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Commit Graph

1668 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Brad Fitzpatrick
371e44e5a1 runtime/race: update two stale references
Fixes #13550

Change-Id: I407daad8b94f6773d7949ba27981d26cbfd2cdf4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17682
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-12-09 18:11:42 +00:00
Russ Cox
50c5042047 runtime: best-effort detection of concurrent misuse of maps
If reports like #13062 are really concurrent misuse of maps,
we can detect that, at least some of the time, with a cheap check.

There is an extra pair of memory writes for writing to a map,
but to the same cache line as h.count, which is often being modified anyway,
and there is an extra memory read for reading from a map,
but to the same cache line as h.count, which is always being read anyway.
So the check should be basically invisible and may help reduce the
number of "mysterious runtime crash due to map misuse" reports.

Change-Id: I0e71b0d92eaa3b7bef48bf41b0f5ab790092487e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17501
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2015-12-07 20:19:52 +00:00
Russ Cox
b9fde8605e runtime: fix integer comparison in signal handling
(sig is unsigned, so sig-1 >= 0 is always true.)

Fixes #11281.

Change-Id: I4b9d784da6e3cc80816f2d2f7228d5d8a237e2d5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17457
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-12-05 21:23:35 +00:00
Russ Cox
c5a94ba24f runtime: document that NumCPU does not change
Fixes #11609.

Change-Id: I3cf64164fde28ebf739706728b84d8ef5b6dc90e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17456
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-12-05 20:16:35 +00:00
Shenghou Ma
35e84546d7 runtime: check and fail early with a message if MMX is not available on 386
Fixes #12970.

Change-Id: Id0026e8274e071d65d47df63d65a93110abbec5d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/15998
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-12-05 17:43:51 +00:00
Russ Cox
cd58f44b20 runtime/cgo: assume Solaris thread stack is at least 1 MB
When run with "ulimit -s unlimited", the misc/cgo/test test binary
finds a stack size of 0x3000 returned by getcontext, causing the
runtime to try to stay within those bounds and then fault when
called back in the test after 64 kB has been used by C.

I suspect that Solaris is doing something clever like reporting the
current stack size and growing the stack as faults happen.
On all the other systems, getcontext reports the maximum stack size.
And when the ulimit is not unlimited, even Solaris reports the
maximum stack size.

Work around this by assuming that any stack on Solaris must be at least 1 MB.

Fixes #12210.

Change-Id: I0a6ed0afb8a8f50aa1b2486f32b4ae470ab47dbf
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17452
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-12-05 03:56:06 +00:00
Austin Clements
bb6fb929d6 runtime: fix sanity check in stackBarrier
stackBarrier on amd64 sanity checks that it's unwinding the correct
entry in the stack barrier array. However, this check is wrong in two
ways that make it unlikely to catch anything, right or wrong:

1) It checks that savedLRPtr == SP, but, in fact, it should be that
   savedLRPtr+8 == SP because the RET that returned to stackBarrier
   popped the saved LR. However, we didn't notice this check was wrong
   because,

2) the sense of the conditional branch is also wrong.

Fix both of these.

Change-Id: I38ba1f652b0168b5b2c11b81637656241262af7c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17039
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-12-03 03:53:35 +00:00
Shenghou Ma
08b80ca880 runtime: note interactions between GC and MemProfile
Change-Id: Icce28fc4937cc73c0712c054161222f034381c2f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16876
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2015-12-03 02:11:52 +00:00
Rahul Chaudhry
c091d4cd25 runtime: set TLSG_IS_VARIABLE for android/arm64.
On android, runtime.tls_g is a normal variable.
TLS offset is computed in x_cgo_inittls.

Change-Id: I18bc9a736d5fb2a89d0f798956c754e3c10d10e2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17246
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-12-02 22:00:04 +00:00
Rahul Chaudhry
4480d6a927 runtime/cgo: define x_cgo_inittls() for android/arm64.
On android, runtime.tls_g is a normal variable.
TLS offset is computed in x_cgo_inittls.

Change-Id: I64cfd3543040776dcdf73cad8dba54fc6aaf6f35
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17245
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-12-02 21:59:52 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
f000523018 runtime: set r12 to sigpanic before jumping to it in sighandler
The ppc64le shared library ABI demands that r12 is set to a function's global
entrypoint before jumping to the global entrypoint. Not doing so means that
handling signals that usually panic actually crashes (and so, e.g. can't be
recovered). Fixes several failures of "cd test; go run run.go -linkshared".

Change-Id: Ia4d0da4c13efda68340d38c045a52b37c2f90796
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17280
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-12-01 04:51:35 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
fd2bc8681d runtime: fix conflict resolution in golang.org/cl/14207
Fixes testshared on arm64 and ppc64le.

Change-Id: Ie94bc0c85c7666fbb5ab6fc6d3dbb180407a9955
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17212
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-11-25 01:32:55 +00:00
Shenghou Ma
3583a44ed2 runtime: check that masks and shifts are correct aligned
We need a runtime check because the original issue is encountered
when running cross compiled windows program from linux. It's better
to give a meaningful crash message earlier than to segfault later.

The added test should not impose any measurable overhead to Go
programs.

For #12415.

Change-Id: Ib4a24ef560c09c0585b351d62eefd157b6b7f04c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14207
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-25 00:46:57 +00:00
Austin Clements
ab9d5f38be runtime: make gcFlushBgCredit go:nowritebarrierrec
Write barriers in gcFlushBgCredit lead to very subtle bugs because it
executes after the getfull barrier. I tracked some bugs of this form
down before go:nowritebarrierrec was implemented. Ensure that they
don't reappear by making gcFlushBgCredit go:nowritebarrierrec.

Change-Id: Ia5ca2dc59e6268bce8d8b4c87055bd0f6e19bed2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17052
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-24 19:37:03 +00:00
Austin Clements
e126f30a66 runtime: recursively disallow write barriers in sighandler
sighandler may run during STW, so write barriers are not allowed.

Change-Id: Icdf46be10ea296fd87e73ab56ebb718c5d3c97ac
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17007
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-24 19:36:55 +00:00
Elias Naur
a7383fc467 runtime: use a proper type, sigset, for m.sigmask
Replace the cross platform but unsafe [4]uintptr type with a OS
specific type, sigset. Most OSes already define sigset, and this
change defines a suitable sigset for the OSes that don't (darwin,
openbsd). The OSes that don't use m.sigmask (windows, plan9, nacl)
now defines sigset as the empty type, struct{}.

The gain is strongly typed access to m.sigmask, saving a dynamic
size sanity check and unsafe.Pointer casting. Also, some storage is
saved for each M, since [4]uinptr was conservative for most OSes.

The cost is that OSes that don't need m.sigmask has to define sigset.

completes ./all.bash with GOOS linux, on amd64
completes ./make.bash with GOOSes openbsd, android, plan9, windows,
darwin, solaris, netbsd, freebsd, dragonfly, all amd64.

With GOOS=nacl ./make.bash failed with a seemingly unrelated error.

[Replay of CL 16942 by Elias Naur.]

Change-Id: I98f144d626033ae5318576115ed635415ac71b2c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17033
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-24 17:16:47 +00:00
dvyukov
5526d95019 runtime/race: add tests for channels
These tests were failing on one of the versions of cl/9345
("runtime: simplify buffered channels").

Change-Id: I920ffcd28de428bcb7c2d5a300068644260e1017
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16416
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-24 17:00:43 +00:00
Ilya Tocar
b597e1ed54 runtime: speed up memclr with avx2 on amd64
Results are a bit noisy, but show good improvement (haswell)

name            old time/op    new time/op     delta
Memclr5-48        6.06ns ± 8%     5.65ns ± 8%    -6.81%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
Memclr16-48       5.75ns ± 6%     5.71ns ± 6%      ~     (p=0.545 n=20+19)
Memclr64-48       6.54ns ± 5%     6.14ns ± 9%    -6.12%  (p=0.000 n=18+20)
Memclr256-48      10.1ns ±12%      9.9ns ±14%      ~     (p=0.285 n=20+19)
Memclr4096-48      104ns ± 8%       57ns ±15%   -44.98%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
Memclr65536-48    2.45µs ± 5%     2.43µs ± 8%      ~     (p=0.665 n=16+20)
Memclr1M-48       58.7µs ±13%     56.4µs ±11%    -3.92%  (p=0.033 n=20+19)
Memclr4M-48        233µs ± 9%      234µs ± 9%      ~     (p=0.728 n=20+19)
Memclr8M-48        469µs ±11%      472µs ±16%      ~     (p=0.947 n=20+20)
Memclr16M-48       947µs ±10%      916µs ±10%      ~     (p=0.050 n=20+19)
Memclr64M-48      10.9ms ±10%      4.5ms ± 9%   -58.43%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
GoMemclr5-48      3.80ns ±13%     3.38ns ± 6%   -11.02%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
GoMemclr16-48     3.34ns ±15%     3.40ns ± 9%      ~     (p=0.351 n=20+20)
GoMemclr64-48     4.10ns ±15%     4.04ns ±10%      ~     (p=1.000 n=20+19)
GoMemclr256-48    7.75ns ±20%     7.88ns ± 9%      ~     (p=0.227 n=20+19)

name            old speed      new speed       delta
Memclr5-48       826MB/s ± 7%    886MB/s ± 8%    +7.32%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
Memclr16-48     2.78GB/s ± 5%   2.81GB/s ± 6%      ~     (p=0.550 n=20+19)
Memclr64-48     9.79GB/s ± 5%  10.44GB/s ±10%    +6.64%  (p=0.000 n=18+20)
Memclr256-48    25.4GB/s ±14%   25.6GB/s ±12%      ~     (p=0.647 n=20+19)
Memclr4096-48   39.4GB/s ± 8%   72.0GB/s ±13%   +82.81%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
Memclr65536-48  26.6GB/s ± 6%   27.0GB/s ± 9%      ~     (p=0.517 n=17+20)
Memclr1M-48     17.9GB/s ±12%   18.5GB/s ±11%      ~     (p=0.068 n=20+20)
Memclr4M-48     18.0GB/s ± 9%   17.8GB/s ±14%      ~     (p=0.547 n=20+20)
Memclr8M-48     17.9GB/s ±10%   17.8GB/s ±14%      ~     (p=0.947 n=20+20)
Memclr16M-48    17.8GB/s ± 9%   18.4GB/s ± 9%      ~     (p=0.050 n=20+19)
Memclr64M-48    6.19GB/s ±10%  14.87GB/s ± 9%  +140.11%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
GoMemclr5-48    1.31GB/s ±10%   1.48GB/s ± 6%   +13.06%  (p=0.000 n=19+20)
GoMemclr16-48   4.81GB/s ±14%   4.71GB/s ± 8%      ~     (p=0.341 n=20+20)
GoMemclr64-48   15.7GB/s ±13%   15.8GB/s ±11%      ~     (p=0.967 n=20+19)

Change-Id: I393f3f20e2f31538d1b1dd70d6e5c201c106a095
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16773
Run-TryBot: Ilya Tocar <ilya.tocar@intel.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2015-11-24 16:49:30 +00:00
Dave Cheney
984004263d runtime: skip CallbackGC test in short mode on linux/arm
Fixes #11959
Fixes #12035

Skip the CallbackGC test on linux/arm. This test takes between 30 and 60
seconds to run by itself, and is run 4 times over the course of ./run.bash
(once during the runtime test, three times more later in the build).

