| 1 | The collector supports both incremental collection and threads under
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| 2 | Solaris 2. The incremental collector normally retrieves page dirty information
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| 3 | through the appropriate /proc calls. But it can also be configured
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| 4 | (by defining MPROTECT_VDB instead of PROC_VDB in gcconfig.h) to use mprotect
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| 5 | and signals. This may result in shorter pause times, but it is no longer
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| 6 | safe to issue arbitrary system calls that write to the heap.
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| 7 |
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| 8 | Under other UNIX versions,
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| 9 | the collector normally obtains memory through sbrk. There is some reason
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| 10 | to expect that this is not safe if the client program also calls the system
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| 11 | malloc, or especially realloc. The sbrk man page strongly suggests this is
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| 12 | not safe: "Many library routines use malloc() internally, so use brk()
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| 13 | and sbrk() only when you know that malloc() definitely will not be used by
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| 14 | any library routine." This doesn't make a lot of sense to me, since there
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| 15 | seems to be no documentation as to which routines can transitively call malloc.
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| 16 | Nonetheless, under Solaris2, the collector now (since 4.12) allocates
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| 17 | memory using mmap by default. (It defines USE_MMAP in gcconfig.h.)
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| 18 | You may want to reverse this decisions if you use -DREDIRECT_MALLOC=...
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| 19 |
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| 20 |
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| 21 | SOLARIS THREADS:
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| 22 |
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| 23 | The collector must be compiled with -DGC_SOLARIS_THREADS (thr_ functions)
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| 24 | or -DGC_SOLARIS_PTHREADS (pthread_ functions) to be thread safe.
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| 25 | It is also essential that gc.h be included in files that call thr_create,
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| 26 | thr_join, thr_suspend, thr_continue, or dlopen. Gc.h macro defines
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| 27 | these to also do GC bookkeeping, etc. Gc.h must be included with
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| 28 | one or both of these macros defined, otherwise
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| 29 | these replacements are not visible.
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| 30 | A collector built in this way way only be used by programs that are
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| 31 | linked with the threads library.
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| 32 |
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| 33 | In this mode, the collector contains various workarounds for older Solaris
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| 34 | bugs. Mostly, these should not be noticeable unless you look at system
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| 35 | call traces. However, it cannot protect a guard page at the end of
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| 36 | a thread stack. If you know that you will only be running Solaris2.5
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| 37 | or later, it should be possible to fix this by compiling the collector
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| 38 | with -DSOLARIS23_MPROTECT_BUG_FIXED.
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| 39 |
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| 40 | Since 5.0 alpha5, dlopen disables collection temporarily,
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| 41 | unless USE_PROC_FOR_LIBRARIES is defined. In some unlikely cases, this
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| 42 | can result in unpleasant heap growth. But it seems better than the
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| 43 | race/deadlock issues we had before.
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| 44 |
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| 45 | If solaris_threads are used on an X86 processor with malloc redirected to
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| 46 | GC_malloc, it is necessary to call GC_thr_init explicitly before forking the
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| 47 | first thread. (This avoids a deadlock arising from calling GC_thr_init
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| 48 | with the allocation lock held.)
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| 49 |
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| 50 | It appears that there is a problem in using gc_cpp.h in conjunction with
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| 51 | Solaris threads and Sun's C++ runtime. Apparently the overloaded new operator
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| 52 | is invoked by some iostream initialization code before threads are correctly
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| 53 | initialized. As a result, call to thr_self() in garbage collector
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| 54 | initialization segfaults. Currently the only known workaround is to not
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| 55 | invoke the garbage collector from a user defined global operator new, or to
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| 56 | have it invoke the garbage-collector's allocators only after main has started.
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| 57 | (Note that the latter requires a moderately expensive test in operator
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| 58 | delete.)
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| 59 |
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| 60 | Hans-J. Boehm
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| 61 | (The above contains my personal opinions, which are probably not shared
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| 62 | by anyone else.)
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