit null
|
|
2087 // We only expect null pointers in the stubs (vtable)
|
|
2088 // the rest are checked explicitly now.
|
|
2089 //
|
|
2090 CodeBlob* cb = CodeCache::find_blob(pc);
|
|
2091 if (cb != NULL) {
|
|
2092 if (os::is_poll_address(addr)) {
|
|
2093 address stub = SharedRuntime::get_poll_stub(pc);
|
|
2094 return Handle_Exception(exceptionInfo, stub);
|
|
2095 }
|
|
2096 }
|
|
2097 {
|
|
2098 #ifdef _WIN64
|
|
2099 //
|
|
2100 // If it's a legal stack address map the entire region in
|
|
2101 //
|
|
2102 PEXCEPTION_RECORD exceptionRecord = exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord;
|
|
2103 address addr = (address) exceptionRecord->ExceptionInformation[1];
|
|
2104 if (addr > thread->stack_yellow_zone_base() && addr < thread->stack_base() ) {
|
|
2105 addr = (address)((uintptr_t)addr &
|
|
2106 (~((uintptr_t)os::vm_page_size() - (uintptr_t)1)));
|
|
2107 os::commit_memory( (char *)addr, thread->stack_base() - addr );
|
|
2108 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
2109 }
|
|
2110 else
|
|
2111 #endif
|
|
2112 {
|
|
2113 // Null pointer exception.
|
|
2114 #ifdef _M_IA64
|
|
2115 // We catch register stack overflows in compiled code by doing
|
|
2116 // an explicit compare and executing a st8(G0, G0) if the
|
|
2117 // BSP enters into our guard area. We test for the overflow
|
|
2118 // condition and fall into the normal null pointer exception
|
|
2119 // code if BSP hasn't overflowed.
|
|
2120 if ( in_java ) {
|
|
2121 if(thread->register_stack_overflow()) {
|
|
2122 assert((address)exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->IntS3 ==
|
|
2123 thread->register_stack_limit(),
|
|
2124 "GR7 doesn't contain register_stack_limit");
|
|
2125 // Disable the yellow zone which sets the state that
|
|
2126 // we've got a stack overflow problem.
|
|
2127 if (thread->stack_yellow_zone_enabled()) {
|
|
2128 thread->disable_stack_yellow_zone();
|
|
2129 }
|
|
2130 // Give us some room to process the exception
|
|
2131 thread->disable_register_stack_guard();
|
|
2132 // Update GR7 with the new limit so we can continue running
|
|
2133 // compiled code.
|
|
2134 exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->IntS3 =
|
|
2135 (ULONGLONG)thread->register_stack_limit();
|
|
2136 return Handle_Exception(exceptionInfo,
|
|
2137 SharedRuntime::continuation_for_implicit_exception(thread, pc, SharedRuntime::STACK_OVERFLOW));
|
|
2138 } else {
|
|
2139 //
|
|
2140 // Check for implicit null
|
|
2141 // We only expect null pointers in the stubs (vtable)
|
|
2142 // the rest are checked explicitly now.
|
|
2143 //
|
|
2144 CodeBlob* cb = CodeCache::find_blob(pc);
|
|
2145 if (cb != NULL) {
|
|
2146 if (VtableStubs::stub_containing(pc) != NULL) {
|
|
2147 if (((uintptr_t)addr) < os::vm_page_size() ) {
|
|
2148 // an access to the first page of VM--assume it is a null pointer
|
|
2149 return Handle_Exception(exceptionInfo,
|
|
2150 SharedRuntime::continuation_for_implicit_exception(thread, pc, SharedRuntime::IMPLICIT_NULL));
|
|
2151 }
|
|
2152 }
|
|
2153 }
|
|
2154 }
|
|
2155 } // in_java
|
|
2156
|
|
2157 // IA64 doesn't use implicit null checking yet. So we shouldn't
|
|
2158 // get here.
|
|
2159 tty->print_raw_cr("Access violation, possible null pointer exception");
|
|
2160 report_error(t, exception_code, pc, exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord,
|
|
2161 exceptionInfo->ContextRecord);
|
|
2162 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
2163 #else /* !IA64 */
|
|
2164
|
|
2165 // Windows 98 reports faulting addresses incorrectly
|
|
2166 if (!MacroAssembler::needs_explicit_null_check((intptr_t)addr) ||
|
|
2167 !os::win32::is_nt()) {
|
|
2168 return Handle_Exception(exceptionInfo,
|
|
2169 SharedRuntime::continuation_for_implicit_exception(thread, pc, SharedRuntime::IMPLICIT_NULL));
|
|
2170 }
|
|
2171 report_error(t, exception_code, pc, exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord,
|
|
2172 exceptionInfo->ContextRecord);
|
|
2173 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
2174 #endif
|
|
2175 }
|
|
2176 }
|
|
2177 }
|
|
2178
|
|
2179 #ifdef _WIN64
|
|
2180 // Special care for fast JNI field accessors.
|
|
2181 // jni_fast_Get<Primitive>Field can trap at certain pc's if a GC kicks
|
|
2182 // in and the heap gets shrunk before the field access.
|
|
2183 if (exception_code == EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION) {
|
|
2184 address addr = JNI_FastGetField::find_slowcase_pc(pc);
|
|
2185 if (addr != (address)-1) {
|
|
2186 return Handle_Exception(exceptionInfo, addr);
|
|
2187 }
|
|
2188 }
|
|
2189 #endif
|
|
2190
|
|
2191 #ifdef _WIN64
|
|
2192 // Windows will sometimes generate an access violation
|
|
2193 // when we call malloc. Since we use VectoredExceptions
|
|
2194 // on 64 bit platforms, we see this exception. We must
|
|
2195 // pass this exception on so Windows can recover.
|
|
2196 // We check to see if the pc of the fault is in NTDLL.DLL
|
|
2197 // if so, we pass control on to Windows for handling.
|
|
2198 if (UseVectoredExceptions && _addr_in_ntdll(pc)) return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
2199 #endif
|
|
2200
|
|
2201 // Stack overflow or null pointer exception in native code.
|
|
2202 report_error(t, exception_code, pc, exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord,
|
|
2203 exceptionInfo->ContextRecord);
|
|
2204 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
2205 }
|
|
2206
|
|
2207 if (in_java) {
|
|
2208 switch (exception_code) {
|
|
2209 case EXCEPTION_INT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO:
|
|
2210 return Handle_Exception(exceptionInfo, SharedRuntime::continuation_for_implicit_exception(thread, pc, SharedRuntime::IMPLICIT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO));
|
|
2211
|
|
2212 case EXCEPTION_INT_OVERFLOW:
|
|
2213 return Handle_IDiv_Exception(exceptionInfo);
|
|
2214
|
|
2215 } // switch
|
|
2216 }
|
|
2217 #ifndef _WIN64
|
|
2218 if ((thread->thread_state() == _thread_in_Java) ||
|
|
2219 (thread->thread_state() == _thread_in_native) )
|
|
2220 {
|
|
2221 LONG result=Handle_FLT_Exception(exceptionInfo);
|
|
2222 if (result==EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION) return result;
|
|
2223 }
|
|
2224 #endif //_WIN64
|
|
2225 }
|
|
2226
|
|
2227 if (exception_code != EXCEPTION_BREAKPOINT) {
|
|
2228 #ifndef _WIN64
|
|
2229 report_error(t, exception_code, pc, exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord,
|
|
2230 exceptionInfo->ContextRecord);
|
|
2231 #else
|
|
2232 // Itanium Windows uses a VectoredExceptionHandler
|
|
2233 // Which means that C++ programatic exception handlers (try/except)
|
|
2234 // will get here. Continue the search for the right except block if
|
|
2235 // the exception code is not a fatal code.
|
|
2236 switch ( exception_code ) {
|
|
2237 case EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION:
|
|
2238 case EXCEPTION_STACK_OVERFLOW:
|
|
2239 case EXCEPTION_ILLEGAL_INSTRUCTION:
|
|
2240 case EXCEPTION_ILLEGAL_INSTRUCTION_2:
|
|
2241 case EXCEPTION_INT_OVERFLOW:
|
|
2242 case EXCEPTION_INT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO:
|
|
2243 { report_error(t, exception_code, pc, exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord,
|
|
2244 exceptionInfo->ContextRecord);
|
|
2245 }
|
|
2246 break;
|
|
2247 default:
|
|
2248 break;
|
|
2249 }
|
|
2250 #endif
|
|
2251 }
|
|
2252 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
2253 }
|
|
2254
|
|
2255 #ifndef _WIN64
|
|
2256 // Special care for fast JNI accessors.
|
|
2257 // jni_fast_Get<Primitive>Field can trap at certain pc's if a GC kicks in and
|
|
2258 // the heap gets shrunk before the field access.
|
|
2259 // Need to install our own structured exception handler since native code may
|
|
2260 // install its own.
|
|
2261 LONG WINAPI fastJNIAccessorExceptionFilter(struct _EXCEPTION_POINTERS* exceptionInfo) {
|
|
2262 DWORD exception_code = exceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord->ExceptionCode;
|
|
2263 if (exception_code == EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION) {
|
|
2264 address pc = (address) exceptionInfo->ContextRecord->Eip;
|
|
2265 address addr = JNI_FastGetField::find_slowcase_pc(pc);
|
|
2266 if (addr != (address)-1) {
|
|
2267 return Handle_Exception(exceptionInfo, addr);
|
|
2268 }
|
|
2269 }
|
|
2270 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
2271 }
|
|
2272
|
|
2273 #define DEFINE_FAST_GETFIELD(Return,Fieldname,Result) \
|
|
2274 Return JNICALL jni_fast_Get##Result##Field_wrapper(JNIEnv *env, jobject obj, jfieldID fieldID) { \
|
|
2275 __try { \
|
|
2276 return (*JNI_FastGetField::jni_fast_Get##Result##Field_fp)(env, obj, fieldID); \
|
|
2277 } __except(fastJNIAccessorExceptionFilter((_EXCEPTION_POINTERS*)_exception_info())) { \
|
|
2278 } \
|
|
2279 return 0; \
|
|
2280 }
|
|
2281
|
|
2282 DEFINE_FAST_GETFIELD(jboolean, bool, Boolean)
|
|
2283 DEFINE_FAST_GETFIELD(jbyte, byte, Byte)
|
|
2284 DEFINE_FAST_GETFIELD(jchar, char, Char)
|
|
2285 DEFINE_FAST_GETFIELD(jshort, short, Short)
|
|
2286 DEFINE_FAST_GETFIELD(jint, int, Int)
|
|
2287 DEFINE_FAST_GETFIELD(jlong, long, Long)
|
|
2288 DEFINE_FAST_GETFIELD(jfloat, float, Float)
|
|
2289 DEFINE_FAST_GETFIELD(jdouble, double, Double)
|
|
2290
|
|
2291 address os::win32::fast_jni_accessor_wrapper(BasicType type) {
|
|
2292 switch (type) {
|
|
2293 case T_BOOLEAN: return (address)jni_fast_GetBooleanField_wrapper;
|
|
2294 case T_BYTE: return (address)jni_fast_GetByteField_wrapper;
|
|
2295 case T_CHAR: return (address)jni_fast_GetCharField_wrapper;
|
|
2296 case T_SHORT: return (address)jni_fast_GetShortField_wrapper;
|
|
2297 case T_INT: return (address)jni_fast_GetIntField_wrapper;
|
|
2298 case T_LONG: return (address)jni_fast_GetLongField_wrapper;
|
|
2299 case T_FLOAT: return (address)jni_fast_GetFloatField_wrapper;
|
|
2300 case T_DOUBLE: return (address)jni_fast_GetDoubleField_wrapper;
|
|
2301 default: ShouldNotReachHere();
|
|
2302 }
|
|
2303 return (address)-1;
|
|
2304 }
|
|
2305 #endif
|
|
2306
|
|
2307 // Virtual Memory
|
|
2308
|
|
2309 int os::vm_page_size() { return os::win32::vm_page_size(); }
|
|
2310 int os::vm_allocation_granularity() {
|
|
2311 return os::win32::vm_allocation_granularity();
|
|
2312 }
|
|
2313
|
|
2314 // Windows large page support is available on Windows 2003. In order to use
|
|
2315 // large page memory, the administrator must first assign additional privilege
|
|
2316 // to the user:
|
|
2317 // + select Control Panel -> Administrative Tools -> Local Security Policy
|
|
2318 // + select Local Policies -> User Rights Assignment
|
|
2319 // + double click "Lock pages in memory", add users and/or groups
|
|
2320 // + reboot
|
|
2321 // Note the above steps are needed for administrator as well, as administrators
|
|
2322 // by default do not have the privilege to lock pages in memory.