Change-Id: I4e7d3046031cd8c08f39634bdd91da6e00054caf
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14485
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-24 16:48:32 +00:00
Alex Brainman
1cb53ce36b runtime: fix handling VirtualAlloc failure in sysUsed
Original code is mistakenly panics on VirtualAlloc failure - we want
it to go looking for smaller memory region that VirtualAlloc will
succeed to allocate. Also return immediately if VirtualAlloc succeeds.
See rsc comment on issue #12587 for details.

I still don't have a test for this. So I can only hope that this

Fixes #12587

Change-Id: I052068ec627fdcb466c94ae997ad112016f734b7
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17169
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-24 14:50:23 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
239273d963 runtime: mark {g,m,p}uintptr methods as nosplit
These are methods that are "obviously" going to get inlined -- until you build
with -l, when they can trigger a stack split at a bad time.

Fixes #11482

Change-Id: Ia065c385978a2e7fe9f587811991d088c4d68325
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17165
Run-TryBot: Michael Hudson-Doyle <michael.hudson@canonical.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-24 02:33:04 +00:00
Austin Clements
ecf388f3a4 runtime: take stack barrier lock during copystack
Commit bbd1a1c prevented SIGPROF from scanning stacks that were being
copied, but it didn't prevent a stack copy (specifically a stack
shrink) from happening while SIGPROF is scanning the stack. As a
result, a stack copy may adjust stack barriers while SIGPROF is in the
middle of scanning a stack, causing SIGPROF to panic when it detects
an inconsistent stack barrier.

Fix this by taking the stack barrier lock while adjusting the stack.
In addition to preventing SIGPROF from scanning this stack, this will
block until any in-progress SIGPROF is done scanning the stack.

For 1.5.2.

Fixes #13362.
Updates #12932.

Change-Id: I422219c363054410dfa56381f7b917e04690e5dd
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17191
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-24 01:50:52 +00:00
Alex Brainman
ab4c9298b8 runtime: do not call timeBeginPeriod on windows
Calling timeBeginPeriod changes Windows global timer resolution
from 15ms to 1ms. This used to improve Go runtime scheduler
performance, but not anymore. Thanks to @aclements, scheduler now
behaves the same way if we call timeBeginPeriod or not.

Remove call to timeBeginPeriod, since it is machine global
resource, and there are downsides of using low timer resolution.
See issue #8687 for details.

Fixes #8687

Change-Id: Ib7e41aa4a81861b62a900e0e62776c9ef19bfb73
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17164
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Yasuhiro MATSUMOTO <mattn.jp@gmail.com>
Run-TryBot: Alex Brainman <alex.brainman@gmail.com>
2015-11-24 01:11:58 +00:00
Austin Clements
b890333998 runtime: clean up gcMarkDone
This improves the documentation comment on gcMarkDone, replaces a
recursive call with a simple goto, and disables preemption before
stopping the world in accordance with the documentation comment on
stopTheWorldWithSema.

Updates #13363, but, sadly, doesn't fix it.

Change-Id: I6cb2a5836b35685bf82f7b1ce7e48a7625906656
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17149
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-23 20:59:35 +00:00
Austin Clements
a7c09ad4fb runtime: improve stack barrier debugging
This improves stack barrier debugging messages in various ways:

1) Rather than printing only the remaining stack barriers (of which
   there may be none, which isn't very useful), print all of the G's
   stack barriers with a marker at the position the stack itself has
   unwound to and a marker at the problematic stack barrier (where
   applicable).

2) Rather than crashing if we encounter a stack barrier when there are
   no more stkbar entries, print the same debug message we would if we
   had encountered a stack barrier at an unexpected location.

Hopefully this will help with debugging #12528.

Change-Id: I2e6fe6a778e0d36dd8ef30afd4c33d5d94731262
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17147
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-23 19:17:52 +00:00
Austin Clements
22e57c6655 runtime: make stack barrier locking more robust
The stack barrier locking functions use a simple cas lock because they
need to support trylock, but currently don't increment g.m.locks. This
is okay right now because they always run on the system stack or the
signal stack and are hence non-preemtible, but this could lead to
difficult-to-reproduce deadlocks if these conditions change in the
future.

Make these functions more robust by incrementing g.m.locks and making
them nosplit to enforce non-preemtibility.

Change-Id: I73d60a35bd2ad2d81c73aeb20dbd37665730eb1b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17058
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ingo Oeser <nightlyone@googlemail.com>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-23 19:13:15 +00:00
Austin Clements
624d798a41 runtime/pprof: disable TestStackBarrierProfiling on ppc64
This test depends on GODEBUG=gcstackbarrierall, which doesn't work on
ppc64.

Updates #13334.

Change-Id: Ie554117b783c4e999387f97dd660484488499d85
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17120
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-20 19:39:36 +00:00
Russ Cox
cb859021d1 runtime: fix new stack barrier check
During a crash showing goroutine stacks of all threads
(with GOTRACEBACK=crash), it can be that f == nil.

Only happens on Solaris; not sure why.

Change-Id: Iee2c394a0cf19fa0a24f6befbc70776b9e42d25a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17110
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2015-11-20 19:08:21 +00:00
David Crawshaw
2fa64c4182 runtime/pprof: check if test can fork
(TestStackBarrierProfiling is failing on darwin/arm.)

Change-Id: I8006d6222ccafc213821e02105896440079caa37
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17091
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Run-TryBot: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-20 17:52:33 +00:00
Shenghou Ma
35a5bd6431 runtime: make it possible to call syscall on solaris without g
The nosplit stack is now much bigger, so we can afford to allocate
libcall on stack.

Fix asmsysvicall6 to not update errno if g == nil.

These two fixes TestCgoCallbackGC on solaris, which used to stuck
in a loop.

Change-Id: Id1b13be992dae9f059aa3d47ffffd37785300933
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17076
Run-TryBot: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-20 08:11:35 +00:00
Russ Cox
3af29fb858 runtime: make asmcgocall work without a g
Solaris needs to make system calls without a g,
and Solaris uses asmcgocall to make system calls.
I know, I know.

I hope this makes CL 16915, fixing #12277, work on Solaris.

Change-Id: If988dfd37f418b302da9c7096f598e5113ecea87
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17072
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Aram Hăvărneanu <aram@mgk.ro>
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-20 02:51:09 +00:00
Austin Clements
d2c81ad847 runtime: recursively disallow write barriers in sysmon
sysmon runs without a P. This means it can't interact with the garbage
collector, so write barriers not allowed in anything that sysmon does.

Fixes #10600.

Change-Id: I9de1283900dadee4f72e2ebfc8787123e382ae88
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17006
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-19 21:17:25 +00:00
Austin Clements
402e37d4a9 cmd/compile: special case nowritebarrierrec for allocm
allocm is a very unusual function: it is specifically designed to
allocate in contexts where m.p is nil by temporarily taking over a P.
Since allocm is used in many contexts where it would make sense to use
nowritebarrierrec, this commit teaches the nowritebarrierrec analysis
to stop at allocm.

Updates #10600.

Change-Id: I8499629461d4fe25712d861720dfe438df7ada9b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17005
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-19 21:17:19 +00:00
Austin Clements
c84ae1c499 runtime: eliminate write barriers from mem_plan9.go
This replaces *memHdr with memHdrPtr.

Updates #10600.

Change-Id: I673aa2cd20f29abec8ab91ed7e783718c8479ce1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17009
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: David du Colombier <0intro@gmail.com>
2015-11-19 21:17:14 +00:00
Austin Clements
e9aef43d87 runtime: eliminate traceAllocBlock write barriers
This replaces *traceAllocBlock with traceAllocBlockPtr.

Updates #10600.

Change-Id: I94a20d90f04cca7c457b29062427748e315e4857
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17004
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
2015-11-19 21:17:09 +00:00
Austin Clements
b43b375c6c runtime: eliminate write barriers from gentraceback
gentraceback is used in many contexts where write barriers are
disallowed. This currently works because the only write barrier is in
assigning frame.argmap in setArgInfo and in practice frame is always
on the stack, so this write barrier is a no-op.

However, we can easily eliminate this write barrier, which will let us
statically disallow write barriers (using go:nowritebarrierrec
annotations) in many more situations. As a bonus, this makes the code
a little more idiomatic.

Updates #10600.

Change-Id: I45ba5cece83697ff79f8537ee6e43eadf1c18c6d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17003
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
2015-11-19 21:17:04 +00:00
Russ Cox
8b1b81f463 cmd/compile: fix crash with -race on large expr containing string->[]byte conversion
The assumption is that there are no nested function calls in complex expressions.
For the most part that assumption is true. It wasn't for these calls inserted during walk.
Fix that.

I looked through all the calls to mkcall in walk and these were the only cases
that emitted calls, that could be part of larger expressions (like not delete),
and that were not already handled.

Fixes #12225.

Change-Id: Iad380683fe2e054d480e7ae4e8faf1078cdd744c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17034
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-19 19:54:55 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
0e2c635788 cmd/cgo, runtime: exported Go functions can't return a Go pointer
Update #12416.

Change-Id: Iccbcb12709d1ca9bea87274f44f93cfcebadb070
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17048
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-11-19 18:28:39 +00:00
Austin Clements
9a7893550c runtime/pprof: test that stack barriers never appear in profile
This adds a test that runs CPU profiling with a high load of stack
barriers and stack barrier insertion/removal operations and checks
that both 1) the runtime doesn't crash and 2) stackBarrier itself
never appears in a profile. Prior to the fix for gentraceback starting
in the middle of stackBarrier, condition 2 often failed.

