1
0
mirror of https://github.com/golang/go synced 2024-10-02 12:18:33 -06:00
go/src/runtime/malloc.go

822 lines
23 KiB
Go
Raw Normal View History

// Copyright 2014 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package runtime
import (
"unsafe"
)
const (
debugMalloc = false
flagNoScan = _FlagNoScan
flagNoZero = _FlagNoZero
maxTinySize = _TinySize
tinySizeClass = _TinySizeClass
maxSmallSize = _MaxSmallSize
pageShift = _PageShift
pageSize = _PageSize
pageMask = _PageMask
bitsPerPointer = _BitsPerPointer
bitsMask = _BitsMask
pointersPerByte = _PointersPerByte
maxGCMask = _MaxGCMask
bitsDead = _BitsDead
bitsPointer = _BitsPointer
mSpanInUse = _MSpanInUse
concurrentSweep = _ConcurrentSweep != 0
)
// Page number (address>>pageShift)
type pageID uintptr
// base address for all 0-byte allocations
var zerobase uintptr
// Allocate an object of size bytes.
// Small objects are allocated from the per-P cache's free lists.
// Large objects (> 32 kB) are allocated straight from the heap.
func mallocgc(size uintptr, typ *_type, flags int) unsafe.Pointer {
if size == 0 {
return unsafe.Pointer(&zerobase)
}
size0 := size
if flags&flagNoScan == 0 && typ == nil {
gothrow("malloc missing type")
}
// This function must be atomic wrt GC, but for performance reasons
// we don't acquirem/releasem on fast path. The code below does not have
// split stack checks, so it can't be preempted by GC.
// Functions like roundup/add are inlined. And onM/racemalloc are nosplit.
// If debugMalloc = true, these assumptions are checked below.
if debugMalloc {
mp := acquirem()
if mp.mallocing != 0 {
gothrow("malloc deadlock")
}
mp.mallocing = 1
if mp.curg != nil {
mp.curg.stackguard0 = ^uintptr(0xfff) | 0xbad
}
}
c := gomcache()
var s *mspan
var x unsafe.Pointer
if size <= maxSmallSize {
if flags&flagNoScan != 0 && size < maxTinySize {
// Tiny allocator.
//
// Tiny allocator combines several tiny allocation requests
// into a single memory block. The resulting memory block
// is freed when all subobjects are unreachable. The subobjects
// must be FlagNoScan (don't have pointers), this ensures that
// the amount of potentially wasted memory is bounded.
//
// Size of the memory block used for combining (maxTinySize) is tunable.
// Current setting is 16 bytes, which relates to 2x worst case memory
// wastage (when all but one subobjects are unreachable).
// 8 bytes would result in no wastage at all, but provides less
// opportunities for combining.
// 32 bytes provides more opportunities for combining,
// but can lead to 4x worst case wastage.
// The best case winning is 8x regardless of block size.
//
// Objects obtained from tiny allocator must not be freed explicitly.
// So when an object will be freed explicitly, we ensure that
// its size >= maxTinySize.
//
// SetFinalizer has a special case for objects potentially coming
// from tiny allocator, it such case it allows to set finalizers
// for an inner byte of a memory block.
//
// The main targets of tiny allocator are small strings and
// standalone escaping variables. On a json benchmark
// the allocator reduces number of allocations by ~12% and
// reduces heap size by ~20%.
tinysize := uintptr(c.tinysize)
if size <= tinysize {
tiny := unsafe.Pointer(c.tiny)
// Align tiny pointer for required (conservative) alignment.
if size&7 == 0 {
tiny = roundup(tiny, 8)
} else if size&3 == 0 {
tiny = roundup(tiny, 4)
} else if size&1 == 0 {
tiny = roundup(tiny, 2)
}
size1 := size + (uintptr(tiny) - uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(c.tiny)))
if size1 <= tinysize {
// The object fits into existing tiny block.
x = tiny
c.tiny = (*byte)(add(x, size))
c.tinysize -= uintptr(size1)
if debugMalloc {
mp := acquirem()
if mp.mallocing == 0 {
gothrow("bad malloc")
}
mp.mallocing = 0
if mp.curg != nil {
mp.curg.stackguard0 = mp.curg.stack.lo + _StackGuard
}
// Note: one releasem for the acquirem just above.