|
|
2323 //
|
|
2324 // Note about Windows 2003: although the API supports committing large page
|
|
2325 // memory on a page-by-page basis and VirtualAlloc() returns success under this
|
|
2326 // scenario, I found through experiment it only uses large page if the entire
|
|
2327 // memory region is reserved and committed in a single VirtualAlloc() call.
|
|
2328 // This makes Windows large page support more or less like Solaris ISM, in
|
|
2329 // that the entire heap must be committed upfront. This probably will change
|
|
2330 // in the future, if so the code below needs to be revisited.
|
|
2331
|
|
2332 #ifndef MEM_LARGE_PAGES
|
|
2333 #define MEM_LARGE_PAGES 0x20000000
|
|
2334 #endif
|
|
2335
|
|
2336 // GetLargePageMinimum is only available on Windows 2003. The other functions
|
|
2337 // are available on NT but not on Windows 98/Me. We have to resolve them at
|
|
2338 // runtime.
|
|
2339 typedef SIZE_T (WINAPI *GetLargePageMinimum_func_type) (void);
|
|
2340 typedef BOOL (WINAPI *AdjustTokenPrivileges_func_type)
|
|
2341 (HANDLE, BOOL, PTOKEN_PRIVILEGES, DWORD, PTOKEN_PRIVILEGES, PDWORD);
|
|
2342 typedef BOOL (WINAPI *OpenProcessToken_func_type) (HANDLE, DWORD, PHANDLE);
|
|
2343 typedef BOOL (WINAPI *LookupPrivilegeValue_func_type) (LPCTSTR, LPCTSTR, PLUID);
|
|
2344
|
|
2345 static GetLargePageMinimum_func_type _GetLargePageMinimum;
|
|
2346 static AdjustTokenPrivileges_func_type _AdjustTokenPrivileges;
|
|
2347 static OpenProcessToken_func_type _OpenProcessToken;
|
|
2348 static LookupPrivilegeValue_func_type _LookupPrivilegeValue;
|
|
2349
|
|
2350 static HINSTANCE _kernel32;
|
|
2351 static HINSTANCE _advapi32;
|
|
2352 static HANDLE _hProcess;
|
|
2353 static HANDLE _hToken;
|
|
2354
|
|
2355 static size_t _large_page_size = 0;
|
|
2356
|
|
2357 static bool resolve_functions_for_large_page_init() {
|
|
2358 _kernel32 = LoadLibrary("kernel32.dll");
|
|
2359 if (_kernel32 == NULL) return false;
|
|
2360
|
|
2361 _GetLargePageMinimum = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(GetLargePageMinimum_func_type,
|
|
2362 GetProcAddress(_kernel32, "GetLargePageMinimum"));
|
|
2363 if (_GetLargePageMinimum == NULL) return false;
|
|
2364
|
|
2365 _advapi32 = LoadLibrary("advapi32.dll");
|
|
2366 if (_advapi32 == NULL) return false;
|
|
2367
|
|
2368 _AdjustTokenPrivileges = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(AdjustTokenPrivileges_func_type,
|
|
2369 GetProcAddress(_advapi32, "AdjustTokenPrivileges"));
|
|
2370 _OpenProcessToken = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(OpenProcessToken_func_type,
|
|
2371 GetProcAddress(_advapi32, "OpenProcessToken"));
|
|
2372 _LookupPrivilegeValue = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(LookupPrivilegeValue_func_type,
|
|
2373 GetProcAddress(_advapi32, "LookupPrivilegeValueA"));
|
|
2374 return _AdjustTokenPrivileges != NULL &&
|
|
2375 _OpenProcessToken != NULL &&
|
|
2376 _LookupPrivilegeValue != NULL;
|
|
2377 }
|
|
2378
|
|
2379 static bool request_lock_memory_privilege() {
|
|
2380 _hProcess = OpenProcess(PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION, FALSE,
|
|
2381 os::current_process_id());
|
|
2382
|
|
2383 LUID luid;
|
|
2384 if (_hProcess != NULL &&
|
|
2385 _OpenProcessToken(_hProcess, TOKEN_ADJUST_PRIVILEGES, &_hToken) &&
|
|
2386 _LookupPrivilegeValue(NULL, "SeLockMemoryPrivilege", &luid)) {
|
|
2387
|
|
2388 TOKEN_PRIVILEGES tp;
|
|
2389 tp.PrivilegeCount = 1;
|
|
2390 tp.Privileges[0].Luid = luid;
|
|
2391 tp.Privileges[0].Attributes = SE_PRIVILEGE_ENABLED;
|
|
2392
|
|
2393 // AdjustTokenPrivileges() may return TRUE even when it couldn't change the
|
|
2394 // privilege. Check GetLastError() too. See MSDN document.
|
|
2395 if (_AdjustTokenPrivileges(_hToken, false, &tp, sizeof(tp), NULL, NULL) &&
|
|
2396 (GetLastError() == ERROR_SUCCESS)) {
|
|
2397 return true;
|
|
2398 }
|
|
2399 }
|
|
2400
|
|
2401 return false;
|
|
2402 }
|
|
2403
|
|
2404 static void cleanup_after_large_page_init() {
|
|
2405 _GetLargePageMinimum = NULL;
|
|
2406 _AdjustTokenPrivileges = NULL;
|
|
2407 _OpenProcessToken = NULL;
|
|
2408 _LookupPrivilegeValue = NULL;
|
|
2409 if (_kernel32) FreeLibrary(_kernel32);
|
|
2410 _kernel32 = NULL;
|
|
2411 if (_advapi32) FreeLibrary(_advapi32);
|
|
2412 _advapi32 = NULL;
|
|
2413 if (_hProcess) CloseHandle(_hProcess);
|
|
2414 _hProcess = NULL;
|
|
2415 if (_hToken) CloseHandle(_hToken);
|
|
2416 _hToken = NULL;
|
|
2417 }
|
|
2418
|
|
2419 bool os::large_page_init() {
|
|
2420 if (!UseLargePages) return false;
|
|
2421
|
|
2422 // print a warning if any large page related flag is specified on command line
|
|
2423 bool warn_on_failure = !FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(UseLargePages) ||
|
|
2424 !FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(LargePageSizeInBytes);
|
|
2425 bool success = false;
|
|
2426
|
|
2427 # define WARN(msg) if (warn_on_failure) { warning(msg); }
|
|
2428 if (resolve_functions_for_large_page_init()) {
|
|
2429 if (request_lock_memory_privilege()) {
|
|
2430 size_t s = _GetLargePageMinimum();
|
|
2431 if (s) {
|
|
2432 #if defined(IA32) || defined(AMD64)
|
|
2433 if (s > 4*M || LargePageSizeInBytes > 4*M) {
|
|
2434 WARN("JVM cannot use large pages bigger than 4mb.");
|
|
2435 } else {
|
|
2436 #endif
|
|
2437 if (LargePageSizeInBytes && LargePageSizeInBytes % s == 0) {
|
|
2438 _large_page_size = LargePageSizeInBytes;
|
|
2439 } else {
|
|
2440 _large_page_size = s;
|
|
2441 }
|
|
2442 success = true;
|
|
2443 #if defined(IA32) || defined(AMD64)
|
|
2444 }
|
|
2445 #endif
|
|
2446 } else {
|
|
2447 WARN("Large page is not supported by the processor.");
|
|
2448 }
|
|
2449 } else {
|
|
2450 WARN("JVM cannot use large page memory because it does not have enough privilege to lock pages in memory.");
|
|
2451 }
|
|
2452 } else {
|
|
2453 WARN("Large page is not supported by the operating system.");
|
|
2454 }
|
|
2455 #undef WARN
|
|
2456
|
|
2457 const size_t default_page_size = (size_t) vm_page_size();
|
|
2458 if (success && _large_page_size > default_page_size) {
|
|
2459 _page_sizes[0] = _large_page_size;
|
|
2460 _page_sizes[1] = default_page_size;
|
|
2461 _page_sizes[2] = 0;
|
|
2462 }
|
|
2463
|
|
2464 cleanup_after_large_page_init();
|
|
2465 return success;
|
|
2466 }
|
|
2467
|
|
2468 // On win32, one cannot release just a part of reserved memory, it's an
|
|
2469 // all or nothing deal. When we split a reservation, we must break the
|
|
2470 // reservation into two reservations.
|
|
2471 void os::split_reserved_memory(char *base, size_t size, size_t split,
|
|
2472 bool realloc) {
|
|
2473 if (size > 0) {
|
|
2474 release_memory(base, size);
|
|
2475 if (realloc) {
|
|
2476 reserve_memory(split, base);
|
|
2477 }
|
|
2478 if (size != split) {
|
|
2479 reserve_memory(size - split, base + split);
|
|
2480 }
|
|
2481 }
|
|
2482 }
|
|
2483
|
|
2484 char* os::reserve_memory(size_t bytes, char* addr, size_t alignment_hint) {
|
|
2485 assert((size_t)addr % os::vm_allocation_granularity() == 0,
|
|
2486 "reserve alignment");
|
|
2487 assert(bytes % os::vm_allocation_granularity() == 0, "reserve block size");
|
|
2488 char* res = (char*)VirtualAlloc(addr, bytes, MEM_RESERVE,
|
|
2489 PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE);
|
|
2490 assert(res == NULL || addr == NULL || addr == res,
|
|
2491 "Unexpected address from reserve.");
|
|
2492 return res;
|
|
2493 }
|
|
2494
|
|
2495 // Reserve memory at an arbitrary address, only if that area is
|
|
2496 // available (and not reserved for something else).
|
|
2497 char* os::attempt_reserve_memory_at(size_t bytes, char* requested_addr) {
|
|
2498 // Windows os::reserve_memory() fails of the requested address range is
|
|
2499 // not avilable.
|
|
2500 return reserve_memory(bytes, requested_addr);
|
|
2501 }
|
|
2502
|
|
2503 size_t os::large_page_size() {
|
|
2504 return _large_page_size;
|
|
2505 }
|
|
2506
|
|
2507 bool os::can_commit_large_page_memory() {
|
|
2508 // Windows only uses large page memory when the entire region is reserved
|
|
2509 // and committed in a single VirtualAlloc() call. This may change in the
|
|
2510 // future, but with Windows 2003 it's not possible to commit on demand.