Change-Id: Ic28860448859029779844c4bf3bb28ca84611e2c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17037
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-19 16:35:43 +00:00
Austin Clements
9c9d74aba7 runtime: prevent sigprof during all stack barrier ops
A sigprof during stack barrier insertion or removal can crash if it
detects an inconsistency between the stkbar array and the stack
itself. Currently we protect against this when scanning another G's
stack using stackLock, but we don't protect against it when unwinding
stack barriers for a recover or a memmove to the stack.

This commit cleans up and improves the stack locking code. It
abstracts out the lock and unlock operations. It uses the lock
consistently everywhere we perform stack operations, and pushes the
lock/unlock down closer to where the stack barrier operations happen
to make it more obvious what it's protecting. Finally, it modifies
sigprof so that instead of spinning until it acquires the lock, it
simply doesn't perform a traceback if it can't acquire it. This is
necessary to prevent self-deadlock.

Updates #11863, which introduced stackLock to fix some of these
issues, but didn't go far enough.

Updates #12528.

Change-Id: I9d1fa88ae3744d31ba91500c96c6988ce1a3a349
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17036
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-19 16:35:38 +00:00
Austin Clements
3a2fc06833 runtime: handle sigprof in stackBarrier
Currently, if a profiling signal happens in the middle of
stackBarrier, gentraceback may see inconsistencies between stkbar and
the barriers on the stack and it will certainly get the wrong return
PC for stackBarrier. In most cases, the return PC won't be a PC at all
and this will immediately abort the traceback (which is considered
okay for a sigprof), but if it happens to be a valid PC this may sent
gentraceback down a rabbit hole.

Fix this by detecting when the gentraceback starts in stackBarrier and
simulating the completion of the barrier to get the correct initial
frame.

Change-Id: Ib11f705ac9194925f63fe5dfbfc84013a38333e6
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17035
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-19 16:35:34 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
09d7de8d61 cmd/link, runtime: call addmoduledata when dynamically linking on linux/386
Change-Id: If1faa2bba28a4e9a8061693173797c4114a7d699
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16387
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-19 00:22:56 +00:00
Russ Cox
f8e6418637 runtime: fix bad signal stack when using cgo-created threads and async signals
Cgo-created threads transition between having associated Go g's and m's and not.
A signal arriving during the transition could think it was safe and appropriate to
run Go signal handlers when it was in fact not.
Avoid the race by masking all signals during the transition.

Fixes #12277.

Change-Id: Ie9711bc1d098391d58362492197a7e0f5b497d14
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16915
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-18 18:05:22 +00:00
Russ Cox
5af2be8604 Revert "runtime: use a proper type, sigset, for m.sigmask"
This reverts commit 7db77271e4.

Change-Id: I6d8855eb05ca331025dc49a5533c6da4d1fa4e84
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/17030
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-18 17:18:20 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
6056cc5df6 runtime: handle volatility of CX when dynamically linking on linux/386
Mostly by avoiding CX entirely, sometimes by reloading it.

I also vetted the assembly in other packages, it's all fine.

Change-Id: I50059669aaaa04efa303cf22ac228f9d14d83db0
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16386
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-18 01:36:44 +00:00
Elias Naur
7db77271e4 runtime: use a proper type, sigset, for m.sigmask
Replace the cross platform but unsafe [4]uintptr type with a OS
specific type, sigset. Most OSes already define sigset, and this
change defines a suitable sigset for the OSes that don't (darwin,
openbsd). The OSes that don't use m.sigmask (windows, plan9, nacl)
now defines sigset as the empty type, struct{}.

The gain is strongly typed access to m.sigmask, saving a dynamic
size sanity check and unsafe.Pointer casting. Also, some storage is
saved for each M, since [4]uinptr was conservative for most OSes.

The cost is that OSes that don't need m.sigmask has to define sigset.

completes ./all.bash with GOOS linux, on amd64
completes ./make.bash with GOOSes openbsd, android, plan9, windows,
darwin, solaris, netbsd, freebsd, dragonfly, all amd64.

With GOOS=nacl ./make.bash failed with a seemingly unrelated error.

R=go1.7

Change-Id: Ib460379f063eb83d393e1c5efe7333a643c1595e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16942
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-17 21:23:06 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
90e26f52c6 runtime, syscall: use int $0x80 to invoke syscalls on android/386
golang.org/cl/16796 broke android/386 by assuming behaviour specific to glibc's
dynamic linker. Copy bionic by using int $0x80 to invoke syscalls on
android/386 as the old alternative (CALL *runtime_vdso(SB)) cannot be compiled
without text relocations, which we want to get rid of on android.

Also remove "CALL *runtime_vdso(SB)" variant from the syscall package.

Change-Id: I6c01849f8dcbd073d000ddc8f13948a836b8b261
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16996
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Hyang-Ah Hana Kim <hyangah@gmail.com>
2015-11-17 20:22:47 +00:00
David Crawshaw
ce8f49f42f runtime: android/arm64 support
Not all tests passing yet, but a good chunk are.

Change-Id: I5daebaeabf3aecb380674ece8830a86751a8d139
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16458
Reviewed-by: Rahul Chaudhry <rahulchaudhry@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-11-17 16:28:18 +00:00
Austin Clements
f9357cdec1 runtime: check for updated arena_end overflow
Currently, if an allocation is large enough that arena_end + size
overflows (which is not hard to do on 32-bit), we go ahead and call
sysReserve with the impossible base and length and depend on this to
either directly fail because the kernel can't possibly fulfill the
requested mapping (causing mheap.sysAlloc to return nil) or to succeed
with a mapping at some other address which will then be rejected as
outside the arena.

In order to make this less subtle, less dependent on the kernel
getting all of this right, and to eliminate the hopeless system call,
add an explicit overflow check.

Updates #13143. This real issue has been fixed by 0de59c2, but this is
a belt-and-suspenders improvement on top of that. It was uncovered by
my symbolic modeling of that bug.

Change-Id: I85fa868a33286fdcc23cdd7cdf86b19abf1cb2d1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16961
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-17 00:16:36 +00:00
Austin Clements
4d39bb6a3a runtime: make mcache.tiny a uintptr
mcache.tiny is in non-GC'd memory, but points to heap memory. As a
result, there may or may not be write barriers when writing to
mcache.tiny. Make it clearer that funny things are going on by making
mcache.tiny a uintptr instead of an unsafe.Pointer.

Change-Id: I732a5b7ea17162f196a9155154bbaff8d4d00eac
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16963
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-16 22:07:41 +00:00
Austin Clements
835c83b40d runtime: clear tiny alloc cache in mark term, not sweep term
The tiny alloc cache is maintained in a pointer from non-GC'd memory
(mcache) to heap memory and hence must be handled carefully.

Currently we clear the tiny alloc cache during sweep termination and,
if it is assigned to a non-nil value during concurrent marking, we
depend on a write barrier to keep the new value alive. However, while
the compiler currently always generates this write barrier, we're
treading on thin ice because write barriers may not happen for writes
to non-heap memory (e.g., typedmemmove). Without this lucky write
barrier, the GC may free a current tiny block while it's still
reachable by the tiny allocator, leading to later memory corruption.

Change this code so that, rather than depending on the write barrier,
we simply clear the tiny cache during mark termination when we're
clearing all of the other mcaches. If the current tiny block is
reachable from regular pointers, it will be retained; if it isn't
reachable from regular pointers, it may be freed, but that's okay
because there won't be any pointers in non-GC'd memory to it.

Change-Id: I8230980d8612c35c2997b9705641a1f9f865f879
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16962
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-16 22:07:37 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
be1ef46775 runtime: add optional expensive check for invalid cgo pointer passing
If you set GODEBUG=cgocheck=2 the runtime package will use the write
barrier to detect cases where a Go program writes a Go pointer into
non-Go memory.  In conjunction with the existing cgo checks, and the
not-yet-implemented cgo check for exported functions, this should
reliably detect all cases (that do not import the unsafe package) in
which a Go pointer is incorrectly shared with C code.  This check is
optional because it turns on the write barrier at all times, which is
known to be expensive.

Update #12416.

Change-Id: I549d8b2956daa76eac853928e9280e615d6365f4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16899
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-16 18:39:06 +00:00
Austin Clements
0de59c27eb runtime: handle sysReserve returning a pointer below the arena
In mheap.sysAlloc, if an allocation at arena_used would exceed
arena_end (but wouldn't yet push us past arena_start+_MaxArean32), it
trie to extend the arena reservation by another 256 MB. It extends the
arena by calling sysReserve, which, on 32-bit, calls mmap without
MAP_FIXED, which means the address is just a hint and the kernel can
put the mapping wherever it wants. In particular, mmap may choose an
address below arena_start (the kernel also chose arena_start, so there
could be lots of space below it). Currently, we don't detect this case
and, if it happens, mheap.sysAlloc will corrupt arena_end and
arena_used then return the low pointer to mheap.grow, which will crash
when it attempts to index in to h_spans with an underflowed index.

Fix this by checking not only that that p+p_size isn't too high, but
that p isn't too low.

Fixes #13143.

Change-Id: I8d0f42bd1484460282a83c6f1a6f8f0df7fb2048
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16927
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-16 17:32:40 +00:00
Austin Clements
97dc591534 runtime: avoid stat underflow crash
If the area returned by sysReserve in mheap.sysAlloc is outside the
usable arena, we sysFree it. We pass a fake stat pointer to sysFree
because we haven't added the allocation to any stat at that point.
However, we pass a 0 stat, so sysFree panics when it decrements the
stat because the fake stat underflows.

Fix this by setting the fake stat to the allocation size.

Updates #13143 (this is a prerequisite to fixing that bug).

Change-Id: I61a6c9be19ac1c95863cf6a8435e19790c8bfc9a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16926
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-16 17:32:29 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
7af0839e11 cmd/go, runtime: always use position-independent code to invoke vsyscall helper on linux/386
golang.org/cl/16346 changed the runtime on linux/386 to invoke the vsyscall
helper via a PIC sequence (CALL 0x10(GS)) when dynamically linking. But it's
actually quite easy to make that code sequence work all the time, so do that,
and remove the ugly machinery that passed the buildmode from the go tool to the
assembly.

This means enlarging m.tls so that we can safely access 0x10(GS) (GS is set to
&m.tls + 4, so 0x10(GS) accesses m_tls[5]).

Change-Id: I1345c34029b149cb5f25320bf19a3cdd73a056fa
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16796
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-15 06:42:19 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
52393ad036 runtime: remove go:nosplit comment from reflect.typelinks
A nosplit comment was added to reflect.typelinks accidentally in
https://golang.org/cl/98510044.  There is only one caller of
reflect.typelinks, reflect.typesByString, and that function is not
nosplit.  There is no reason for reflect.typelinks to be nosplit.