// The other for the acquirem at start of malloc.
releasem(mp)
releasem(mp)
}
return x
}
}
// Allocate a new maxTinySize block.
s = c.alloc[tinySizeClass]
v := s.freelist
if v == nil {
mp := acquirem()
mp.scalararg[0] = tinySizeClass
onM(mcacheRefill_m)
releasem(mp)
s = c.alloc[tinySizeClass]
v = s.freelist
}
s.freelist = v.next
s.ref++
//TODO: prefetch v.next
x = unsafe.Pointer(v)
(*[2]uint64)(x)[0] = 0
(*[2]uint64)(x)[1] = 0
// See if we need to replace the existing tiny block with the new one
// based on amount of remaining free space.
if maxTinySize-size > tinysize {
c.tiny = (*byte)(add(x, size))
c.tinysize = uintptr(maxTinySize - size)
}
size = maxTinySize
} else {
var sizeclass int8
if size <= 1024-8 {
sizeclass = size_to_class8[(size+7)>>3]
} else {
sizeclass = size_to_class128[(size-1024+127)>>7]
}
size = uintptr(class_to_size[sizeclass])
s = c.alloc[sizeclass]
v := s.freelist
if v == nil {
mp := acquirem()
mp.scalararg[0] = uintptr(sizeclass)
onM(mcacheRefill_m)
releasem(mp)
s = c.alloc[sizeclass]
v = s.freelist
}
s.freelist = v.next
s.ref++
//TODO: prefetch
x = unsafe.Pointer(v)
if flags&flagNoZero == 0 {
v.next = nil
if size > 2*ptrSize && ((*[2]uintptr)(x))[1] != 0 {
memclr(unsafe.Pointer(v), size)
}
}
}
c.local_cachealloc += intptr(size)
} else {
mp := acquirem()
mp.scalararg[0] = uintptr(size)
mp.scalararg[1] = uintptr(flags)
onM(largeAlloc_m)
s = (*mspan)(mp.ptrarg[0])
mp.ptrarg[0] = nil
releasem(mp)
x = unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(s.start << pageShift))
size = uintptr(s.elemsize)
}
if flags&flagNoScan != 0 {
// All objects are pre-marked as noscan.
goto marked
}
runtime: use traceback to traverse defer structures This makes the GC and the stack copying agree about how to interpret the defer structures. Previously, only the stack copying treated them precisely. This removes an untyped memory allocation and fixes at least three copystack bugs. To make sure the GC can find the deferred argument frame until it has been copied, keep a Defer on the defer list during its execution. In addition to making it possible to remove the untyped memory allocation, keeping the Defer on the list fixes two races between copystack and execution of defers (in both gopanic and Goexit). The problem is that once the defer has been taken off the list, a stack copy that happens before the deferred arguments have been copied back to the stack will not update the arguments correctly. The new tests TestDeferPtrsPanic and TestDeferPtrsGoexit (variations on the existing TestDeferPtrs) pass now but failed before this CL. In addition to those fixes, keeping the Defer on the list helps correct a dangling pointer error during copystack. The traceback routines walk the Defer chain to provide information about where a panic may resume execution. When the executing Defer was not on the Defer chain but instead linked from the Panic chain, the traceback had to walk the Panic chain too. But Panic structs are on the stack and being updated by copystack. Traceback's use of the Panic chain while copystack is updating those structs means that it can follow an updated pointer and find itself reading from the new stack. The new stack is usually all zeros, so it sees an incorrect early end to the chain. The new TestPanicUseStack makes this happen at tip and dies when adjustdefers finds an unexpected argp. The new StackCopyPoison mode causes an earlier bad dereference instead. By keeping the Defer on the list, traceback can avoid walking the Panic chain at all, making it okay for copystack to update the Panics. We'd have the same problem for any Defers on the stack. There was only one: gopanic's dabort. Since we are not taking the executing Defer off the chain, we can use it to do what dabort was doing, and then there are no Defers on the stack ever, so it is okay for traceback to use the Defer chain even while copystack is executing: copystack cannot modify the Defer chain. LGTM=khr R=khr CC=dvyukov, golang-codereviews, iant, rlh https://golang.org/cl/141490043
2014-09-16 08:36:38 -06:00
// If allocating a defer+arg block, now that we've picked a malloc size
// large enough to hold everything, cut the "asked for" size down to
// just the defer header, so that the GC bitmap will record the arg block
// as containing nothing at all (as if it were unused space at the end of
// a malloc block caused by size rounding).