|
|
2511 return false;
|
|
2512 }
|
|
2513
|
|
2514 char* os::reserve_memory_special(size_t bytes) {
|
|
2515 DWORD flag = MEM_RESERVE | MEM_COMMIT | MEM_LARGE_PAGES;
|
|
2516 char * res = (char *)VirtualAlloc(NULL, bytes, flag, PAGE_READWRITE);
|
|
2517 return res;
|
|
2518 }
|
|
2519
|
|
2520 bool os::release_memory_special(char* base, size_t bytes) {
|
|
2521 return release_memory(base, bytes);
|
|
2522 }
|
|
2523
|
|
2524 void os::print_statistics() {
|
|
2525 }
|
|
2526
|
|
2527 bool os::commit_memory(char* addr, size_t bytes) {
|
|
2528 if (bytes == 0) {
|
|
2529 // Don't bother the OS with noops.
|
|
2530 return true;
|
|
2531 }
|
|
2532 assert((size_t) addr % os::vm_page_size() == 0, "commit on page boundaries");
|
|
2533 assert(bytes % os::vm_page_size() == 0, "commit in page-sized chunks");
|
|
2534 // Don't attempt to print anything if the OS call fails. We're
|
|
2535 // probably low on resources, so the print itself may cause crashes.
|
|
2536 return VirtualAlloc(addr, bytes, MEM_COMMIT, PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE) != NULL;
|
|
2537 }
|
|
2538
|
|
2539 bool os::commit_memory(char* addr, size_t size, size_t alignment_hint) {
|
|
2540 return commit_memory(addr, size);
|
|
2541 }
|
|
2542
|
|
2543 bool os::uncommit_memory(char* addr, size_t bytes) {
|
|
2544 if (bytes == 0) {
|
|
2545 // Don't bother the OS with noops.
|
|
2546 return true;
|
|
2547 }
|
|
2548 assert((size_t) addr % os::vm_page_size() == 0, "uncommit on page boundaries");
|
|
2549 assert(bytes % os::vm_page_size() == 0, "uncommit in page-sized chunks");
|
|
2550 return VirtualFree(addr, bytes, MEM_DECOMMIT) != 0;
|
|
2551 }
|
|
2552
|
|
2553 bool os::release_memory(char* addr, size_t bytes) {
|
|
2554 return VirtualFree(addr, 0, MEM_RELEASE) != 0;
|
|
2555 }
|
|
2556
|
|
2557 bool os::protect_memory(char* addr, size_t bytes) {
|
|
2558 DWORD old_status;
|
|
2559 return VirtualProtect(addr, bytes, PAGE_READONLY, &old_status) != 0;
|
|
2560 }
|
|
2561
|
|
2562 bool os::guard_memory(char* addr, size_t bytes) {
|
|
2563 DWORD old_status;
|
|
2564 return VirtualProtect(addr, bytes, PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE | PAGE_GUARD, &old_status) != 0;
|
|
2565 }
|
|
2566
|
|
2567 bool os::unguard_memory(char* addr, size_t bytes) {
|
|
2568 DWORD old_status;
|
|
2569 return VirtualProtect(addr, bytes, PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE, &old_status) != 0;
|
|
2570 }
|
|
2571
|
|
2572 void os::realign_memory(char *addr, size_t bytes, size_t alignment_hint) { }
|
|
2573 void os::free_memory(char *addr, size_t bytes) { }
|
|
2574 void os::numa_make_global(char *addr, size_t bytes) { }
|
|
2575 void os::numa_make_local(char *addr, size_t bytes) { }
|
|
2576 bool os::numa_topology_changed() { return false; }
|
|
2577 size_t os::numa_get_groups_num() { return 1; }
|
|
2578 int os::numa_get_group_id() { return 0; }
|
|
2579 size_t os::numa_get_leaf_groups(int *ids, size_t size) {
|
|
2580 if (size > 0) {
|
|
2581 ids[0] = 0;
|
|
2582 return 1;
|
|
2583 }
|
|
2584 return 0;
|
|
2585 }
|
|
2586
|
|
2587 bool os::get_page_info(char *start, page_info* info) {
|
|
2588 return false;
|
|
2589 }
|
|
2590
|
|
2591 char *os::scan_pages(char *start, char* end, page_info* page_expected, page_info* page_found) {
|
|
2592 return end;
|
|
2593 }
|
|
2594
|
|
2595 char* os::non_memory_address_word() {
|
|
2596 // Must never look like an address returned by reserve_memory,
|
|
2597 // even in its subfields (as defined by the CPU immediate fields,
|
|
2598 // if the CPU splits constants across multiple instructions).
|
|
2599 return (char*)-1;
|
|
2600 }
|
|
2601
|
|
2602 #define MAX_ERROR_COUNT 100
|
|
2603 #define SYS_THREAD_ERROR 0xffffffffUL
|
|
2604
|
|
2605 void os::pd_start_thread(Thread* thread) {
|
|
2606 DWORD ret = ResumeThread(thread->osthread()->thread_handle());
|
|
2607 // Returns previous suspend state:
|
|
2608 // 0: Thread was not suspended
|
|
2609 // 1: Thread is running now
|
|
2610 // >1: Thread is still suspended.
|
|
2611 assert(ret != SYS_THREAD_ERROR, "StartThread failed"); // should propagate back
|
|
2612 }
|
|
2613
|
|
2614 size_t os::read(int fd, void *buf, unsigned int nBytes) {
|
|
2615 return ::read(fd, buf, nBytes);
|
|
2616 }
|
|
2617
|
|
2618 class HighResolutionInterval {
|
|
2619 // The default timer resolution seems to be 10 milliseconds.
|
|
2620 // (Where is this written down?)
|
|
2621 // If someone wants to sleep for only a fraction of the default,
|
|
2622 // then we set the timer resolution down to 1 millisecond for
|
|
2623 // the duration of their interval.
|
|
2624 // We carefully set the resolution back, since otherwise we
|
|
2625 // seem to incur an overhead (3%?) that we don't need.
|
|
2626 // CONSIDER: if ms is small, say 3, then we should run with a high resolution time.
|
|
2627 // Buf if ms is large, say 500, or 503, we should avoid the call to timeBeginPeriod().
|
|
2628 // Alternatively, we could compute the relative error (503/500 = .6%) and only use
|
|
2629 // timeBeginPeriod() if the relative error exceeded some threshold.
|
|
2630 // timeBeginPeriod() has been linked to problems with clock drift on win32 systems and
|
|
2631 // to decreased efficiency related to increased timer "tick" rates. We want to minimize
|
|
2632 // (a) calls to timeBeginPeriod() and timeEndPeriod() and (b) time spent with high
|
|
2633 // resolution timers running.
|
|
2634 private:
|
|
2635 jlong resolution;
|
|
2636 public:
|
|
2637 HighResolutionInterval(jlong ms) {
|
|
2638 resolution = ms % 10L;
|
|
2639 if (resolution != 0) {
|
|
2640 MMRESULT result = timeBeginPeriod(1L);
|
|
2641 }
|
|
2642 }
|
|
2643 ~HighResolutionInterval() {
|
|
2644 if (resolution != 0) {
|
|
2645 MMRESULT result = timeEndPeriod(1L);
|
|
2646 }
|
|
2647 resolution = 0L;
|
|
2648 }
|
|
2649 };
|
|
2650
|
|
2651 int os::sleep(Thread* thread, jlong ms, bool interruptable) {
|
|
2652 jlong limit = (jlong) MAXDWORD;
|
|
2653
|
|
2654 while(ms > limit) {
|
|
2655 int res;
|
|
2656 if ((res = sleep(thread, limit, interruptable)) != OS_TIMEOUT)
|
|
2657 return res;
|
|
2658 ms -= limit;
|
|
2659 }
|
|
2660
|
|
2661 assert(thread == Thread::current(), "thread consistency check");
|
|
2662 OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread();
|
|
2663 OSThreadWaitState osts(osthread, false /* not Object.wait() */);
|
|
2664 int result;
|
|
2665 if (interruptable) {
|
|
2666 assert(thread->is_Java_thread(), "must be java thread");
|
|
2667 JavaThread *jt = (JavaThread *) thread;
|
|
2668 ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(jt);
|
|
2669
|
|
2670 jt->set_suspend_equivalent();
|
|
2671 // cleared by handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition() or
|
|
2672 // java_suspend_self() via check_and_wait_while_suspended()
|
|
2673
|
|
2674 HANDLE events[1];
|
|
2675 events[0] = osthread->interrupt_event();
|
|
2676 HighResolutionInterval *phri=NULL;
|
|
2677 if(!ForceTimeHighResolution)
|
|
2678 phri = new HighResolutionInterval( ms );
|
|
2679 if (WaitForMultipleObjects(1, events, FALSE, (DWORD)ms) == WAIT_TIMEOUT) {
|
|
2680 result = OS_TIMEOUT;
|
|
2681 } else {
|
|
2682 ResetEvent(osthread->interrupt_event());
|
|
2683 osthread->set_interrupted(false);
|
|
2684 result = OS_INTRPT;
|
|
2685 }
|
|
2686 delete phri; //if it is NULL, harmless
|
|
2687
|
|
2688 // were we externally suspended while we were waiting?
|
|
2689 jt->check_and_wait_while_suspended();
|
|
2690 } else {
|
|
2691 assert(!thread->is_Java_thread(), "must not be java thread");
|
|
2692 Sleep((long) ms);
|
|
2693 result = OS_TIMEOUT;
|
|
2694 }
|
|
2695 return result;
|
|
2696 }
|
|
2697
|
|
2698 // Sleep forever; naked call to OS-specific sleep; use with CAUTION
|
|
2699 void os::infinite_sleep() {
|
|
2700 while (true) { // sleep forever ...
|
|
2701 Sleep(100000); // ... 100 seconds at a time
|
|
2702 }
|
|
2703 }
|
|
2704
|
|
2705 typedef BOOL (WINAPI * STTSignature)(void) ;
|
|
2706
|
|
2707 os::YieldResult os::NakedYield() {
|
|
2708 // Use either SwitchToThread() or Sleep(0)
|
|
2709 // Consider passing back the return value from SwitchToThread().
|
|
2710 // We use GetProcAddress() as ancient Win9X versions of windows doen't support SwitchToThread.
|
|
2711 // In that case we revert to Sleep(0).
|
|
2712 static volatile STTSignature stt = (STTSignature) 1 ;
|
|
2713
|
|
2714 if (stt == ((STTSignature) 1)) {
|
|
2715 stt = (STTSignature) ::GetProcAddress (LoadLibrary ("Kernel32.dll"), "SwitchToThread") ;
|
|
2716 // It's OK if threads race during initialization as the operation above is idempotent.
|
|
2717 }
|
|
2718 if (stt != NULL) {
|
|
2719 return (*stt)() ? os::YIELD_SWITCHED : os::YIELD_NONEREADY ;
|
|
2720 } else {
|
|
2721 Sleep (0) ;
|
|
2722 }
|
|
2723 return os::YIELD_UNKNOWN ;
|
|
2724 }
|
|
2725
|
|
2726 void os::yield() { os::NakedYield(); }
|
|
2727
|
|
2728 void os::yield_all(int attempts) {
|
|
2729 // Yields to all threads, including threads with lower priorities
|
|
2730 Sleep(1);
|
|
2731 }
|
|
2732
|
|
2733 // Win32 only gives you access to seven real priorities at a time,
|
|
2734 // so we compress Java's ten down to seven. It would be better
|
|
2735 // if we dynamically adjusted relative priorities.