Change-Id: I0fd3cc66fafcd92643e38e53fa586d6b2f868a0a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16932
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
2015-11-15 05:49:48 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
06eb504ca4 runtime: remove zgoarch_*.go files
These now live in runtime/internal/sys.

Change-Id: I270597142516512bfc1395419e51d8083ba1663f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16891
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-11-13 20:26:56 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
ec9aae772c runtime: move m's OS-specific semaphore fields into mOS
Allows removing fields that aren't relevant to a particular OS or
changing their types to match the underlying OS system calls they'll
be used for.

Change-Id: I5cea89ee77b4e7b985bff41337e561887c3272ff
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16176
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
2015-11-13 02:58:12 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
7bb38f6e47 runtime: replace tls0 with m0.tls
We're allocating TLS storage for m0 anyway, so might as well use it.

Change-Id: I7dc20bbea5320c8ab8a367f18a9540706751e771
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16890
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Hudson-Doyle <michael.hudson@canonical.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-13 01:53:00 +00:00
Shenghou Ma
0adf6dce8a runtime: disable prefetching on 386
It doesn't seem to help on modern processors and it makes Go impossible to run
on Pentium MMX (which is the documented minimum hardware requirement.)

Old is with prefetch, new is w/o. Both are compiled with GO386=sse2.
Benchmarking is done on Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3570K CPU @ 3.40GHz.

name                     old time/op    new time/op    delta
BinaryTree17-4              2.89s ± 2%     2.87s ± 0%    ~     (p=0.061 n=11+10)
Fannkuch11-4                3.65s ± 0%     3.65s ± 0%    ~     (p=0.365 n=11+11)
FmtFprintfEmpty-4          52.1ns ± 0%    52.1ns ± 0%    ~      (p=0.065 n=10+9)
FmtFprintfString-4          168ns ± 0%     167ns ± 0%  -0.48%   (p=0.000 n=8+10)
FmtFprintfInt-4             167ns ± 0%     167ns ± 1%    ~      (p=0.591 n=9+10)
FmtFprintfIntInt-4          295ns ± 0%     292ns ± 0%  -0.99%   (p=0.000 n=9+10)
FmtFprintfPrefixedInt-4     327ns ± 0%     326ns ± 0%  -0.24%  (p=0.007 n=10+10)
FmtFprintfFloat-4           431ns ± 0%     431ns ± 0%  -0.07%  (p=0.000 n=10+11)
FmtManyArgs-4              1.13µs ± 0%    1.13µs ± 0%  -0.37%  (p=0.009 n=11+11)
GobDecode-4                9.36ms ± 1%    9.33ms ± 0%  -0.31%  (p=0.006 n=11+10)
GobEncode-4                7.38ms ± 1%    7.38ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.797 n=11+11)
Gzip-4                      394ms ± 0%     395ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.519 n=11+11)
Gunzip-4                   65.4ms ± 0%    65.4ms ± 0%    ~     (p=0.739 n=10+10)
HTTPClientServer-4         52.4µs ± 1%    52.5µs ± 1%    ~     (p=0.748 n=11+11)
JSONEncode-4               19.0ms ± 0%    19.0ms ± 0%    ~      (p=0.780 n=9+10)
JSONDecode-4               59.6ms ± 0%    59.6ms ± 0%    ~      (p=0.720 n=9+10)
Mandelbrot200-4            4.09ms ± 0%    4.09ms ± 0%    ~      (p=0.295 n=11+9)
GoParse-4                  3.45ms ± 1%    3.43ms ± 1%  -0.35%  (p=0.040 n=11+11)
RegexpMatchEasy0_32-4       101ns ± 1%     101ns ± 1%    ~     (p=1.000 n=11+11)
RegexpMatchEasy0_1K-4       796ns ± 0%     796ns ± 0%    ~      (p=0.954 n=10+8)
RegexpMatchEasy1_32-4       110ns ± 0%     110ns ± 1%    ~      (p=0.289 n=9+11)
RegexpMatchEasy1_1K-4       991ns ± 0%     991ns ± 0%    ~      (p=0.784 n=10+8)
RegexpMatchMedium_32-4      131ns ± 0%     130ns ± 0%  -0.42%   (p=0.004 n=11+9)
RegexpMatchMedium_1K-4     41.9µs ± 1%    41.6µs ± 0%    ~      (p=0.067 n=11+9)
RegexpMatchHard_32-4       2.34µs ± 0%    2.34µs ± 0%    ~     (p=0.208 n=11+11)
RegexpMatchHard_1K-4       70.9µs ± 0%    71.0µs ± 0%    ~      (p=0.968 n=9+10)
Revcomp-4                   819ms ± 0%     818ms ± 0%    ~     (p=0.251 n=10+11)
Template-4                 73.9ms ± 0%    73.8ms ± 0%  -0.25%  (p=0.013 n=10+11)
TimeParse-4                 414ns ± 0%     414ns ± 0%    ~     (p=0.809 n=11+10)
TimeFormat-4                485ns ± 0%     485ns ± 0%    ~      (p=0.404 n=11+7)

name                     old speed      new speed      delta
GobDecode-4              82.0MB/s ± 1%  82.3MB/s ± 0%  +0.31%  (p=0.007 n=11+10)
GobEncode-4               104MB/s ± 1%   104MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.797 n=11+11)
Gzip-4                   49.2MB/s ± 0%  49.1MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.507 n=11+11)
Gunzip-4                  297MB/s ± 0%   297MB/s ± 0%    ~     (p=0.670 n=10+10)
JSONEncode-4              102MB/s ± 0%   102MB/s ± 0%    ~      (p=0.794 n=9+10)
JSONDecode-4             32.6MB/s ± 0%  32.6MB/s ± 0%    ~       (p=0.334 n=9+9)
GoParse-4                16.8MB/s ± 1%  16.9MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.052 n=11+11)
RegexpMatchEasy0_32-4     314MB/s ± 0%   314MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.618 n=11+11)
RegexpMatchEasy0_1K-4    1.29GB/s ± 0%  1.29GB/s ± 0%    ~     (p=0.315 n=10+10)
RegexpMatchEasy1_32-4     290MB/s ± 1%   290MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.667 n=10+11)
RegexpMatchEasy1_1K-4    1.03GB/s ± 0%  1.03GB/s ± 0%    ~      (p=0.829 n=10+8)
RegexpMatchMedium_32-4   7.63MB/s ± 0%  7.65MB/s ± 0%    ~     (p=0.142 n=11+11)
RegexpMatchMedium_1K-4   24.4MB/s ± 1%  24.6MB/s ± 0%    ~      (p=0.063 n=11+9)
RegexpMatchHard_32-4     13.7MB/s ± 0%  13.7MB/s ± 0%    ~     (p=0.302 n=11+11)
RegexpMatchHard_1K-4     14.4MB/s ± 0%  14.4MB/s ± 0%    ~      (p=0.784 n=9+10)
Revcomp-4                 310MB/s ± 0%   311MB/s ± 0%    ~     (p=0.243 n=10+11)
Template-4               26.2MB/s ± 0%  26.3MB/s ± 0%  +0.24%  (p=0.009 n=10+11)

Update #12970.

Change-Id: Id185080687a60c229a5cb2e5220e7ca1b53910e2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/15999
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
2015-11-13 01:09:36 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
1ccefcd1b8 cmd/link, runtime: implement & call addmoduledata on ppc64le
Change-Id: I3980d82c7df95e69522c3d2c90311f89c6fef0e1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/15972
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-13 00:51:45 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
a35c85c0cc cmd/internal/obj, runtime: implement IE model TLS on ppc64le
This requires changing the tls access code to match the patterns documented in
the ABI documentation or the system linker will "optimize" it into ridiculousness.

With this change, -buildmode=pie works, although as it is tested in testshared,
the tests are not run yet.

Change-Id: I1efa6687af0a5b8db3385b10f6542a49056b2eb3
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/15971
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-12 23:50:27 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
368d548417 cmd/compile, cmd/link, runtime: on ppc64x, maintain the TOC pointer in R2 when compiling PIC
The PowerPC ISA does not have a PC-relative load instruction, which poses
obvious challenges when generating position-independent code. The way the ELFv2
ABI addresses this is to specify that r2 points to a per "module" (shared
library or executable) TOC pointer. Maintaining this pointer requires
cooperation between codegen and the system linker:

 * Non-leaf functions leave space on the stack at r1+24 to save the TOC pointer.
 * A call to a function that *might* have to go via a PLT stub must be followed
   by a nop instruction that the system linker can replace with "ld r1, 24(r1)"
   to restore the TOC pointer (only when dynamically linking Go code).
 * When calling a function via a function pointer, the address of the function
   must be in r12, and the first couple of instructions (the "global entry
   point") of the called function use this to derive the address of the TOC
   for the module it is in.
 * When calling a function that is implemented in the same module, the system
   linker adjusts the call to skip over the instructions mentioned above (the
   "local entry point"), assuming that r2 is already correctly set.

So this changeset adds the global entry point instructions, sets the metadata so
the system linker knows where the local entry point is, inserts code to save the
TOC pointer at 24(r1), adds a nop after any call not known to be local and copes
with the odd non-local code transfer in the runtime (e.g. the stuff around
jmpdefer). It does not actually compile PIC yet.

Change-Id: I7522e22bdfd2f891745a900c60254fe9e372c854
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/15967
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-12 23:18:58 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
dbdd8c2c94 runtime: update newosproc asm to access m.id directly
darwin/386, freebsd/386, and linux/386 use a setldt system call to
setup each M's thread-local storage area, and they need access to the
M's id for this.  The current code copies m.id into m.tls[0] (and this
logic has been cargo culted to OSes like NetBSD and OpenBSD, which
don't even need m.id to configure TLS), and then the 386 assembly
loads m.tls[0]... but since the assembly code already has a pointer to
the M, it might as well just load m.id directly.

Change-Id: I1a7278f1ec8ebda8d1de3aa3a61993070e3a8cdf
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16881
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-12 23:16:33 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
c83c806535 cmd/internal/obj, cmd/link, runtime: use a larger stack frame on ppc64
The larger stack frames causes the nosplit stack to overflow so the next change
increases the stackguard.

Change-Id: Ib2b4f24f0649eb1d13e3a58d265f13d1b6cc9bf9
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/15964
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-12 22:32:37 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
c1b6e392f5 cmd/internal/obj, cmd/link, runtime: increase stack limit to accommodate larger frames on ppc64x
Larger stack frames mean nosplit functions use more stack and so the limit
needs to increase.