// The defer arg areas are scanned as part of scanstack.
if typ == deferType {
size0 = unsafe.Sizeof(_defer{})
}
// From here till marked label marking the object as allocated
// and storing type info in the GC bitmap.
{
arena_start := uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(mheap_.arena_start))
off := (uintptr(x) - arena_start) / ptrSize
xbits := (*uint8)(unsafe.Pointer(arena_start - off/wordsPerBitmapByte - 1))
shift := (off % wordsPerBitmapByte) * gcBits
if debugMalloc && ((*xbits>>shift)&(bitMask|bitPtrMask)) != bitBoundary {
println("runtime: bits =", (*xbits>>shift)&(bitMask|bitPtrMask))
gothrow("bad bits in markallocated")
}
var ti, te uintptr
var ptrmask *uint8
if size == ptrSize {
// It's one word and it has pointers, it must be a pointer.
*xbits |= (bitsPointer << 2) << shift
goto marked
}
if typ.kind&kindGCProg != 0 {
nptr := (uintptr(typ.size) + ptrSize - 1) / ptrSize
masksize := nptr
if masksize%2 != 0 {
masksize *= 2 // repeated
}
masksize = masksize * pointersPerByte / 8 // 4 bits per word
masksize++ // unroll flag in the beginning
if masksize > maxGCMask && typ.gc[1] != 0 {
// If the mask is too large, unroll the program directly
// into the GC bitmap. It's 7 times slower than copying
// from the pre-unrolled mask, but saves 1/16 of type size
// memory for the mask.
mp := acquirem()
mp.ptrarg[0] = x
mp.ptrarg[1] = unsafe.Pointer(typ)
mp.scalararg[0] = uintptr(size)
mp.scalararg[1] = uintptr(size0)
onM(unrollgcproginplace_m)
releasem(mp)
goto marked
}
ptrmask = (*uint8)(unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(typ.gc[0])))
// Check whether the program is already unrolled.
if uintptr(atomicloadp(unsafe.Pointer(ptrmask)))&0xff == 0 {
mp := acquirem()
mp.ptrarg[0] = unsafe.Pointer(typ)
onM(unrollgcprog_m)
releasem(mp)
}
ptrmask = (*uint8)(add(unsafe.Pointer(ptrmask), 1)) // skip the unroll flag byte
} else {
ptrmask = (*uint8)(unsafe.Pointer(&typ.gc[0])) // embed mask
}
if size == 2*ptrSize {
*xbits = *ptrmask | bitBoundary
goto marked
}
te = uintptr(typ.size) / ptrSize
// If the type occupies odd number of words, its mask is repeated.
if te%2 == 0 {
te /= 2
}
// Copy pointer bitmask into the bitmap.
for i := uintptr(0); i < size0; i += 2 * ptrSize {
v := *(*uint8)(add(unsafe.Pointer(ptrmask), ti))
ti++
if ti == te {
ti = 0
}
if i == 0 {
v |= bitBoundary
}
if i+ptrSize == size0 {
v &^= uint8(bitPtrMask << 4)
}
*xbits = v
xbits = (*byte)(add(unsafe.Pointer(xbits), ^uintptr(0)))
}
if size0%(2*ptrSize) == 0 && size0 < size {
// Mark the word after last object's word as bitsDead.
