runtime knows how to get the time of day
without allocating memory.
R=golang-dev, dsymonds, dave, hectorchu, r, cw
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5297078
Running test/garbage/parser.out.
On a 4-core Lenovo X201s (Linux):
31.12u 0.60s 31.74r 1 cpu, no atomics
32.27u 0.58s 32.86r 1 cpu, atomic instructions
33.04u 0.83s 27.47r 2 cpu
On a 16-core Xeon (Linux):
33.08u 0.65s 33.80r 1 cpu, no atomics
34.87u 1.12s 29.60r 2 cpu
36.00u 1.87s 28.43r 3 cpu
36.46u 2.34s 27.10r 4 cpu
38.28u 3.85s 26.92r 5 cpu
37.72u 5.25s 26.73r 6 cpu
39.63u 7.11s 26.95r 7 cpu
39.67u 8.10s 26.68r 8 cpu
On a 2-core MacBook Pro Core 2 Duo 2.26 (circa 2009, MacBookPro5,5):
39.43u 1.45s 41.27r 1 cpu, no atomics
43.98u 2.95s 38.69r 2 cpu
On a 2-core Mac Mini Core 2 Duo 1.83 (circa 2008; Macmini2,1):
48.81u 2.12s 51.76r 1 cpu, no atomics
57.15u 4.72s 51.54r 2 cpu
The handoff algorithm is really only good for two cores.
Beyond that we will need to so something more sophisticated,
like have each core hand off to the next one, around a circle.
Even so, the code is a good checkpoint; for now we'll limit the
number of gc procs to at most 2.
R=dvyukov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4641082
This change was adapted from gccgo's libgo/runtime/mem.c at
Ian Taylor's suggestion. It fixes all.bash failing with
"address space conflict: map() =" on amd64 Linux with kernel
version 2.6.32.8-grsec-2.1.14-modsign-xeon-64.
With this change, SysMap will use MAP_FIXED to allocate its desired
address space, after first calling mincore to check that there is
nothing else mapped there.
R=iant, dave, n13m3y3r, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4438091
The existing code assumed that signals only arrived
while executing on the goroutine stack (g == m->curg),
not while executing on the scheduler stack (g == m->g0).
Most of the signal handling trampolines correctly saved
and restored g already, but the sighandler C code did not
have access to it.
Some rewriting of assembly to make the various
implementations as similar as possible.
Will need to change Windows too but I don't
understand how sigtramp gets called there.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4203042
Prefix all external symbols in runtime by runtime·,
to avoid conflicts with possible symbols of the same
name in linked-in C libraries. The obvious conflicts
are printf, malloc, and free, but hide everything to
avoid future pain.
The symbols left alone are:
** known to cgo **
_cgo_free
_cgo_malloc
libcgo_thread_start
initcgo
ncgocall
** known to linker **
_rt0_$GOARCH
_rt0_$GOARCH_$GOOS
text
etext
data
end
pclntab
epclntab
symtab
esymtab
** known to C compiler **
_divv
_modv
_div64by32
etc (arch specific)
Tested on darwin/386, darwin/amd64, linux/386, linux/amd64.
Built (but not tested) for freebsd/386, freebsd/amd64, linux/arm, windows/386.
R=r, PeterGo
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2899041
Old code was using recursion to traverse object graph.
New code uses an explicit stack, cutting the per-pointer
footprint to two words during the recursion and avoiding
the standard allocator and stack splitting code.
in test/garbage:
Reduces parser runtime by 2-3%
Reduces Peano runtime by 40%
Increases tree runtime by 4-5%
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2150042
Cannot assume that g == m->curg at time of signal.
Must save actual g and restore.
Fixes flaky crashes with messages like
throw: malloc mlookup
throw: malloc/free - deadlock
throw: unwindstack on self
throw: free mlookup
(and probably others) when running cgo.
R=iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1648043
FreeBSD was passing stk as the new thread's stack base, while
stk is the top of the stack in go. The added check should cause
a trap if this ever comes up in any new ports, or regresses
in current ones.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/167055
SELinux will cause mmap to fail when we request w+x memory unless the
user has configured their policies. We have a warning in make.bash,
but it's quite likely that the policy will be reset at some point and
then all their binaries start failing.
This patch prints a warning on Linux when mmap fails with EACCES.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/152086
because they are in package runtime.
another step to enforcing package boundaries.
R=r
DELTA=732 (114 added, 93 deleted, 525 changed)
OCL=35811
CL=35824
better mach binaries.
cgo working on darwin+linux amd64+386.
eliminated context switches - pi is 30x faster.
add libcgo to build.
on snow leopard:
- non-cgo binaries work; all tests pass.
- cgo binaries work on amd64 but not 386.
R=r
DELTA=2031 (1316 added, 626 deleted, 89 changed)
OCL=35264
CL=35304
* change ldt0setup to set GS itself; nacl won't let us do it.
* change breakpoint to INT $3 so 8l can translate to HLT for nacl.
* panic if closure is needed on nacl.
* do not try to access symbol table on nacl.
* mmap in 64kB chunks.
nacl support:
* system calls, threading, locks.
R=r
DELTA=365 (357 added, 5 deleted, 3 changed)
OCL=34880
CL=34906