|
|
2736
|
|
2737 int os::java_to_os_priority[MaxPriority + 1] = {
|
|
2738 THREAD_PRIORITY_IDLE, // 0 Entry should never be used
|
|
2739 THREAD_PRIORITY_LOWEST, // 1 MinPriority
|
|
2740 THREAD_PRIORITY_LOWEST, // 2
|
|
2741 THREAD_PRIORITY_BELOW_NORMAL, // 3
|
|
2742 THREAD_PRIORITY_BELOW_NORMAL, // 4
|
|
2743 THREAD_PRIORITY_NORMAL, // 5 NormPriority
|
|
2744 THREAD_PRIORITY_NORMAL, // 6
|
|
2745 THREAD_PRIORITY_ABOVE_NORMAL, // 7
|
|
2746 THREAD_PRIORITY_ABOVE_NORMAL, // 8
|
|
2747 THREAD_PRIORITY_HIGHEST, // 9 NearMaxPriority
|
|
2748 THREAD_PRIORITY_HIGHEST // 10 MaxPriority
|
|
2749 };
|
|
2750
|
|
2751 int prio_policy1[MaxPriority + 1] = {
|
|
2752 THREAD_PRIORITY_IDLE, // 0 Entry should never be used
|
|
2753 THREAD_PRIORITY_LOWEST, // 1 MinPriority
|
|
2754 THREAD_PRIORITY_LOWEST, // 2
|
|
2755 THREAD_PRIORITY_BELOW_NORMAL, // 3
|
|
2756 THREAD_PRIORITY_BELOW_NORMAL, // 4
|
|
2757 THREAD_PRIORITY_NORMAL, // 5 NormPriority
|
|
2758 THREAD_PRIORITY_ABOVE_NORMAL, // 6
|
|
2759 THREAD_PRIORITY_ABOVE_NORMAL, // 7
|
|
2760 THREAD_PRIORITY_HIGHEST, // 8
|
|
2761 THREAD_PRIORITY_HIGHEST, // 9 NearMaxPriority
|
|
2762 THREAD_PRIORITY_TIME_CRITICAL // 10 MaxPriority
|
|
2763 };
|
|
2764
|
|
2765 static int prio_init() {
|
|
2766 // If ThreadPriorityPolicy is 1, switch tables
|
|
2767 if (ThreadPriorityPolicy == 1) {
|
|
2768 int i;
|
|
2769 for (i = 0; i < MaxPriority + 1; i++) {
|
|
2770 os::java_to_os_priority[i] = prio_policy1[i];
|
|
2771 }
|
|
2772 }
|
|
2773 return 0;
|
|
2774 }
|
|
2775
|
|
2776 OSReturn os::set_native_priority(Thread* thread, int priority) {
|
|
2777 if (!UseThreadPriorities) return OS_OK;
|
|
2778 bool ret = SetThreadPriority(thread->osthread()->thread_handle(), priority) != 0;
|
|
2779 return ret ? OS_OK : OS_ERR;
|
|
2780 }
|
|
2781
|
|
2782 OSReturn os::get_native_priority(const Thread* const thread, int* priority_ptr) {
|
|
2783 if ( !UseThreadPriorities ) {
|
|
2784 *priority_ptr = java_to_os_priority[NormPriority];
|
|
2785 return OS_OK;
|
|
2786 }
|
|
2787 int os_prio = GetThreadPriority(thread->osthread()->thread_handle());
|
|
2788 if (os_prio == THREAD_PRIORITY_ERROR_RETURN) {
|
|
2789 assert(false, "GetThreadPriority failed");
|
|
2790 return OS_ERR;
|
|
2791 }
|
|
2792 *priority_ptr = os_prio;
|
|
2793 return OS_OK;
|
|
2794 }
|
|
2795
|
|
2796
|
|
2797 // Hint to the underlying OS that a task switch would not be good.
|
|
2798 // Void return because it's a hint and can fail.
|
|
2799 void os::hint_no_preempt() {}
|
|
2800
|
|
2801 void os::interrupt(Thread* thread) {
|
|
2802 assert(!thread->is_Java_thread() || Thread::current() == thread || Threads_lock->owned_by_self(),
|
|
2803 "possibility of dangling Thread pointer");
|
|
2804
|
|
2805 OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread();
|
|
2806 osthread->set_interrupted(true);
|
|
2807 // More than one thread can get here with the same value of osthread,
|
|
2808 // resulting in multiple notifications. We do, however, want the store
|
|
2809 // to interrupted() to be visible to other threads before we post
|
|
2810 // the interrupt event.
|
|
2811 OrderAccess::release();
|
|
2812 SetEvent(osthread->interrupt_event());
|
|
2813 // For JSR166: unpark after setting status
|
|
2814 if (thread->is_Java_thread())
|
|
2815 ((JavaThread*)thread)->parker()->unpark();
|
|
2816
|
|
2817 ParkEvent * ev = thread->_ParkEvent ;
|
|
2818 if (ev != NULL) ev->unpark() ;
|
|
2819
|
|
2820 }
|
|
2821
|
|
2822
|
|
2823 bool os::is_interrupted(Thread* thread, bool clear_interrupted) {
|
|
2824 assert(!thread->is_Java_thread() || Thread::current() == thread || Threads_lock->owned_by_self(),
|
|
2825 "possibility of dangling Thread pointer");
|
|
2826
|
|
2827 OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread();
|
|
2828 bool interrupted;
|
|
2829 interrupted = osthread->interrupted();
|
|
2830 if (clear_interrupted == true) {
|
|
2831 osthread->set_interrupted(false);
|
|
2832 ResetEvent(osthread->interrupt_event());
|
|
2833 } // Otherwise leave the interrupted state alone
|
|
2834
|
|
2835 return interrupted;
|
|
2836 }
|
|
2837
|
|
2838 // Get's a pc (hint) for a running thread. Currently used only for profiling.
|
|
2839 ExtendedPC os::get_thread_pc(Thread* thread) {
|
|
2840 CONTEXT context;
|
|
2841 context.ContextFlags = CONTEXT_CONTROL;
|
|
2842 HANDLE handle = thread->osthread()->thread_handle();
|
|
2843 #ifdef _M_IA64
|
|
2844 assert(0, "Fix get_thread_pc");
|
|
2845 return ExtendedPC(NULL);
|
|
2846 #else
|
|
2847 if (GetThreadContext(handle, &context)) {
|
|
2848 #ifdef _M_AMD64
|
|
2849 return ExtendedPC((address) context.Rip);
|
|
2850 #else
|
|
2851 return ExtendedPC((address) context.Eip);
|
|
2852 #endif
|
|
2853 } else {
|
|
2854 return ExtendedPC(NULL);
|
|
2855 }
|
|
2856 #endif
|
|
2857 }
|
|
2858
|
|
2859 // GetCurrentThreadId() returns DWORD
|
|
2860 intx os::current_thread_id() { return GetCurrentThreadId(); }
|
|
2861
|
|
2862 static int _initial_pid = 0;
|
|
2863
|
|
2864 int os::current_process_id()
|
|
2865 {
|
|
2866 return (_initial_pid ? _initial_pid : _getpid());
|
|
2867 }
|
|
2868
|
|
2869 int os::win32::_vm_page_size = 0;
|
|
2870 int os::win32::_vm_allocation_granularity = 0;
|
|
2871 int os::win32::_processor_type = 0;
|
|
2872 // Processor level is not available on non-NT systems, use vm_version instead
|
|
2873 int os::win32::_processor_level = 0;
|
|
2874 julong os::win32::_physical_memory = 0;
|
|
2875 size_t os::win32::_default_stack_size = 0;
|
|
2876
|
|
2877 intx os::win32::_os_thread_limit = 0;
|
|
2878 volatile intx os::win32::_os_thread_count = 0;
|
|
2879
|
|
2880 bool os::win32::_is_nt = false;
|
|
2881
|
|
2882
|
|
2883 void os::win32::initialize_system_info() {
|
|
2884 SYSTEM_INFO si;
|
|
2885 GetSystemInfo(&si);
|
|
2886 _vm_page_size = si.dwPageSize;
|
|
2887 _vm_allocation_granularity = si.dwAllocationGranularity;
|
|
2888 _processor_type = si.dwProcessorType;
|
|
2889 _processor_level = si.wProcessorLevel;
|
|
2890 _processor_count = si.dwNumberOfProcessors;
|
|
2891
|
|
2892 MEMORYSTATUS ms;
|
|
2893 // also returns dwAvailPhys (free physical memory bytes), dwTotalVirtual, dwAvailVirtual,
|
|
2894 // dwMemoryLoad (% of memory in use)
|
|
2895 GlobalMemoryStatus(&ms);
|
|
2896 _physical_memory = ms.dwTotalPhys;
|
|
2897
|
|
2898 OSVERSIONINFO oi;
|
|
2899 oi.dwOSVersionInfoSize = sizeof(OSVERSIONINFO);
|
|
2900 GetVersionEx(&oi);
|
|
2901 switch(oi.dwPlatformId) {
|
|
2902 case VER_PLATFORM_WIN32_WINDOWS: _is_nt = false; break;
|
|
2903 case VER_PLATFORM_WIN32_NT: _is_nt = true; break;
|
|
2904 default: fatal("Unknown platform");
|
|
2905 }
|
|
2906
|
|
2907 _default_stack_size = os::current_stack_size();
|
|
2908 assert(_default_stack_size > (size_t) _vm_page_size, "invalid stack size");
|
|
2909 assert((_default_stack_size & (_vm_page_size - 1)) == 0,
|
|
2910 "stack size not a multiple of page size");
|
|
2911
|
|
2912 initialize_performance_counter();
|
|
2913
|
|
2914 // Win95/Win98 scheduler bug work-around. The Win95/98 scheduler is
|
|
2915 // known to deadlock the system, if the VM issues to thread operations with
|
|
2916 // a too high frequency, e.g., such as changing the priorities.
|
|
2917 // The 6000 seems to work well - no deadlocks has been notices on the test
|
|
2918 // programs that we have seen experience this problem.