*xbits = bitsDead << 2
}
}
marked:
if raceenabled {
racemalloc(x, size)
}
if debugMalloc {
mp := acquirem()
if mp.mallocing == 0 {
gothrow("bad malloc")
}
mp.mallocing = 0
if mp.curg != nil {
mp.curg.stackguard0 = mp.curg.stack.lo + _StackGuard
}
// Note: one releasem for the acquirem just above.
// The other for the acquirem at start of malloc.
releasem(mp)
releasem(mp)
}
if debug.allocfreetrace != 0 {
tracealloc(x, size, typ)
}
if rate := MemProfileRate; rate > 0 {
if size < uintptr(rate) && int32(size) < c.next_sample {
c.next_sample -= int32(size)
} else {
mp := acquirem()
profilealloc(mp, x, size)
releasem(mp)
}
}
if memstats.heap_alloc >= memstats.next_gc {
gogc(0)
}
return x
}
// implementation of new builtin
func newobject(typ *_type) unsafe.Pointer {
flags := 0
if typ.kind&kindNoPointers != 0 {
flags |= flagNoScan
}
return mallocgc(uintptr(typ.size), typ, flags)
}
// implementation of make builtin for slices
func newarray(typ *_type, n uintptr) unsafe.Pointer {
flags := 0
if typ.kind&kindNoPointers != 0 {
flags |= flagNoScan
}
if int(n) < 0 || (typ.size > 0 && n > maxmem/uintptr(typ.size)) {
panic("runtime: allocation size out of range")
}
return mallocgc(uintptr(typ.size)*n, typ, flags)
}
// rawmem returns a chunk of pointerless memory. It is
// not zeroed.
func rawmem(size uintptr) unsafe.Pointer {
return mallocgc(size, nil, flagNoScan|flagNoZero)
}
// round size up to next size class
func goroundupsize(size uintptr) uintptr {
if size < maxSmallSize {
if size <= 1024-8 {
return uintptr(class_to_size[size_to_class8[(size+7)>>3]])
}
return uintptr(class_to_size[size_to_class128[(size-1024+127)>>7]])
}
if size+pageSize < size {
return size
}
return (size + pageSize - 1) &^ pageMask
}
func profilealloc(mp *m, x unsafe.Pointer, size uintptr) {
c := mp.mcache
rate := MemProfileRate
if size < uintptr(rate) {
// pick next profile time
// If you change this, also change allocmcache.
if rate > 0x3fffffff { // make 2*rate not overflow
rate = 0x3fffffff
}
next := int32(fastrand1()) % (2 * int32(rate))
// Subtract the "remainder" of the current allocation.
// Otherwise objects that are close in size to sampling rate
// will be under-sampled, because we consistently discard this remainder.
next -= (int32(size) - c.next_sample)
if next < 0 {
next = 0
}
c.next_sample = next
}
mProf_Malloc(x, size)
}
// force = 1 - do GC regardless of current heap usage
// force = 2 - go GC and eager sweep
func gogc(force int32) {
// The gc is turned off (via enablegc) until the bootstrap has completed.
// Also, malloc gets called in the guts of a number of libraries that might be
// holding locks. To avoid deadlocks during stoptheworld, don't bother
// trying to run gc while holding a lock. The next mallocgc without a lock
// will do the gc instead.
mp := acquirem()
if gp := getg(); gp == mp.g0 || mp.locks > 1 || !memstats.enablegc || panicking != 0 || gcpercent < 0 {
releasem(mp)
return
}
releasem(mp)
mp = nil
semacquire(&worldsema, false)
if force == 0 && memstats.heap_alloc < memstats.next_gc {
// typically threads which lost the race to grab
// worldsema exit here when gc is done.