The change to test/nosplit.go is a bit ugly but I can't really think of a
way to make it nicer.

Change-Id: I2616b58015f0b62abbd62951575fcd0d2d8643c2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16504
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-12 22:32:16 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
c3ba74931f runtime/internal/sys: remove Intptr
Apparently its last use was removed in CL 8899.

Change-Id: I4f3a789b3cc4c249582e81463af62b576a281e40
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16880
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-12 21:46:06 +00:00
Dmitry Vyukov
c5f0f881ad runtime/race: update race runtime
The new revision is 389d49d4943780efbfcd2a434f4462b6d0f23c44 (Nov 13, 2015).
The runtimes are built using the new x/build/cmd/racebuild utility.
This update fixes a bug in race detection algorithm that can
lead to occasional false negatives (#10589). But generally just
brings in an up-to-date runtime.

Update #8653
Fixes #10589

Change-Id: I7ac9614d014ee89c2302ce5e096d326ef293f367
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16827
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2015-11-12 21:28:36 +00:00
Shenghou Ma
e8b4c5bfe9 runtime, runtime/internal/sys: fix build for linux/{mips64,mips64le}
Change-Id: I37bac9680efdfd797ca5dca90bd9a9e1001bfb68
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16874
Reviewed-by: Michael Matloob <matloob@golang.org>
2015-11-12 20:59:56 +00:00
Michael Matloob
7c38ae084e runtime: delete runtime/internal/atomic/textflag.h
As per mdempsky's comment on golang.org/cl/14204, textflag.h is
copied to the includes dir by cmd/dist, and the copy in
runtime/internal/atomic is not actually being used.

Updates #11647

Change-Id: Ie95c08903a9df54cea4c70ee9d5291176f7b5609
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16871
Run-TryBot: Michael Matloob <matloob@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
2015-11-12 20:26:28 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
d10675089d runtime: ignore rt_sigaction error if it is for SIGRTMAX
A forward port of https://codereview.appspot.com/124900043/ which somehow
got lost somewhere.

Fixes #13024

Change-Id: Iab128899e65c51d90f6704e3e1b2fc9326e3a1c2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16853
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-12 20:05:49 +00:00
Daniel Theophanes
d958881271 runtime: use WriteConsole to implement print and panic on windows
Fixes #7864

Change-Id: Id13369352aeccac8387876f0b911e383c543c28e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16714
Reviewed-by: Alex Brainman <alex.brainman@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-12 20:00:34 +00:00
Michael Matloob
d3498c5abd runtime: move arch_mips64(le)?.go into runtime/internal/sys
Somehow these were left out of the orignial CL.

Updates #11647

Change-Id: I058a30eaa25fbb72d60e7fb6bc9ff0a3b54fdb2a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16870
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
2015-11-12 19:54:53 +00:00
Michael Matloob
80d0b98d80 runtime/internal/atomic: delete arch1_*.go files
I made a copy of the per-arch _CacheLineSize definitons when checking in
runtime/internal/atomic. Now that runtime/internal/sys is checked in,
we can use the definition there.

Change-Id: I7242f6b633e4164f033b67ff471416b9d71c64d2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16847
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-11-12 17:37:22 +00:00
Austin Clements
bbd1a1c706 runtime: make SIGPROF skip stacks that are being copied
sigprof tracebacks the stack across systemstack switches to make
profile tracebacks more complete. However, it does this even if the
user stack is currently being copied, which means it may be in an
inconsistent state that will cause the traceback to panic.

One specific way this can happen is during stack shrinking. Some
goroutine blocks for STW, then enters gchelper, which then assists
with root marking. If that root marking happens to pick the original
goroutine and its stack needs to be shrunk, it will begin to copy that
stack. During this copy, the stack is generally inconsistent and, in
particular, the actual locations of the stack barriers and their
recorded locations are temporarily out of sync. If a SIGPROF happens
during this inconsistency, it will walk the stack all the way back to
the blocked goroutine and panic when it fails to unwind the stack
barriers.

Fix this by disallowing jumping to the user stack during SIGPROF if
that user stack is in the process of being copied.

Fixes #12932.

Change-Id: I9ef694c2c01e3653e292ce22612418dd3daff1b4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16819
Reviewed-by: Daniel Morsing <daniel.morsing@gmail.com>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-12 17:37:04 +00:00
Michael Matloob
432cb66f16 runtime: break out system-specific constants into package sys
runtime/internal/sys will hold system-, architecture- and config-
specific constants.

Updates #11647

Change-Id: I6db29c312556087a42e8d2bdd9af40d157c56b54
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16817
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-12 17:04:45 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
3073797c37 runtime: fix vet warning about println
lfstack.go:19: println call ends with newline

Change-Id: I2a903eef80a5300e9014999c2f0bc5d40ed5c735
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16836
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org>
2015-11-12 05:19:58 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
58bc561d1a runtime: fix vet warning about +build rule
cgo_ppc64x.go:7: +build comment must appear before package clause and be followed by a blank line

Change-Id: Ib6dedddae70cc75dc3f137eb37ea338a64f8b595
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16835
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-12 05:13:47 +00:00
Yao Zhang
fa61945cf2 runtime/debug: skip TestFreeOSMemory for mips64{,le}
Change-Id: I419f3b8bf1bddffd4a775b0cd7b98f0239fe19cb
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14458
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-12 04:51:42 +00:00
Yao Zhang
846a9adf05 runtime: restructured signal_linux.go, added signal table for mips64.
Linux/mips64 uses a different signal table. To avoid code copying,
signal table is factored out from signal_linux.go to
sigtab_linux_generic.go. And a mips64-specific version is added.

Change-Id: I842d7a7467c330bf772855fde01aecc77a42316b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14993
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-12 04:49:06 +00:00
Yao Zhang
624f84536d runtime: renamed os2_linux.go to os2_linux_generic.go, added mips64 support
Linux/mips64 has a different sigset type and some different constants.
os2_linux.go is renamed to os2_linux_generic.go, and not used in mips64.
The corresponding file os2_linux_mips64x.go is added.

Change-Id: Ief83845a2779f7fe048d236d3c7da52b627ab533
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14992
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
2015-11-12 04:48:43 +00:00
Yao Zhang
e0053f8b1c runtime: restructured os1_linux.go, added mips64 support
Linux/mips64 uses a different type of sigset. To deal with it, related
functions in os1_linux.go is refactored to os1_linux_generic.go
(used for non-mips64 architectures), and os1_linux_mips64x.go (only used
in mips64{,le}), to avoid code copying.

Change-Id: I5cadfccd86bfc4b30bf97e12607c3c614903ea4c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14991
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-12 04:48:23 +00:00
Yao Zhang
c1037aad4d runtime: added mips64{,le} build tags and GOARCH cases
Change-Id: I381c03d957a0dccae5f655f02e92760e5c0e9629
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14929
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
2015-11-12 04:47:42 +00:00
Yao Zhang
15b51d6ae6 runtime: updated automatically generated zgoarch_*.go
files for unsupported architectures are deleted, as it would require
changing cmd/dist to recognize their names as build tags (probably
need a separated CL).

Change-Id: Ifd164b014867d39b4924d1b859fb84317dce4ab0
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14928
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
2015-11-12 04:47:29 +00:00
Yao Zhang
a36dda7880 runtime: added go files for linux/mips64{,le} support
Change-Id: I14b537922b97d4bce9e0523d98a822da906348f1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14447
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
2015-11-12 04:47:15 +00:00
Yao Zhang
980b00f55b runtime: added go files for mips64 architecture support
Change-Id: Ia496470e48b3c5d39fb9fef99fac356dfb73a949
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14927
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
2015-11-12 04:46:50 +00:00
Yao Zhang
b2b8559987 runtime/internal/atomic: added mips64 support.
Change-Id: I2eaf0658771a0ff788429e2f503d116531166315
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16834
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
2015-11-12 04:46:35 +00:00
Yao Zhang
424738e43e runtime: added assembly part of linux/mips64{,le} support
Change-Id: I9e94027ef66c88007107de2b2b75c3d7cf1352af
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14467
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
2015-11-12 04:46:17 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
a9bebd91c9 runtime: update comment that was missed in CL 6584
Change-Id: Ie5f70af7e673bb2c691a45c28db2c017e6cddd4f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16833
Reviewed-by: Minux Ma <minux@golang.org>
2015-11-12 03:38:04 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
c17c42e8a5 runtime: rewrite lots of foo_Bar(f, ...) into f.bar(...)
Applies to types fixAlloc, mCache, mCentral, mHeap, mSpan, and
mSpanList.

Two special cases:

1. mHeap_Scavenge() previously didn't take an *mheap parameter, so it
was specially handled in this CL.

2. mHeap_Free() would have collided with mheap's "free" field, so it's
been renamed to (*mheap).freeSpan to parallel its underlying
(*mheap).freeSpanLocked method.

Change-Id: I325938554cca432c166fe9d9d689af2bbd68de4b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16221
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-12 00:34:58 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
58db5fc94d runtime: run TestCgoExternalThreadSIGPROF on ppc64le
It was disabled because of the lack of external linking.

Change-Id: Iccb4a4ef8c57d048d53deabe4e0f4e6b9dccce33
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16797
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-12 00:30:04 +00:00
Hyang-Ah Hana Kim
b2259dcef0 runtime: add syscalls needed for android/386 logging
Update golang/go#9327.

Change-Id: I27ef973190d9ae652411caf3739414b5d46ca7d2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16679
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-11-11 21:59:53 +00:00
Hyang-Ah Hana Kim
05c4c6e2f4 cmd,runtime: TLS setup for android/386
Same ugly hack as https://go-review.googlesource.com/15991.

Update golang/go#9327.

Change-Id: I58284e83268a15de95eabc833c3e01bf1e3faa2e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16678
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-11-11 21:59:24 +00:00
Austin Clements
d727312cbf runtime: remove unused marking parfor
The GC now handles the root marking jobs as part of general marking,
so work.markfor is no longer used.

Change-Id: I6c3b23fed27e4e7ea6430d6ca7ba25ae4d04ed14
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16811
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-11-11 18:31:33 +00:00
Austin Clements
f32f2954fb runtime: never allocate new M when jumping time forward
When we're jumping time forward, it means everyone is asleep, so there
should always be an M available. Furthermore, this causes both
allocation and write barriers in contexts that may be running without
a P (such as in sysmon).

Hence, replace this allocation with a throw.

Updates #10600.