|
|
2919 if (!os::win32::is_nt()) {
|
|
2920 StarvationMonitorInterval = 6000;
|
|
2921 }
|
|
2922 }
|
|
2923
|
|
2924
|
|
2925 void os::win32::setmode_streams() {
|
|
2926 _setmode(_fileno(stdin), _O_BINARY);
|
|
2927 _setmode(_fileno(stdout), _O_BINARY);
|
|
2928 _setmode(_fileno(stderr), _O_BINARY);
|
|
2929 }
|
|
2930
|
|
2931
|
|
2932 int os::message_box(const char* title, const char* message) {
|
|
2933 int result = MessageBox(NULL, message, title,
|
|
2934 MB_YESNO | MB_ICONERROR | MB_SYSTEMMODAL | MB_DEFAULT_DESKTOP_ONLY);
|
|
2935 return result == IDYES;
|
|
2936 }
|
|
2937
|
|
2938 int os::allocate_thread_local_storage() {
|
|
2939 return TlsAlloc();
|
|
2940 }
|
|
2941
|
|
2942
|
|
2943 void os::free_thread_local_storage(int index) {
|
|
2944 TlsFree(index);
|
|
2945 }
|
|
2946
|
|
2947
|
|
2948 void os::thread_local_storage_at_put(int index, void* value) {
|
|
2949 TlsSetValue(index, value);
|
|
2950 assert(thread_local_storage_at(index) == value, "Just checking");
|
|
2951 }
|
|
2952
|
|
2953
|
|
2954 void* os::thread_local_storage_at(int index) {
|
|
2955 return TlsGetValue(index);
|
|
2956 }
|
|
2957
|
|
2958
|
|
2959 #ifndef PRODUCT
|
|
2960 #ifndef _WIN64
|
|
2961 // Helpers to check whether NX protection is enabled
|
|
2962 int nx_exception_filter(_EXCEPTION_POINTERS *pex) {
|
|
2963 if (pex->ExceptionRecord->ExceptionCode == EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION &&
|
|
2964 pex->ExceptionRecord->NumberParameters > 0 &&
|
|
2965 pex->ExceptionRecord->ExceptionInformation[0] ==
|
|
2966 EXCEPTION_INFO_EXEC_VIOLATION) {
|
|
2967 return EXCEPTION_EXECUTE_HANDLER;
|
|
2968 }
|
|
2969 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
2970 }
|
|
2971
|
|
2972 void nx_check_protection() {
|
|
2973 // If NX is enabled we'll get an exception calling into code on the stack
|
|
2974 char code[] = { (char)0xC3 }; // ret
|
|
2975 void *code_ptr = (void *)code;
|
|
2976 __try {
|
|
2977 __asm call code_ptr
|
|
2978 } __except(nx_exception_filter((_EXCEPTION_POINTERS*)_exception_info())) {
|
|
2979 tty->print_raw_cr("NX protection detected.");
|
|
2980 }
|
|
2981 }
|
|
2982 #endif // _WIN64
|
|
2983 #endif // PRODUCT
|
|
2984
|
|
2985 // this is called _before_ the global arguments have been parsed
|
|
2986 void os::init(void) {
|
|
2987 _initial_pid = _getpid();
|
|
2988
|
|
2989 init_random(1234567);
|
|
2990
|
|
2991 win32::initialize_system_info();
|
|
2992 win32::setmode_streams();
|
|
2993 init_page_sizes((size_t) win32::vm_page_size());
|
|
2994
|
|
2995 // For better scalability on MP systems (must be called after initialize_system_info)
|
|
2996 #ifndef PRODUCT
|
|
2997 if (is_MP()) {
|
|
2998 NoYieldsInMicrolock = true;
|
|
2999 }
|
|
3000 #endif
|
|
3001 // Initialize main_process and main_thread
|
|
3002 main_process = GetCurrentProcess(); // Remember main_process is a pseudo handle
|
|
3003 if (!DuplicateHandle(main_process, GetCurrentThread(), main_process,
|
|
3004 &main_thread, THREAD_ALL_ACCESS, false, 0)) {
|
|
3005 fatal("DuplicateHandle failed\n");
|
|
3006 }
|
|
3007 main_thread_id = (int) GetCurrentThreadId();
|
|
3008 }
|
|
3009
|
|
3010 // To install functions for atexit processing
|
|
3011 extern "C" {
|
|
3012 static void perfMemory_exit_helper() {
|
|
3013 perfMemory_exit();
|
|
3014 }
|
|
3015 }
|
|
3016
|
|
3017
|
|
3018 // this is called _after_ the global arguments have been parsed
|
|
3019 jint os::init_2(void) {
|
|
3020 // Allocate a single page and mark it as readable for safepoint polling
|
|
3021 address polling_page = (address)VirtualAlloc(NULL, os::vm_page_size(), MEM_RESERVE, PAGE_READONLY);
|
|
3022 guarantee( polling_page != NULL, "Reserve Failed for polling page");
|
|
3023
|
|
3024 address return_page = (address)VirtualAlloc(polling_page, os::vm_page_size(), MEM_COMMIT, PAGE_READONLY);
|
|
3025 guarantee( return_page != NULL, "Commit Failed for polling page");
|
|
3026
|
|
3027 os::set_polling_page( polling_page );
|
|
3028
|
|
3029 #ifndef PRODUCT
|
|
3030 if( Verbose && PrintMiscellaneous )
|
|
3031 tty->print("[SafePoint Polling address: " INTPTR_FORMAT "]\n", (intptr_t)polling_page);
|
|
3032 #endif
|
|
3033
|
|
3034 if (!UseMembar) {
|
|
3035 address mem_serialize_page = (address)VirtualAlloc(NULL, os::vm_page_size(), MEM_RESERVE, PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE);
|
|
3036 guarantee( mem_serialize_page != NULL, "Reserve Failed for memory serialize page");
|
|
3037
|
|
3038 return_page = (address)VirtualAlloc(mem_serialize_page, os::vm_page_size(), MEM_COMMIT, PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE);
|
|
3039 guarantee( return_page != NULL, "Commit Failed for memory serialize page");
|
|
3040
|
|
3041 os::set_memory_serialize_page( mem_serialize_page );
|
|
3042
|
|
3043 #ifndef PRODUCT
|
|
3044 if(Verbose && PrintMiscellaneous)
|
|
3045 tty->print("[Memory Serialize Page address: " INTPTR_FORMAT "]\n", (intptr_t)mem_serialize_page);
|
|
3046 #endif
|
|
3047 }
|
|
3048
|
|
3049 FLAG_SET_DEFAULT(UseLargePages, os::large_page_init());
|
|
3050
|
|
3051 // Setup Windows Exceptions
|
|
3052
|
|
3053 // On Itanium systems, Structured Exception Handling does not
|
|
3054 // work since stack frames must be walkable by the OS. Since
|
|
3055 // much of our code is dynamically generated, and we do not have
|
|
3056 // proper unwind .xdata sections, the system simply exits
|
|
3057 // rather than delivering the exception. To work around
|
|
3058 // this we use VectorExceptions instead.
|
|
3059 #ifdef _WIN64
|
|
3060 if (UseVectoredExceptions) {
|
|
3061 topLevelVectoredExceptionHandler = AddVectoredExceptionHandler( 1, topLevelExceptionFilter);
|
|
3062 }
|
|
3063 #endif
|
|
3064
|
|
3065 // for debugging float code generation bugs
|
|
3066 if (ForceFloatExceptions) {
|
|
3067 #ifndef _WIN64
|
|
3068 static long fp_control_word = 0;
|
|
3069 __asm { fstcw fp_control_word }
|
|
3070 // see Intel PPro Manual, Vol. 2, p 7-16
|
|
3071 const long precision = 0x20;
|
|
3072 const long underflow = 0x10;
|
|
3073 const long overflow = 0x08;
|
|
3074 const long zero_div = 0x04;
|
|
3075 const long denorm = 0x02;
|
|
3076 const long invalid = 0x01;
|
|
3077 fp_control_word |= invalid;
|
|
3078 __asm { fldcw fp_control_word }
|
|
3079 #endif
|
|
3080 }
|
|
3081
|
|
3082 // Initialize HPI.
|
|
3083 jint hpi_result = hpi::initialize();
|
|
3084 if (hpi_result != JNI_OK) { return hpi_result; }
|
|
3085
|
|
3086 // If stack_commit_size is 0, windows will reserve the default size,
|
|
3087 // but only commit a small portion of it.
|
|
3088 size_t stack_commit_size = round_to(ThreadStackSize*K, os::vm_page_size());
|
|
3089 size_t default_reserve_size = os::win32::default_stack_size();
|
|
3090 size_t actual_reserve_size = stack_commit_size;
|
|
3091 if (stack_commit_size < default_reserve_size) {
|
|
3092 // If stack_commit_size == 0, we want this too
|
|
3093 actual_reserve_size = default_reserve_size;
|
|
3094 }
|
|
3095
|
|
3096 JavaThread::set_stack_size_at_create(stack_commit_size);
|
|
3097
|
|
3098 // Calculate theoretical max. size of Threads to guard gainst artifical
|
|
3099 // out-of-memory situations, where all available address-space has been
|
|
3100 // reserved by thread stacks.
|
|
3101 assert(actual_reserve_size != 0, "Must have a stack");
|
|
3102
|
|
3103 // Calculate the thread limit when we should start doing Virtual Memory
|
|
3104 // banging. Currently when the threads will have used all but 200Mb of space.
|
|
3105 //
|
|
3106 // TODO: consider performing a similar calculation for commit size instead
|
|
3107 // as reserve size, since on a 64-bit platform we'll run into that more
|
|
3108 // often than running out of virtual memory space. We can use the
|
|
3109 // lower value of the two calculations as the os_thread_limit.
|
|
3110 size_t max_address_space = ((size_t)1 << (BitsPerOop - 1)) - (200 * K * K);
|
|
3111 win32::_os_thread_limit = (intx)(max_address_space / actual_reserve_size);
|
|
3112
|
|
3113 // at exit methods are called in the reverse order of their registration.
|
|
3114 // there is no limit to the number of functions registered. atexit does
|
|
3115 // not set errno.
|
|
3116
|
|
3117 if (PerfAllowAtExitRegistration) {
|
|
3118 // only register atexit functions if PerfAllowAtExitRegistration is set.
|
|
3119 // atexit functions can be delayed until process exit time, which
|
|
3120 // can be problematic for embedded VM situations. Embedded VMs should
|
|
3121 // call DestroyJavaVM() to assure that VM resources are released.
|
|
3122
|
|
3123 // note: perfMemory_exit_helper atexit function may be removed in
|
|
3124 // the future if the appropriate cleanup code can be added to the
|
|
3125 // VM_Exit VMOperation's doit method.
|
|
3126 if (atexit(perfMemory_exit_helper) != 0) {
|
|
3127 warning("os::init_2 atexit(perfMemory_exit_helper) failed");
|
|
3128 }
|
|
3129 }
|
|
3130
|
|
3131 // initialize PSAPI or ToolHelp for fatal error handler
|
|
3132 if (win32::is_nt()) _init_psapi();
|
|
3133 else _init_toolhelp();
|
|
3134
|
|
3135 #ifndef _WIN64
|
|
3136 // Print something if NX is enabled (win32 on AMD64)
|
|
3137 NOT_PRODUCT(if (PrintMiscellaneous && Verbose) nx_check_protection());
|
|
3138 #endif
|
|
3139
|
|
3140 // initialize thread priority policy
|
|
3141 prio_init();
|
|
3142
|
|
3143 return JNI_OK;
|
|
3144 }
|
|
3145
|
|
3146
|
|
3147 // Mark the polling page as unreadable
|
|
3148 void os::make_polling_page_unreadable(void) {
|
|
3149 DWORD old_status;
|
|
3150 if( !VirtualProtect((char *)_polling_page, os::vm_page_size(), PAGE_NOACCESS, &old_status) )
|
|
3151 fatal("Could not disable polling page");
|
|
3152 };
|
|
3153
|
|
3154 // Mark the polling page as readable
|
|
3155 void os::make_polling_page_readable(void) {
|
|
3156 DWORD old_status;
|
|
3157 if( !VirtualProtect((char *)_polling_page, os::vm_page_size(), PAGE_READONLY, &old_status) )
|
|
3158 fatal("Could not enable polling page");
|
|
3159 };
|
|
3160
|
|
3161
|
|
3162 int os::stat(const char *path, struct stat *sbuf) {
|
|
3163 char pathbuf[MAX_PATH];
|
|
3164 if (strlen(path) > MAX_PATH - 1) {
|
|
3165 errno = ENAMETOOLONG;
|
|
3166 return -1;
|
|
3167 }
|
|
3168 hpi::native_path(strcpy(pathbuf, path));
|
|
3169 int ret = ::stat(pathbuf, sbuf);
|
|
3170 if (sbuf != NULL && UseUTCFileTimestamp) {
|
|
3171 // Fix for 6539723. st_mtime returned from stat() is dependent on
|
|
3172 // the system timezone and so can return different values for the
|
|
3173 // same file if/when daylight savings time changes. This adjustment
|
|
3174 // makes sure the same timestamp is returned regardless of the TZ.
|
|
3175 //
|
|
3176 // See:
|
|
3177 // http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/
|
|
3178 // default.asp?url=/library/en-us/sysinfo/base/
|
|
3179 // time_zone_information_str.asp
|
|
3180 // and
|
|
3181 // http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url=
|
|
3182 // /library/en-us/sysinfo/base/settimezoneinformation.asp
|
|
3183 //
|
|
3184 // NOTE: there is a insidious bug here: If the timezone is changed
|
|
3185 // after the call to stat() but before 'GetTimeZoneInformation()', then
|
|
3186 // the adjustment we do here will be wrong and we'll return the wrong
|
|
3187 // value (which will likely end up creating an invalid class data
|
|
3188 // archive). Absent a better API for this, or some time zone locking
|
|
3189 // mechanism, we'll have to live with this risk.