semrelease(&worldsema)
return
}
// Ok, we're doing it! Stop everybody else
startTime := nanotime()
mp = acquirem()
mp.gcing = 1
releasem(mp)
onM(stoptheworld)
if mp != acquirem() {
gothrow("gogc: rescheduled")
}
clearpools()
// Run gc on the g0 stack. We do this so that the g stack
// we're currently running on will no longer change. Cuts
// the root set down a bit (g0 stacks are not scanned, and
// we don't need to scan gc's internal state). We also
// need to switch to g0 so we can shrink the stack.
n := 1
if debug.gctrace > 1 {
n = 2
}
for i := 0; i < n; i++ {
if i > 0 {
startTime = nanotime()
}
// switch to g0, call gc, then switch back
mp.scalararg[0] = uintptr(uint32(startTime)) // low 32 bits
mp.scalararg[1] = uintptr(startTime >> 32) // high 32 bits
if force >= 2 {
mp.scalararg[2] = 1 // eagersweep
} else {
mp.scalararg[2] = 0
}
onM(gc_m)
}
// all done
mp.gcing = 0
semrelease(&worldsema)
onM(starttheworld)
releasem(mp)
mp = nil
// now that gc is done, kick off finalizer thread if needed
if !concurrentSweep {
// give the queued finalizers, if any, a chance to run
Gosched()
}
}
// GC runs a garbage collection.
func GC() {
gogc(2)
}
// SetFinalizer sets the finalizer associated with x to f.
// When the garbage collector finds an unreachable block
// with an associated finalizer, it clears the association and runs
// f(x) in a separate goroutine. This makes x reachable again, but
// now without an associated finalizer. Assuming that SetFinalizer
// is not called again, the next time the garbage collector sees
// that x is unreachable, it will free x.
//
// SetFinalizer(x, nil) clears any finalizer associated with x.
//
// The argument x must be a pointer to an object allocated by
// calling new or by taking the address of a composite literal.
// The argument f must be a function that takes a single argument
// to which x's type can be assigned, and can have arbitrary ignored return
// values. If either of these is not true, SetFinalizer aborts the
// program.
//
// Finalizers are run in dependency order: if A points at B, both have
// finalizers, and they are otherwise unreachable, only the finalizer
// for A runs; once A is freed, the finalizer for B can run.
// If a cyclic structure includes a block with a finalizer, that
// cycle is not guaranteed to be garbage collected and the finalizer
// is not guaranteed to run, because there is no ordering that
// respects the dependencies.
//
// The finalizer for x is scheduled to run at some arbitrary time after
// x becomes unreachable.
// There is no guarantee that finalizers will run before a program exits,
// so typically they are useful only for releasing non-memory resources
// associated with an object during a long-running program.
// For example, an os.File object could use a finalizer to close the
// associated operating system file descriptor when a program discards
// an os.File without calling Close, but it would be a mistake
// to depend on a finalizer to flush an in-memory I/O buffer such as a
// bufio.Writer, because the buffer would not be flushed at program exit.
//
// It is not guaranteed that a finalizer will run if the size of *x is
// zero bytes.
//
// A single goroutine runs all finalizers for a program, sequentially.
// If a finalizer must run for a long time, it should do so by starting
// a new goroutine.
func SetFinalizer(obj interface{}, finalizer interface{}) {
e := (*eface)(unsafe.Pointer(&obj))
etyp := e._type
if etyp == nil {
gothrow("runtime.SetFinalizer: first argument is nil")
}
if etyp.kind&kindMask != kindPtr {
gothrow("runtime.SetFinalizer: first argument is " + *etyp._string + ", not pointer")
}
ot := (*ptrtype)(unsafe.Pointer(etyp))
if ot.elem == nil {
gothrow("nil elem type!")