Change-Id: I2cee70d5db828d0044082878995949edb25dda5f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16815
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-11 17:37:42 +00:00
Austin Clements
f5c42cf88e runtime: replace traceBuf slice with index
Currently traceBuf keeps track of where it is in the trace buffer by
also maintaining a slice that points in to this buffer with an initial
length of 0 and a cap of the length of the array. All writes to this
buffer are done by appending to the slice (as long as the bounds
checks are right, it will never overflow and the append won't allocate
a new slice).

Each of these appends generates a write barrier. As long as we never
overflow the buffer, this write barrier won't fire, but this wreaks
havoc with eliminating write barriers from the tracing code. If we
were to overflow the buffer, this would both allocate and invoke a
write barrier, both things that are dicey at best to do in many of the
contexts tracing happens. It also wastes space in the traceBuf and
leads to more complex code and more complex generated code.

Replace this slice trick with keeping track of a simple array
position.

Updates #10600.

Change-Id: I0a63eecec1992e195449f414ed47653f66318d0e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16814
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
2015-11-11 17:37:31 +00:00
Austin Clements
2be1ed80c5 runtime: eliminate traceStack write barriers
This replaces *traceStack with traceStackPtr, much like the preceding
commit.

Updates #10600.

Change-Id: Ifadc35eb37a405ae877f9740151fb31a0ca1d08f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16813
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
2015-11-11 17:37:26 +00:00
Austin Clements
03227bb55e runtime: eliminate traceBuf write barriers
The tracing code is currently called from contexts such as sysmon and
the scheduler where write barriers are not allowed. Unfortunately,
while the common paths through the tracing code do not have write
barriers, many of the less common paths dealing with buffer overflow
and recycling do.

This change replaces all *traceBufs with traceBufPtrs. In the style of
guintptr, etc., the GC does not trace traceBufPtrs and write barriers
do not apply when these pointers are written. Since traceBufs are
allocated from non-GC'd memory and manually managed, this is always
safe.

Updates #10600.

Change-Id: I52b992d36d1b634ebd855c8cde27947ec14f59ba
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16812
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
2015-11-11 17:37:18 +00:00
Austin Clements
7d1d642956 runtime: fix use of xadd64
Commit 7407d8e was rebased over the switch to runtime/internal/atomic
and introduced a call to xadd64, which no longer exists. Fix that
call.

Change-Id: I99c93469794c16504ae4a8ffe3066ac382c66a3a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16816
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
2015-11-11 15:26:24 +00:00
Austin Clements
7407d8e582 runtime: fix over-aggressive proportional sweep
Currently, sweeping is performed before allocating a span by charging
for the entire size of the span requested, rather than the number of
bytes actually available for allocation from the returned span. That
is, if the returned span is 8K, but already has 6K in use, the mutator
is charged for 8K of heap allocation even though it can only allocate
2K more from the span. As a result, proportional sweep is
over-aggressive and tends to finish much earlier than it needs to.
This effect is more amplified by fragmented heaps.

Fix this by reimbursing the mutator for the used space in a span once
it has allocated that span. We still have to charge up-front for the
worst-case because we don't know which span the mutator will get, but
at least we can correct the over-charge once it has a span, which will
go toward later span allocations.

This has negligible effect on the throughput of the go1 benchmarks and
the garbage benchmark.

Fixes #12040.

Change-Id: I0e23e7a4ccf126cca000fed5067b20017028dd6b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16515
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
2015-11-11 15:21:32 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
880a689124 runtime: don't call msanread when running on the system stack
The runtime is not instrumented, but the calls to msanread in the
runtime can sometimes refer to the system stack.  An example is the call
to copy in stkbucket in mprof.go.  Depending on what C code has done,
the system stack may appear uninitialized to msan.

Change-Id: Ic21705b9ac504ae5cf7601a59189302f072e7db1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16660
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-11-11 06:04:04 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
8f3f2ccac0 runtime: mark cgo callback results as written for msan
This is a fix for the -msan option when using cgo callbacks.  A cgo
callback works by writing out C code that puts a struct on the stack and
passes the address of that struct into Go.  The result parameters are
fields of the struct.  The Go code will write to the result parameters,
but the Go code thinks it is just writing into the Go stack, and
therefore won't call msanwrite.  This CL adds a call to msanwrite in the
cgo callback code so that the C knows that results were written.

Change-Id: I80438dbd4561502bdee97fad3f02893a06880ee1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16611
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-11-11 05:58:19 +00:00
Austin Clements
f84420c20d runtime: clean up park messages
This changes "mark worker (idle)" to "GC worker (idle)" so it's more
clear to users that these goroutines are GC-related. It changes "GC
assist" to "GC assist wait" to make it clear that the assist is
blocked.

Change-Id: Iafbc0903c84f9250ff6bee14baac6fcd4ed5ef76
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16511
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
2015-11-11 01:04:39 +00:00
Austin Clements
56ad88b1ff runtime: free stack spans outside STW
We couldn't do this before this point because it must be done before
the next GC cycle starts. Hence, if it delayed the start of the next
cycle, that would widen the window between reaching the heap trigger
of the next cycle and starting the next GC cycle, during which the
mutator could over-allocate. With the decentralized GC, any mutators
that reach the heap trigger will block on the GC starting, so it's
safe to widen the time between starting the world and being able to
start the next GC cycle.

Fixes #11465.

Change-Id: Ic7ea7e9eba5b66fc050299f843a9c9001ad814aa
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16394
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-11 01:04:33 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
9dcc58c3d1 cmd/cgo, runtime: add checks for passing pointers from Go to C
This implements part of the proposal in issue 12416 by adding dynamic
checks for passing pointers from Go to C.  This code is intended to be
on at all times.  It does not try to catch every case.  It does not
implement checks on calling Go functions from C.

The new cgo checks may be disabled using GODEBUG=cgocheck=0.

Update #12416.

Change-Id: I48de130e7e2e83fb99a1e176b2c856be38a4d3c8
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16003
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-10 22:22:10 +00:00
Michael Matloob
67faca7d9c runtime: break atomics out into package runtime/internal/atomic
This change breaks out most of the atomics functions in the runtime
into package runtime/internal/atomic. It adds some basic support
in the toolchain for runtime packages, and also modifies linux/arm
atomics to remove the dependency on the runtime's mutex. The mutexes
have been replaced with spinlocks.

all trybots are happy!
In addition to the trybots, I've tested on the darwin/arm64 builder,
on the darwin/arm builder, and on a ppc64le machine.

Change-Id: I6698c8e3cf3834f55ce5824059f44d00dc8e3c2f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14204
Run-TryBot: Michael Matloob <matloob@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-10 17:38:04 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
4e3deae96d cmd/link, runtime: arm64 implementation of addmoduledata
Change-Id: I62fb5b20d7caa51b77560a4bfb74a39f17089805
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/13999
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2015-11-10 01:24:25 +00:00
Keith Randall
e410a527b2 runtime: simplify chan ops, take 2
This change is the same as CL #9345 which was reverted,
except for a small bug fix.

The only change is to the body of sendDirect and its callsite.
Also added a test.

The problem was during a channel send operation.  The target
of the send was a sleeping goroutine waiting to receive.  We
basically do:
1) Read the destination pointer out of the sudog structure
2) Copy the value we're sending to that destination pointer
Unfortunately, the previous change had a goroutine suspend
point between 1 & 2 (the call to sendDirect).  At that point
the destination goroutine's stack could be copied (shrunk).
The pointer we read in step 1 is no longer valid for step 2.

Fixed by not allowing any suspension points between 1 & 2.
I suspect the old code worked correctly basically by accident.

Fixes #13169

The original 9345:

This change removes the retry mechanism we use for buffered channels.
Instead, any sender waking up a receiver or vice versa completes the
full protocol with its counterpart.  This means the counterpart does
not need to relock the channel when it wakes up.  (Currently
buffered channels need to relock on wakeup.)

For sends on a channel with waiting receivers, this change replaces
two copies (sender->queue, queue->receiver) with one (sender->receiver).
For receives on channels with a waiting sender, two copies are still required.

This change unifies to a large degree the algorithm for buffered
and unbuffered channels, simplifying the overall implementation.

Fixes #11506

Change-Id: I57dfa3fc219cffa4d48301ee15fe5479299efa09
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16740
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-08 23:20:25 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
1b4d28f8cf cmd/link, runtime: arm implementation of addmoduledata
Change-Id: I3975e10c2445e23c2798a7203a877ff2de3427c7
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14189
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-08 21:46:17 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
e884334b55 runtime: use pthread_sigmask, not sigprocmask, on Darwin ARM/ARM64
Other systems use pthread_sigmask.  It was a mistake to use sigprocmask
here.

Change-Id: Ie045aa3f09cf035fcf807b7543b96fa5b847958a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16720
Reviewed-by: Dave Cheney <dave@cheney.net>
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-07 15:48:58 +00:00
Keith Randall
4b7d5f0b94 runtime: memmove/memclr pointers atomically
Make sure that we're moving or zeroing pointers atomically.
Anything that is a multiple of pointer size and at least
pointer aligned might have pointers in it.  All the code looks
ok except for the 1-pointer-sized moves.