|
|
3190 TIME_ZONE_INFORMATION tz;
|
|
3191 DWORD tzid = GetTimeZoneInformation(&tz);
|
|
3192 int daylightBias =
|
|
3193 (tzid == TIME_ZONE_ID_DAYLIGHT) ? tz.DaylightBias : tz.StandardBias;
|
|
3194 sbuf->st_mtime += (tz.Bias + daylightBias) * 60;
|
|
3195 }
|
|
3196 return ret;
|
|
3197 }
|
|
3198
|
|
3199
|
|
3200 #define FT2INT64(ft) \
|
|
3201 ((jlong)((jlong)(ft).dwHighDateTime << 32 | (julong)(ft).dwLowDateTime))
|
|
3202
|
|
3203
|
|
3204 // current_thread_cpu_time(bool) and thread_cpu_time(Thread*, bool)
|
|
3205 // are used by JVM M&M and JVMTI to get user+sys or user CPU time
|
|
3206 // of a thread.
|
|
3207 //
|
|
3208 // current_thread_cpu_time() and thread_cpu_time(Thread*) returns
|
|
3209 // the fast estimate available on the platform.
|
|
3210
|
|
3211 // current_thread_cpu_time() is not optimized for Windows yet
|
|
3212 jlong os::current_thread_cpu_time() {
|
|
3213 // return user + sys since the cost is the same
|
|
3214 return os::thread_cpu_time(Thread::current(), true /* user+sys */);
|
|
3215 }
|
|
3216
|
|
3217 jlong os::thread_cpu_time(Thread* thread) {
|
|
3218 // consistent with what current_thread_cpu_time() returns.
|
|
3219 return os::thread_cpu_time(thread, true /* user+sys */);
|
|
3220 }
|
|
3221
|
|
3222 jlong os::current_thread_cpu_time(bool user_sys_cpu_time) {
|
|
3223 return os::thread_cpu_time(Thread::current(), user_sys_cpu_time);
|
|
3224 }
|
|
3225
|
|
3226 jlong os::thread_cpu_time(Thread* thread, bool user_sys_cpu_time) {
|
|
3227 // This code is copy from clasic VM -> hpi::sysThreadCPUTime
|
|
3228 // If this function changes, os::is_thread_cpu_time_supported() should too
|
|
3229 if (os::win32::is_nt()) {
|
|
3230 FILETIME CreationTime;
|
|
3231 FILETIME ExitTime;
|
|
3232 FILETIME KernelTime;
|
|
3233 FILETIME UserTime;
|
|
3234
|
|
3235 if ( GetThreadTimes(thread->osthread()->thread_handle(),
|
|
3236 &CreationTime, &ExitTime, &KernelTime, &UserTime) == 0)
|
|
3237 return -1;
|
|
3238 else
|
|
3239 if (user_sys_cpu_time) {
|
|
3240 return (FT2INT64(UserTime) + FT2INT64(KernelTime)) * 100;
|
|
3241 } else {
|
|
3242 return FT2INT64(UserTime) * 100;
|
|
3243 }
|
|
3244 } else {
|
|
3245 return (jlong) timeGetTime() * 1000000;
|
|
3246 }
|
|
3247 }
|
|
3248
|
|
3249 void os::current_thread_cpu_time_info(jvmtiTimerInfo *info_ptr) {
|
|
3250 info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS; // the max value -- all 64 bits
|
|
3251 info_ptr->may_skip_backward = false; // GetThreadTimes returns absolute time
|
|
3252 info_ptr->may_skip_forward = false; // GetThreadTimes returns absolute time
|
|
3253 info_ptr->kind = JVMTI_TIMER_TOTAL_CPU; // user+system time is returned
|
|
3254 }
|
|
3255
|
|
3256 void os::thread_cpu_time_info(jvmtiTimerInfo *info_ptr) {
|
|
3257 info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS; // the max value -- all 64 bits
|
|
3258 info_ptr->may_skip_backward = false; // GetThreadTimes returns absolute time
|
|
3259 info_ptr->may_skip_forward = false; // GetThreadTimes returns absolute time
|
|
3260 info_ptr->kind = JVMTI_TIMER_TOTAL_CPU; // user+system time is returned
|
|
3261 }
|
|
3262
|
|
3263 bool os::is_thread_cpu_time_supported() {
|
|
3264 // see os::thread_cpu_time
|
|
3265 if (os::win32::is_nt()) {
|
|
3266 FILETIME CreationTime;
|
|
3267 FILETIME ExitTime;
|
|
3268 FILETIME KernelTime;
|
|
3269 FILETIME UserTime;
|
|
3270
|
|
3271 if ( GetThreadTimes(GetCurrentThread(),
|
|
3272 &CreationTime, &ExitTime, &KernelTime, &UserTime) == 0)
|
|
3273 return false;
|
|
3274 else
|
|
3275 return true;
|
|
3276 } else {
|
|
3277 return false;
|
|
3278 }
|
|
3279 }
|
|
3280
|
|
3281 // Windows does't provide a loadavg primitive so this is stubbed out for now.
|
|
3282 // It does have primitives (PDH API) to get CPU usage and run queue length.
|
|
3283 // "\\Processor(_Total)\\% Processor Time", "\\System\\Processor Queue Length"
|
|
3284 // If we wanted to implement loadavg on Windows, we have a few options:
|
|
3285 //
|
|
3286 // a) Query CPU usage and run queue length and "fake" an answer by
|
|
3287 // returning the CPU usage if it's under 100%, and the run queue
|
|
3288 // length otherwise. It turns out that querying is pretty slow
|
|
3289 // on Windows, on the order of 200 microseconds on a fast machine.
|
|
3290 // Note that on the Windows the CPU usage value is the % usage
|
|
3291 // since the last time the API was called (and the first call
|
|
3292 // returns 100%), so we'd have to deal with that as well.
|
|
3293 //
|
|
3294 // b) Sample the "fake" answer using a sampling thread and store
|
|
3295 // the answer in a global variable. The call to loadavg would
|
|
3296 // just return the value of the global, avoiding the slow query.
|
|
3297 //
|
|
3298 // c) Sample a better answer using exponential decay to smooth the
|
|
3299 // value. This is basically the algorithm used by UNIX kernels.
|
|
3300 //
|
|
3301 // Note that sampling thread starvation could affect both (b) and (c).
|
|
3302 int os::loadavg(double loadavg[], int nelem) {
|
|
3303 return -1;
|
|
3304 }
|
|
3305
|
|
3306
|
|
3307 // DontYieldALot=false by default: dutifully perform all yields as requested by JVM_Yield()
|
|
3308 bool os::dont_yield() {
|
|
3309 return DontYieldALot;
|
|
3310 }
|
|
3311
|
|
3312 // Is a (classpath) directory empty?
|
|
3313 bool os::dir_is_empty(const char* path) {
|
|
3314 WIN32_FIND_DATA fd;
|
|
3315 HANDLE f = FindFirstFile(path, &fd);
|
|
3316 if (f == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
|
3317 return true;
|
|
3318 }
|
|
3319 FindClose(f);
|
|
3320 return false;
|
|
3321 }
|
|
3322
|
|
3323 // create binary file, rewriting existing file if required
|
|
3324 int os::create_binary_file(const char* path, bool rewrite_existing) {
|
|
3325 int oflags = _O_CREAT | _O_WRONLY | _O_BINARY;
|
|
3326 if (!rewrite_existing) {
|
|
3327 oflags |= _O_EXCL;
|
|
3328 }
|
|
3329 return ::open(path, oflags, _S_IREAD | _S_IWRITE);
|
|
3330 }
|
|
3331
|
|
3332 // return current position of file pointer
|
|
3333 jlong os::current_file_offset(int fd) {
|
|
3334 return (jlong)::_lseeki64(fd, (__int64)0L, SEEK_CUR);
|
|
3335 }
|
|
3336
|
|
3337 // move file pointer to the specified offset
|
|
3338 jlong os::seek_to_file_offset(int fd, jlong offset) {
|
|
3339 return (jlong)::_lseeki64(fd, (__int64)offset, SEEK_SET);
|
|
3340 }
|
|
3341
|
|
3342
|
|
3343 // Map a block of memory.
|
|
3344 char* os::map_memory(int fd, const char* file_name, size_t file_offset,
|
|
3345 char *addr, size_t bytes, bool read_only,
|
|
3346 bool allow_exec) {
|
|
3347 HANDLE hFile;
|
|
3348 char* base;
|
|
3349
|
|
3350 hFile = CreateFile(file_name, GENERIC_READ, FILE_SHARE_READ, NULL,
|
|
3351 OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, NULL);
|
|
3352 if (hFile == NULL) {
|
|
3353 if (PrintMiscellaneous && Verbose) {
|
|
3354 DWORD err = GetLastError();
|
|
3355 tty->print_cr("CreateFile() failed: GetLastError->%ld.");
|
|
3356 }
|
|
3357 return NULL;
|
|
3358 }
|
|
3359
|
|
3360 if (allow_exec) {
|
|
3361 // CreateFileMapping/MapViewOfFileEx can't map executable memory
|
|
3362 // unless it comes from a PE image (which the shared archive is not.)
|
|
3363 // Even VirtualProtect refuses to give execute access to mapped memory
|
|
3364 // that was not previously executable.
|
|
3365 //
|
|
3366 // Instead, stick the executable region in anonymous memory. Yuck.
|
|
3367 // Penalty is that ~4 pages will not be shareable - in the future
|
|
3368 // we might consider DLLizing the shared archive with a proper PE
|
|
3369 // header so that mapping executable + sharing is possible.
|
|
3370
|
|
3371 base = (char*) VirtualAlloc(addr, bytes, MEM_COMMIT | MEM_RESERVE,
|
|
3372 PAGE_READWRITE);
|
|
3373 if (base == NULL) {
|
|
3374 if (PrintMiscellaneous && Verbose) {
|
|
3375 DWORD err = GetLastError();
|
|
3376 tty->print_cr("VirtualAlloc() failed: GetLastError->%ld.", err);
|
|
3377 }
|
|
3378 CloseHandle(hFile);
|
|
3379 return NULL;
|
|
3380 }
|
|
3381
|
|
3382 DWORD bytes_read;
|
|
3383 OVERLAPPED overlapped;
|
|
3384 overlapped.Offset = (DWORD)file_offset;
|
|
3385 overlapped.OffsetHigh = 0;
|
|
3386 overlapped.hEvent = NULL;
|
|
3387 // ReadFile guarantees that if the return value is true, the requested
|
|
3388 // number of bytes were read before returning.