}
// As an implementation detail we do not run finalizers for zero-sized objects,
// because we use &runtime·zerobase for all such allocations.
if ot.elem.size == 0 {
return
}
// find the containing object
_, base, _ := findObject(e.data)
// The following check is required for cases when a user passes a pointer to composite
// literal, but compiler makes it a pointer to global. For example:
// var Foo = &Object{}
// func main() {
// runtime.SetFinalizer(Foo, nil)
// }
// See issue 7656.
if base == nil {
return
}
if e.data != base {
// As an implementation detail we allow to set finalizers for an inner byte
// of an object if it could come from tiny alloc (see mallocgc for details).
if ot.elem == nil || ot.elem.kind&kindNoPointers == 0 || ot.elem.size >= maxTinySize {
gothrow("runtime.SetFinalizer: pointer not at beginning of allocated block")
}
}
f := (*eface)(unsafe.Pointer(&finalizer))
ftyp := f._type
if ftyp == nil {
// switch to M stack and remove finalizer
mp := acquirem()
mp.ptrarg[0] = e.data
onM(removeFinalizer_m)
releasem(mp)
return
}
if ftyp.kind&kindMask != kindFunc {
gothrow("runtime.SetFinalizer: second argument is " + *ftyp._string + ", not a function")
}
ft := (*functype)(unsafe.Pointer(ftyp))
ins := *(*[]*_type)(unsafe.Pointer(&ft.in))
if ft.dotdotdot || len(ins) != 1 {
gothrow("runtime.SetFinalizer: cannot pass " + *etyp._string + " to finalizer " + *ftyp._string)
}
fint := ins[0]
switch {
case fint == etyp:
// ok - same type
goto okarg
case fint.kind&kindMask == kindPtr:
if (fint.x == nil || fint.x.name == nil || etyp.x == nil || etyp.x.name == nil) && (*ptrtype)(unsafe.Pointer(fint)).elem == ot.elem {
// ok - not same type, but both pointers,
// one or the other is unnamed, and same element type, so assignable.
goto okarg
}
case fint.kind&kindMask == kindInterface:
ityp := (*interfacetype)(unsafe.Pointer(fint))
if len(ityp.mhdr) == 0 {
// ok - satisfies empty interface
goto okarg
}
if _, ok := assertE2I2(ityp, obj); ok {
goto okarg
}
}
gothrow("runtime.SetFinalizer: cannot pass " + *etyp._string + " to finalizer " + *ftyp._string)
okarg:
// compute size needed for return parameters
nret := uintptr(0)
for _, t := range *(*[]*_type)(unsafe.Pointer(&ft.out)) {
nret = round(nret, uintptr(t.align)) + uintptr(t.size)
}
nret = round(nret, ptrSize)
// make sure we have a finalizer goroutine
createfing()
// switch to M stack to add finalizer record
mp := acquirem()
mp.ptrarg[0] = f.data
mp.ptrarg[1] = e.data
mp.scalararg[0] = nret
mp.ptrarg[2] = unsafe.Pointer(fint)
mp.ptrarg[3] = unsafe.Pointer(ot)
onM(setFinalizer_m)
if mp.scalararg[0] != 1 {
gothrow("runtime.SetFinalizer: finalizer already set")
}
releasem(mp)
}
// round n up to a multiple of a. a must be a power of 2.
func round(n, a uintptr) uintptr {
return (n + a - 1) &^ (a - 1)
}
// Look up pointer v in heap. Return the span containing the object,
// the start of the object, and the size of the object. If the object
// does not exist, return nil, nil, 0.