Fixes #13160
Update #12552

Change-Id: Ib97d9b918fa9f4cc5c56c67ed90255b7fdfb7b45
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16668
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-07 02:42:12 +00:00
Ilya Tocar
321a40721b runtime: optimize indexbytebody on amd64
Use avx2 to compare 32 bytes per iteration.
Results (haswell):

name                    old time/op    new time/op     delta
IndexByte32-6             15.5ns ± 0%     14.7ns ± 5%   -4.87%        (p=0.000 n=16+20)
IndexByte4K-6              360ns ± 0%      183ns ± 0%  -49.17%        (p=0.000 n=19+20)
IndexByte4M-6              384µs ± 0%      256µs ± 1%  -33.41%        (p=0.000 n=20+20)
IndexByte64M-6            6.20ms ± 0%     4.18ms ± 1%  -32.52%        (p=0.000 n=19+20)
IndexBytePortable32-6     73.4ns ± 5%     75.8ns ± 3%   +3.35%        (p=0.000 n=20+19)
IndexBytePortable4K-6     5.15µs ± 0%     5.15µs ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
IndexBytePortable4M-6     5.26ms ± 0%     5.25ms ± 0%   -0.12%        (p=0.000 n=20+18)
IndexBytePortable64M-6    84.1ms ± 0%     84.1ms ± 0%   -0.08%        (p=0.012 n=18+20)
Index32-6                  352ns ± 0%      352ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
Index4K-6                 53.8µs ± 0%     53.8µs ± 0%   -0.03%        (p=0.000 n=16+18)
Index4M-6                 55.4ms ± 0%     55.4ms ± 0%     ~           (p=0.149 n=20+19)
Index64M-6                 886ms ± 0%      886ms ± 0%     ~           (p=0.108 n=20+20)
IndexEasy32-6             80.3ns ± 0%     80.1ns ± 0%   -0.21%        (p=0.000 n=20+20)
IndexEasy4K-6              426ns ± 0%      215ns ± 0%  -49.53%        (p=0.000 n=20+20)
IndexEasy4M-6              388µs ± 0%      262µs ± 1%  -32.42%        (p=0.000 n=18+20)
IndexEasy64M-6            6.20ms ± 0%     4.19ms ± 1%  -32.47%        (p=0.000 n=18+20)

name                    old speed      new speed       delta
IndexByte32-6           2.06GB/s ± 1%   2.17GB/s ± 5%   +5.19%        (p=0.000 n=18+20)
IndexByte4K-6           11.4GB/s ± 0%   22.3GB/s ± 0%  +96.45%        (p=0.000 n=17+20)
IndexByte4M-6           10.9GB/s ± 0%   16.4GB/s ± 1%  +50.17%        (p=0.000 n=20+20)
IndexByte64M-6          10.8GB/s ± 0%   16.0GB/s ± 1%  +48.19%        (p=0.000 n=19+20)
IndexBytePortable32-6    436MB/s ± 5%    422MB/s ± 3%   -3.27%        (p=0.000 n=20+19)
IndexBytePortable4K-6    795MB/s ± 0%    795MB/s ± 0%     ~           (p=0.940 n=17+18)
IndexBytePortable4M-6    798MB/s ± 0%    799MB/s ± 0%   +0.12%        (p=0.000 n=20+18)
IndexBytePortable64M-6   798MB/s ± 0%    798MB/s ± 0%   +0.08%        (p=0.011 n=18+20)
Index32-6               90.9MB/s ± 0%   90.9MB/s ± 0%   -0.00%        (p=0.025 n=20+20)
Index4K-6               76.1MB/s ± 0%   76.1MB/s ± 0%   +0.03%        (p=0.000 n=14+15)
Index4M-6               75.7MB/s ± 0%   75.7MB/s ± 0%     ~           (p=0.076 n=20+19)
Index64M-6              75.7MB/s ± 0%   75.7MB/s ± 0%     ~           (p=0.456 n=20+17)
IndexEasy32-6            399MB/s ± 0%    399MB/s ± 0%   +0.20%        (p=0.000 n=20+19)
IndexEasy4K-6           9.60GB/s ± 0%  19.02GB/s ± 0%  +98.19%        (p=0.000 n=20+20)
IndexEasy4M-6           10.8GB/s ± 0%   16.0GB/s ± 1%  +47.98%        (p=0.000 n=18+20)
IndexEasy64M-6          10.8GB/s ± 0%   16.0GB/s ± 1%  +48.08%        (p=0.000 n=18+20)

Change-Id: I46075921dde9f3580a89544c0b3a2d8c9181ebc4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16484
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ilya Tocar <ilya.tocar@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-06 15:16:28 +00:00
Keith Randall
e9f90ba246 Revert "runtime: simplify buffered channels."
Revert for now until #13169 is understood.

This reverts commit 8e496f1d69.

Change-Id: Ib3eb2588824ef47a2b6eb9e377a24e5c817fcc81
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16716
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2015-11-06 08:30:35 +00:00
Austin Clements
d5ba582166 runtime: remove background GC goroutine and mark barriers
These are now unused.

Updates #11970.

Change-Id: I43e5c4e5bcda9581bacc63364f96bb4855ab779f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16393
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:24:05 +00:00
Austin Clements
bbf2da00fc runtime: remove GC start up/shutdown workaround in mallocgc
Currently mallocgc detects if the GC is in a state where it can't
assist, but also can't allocate uncontrolled and yields to help out
the GC. This was a workaround for periods when we were trying to
schedule the GC coordinator. It is no longer necessary because there
is no GC coordinator and malloc can always assist with any GC
transitions that are necessary.

Updates #11970.

Change-Id: I4f7beb7013e85e50ae99a3a8b0bb708ba49cbcd4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16392
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:24:01 +00:00
Austin Clements
c99d7f7f85 runtime: decentralize mark done and mark termination
This moves all of the mark 1 to mark 2 transition and mark termination
to the mark done transition function. This means these transitions are
now handled on the goroutine that detected mark completion. This also
means that the GC coordinator and the background completion barriers
are no longer used and various workarounds to yield to the coordinator
are no longer necessary. These will be removed in follow-up commits.

One consequence of this is that mark workers now need to be
preemptible when performing the mark done transition. This allows them
to stop the world and to perform the final clean-up steps of GC after
restarting the world. They are only made preemptible while performing
this transition, so if the worker findRunnableGCWorker would schedule
isn't available, we didn't want to schedule it anyway.

Fixes #11970.

Change-Id: I9203a2d6287eeff62d589ec02ad9cb1e29ddb837
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16391
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:23:54 +00:00
Austin Clements
d986bf2741 runtime: account mark worker time before gcMarkDone
Currently gcMarkDone takes basically no time, so it's okay to account
the worker time after calling it. However, gcMarkDone is about to take
potentially *much* longer because it may perform all of mark
termination. Prepare for this by swapping the order so we account the
time before calling gcMarkDone.

Change-Id: I90c7df68192acfc4fd02a7254dae739dda4e2fcb
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16390
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:23:49 +00:00
Austin Clements
171204b561 runtime: factor mark done transition
Currently the code for completion of mark 1/mark 2 is duplicated in
background workers and assists. Factor this in to a single function
that will serve as the transition function for concurrent mark.

Change-Id: I4d9f697a15da0d349db3b34d56f3a220dd41d41b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16359
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:23:42 +00:00
Austin Clements
12e23f05ff runtime: eliminate mark completion in scheduler
Currently, findRunnableGCWorker will perform mark completion if there
is no remaining work and no running workers. This used to be necessary
to resolve a race in the transition from mark 1 to mark 2 where we
would enter mark 2 with no mark work (and no dedicated workers), so no
workers would run, so no worker would signal mark completion.

However, we're about to make mark completion also perform the entire
follow-on process, which includes mark termination. We really don't
want to do that in the scheduler if it happens to detect completion.

Conveniently, this hack is no longer necessary because we always
enqueue root scanning work at the beginning of both mark 1 and mark 2,
so a mark worker will always run. Hence, we can simply eliminate it.

Change-Id: I3fc8f27c8da632f0fb732c9f6425e1f457f5652e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16358
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:23:38 +00:00
Austin Clements
20f276e237 runtime: don't start idle mark workers when barriers are cleared
Currently, we don't start dedicated or fractional mark workers unless
the mark 1 or mark 2 barriers have been cleared. One intended
consequence of this is that no background workers run between the
forEachP that disposes all gcWork caches and the beginning of mark 2.

However, we (unintentionally) did not apply this restriction to idle
mark workers. As a result, these can start in the interim between mark
1 completion and mark 2 starting. This explains why it was necessary
to reset the root marking jobs using carefully ordered atomic writes
when setting up mark 2. It also means that, even though we definitely
enqueue work before starting mark 2, it may be drained by the time we
reset the mark 2 barrier. If this happens, currently the only thing
preventing the runtime from deadlocking is that the scheduler itself
also checks for mark completion and will signal mark 2 completion.
Were it not for the odd behavior of idle workers, this check in the
scheduler would not be necessary.

Clean all of this up and prepare to remove this check in the scheduler
by applying the same restriction to starting idle mark workers.

Change-Id: Ic1b479e1591bd7773dc27b320ca399a215603b5a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16631
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:23:33 +00:00
Austin Clements
a51905fa04 runtime: decentralize sweep termination and mark transition
This moves all of GC initialization, sweep termination, and the
transition to concurrent marking in to the off->mark transition
function. This means it's now handled on the goroutine that detected
the state exit condition.

As a result, malloc no longer needs to Gosched() at the beginning of
the GC cycle to prevent over-allocation while the GC is starting up
because it will now *help* the GC to start up. The Gosched hack is
still necessary during GC shutdown (this is easy to test by enabling
gctrace and hitting Ctrl-S to block the gctrace output).

At this point, the GC coordinator still handles later phases. This
requires a small tweak to how we start the GC coordinator. Currently,
starting the GC coordinator is best-effort and may fail if the
coordinator is about to park from the previous cycle but hasn't yet.
We fix this by replacing the park/ready to wake up the coordinator
with a semaphore. This is temporary since the coordinator will be
going away in a few commits.

Updates #11970.

Change-Id: I2c6a11c91e72dfbc59c2d8e7c66146dee9a444fe
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16357
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:23:27 +00:00
Austin Clements
9630c47e8c runtime: decentralize concurrent sweep termination
This moves concurrent sweep termination from the coordinator to the
off->mark transition. This allows it to be performed by all Gs
attempting to start the GC.

Updates #11970.

Change-Id: I24428e8599a759398c2ef7ec996ba755a448f947
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16356
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:23:22 +00:00
Austin Clements
f54bcedce1 runtime: beginning of decentralized off->mark transition
This begins the conversion of the centralized GC coordinator to a
decentralized state machine by introducing the internal API that
triggers the first state transition from _GCoff to _GCmark (or
_GCmarktermination).

This change introduces the transition lock, the off->mark transition
condition (which is very similar to shouldtriggergc()), and the
general structure of a state transition. Since we're doing this
conversion in stages, it then falls back to the GC coordinator to
actually execute the cycle. We'll start moving logic out of the GC
coordinator and in to transition functions next.

This fixes a minor bug in gcstoptheworld debug mode where passing the
heap trigger once could trigger multiple STW GCs.

Updates #11970.

Change-Id: I964087dd190a639eb5766398f8e1bbf8b352902f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16355
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2015-11-05 21:23:17 +00:00
Austin Clements
3842596284 runtime: move concurrent mark setup off system stack
For historical reasons we currently do a lot of the concurrent mark
setup on the system stack. In fact, at this point the one and only
thing that needs to happen on the system stack is the start-the-world.

Clean up this code by lifting everything other than the
start-the-world off the system stack.

The diff for this change looks large, but the only code change is to
narrow the systemstack call. Everything else is re-indentation.

Change-Id: I1e03b8afc759fad726f2397b05a17d183c2713ce
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16354
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:23:11 +00:00
Austin Clements
1959621584 runtime: lift state variables from func gc to var work
We're about to split func gc across several functions, so lift the
local variables it uses for tracking statistics and state across the
cycle into the global "work" variable.