|
|
3389 bool res = ReadFile(hFile, base, (DWORD)bytes, &bytes_read, &overlapped) != 0;
|
|
3390 if (!res) {
|
|
3391 if (PrintMiscellaneous && Verbose) {
|
|
3392 DWORD err = GetLastError();
|
|
3393 tty->print_cr("ReadFile() failed: GetLastError->%ld.", err);
|
|
3394 }
|
|
3395 release_memory(base, bytes);
|
|
3396 CloseHandle(hFile);
|
|
3397 return NULL;
|
|
3398 }
|
|
3399 } else {
|
|
3400 HANDLE hMap = CreateFileMapping(hFile, NULL, PAGE_WRITECOPY, 0, 0,
|
|
3401 NULL /*file_name*/);
|
|
3402 if (hMap == NULL) {
|
|
3403 if (PrintMiscellaneous && Verbose) {
|
|
3404 DWORD err = GetLastError();
|
|
3405 tty->print_cr("CreateFileMapping() failed: GetLastError->%ld.");
|
|
3406 }
|
|
3407 CloseHandle(hFile);
|
|
3408 return NULL;
|
|
3409 }
|
|
3410
|
|
3411 DWORD access = read_only ? FILE_MAP_READ : FILE_MAP_COPY;
|
|
3412 base = (char*)MapViewOfFileEx(hMap, access, 0, (DWORD)file_offset,
|
|
3413 (DWORD)bytes, addr);
|
|
3414 if (base == NULL) {
|
|
3415 if (PrintMiscellaneous && Verbose) {
|
|
3416 DWORD err = GetLastError();
|
|
3417 tty->print_cr("MapViewOfFileEx() failed: GetLastError->%ld.", err);
|
|
3418 }
|
|
3419 CloseHandle(hMap);
|
|
3420 CloseHandle(hFile);
|
|
3421 return NULL;
|
|
3422 }
|
|
3423
|
|
3424 if (CloseHandle(hMap) == 0) {
|
|
3425 if (PrintMiscellaneous && Verbose) {
|
|
3426 DWORD err = GetLastError();
|
|
3427 tty->print_cr("CloseHandle(hMap) failed: GetLastError->%ld.", err);
|
|
3428 }
|
|
3429 CloseHandle(hFile);
|
|
3430 return base;
|
|
3431 }
|
|
3432 }
|
|
3433
|
|
3434 if (allow_exec) {
|
|
3435 DWORD old_protect;
|
|
3436 DWORD exec_access = read_only ? PAGE_EXECUTE_READ : PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE;
|
|
3437 bool res = VirtualProtect(base, bytes, exec_access, &old_protect) != 0;
|
|
3438
|
|
3439 if (!res) {
|
|
3440 if (PrintMiscellaneous && Verbose) {
|
|
3441 DWORD err = GetLastError();
|
|
3442 tty->print_cr("VirtualProtect() failed: GetLastError->%ld.", err);
|
|
3443 }
|
|
3444 // Don't consider this a hard error, on IA32 even if the
|
|
3445 // VirtualProtect fails, we should still be able to execute
|
|
3446 CloseHandle(hFile);
|
|
3447 return base;
|
|
3448 }
|
|
3449 }
|
|
3450
|
|
3451 if (CloseHandle(hFile) == 0) {
|
|
3452 if (PrintMiscellaneous && Verbose) {
|
|
3453 DWORD err = GetLastError();
|
|
3454 tty->print_cr("CloseHandle(hFile) failed: GetLastError->%ld.", err);
|
|
3455 }
|
|
3456 return base;
|
|
3457 }
|
|
3458
|
|
3459 return base;
|
|
3460 }
|
|
3461
|
|
3462
|
|
3463 // Remap a block of memory.
|
|
3464 char* os::remap_memory(int fd, const char* file_name, size_t file_offset,
|
|
3465 char *addr, size_t bytes, bool read_only,
|
|
3466 bool allow_exec) {
|
|
3467 // This OS does not allow existing memory maps to be remapped so we
|
|
3468 // have to unmap the memory before we remap it.
|
|
3469 if (!os::unmap_memory(addr, bytes)) {
|
|
3470 return NULL;
|
|
3471 }
|
|
3472
|
|
3473 // There is a very small theoretical window between the unmap_memory()
|
|
3474 // call above and the map_memory() call below where a thread in native
|
|
3475 // code may be able to access an address that is no longer mapped.
|
|
3476
|
|
3477 return os::map_memory(fd, file_name, file_offset, addr, bytes, read_only,
|
|
3478 allow_exec);
|
|
3479 }
|
|
3480
|
|
3481
|
|
3482 // Unmap a block of memory.
|
|
3483 // Returns true=success, otherwise false.
|
|
3484
|
|
3485 bool os::unmap_memory(char* addr, size_t bytes) {
|
|
3486 BOOL result = UnmapViewOfFile(addr);
|
|
3487 if (result == 0) {
|
|
3488 if (PrintMiscellaneous && Verbose) {
|
|
3489 DWORD err = GetLastError();
|
|
3490 tty->print_cr("UnmapViewOfFile() failed: GetLastError->%ld.", err);
|
|
3491 }
|
|
3492 return false;
|
|
3493 }
|
|
3494 return true;
|
|
3495 }
|
|
3496
|
|
3497 void os::pause() {
|
|
3498 char filename[MAX_PATH];
|
|
3499 if (PauseAtStartupFile && PauseAtStartupFile[0]) {
|
|
3500 jio_snprintf(filename, MAX_PATH, PauseAtStartupFile);
|
|
3501 } else {
|
|
3502 jio_snprintf(filename, MAX_PATH, "./vm.paused.%d", current_process_id());
|
|
3503 }
|
|
3504
|
|
3505 int fd = ::open(filename, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC, 0666);
|
|
3506 if (fd != -1) {
|
|
3507 struct stat buf;
|
|
3508 close(fd);
|
|
3509 while (::stat(filename, &buf) == 0) {
|
|
3510 Sleep(100);
|
|
3511 }
|
|
3512 } else {
|
|
3513 jio_fprintf(stderr,
|
|
3514 "Could not open pause file '%s', continuing immediately.\n", filename);
|
|
3515 }
|
|
3516 }
|
|
3517
|
|
3518 // An Event wraps a win32 "CreateEvent" kernel handle.
|
|
3519 //
|
|
3520 // We have a number of choices regarding "CreateEvent" win32 handle leakage:
|
|
3521 //
|
|
3522 // 1: When a thread dies return the Event to the EventFreeList, clear the ParkHandle
|
|
3523 // field, and call CloseHandle() on the win32 event handle. Unpark() would
|
|
3524 // need to be modified to tolerate finding a NULL (invalid) win32 event handle.
|
|
3525 // In addition, an unpark() operation might fetch the handle field, but the
|
|
3526 // event could recycle between the fetch and the SetEvent() operation.
|
|
3527 // SetEvent() would either fail because the handle was invalid, or inadvertently work,
|
|
3528 // as the win32 handle value had been recycled. In an ideal world calling SetEvent()
|
|
3529 // on an stale but recycled handle would be harmless, but in practice this might
|
|
3530 // confuse other non-Sun code, so it's not a viable approach.
|
|
3531 //
|
|
3532 // 2: Once a win32 event handle is associated with an Event, it remains associated
|
|
3533 // with the Event. The event handle is never closed. This could be construed
|
|
3534 // as handle leakage, but only up to the maximum # of threads that have been extant
|
|
3535 // at any one time. This shouldn't be an issue, as windows platforms typically
|
|
3536 // permit a process to have hundreds of thousands of open handles.
|
|
3537 //
|
|
3538 // 3: Same as (1), but periodically, at stop-the-world time, rundown the EventFreeList
|
|
3539 // and release unused handles.
|
|
3540 //
|
|
3541 // 4: Add a CRITICAL_SECTION to the Event to protect LD+SetEvent from LD;ST(null);CloseHandle.
|
|
3542 // It's not clear, however, that we wouldn't be trading one type of leak for another.
|
|
3543 //
|
|
3544 // 5. Use an RCU-like mechanism (Read-Copy Update).
|
|
3545 // Or perhaps something similar to Maged Michael's "Hazard pointers".
|
|
3546 //
|
|
3547 // We use (2).
|
|
3548 //
|
|
3549 // TODO-FIXME:
|
|
3550 // 1. Reconcile Doug's JSR166 j.u.c park-unpark with the objectmonitor implementation.
|
|
3551 // 2. Consider wrapping the WaitForSingleObject(Ex) calls in SEH try/finally blocks
|
|
3552 // to recover from (or at least detect) the dreaded Windows 841176 bug.
|
|
3553 // 3. Collapse the interrupt_event, the JSR166 parker event, and the objectmonitor ParkEvent
|
|
3554 // into a single win32 CreateEvent() handle.
|
|
3555 //
|
|
3556 // _Event transitions in park()
|
|
3557 // -1 => -1 : illegal
|
|
3558 // 1 => 0 : pass - return immediately
|
|
3559 // 0 => -1 : block
|
|
3560 //
|
|
3561 // _Event serves as a restricted-range semaphore :
|
|
3562 // -1 : thread is blocked
|
|
3563 // 0 : neutral - thread is running or ready
|
|
3564 // 1 : signaled - thread is running or ready
|
|
3565 //
|
|
3566 // Another possible encoding of _Event would be
|
|
3567 // with explicit "PARKED" and "SIGNALED" bits.
|
|
3568
|
|
3569 int os::PlatformEvent::park (jlong Millis) {
|
|
3570 guarantee (_ParkHandle != NULL , "Invariant") ;
|
|
3571 guarantee (Millis > 0 , "Invariant") ;
|
|
3572 int v ;
|
|
3573
|
|
3574 // CONSIDER: defer assigning a CreateEvent() handle to the Event until
|
|
3575 // the initial park() operation.
|
|
3576
|
|
3577 for (;;) {
|
|
3578 v = _Event ;
|
|
3579 if (Atomic::cmpxchg (v-1, &_Event, v) == v) break ;
|
|
3580 }
|
|
3581 guarantee ((v == 0) || (v == 1), "invariant") ;
|
|
3582 if (v != 0) return OS_OK ;
|
|
3583
|
|
3584 // Do this the hard way by blocking ...
|
|
3585 // TODO: consider a brief spin here, gated on the success of recent
|
|
3586 // spin attempts by this thread.
|
|
3587 //
|
|
3588 // We decompose long timeouts into series of shorter timed waits.
|
|
3589 // Evidently large timo values passed in WaitForSingleObject() are problematic on some
|
|
3590 // versions of Windows. See EventWait() for details. This may be superstition. Or not.
|
|
3591 // We trust the WAIT_TIMEOUT indication and don't track the elapsed wait time
|
|
3592 // with os::javaTimeNanos(). Furthermore, we assume that spurious returns from
|
|
3593 // ::WaitForSingleObject() caused by latent ::setEvent() operations will tend
|
|
3594 // to happen early in the wait interval. Specifically, after a spurious wakeup (rv ==
|
|
3595 // WAIT_OBJECT_0 but _Event is still < 0) we don't bother to recompute Millis to compensate
|
|
3596 // for the already waited time. This policy does not admit any new outcomes.
|
|
3597 // In the future, however, we might want to track the accumulated wait time and
|
|
3598 // adjust Millis accordingly if we encounter a spurious wakeup.
|
|
3599
|
|
3600 const int MAXTIMEOUT = 0x10000000 ;
|
|
3601 DWORD rv = WAIT_TIMEOUT ;
|
|
3602 while (_Event < 0 && Millis > 0) {
|
|
3603 DWORD prd = Millis ; // set prd = MAX (Millis, MAXTIMEOUT)
|
|
3604 if (Millis > MAXTIMEOUT) {
|
|
3605 prd = MAXTIMEOUT ;
|
|
3606 }
|
|
3607 rv = ::WaitForSingleObject (_ParkHandle, prd) ;
|
|
3608 assert (rv == WAIT_OBJECT_0 || rv == WAIT_TIMEOUT, "WaitForSingleObject failed") ;
|
|
3609 if (rv == WAIT_TIMEOUT) {
|
|
3610 Millis -= prd ;
|
|
3611 }
|
|
3612 }
|
|
3613 v = _Event ;
|
|
3614 _Event = 0 ;
|
|
3615 OrderAccess::fence() ;
|
|
3616 // If we encounter a nearly simultanous timeout expiry and unpark()
|
|
3617 // we return OS_OK indicating we awoke via unpark().
|
|
3618 // Implementor's license -- returning OS_TIMEOUT would be equally valid, however.