func findObject(v unsafe.Pointer) (s *mspan, x unsafe.Pointer, n uintptr) {
c := gomcache()
c.local_nlookup++
if ptrSize == 4 && c.local_nlookup >= 1<<30 {
// purge cache stats to prevent overflow
lock(&mheap_.lock)
purgecachedstats(c)
unlock(&mheap_.lock)
}
// find span
arena_start := uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(mheap_.arena_start))
arena_used := uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(mheap_.arena_used))
if uintptr(v) < arena_start || uintptr(v) >= arena_used {
return
}
p := uintptr(v) >> pageShift
q := p - arena_start>>pageShift
s = *(**mspan)(add(unsafe.Pointer(mheap_.spans), q*ptrSize))
if s == nil {
return
}
x = unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(s.start) << pageShift)
if uintptr(v) < uintptr(x) || uintptr(v) >= uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(s.limit)) || s.state != mSpanInUse {
s = nil
x = nil
return
}
n = uintptr(s.elemsize)
if s.sizeclass != 0 {
x = add(x, (uintptr(v)-uintptr(x))/n*n)
}
return
}
var fingCreate uint32
func createfing() {
// start the finalizer goroutine exactly once
if fingCreate == 0 && cas(&fingCreate, 0, 1) {
go runfinq()
}
}
// This is the goroutine that runs all of the finalizers
func runfinq() {
var (
frame unsafe.Pointer
framecap uintptr
)
for {
lock(&finlock)
fb := finq
finq = nil
if fb == nil {
gp := getg()
fing = gp
fingwait = true
gp.issystem = true
goparkunlock(&finlock, "finalizer wait")
gp.issystem = false
continue
}
unlock(&finlock)
if raceenabled {
racefingo()
}
for fb != nil {
for i := int32(0); i < fb.cnt; i++ {
f := (*finalizer)(add(unsafe.Pointer(&fb.fin), uintptr(i)*unsafe.Sizeof(finalizer{})))
framesz := unsafe.Sizeof((interface{})(nil)) + uintptr(f.nret)
if framecap < framesz {
// The frame does not contain pointers interesting for GC,
// all not yet finalized objects are stored in finq.
// If we do not mark it as FlagNoScan,
// the last finalized object is not collected.
frame = mallocgc(framesz, nil, flagNoScan)
framecap = framesz
}
if f.fint == nil {
gothrow("missing type in runfinq")
}
switch f.fint.kind & kindMask {
case kindPtr:
// direct use of pointer
*(*unsafe.Pointer)(frame) = f.arg
case kindInterface:
ityp := (*interfacetype)(unsafe.Pointer(f.fint))
// set up with empty interface
(*eface)(frame)._type = &f.ot.typ
(*eface)(frame).data = f.arg
if len(ityp.mhdr) != 0 {
// convert to interface with methods
// this conversion is guaranteed to succeed - we checked in SetFinalizer
*(*fInterface)(frame) = assertE2I(ityp, *(*interface{})(frame))
}
default:
gothrow("bad kind in runfinq")
}
reflectcall(unsafe.Pointer(f.fn), frame, uint32(framesz), uint32(framesz))
// drop finalizer queue references to finalized object
f.fn = nil
f.arg = nil
f.ot = nil
}
fb.cnt = 0
next := fb.next
lock(&finlock)
fb.next = finc
finc = fb
unlock(&finlock)
fb = next
}
}
}
var persistent struct {
lock mutex
pos unsafe.Pointer
end unsafe.Pointer
}
// Wrapper around sysAlloc that can allocate small chunks.
// There is no associated free operation.
// Intended for things like function/type/debug-related persistent data.
// If align is 0, uses default align (currently 8).
func persistentalloc(size, align uintptr, stat *uint64) unsafe.Pointer {
const (
chunk = 256 << 10
maxBlock = 64 << 10 // VM reservation granularity is 64K on windows
)
if align != 0 {
if align&(align-1) != 0 {
gothrow("persistentalloc: align is not a power of 2")
}
if align > _PageSize {
gothrow("persistentalloc: align is too large")
}
} else {
align = 8
}
if size >= maxBlock {
return sysAlloc(size, stat)
}
lock(&persistent.lock)
persistent.pos = roundup(persistent.pos, align)
if uintptr(persistent.pos)+size > uintptr(persistent.end) {
persistent.pos = sysAlloc(chunk, &memstats.other_sys)
if persistent.pos == nil {
unlock(&persistent.lock)
gothrow("runtime: cannot allocate memory")
}
persistent.end = add(persistent.pos, chunk)
}
p := persistent.pos
persistent.pos = add(persistent.pos, size)
unlock(&persistent.lock)
if stat != &memstats.other_sys {
xadd64(stat, int64(size))
xadd64(&memstats.other_sys, -int64(size))
}
return p
}