|
|
3619 return (v >= 0) ? OS_OK : OS_TIMEOUT ;
|
|
3620 }
|
|
3621
|
|
3622 void os::PlatformEvent::park () {
|
|
3623 guarantee (_ParkHandle != NULL, "Invariant") ;
|
|
3624 // Invariant: Only the thread associated with the Event/PlatformEvent
|
|
3625 // may call park().
|
|
3626 int v ;
|
|
3627 for (;;) {
|
|
3628 v = _Event ;
|
|
3629 if (Atomic::cmpxchg (v-1, &_Event, v) == v) break ;
|
|
3630 }
|
|
3631 guarantee ((v == 0) || (v == 1), "invariant") ;
|
|
3632 if (v != 0) return ;
|
|
3633
|
|
3634 // Do this the hard way by blocking ...
|
|
3635 // TODO: consider a brief spin here, gated on the success of recent
|
|
3636 // spin attempts by this thread.
|
|
3637 while (_Event < 0) {
|
|
3638 DWORD rv = ::WaitForSingleObject (_ParkHandle, INFINITE) ;
|
|
3639 assert (rv == WAIT_OBJECT_0, "WaitForSingleObject failed") ;
|
|
3640 }
|
|
3641
|
|
3642 // Usually we'll find _Event == 0 at this point, but as
|
|
3643 // an optional optimization we clear it, just in case can
|
|
3644 // multiple unpark() operations drove _Event up to 1.
|
|
3645 _Event = 0 ;
|
|
3646 OrderAccess::fence() ;
|
|
3647 guarantee (_Event >= 0, "invariant") ;
|
|
3648 }
|
|
3649
|
|
3650 void os::PlatformEvent::unpark() {
|
|
3651 guarantee (_ParkHandle != NULL, "Invariant") ;
|
|
3652 int v ;
|
|
3653 for (;;) {
|
|
3654 v = _Event ; // Increment _Event if it's < 1.
|
|
3655 if (v > 0) {
|
|
3656 // If it's already signaled just return.
|
|
3657 // The LD of _Event could have reordered or be satisfied
|
|
3658 // by a read-aside from this processor's write buffer.
|
|
3659 // To avoid problems execute a barrier and then
|
|
3660 // ratify the value. A degenerate CAS() would also work.
|
|
3661 // Viz., CAS (v+0, &_Event, v) == v).
|
|
3662 OrderAccess::fence() ;
|
|
3663 if (_Event == v) return ;
|
|
3664 continue ;
|
|
3665 }
|
|
3666 if (Atomic::cmpxchg (v+1, &_Event, v) == v) break ;
|
|
3667 }
|
|
3668 if (v < 0) {
|
|
3669 ::SetEvent (_ParkHandle) ;
|
|
3670 }
|
|
3671 }
|
|
3672
|
|
3673
|
|
3674 // JSR166
|
|
3675 // -------------------------------------------------------
|
|
3676
|
|
3677 /*
|
|
3678 * The Windows implementation of Park is very straightforward: Basic
|
|
3679 * operations on Win32 Events turn out to have the right semantics to
|
|
3680 * use them directly. We opportunistically resuse the event inherited
|
|
3681 * from Monitor.
|
|
3682 */
|
|
3683
|
|
3684
|
|
3685 void Parker::park(bool isAbsolute, jlong time) {
|
|
3686 guarantee (_ParkEvent != NULL, "invariant") ;
|
|
3687 // First, demultiplex/decode time arguments
|
|
3688 if (time < 0) { // don't wait
|
|
3689 return;
|
|
3690 }
|
|
3691 else if (time == 0) {
|
|
3692 time = INFINITE;
|
|
3693 }
|
|
3694 else if (isAbsolute) {
|
|
3695 time -= os::javaTimeMillis(); // convert to relative time
|
|
3696 if (time <= 0) // already elapsed
|
|
3697 return;
|
|
3698 }
|
|
3699 else { // relative
|
|
3700 time /= 1000000; // Must coarsen from nanos to millis
|
|
3701 if (time == 0) // Wait for the minimal time unit if zero
|
|
3702 time = 1;
|
|
3703 }
|
|
3704
|
|
3705 JavaThread* thread = (JavaThread*)(Thread::current());
|
|
3706 assert(thread->is_Java_thread(), "Must be JavaThread");
|
|
3707 JavaThread *jt = (JavaThread *)thread;
|
|
3708
|
|
3709 // Don't wait if interrupted or already triggered
|
|
3710 if (Thread::is_interrupted(thread, false) ||
|
|
3711 WaitForSingleObject(_ParkEvent, 0) == WAIT_OBJECT_0) {
|
|
3712 ResetEvent(_ParkEvent);
|
|
3713 return;
|
|
3714 }
|
|
3715 else {
|
|
3716 ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(jt);
|
|
3717 OSThreadWaitState osts(thread->osthread(), false /* not Object.wait() */);
|
|
3718 jt->set_suspend_equivalent();
|
|
3719
|
|
3720 WaitForSingleObject(_ParkEvent, time);
|
|
3721 ResetEvent(_ParkEvent);
|
|
3722
|
|
3723 // If externally suspended while waiting, re-suspend
|
|
3724 if (jt->handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition()) {
|
|
3725 jt->java_suspend_self();
|
|
3726 }
|
|
3727 }
|
|
3728 }
|
|
3729
|
|
3730 void Parker::unpark() {
|
|
3731 guarantee (_ParkEvent != NULL, "invariant") ;
|
|
3732 SetEvent(_ParkEvent);
|
|
3733 }
|
|
3734
|
|
3735 // Run the specified command in a separate process. Return its exit value,
|
|
3736 // or -1 on failure (e.g. can't create a new process).
|
|
3737 int os::fork_and_exec(char* cmd) {
|
|
3738 STARTUPINFO si;
|
|
3739 PROCESS_INFORMATION pi;
|
|
3740
|
|
3741 memset(&si, 0, sizeof(si));
|
|
3742 si.cb = sizeof(si);
|
|
3743 memset(&pi, 0, sizeof(pi));
|
|
3744 BOOL rslt = CreateProcess(NULL, // executable name - use command line
|
|
3745 cmd, // command line
|
|
3746 NULL, // process security attribute
|
|
3747 NULL, // thread security attribute
|
|
3748 TRUE, // inherits system handles
|
|
3749 0, // no creation flags
|
|
3750 NULL, // use parent's environment block
|
|
3751 NULL, // use parent's starting directory
|
|
3752 &si, // (in) startup information
|
|
3753 &pi); // (out) process information
|
|
3754
|
|
3755 if (rslt) {
|
|
3756 // Wait until child process exits.
|
|
3757 WaitForSingleObject(pi.hProcess, INFINITE);
|
|
3758
|
|
3759 DWORD exit_code;
|
|
3760 GetExitCodeProcess(pi.hProcess, &exit_code);
|
|
3761
|
|
3762 // Close process and thread handles.
|
|
3763 CloseHandle(pi.hProcess);
|
|
3764 CloseHandle(pi.hThread);
|
|
3765
|
|
3766 return (int)exit_code;
|
|
3767 } else {
|
|
3768 return -1;
|
|
3769 }
|
|
3770 }
|
|
3771
|
|
3772 //--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
3773 // Non-product code
|
|
3774
|
|
3775 static int mallocDebugIntervalCounter = 0;
|
|
3776 static int mallocDebugCounter = 0;
|
|
3777 bool os::check_heap(bool force) {
|
|
3778 if (++mallocDebugCounter < MallocVerifyStart && !force) return true;
|
|
3779 if (++mallocDebugIntervalCounter >= MallocVerifyInterval || force) {
|
|
3780 // Note: HeapValidate executes two hardware breakpoints when it finds something
|
|
3781 // wrong; at these points, eax contains the address of the offending block (I think).
|
|
3782 // To get to the exlicit error message(s) below, just continue twice.
|
|
3783 HANDLE heap = GetProcessHeap();
|
|
3784 { HeapLock(heap);
|
|
3785 PROCESS_HEAP_ENTRY phe;
|
|
3786 phe.lpData = NULL;
|
|
3787 while (HeapWalk(heap, &phe) != 0) {
|
|
3788 if ((phe.wFlags & PROCESS_HEAP_ENTRY_BUSY) &&
|
|
3789 !HeapValidate(heap, 0, phe.lpData)) {
|
|
3790 tty->print_cr("C heap has been corrupted (time: %d allocations)", mallocDebugCounter);
|
|
3791 tty->print_cr("corrupted block near address %#x, length %d", phe.lpData, phe.cbData);
|
|
3792 fatal("corrupted C heap");
|
|
3793 }
|
|
3794 }
|
|
3795 int err = GetLastError();
|
|
3796 if (err != ERROR_NO_MORE_ITEMS && err != ERROR_CALL_NOT_IMPLEMENTED) {
|
|
3797 fatal1("heap walk aborted with error %d", err);
|
|
3798 }
|
|
3799 HeapUnlock(heap);
|
|
3800 }
|
|
3801 mallocDebugIntervalCounter = 0;
|
|
3802 }
|
|
3803 return true;
|
|
3804 }
|
|
3805
|
|
3806
|
|
3807 #ifndef PRODUCT
|
|
3808 bool os::find(address addr) {
|
|
3809 // Nothing yet
|
|
3810 return false;
|
|
3811 }
|
|
3812 #endif
|
|
3813
|
|
3814 LONG WINAPI os::win32::serialize_fault_filter(struct _EXCEPTION_POINTERS* e) {
|
|
3815 DWORD exception_code = e->ExceptionRecord->ExceptionCode;
|
|
3816
|
|
3817 if ( exception_code == EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION ) {
|
|
3818 JavaThread* thread = (JavaThread*)ThreadLocalStorage::get_thread_slow();
|
|
3819 PEXCEPTION_RECORD exceptionRecord = e->ExceptionRecord;
|
|
3820 address addr = (address) exceptionRecord->ExceptionInformation[1];
|
|
3821
|
|
3822 if (os::is_memory_serialize_page(thread, addr))
|
|
3823 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION;
|
|
3824 }
|
|
3825
|
|
3826 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH;
|
|
3827 }
|
|
3828
|
|
3829 static int getLastErrorString(char *buf, size_t len)
|
|
3830 {
|
|
3831 long errval;
|
|
3832
|
|
3833 if ((errval = GetLastError()) != 0)
|
|
3834 {
|
|
3835 /* DOS error */
|
|
3836 size_t n = (size_t)FormatMessage(
|
|
3837 FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM|FORMAT_MESSAGE_IGNORE_INSERTS,
|
|
3838 NULL,
|
|
3839 errval,
|
|
3840 0,
|
|
3841 buf,
|
|
3842 (DWORD)len,
|
|
3843 NULL);
|
|
3844 if (n > 3) {
|
|
3845 /* Drop final '.', CR, LF */
|
|
3846 if (buf[n - 1] == '\n') n--;
|
|
3847 if (buf[n - 1] == '\r') n--;
|
|
3848 if (buf[n - 1] == '.') n--;
|
|
3849 buf[n] = '\0';
|
|
3850 }
|
|
3851 return (int)n;
|
|
3852 }
|
|
3853
|
|
3854 if (errno != 0)
|
|
3855 {
|
|
3856 /* C runtime error that has no corresponding DOS error code */
|
|
3857 const char *s = strerror(errno);
|
|
3858 size_t n = strlen(s);
|
|
3859 if (n >= len) n = len - 1;
|
|
3860 strncpy(buf, s, n);
|
|
3861 buf[n] = '\0';
|
|
3862 return (int)n;
|
|
3863 }
|
|
3864 return 0;
|
|
3865 }
|