Change-Id: Ie955f2f1758c7f5a5543ea1f3f33b222bc4b1d37
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16353
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:23:06 +00:00
Austin Clements
1698018955 runtime: note a minor issue with GODEUG=gcstoptheworld
Change-Id: I91cda8d88b0852cd0f868d33c594206bcca0c386
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16352
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
2015-11-05 21:22:59 +00:00
Ilya Tocar
967564be7e runtime: optimize string comparison on amd64
Use AVX2 if possible.
Results below (haswell):

name                            old time/op    new time/op     delta
CompareStringEqual-6              8.77ns ± 0%     8.63ns ± 1%   -1.58%        (p=0.000 n=20+19)
CompareStringIdentical-6          5.02ns ± 0%     5.02ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
CompareStringSameLength-6         7.51ns ± 0%     7.51ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
CompareStringDifferentLength-6    1.56ns ± 0%     1.56ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
CompareStringBigUnaligned-6        124µs ± 1%      105µs ± 5%  -14.99%        (p=0.000 n=20+18)
CompareStringBig-6                 112µs ± 1%      103µs ± 0%   -7.87%        (p=0.000 n=20+17)

name                            old speed      new speed       delta
CompareStringBigUnaligned-6     8.48GB/s ± 1%   9.98GB/s ± 5%  +17.67%        (p=0.000 n=20+18)
CompareStringBig-6              9.37GB/s ± 1%  10.17GB/s ± 0%   +8.54%        (p=0.000 n=20+17)

Change-Id: I1c949626dd2aaf9f633e3c888a9df71c82eed7e1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16481
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ilya Tocar <ilya.tocar@intel.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com>
2015-11-05 15:42:33 +00:00
Keith Randall
8e496f1d69 runtime: simplify buffered channels.
This change removes the retry mechanism we use for buffered channels.
Instead, any sender waking up a receiver or vice versa completes the
full protocol with its counterpart.  This means the counterpart does
not need to relock the channel when it wakes up.  (Currently
buffered channels need to relock on wakeup.)

For sends on a channel with waiting receivers, this change replaces
two copies (sender->queue, queue->receiver) with one (sender->receiver).
For receives on channels with a waiting sender, two copies are still required.

This change unifies to a large degree the algorithm for buffered
and unbuffered channels, simplifying the overall implementation.

Fixes #11506

benchmark                        old ns/op     new ns/op     delta
BenchmarkChanProdCons10          125           110           -12.00%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0           303           284           -6.27%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100         75.5          71.3          -5.56%
BenchmarkChanContended           6452          6125          -5.07%
BenchmarkChanNonblocking         11.5          11.0          -4.35%
BenchmarkChanCreation            149           143           -4.03%
BenchmarkChanSem                 63.6          61.6          -3.14%
BenchmarkChanUncontended         6390          6212          -2.79%
BenchmarkChanSync                282           276           -2.13%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10      516           506           -1.94%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0       696           685           -1.58%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100     470           469           -0.21%
BenchmarkChanPopular             660427        660012        -0.06%

Change-Id: I164113a56432fbc7cace0786e49c5a6e6a708ea4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/9345
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
2015-11-05 15:41:05 +00:00
Austin Clements
dcd9e5bc0f runtime: make putfull start mark workers
Currently we depend on the good graces and timing of the scheduler to
get opportunities to start dedicated mark workers. In the worst case,
it may take 10ms to get dedicated mark workers going at the beginning
of mark 1 and mark 2 or after the amount of available work has dropped
and gone back up.

Instead of waiting for the regular preemption logic to get around to
us, make putfull enlist a random P if we're not already running enough
dedicated workers. This should improve performance stability of the
garbage collector and is likely to improve the overall performance
somewhat.

No overall effect on the go1 benchmarks. It speeds up the garbage
benchmark by 12%, which more than counters the performance loss from
the previous commit.

name              old time/op  new time/op  delta
XBenchGarbage-12  6.32ms ± 4%  5.58ms ± 2%  -11.68%  (p=0.000 n=20+16)

name                      old time/op    new time/op    delta
BinaryTree17-12              3.18s ± 5%     3.12s ± 4%  -1.83%  (p=0.021 n=20+20)
Fannkuch11-12                2.50s ± 2%     2.46s ± 2%  -1.57%  (p=0.000 n=18+19)
FmtFprintfEmpty-12          50.8ns ± 3%    50.4ns ± 3%    ~     (p=0.184 n=20+20)
FmtFprintfString-12          167ns ± 2%     171ns ± 1%  +2.46%  (p=0.000 n=20+19)
FmtFprintfInt-12             161ns ± 2%     163ns ± 2%  +1.81%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
FmtFprintfIntInt-12          269ns ± 1%     266ns ± 1%  -0.81%  (p=0.002 n=19+20)
FmtFprintfPrefixedInt-12     237ns ± 2%     231ns ± 2%  -2.86%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
FmtFprintfFloat-12           313ns ± 2%     313ns ± 1%    ~     (p=0.681 n=20+20)
FmtManyArgs-12              1.05µs ± 2%    1.03µs ± 1%  -2.26%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
GobDecode-12                8.66ms ± 1%    8.67ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.380 n=19+20)
GobEncode-12                6.56ms ± 1%    6.56ms ± 2%    ~     (p=0.607 n=19+20)
Gzip-12                      317ms ± 1%     314ms ± 2%  -1.10%  (p=0.000 n=20+19)
Gunzip-12                   42.1ms ± 1%    42.2ms ± 1%  +0.27%  (p=0.044 n=20+19)
HTTPClientServer-12         62.7µs ± 1%    62.0µs ± 1%  -1.04%  (p=0.000 n=19+18)
JSONEncode-12               16.7ms ± 1%    16.8ms ± 2%  +0.59%  (p=0.021 n=20+20)
JSONDecode-12               58.2ms ± 1%    61.4ms ± 2%  +5.43%  (p=0.000 n=18+19)
Mandelbrot200-12            3.84ms ± 1%    3.87ms ± 2%  +0.79%  (p=0.008 n=18+20)
GoParse-12                  3.86ms ± 2%    3.76ms ± 2%  -2.60%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
RegexpMatchEasy0_32-12       100ns ± 2%     100ns ± 1%  -0.68%  (p=0.005 n=18+15)
RegexpMatchEasy0_1K-12       332ns ± 1%     342ns ± 1%  +3.16%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_32-12      82.9ns ± 3%    83.0ns ± 2%    ~     (p=0.906 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchEasy1_1K-12       487ns ± 1%     494ns ± 1%  +1.50%  (p=0.000 n=17+20)
RegexpMatchMedium_32-12      131ns ± 2%     130ns ± 1%    ~     (p=0.686 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchMedium_1K-12     39.6µs ± 1%    39.2µs ± 1%  -1.09%  (p=0.000 n=18+19)
RegexpMatchHard_32-12       2.04µs ± 1%    2.04µs ± 2%    ~     (p=0.804 n=20+20)
RegexpMatchHard_1K-12       61.7µs ± 2%    61.3µs ± 2%    ~     (p=0.052 n=18+20)
Revcomp-12                   529ms ± 2%     533ms ± 1%  +0.83%  (p=0.003 n=20+19)
Template-12                 70.7ms ± 2%    71.0ms ± 2%    ~     (p=0.065 n=20+19)
TimeParse-12                 351ns ± 2%     355ns ± 1%  +1.25%  (p=0.000 n=19+20)
TimeFormat-12                362ns ± 2%     373ns ± 1%  +2.83%  (p=0.000 n=18+20)
[Geo mean]                  62.2µs         62.3µs       +0.13%

name                      old speed      new speed      delta
GobDecode-12              88.6MB/s ± 1%  88.5MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.392 n=19+20)
GobEncode-12               117MB/s ± 1%   117MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.622 n=19+20)
Gzip-12                   61.1MB/s ± 1%  61.8MB/s ± 2%  +1.11%  (p=0.000 n=20+19)
Gunzip-12                  461MB/s ± 1%   460MB/s ± 1%  -0.27%  (p=0.044 n=20+19)
JSONEncode-12              116MB/s ± 1%   115MB/s ± 2%  -0.58%  (p=0.022 n=20+20)
JSONDecode-12             33.3MB/s ± 1%  31.6MB/s ± 2%  -5.15%  (p=0.000 n=18+19)
GoParse-12                15.0MB/s ± 2%  15.4MB/s ± 2%  +2.66%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
RegexpMatchEasy0_32-12     317MB/s ± 2%   319MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.052 n=20+20)
RegexpMatchEasy0_1K-12    3.08GB/s ± 1%  2.99GB/s ± 1%  -3.07%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_32-12     386MB/s ± 3%   386MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.939 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchEasy1_1K-12    2.10GB/s ± 1%  2.07GB/s ± 1%  -1.46%  (p=0.000 n=17+20)
RegexpMatchMedium_32-12   7.62MB/s ± 2%  7.64MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.702 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchMedium_1K-12   25.9MB/s ± 1%  26.1MB/s ± 2%  +0.99%  (p=0.000 n=18+20)
RegexpMatchHard_32-12     15.7MB/s ± 1%  15.7MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.723 n=20+20)
RegexpMatchHard_1K-12     16.6MB/s ± 2%  16.7MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.052 n=18+20)
Revcomp-12                 481MB/s ± 2%   477MB/s ± 1%  -0.83%  (p=0.003 n=20+19)
Template-12               27.5MB/s ± 2%  27.3MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.062 n=20+19)
[Geo mean]                99.4MB/s       99.1MB/s       -0.35%

Change-Id: I914d8cadded5a230509d118164a4c201601afc06
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16298
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
2015-11-04 20:15:51 +00:00
Austin Clements
62ba520b23 runtime: eliminate getfull barrier from concurrent mark
Currently dedicated mark workers participate in the getfull barrier
during concurrent mark. However, the getfull barrier wasn't designed
for concurrent work and this causes no end of headaches.

In the concurrent setting, participants come and go. This makes mark
completion susceptible to live-lock: since dedicated workers are only
periodically polling for completion, it's possible for the program to
be in some transient worker each time one of the dedicated workers
wakes up to check if it can exit the getfull barrier. It also
complicates reasoning about the system because dedicated workers
participate directly in the getfull barrier, but transient workers
must instead use trygetfull because they have exit conditions that
aren't captured by getfull (e.g., fractional workers exit when
preempted). The complexity of implementing these exit conditions
contributed to #11677. Furthermore, the getfull barrier is inefficient
because we could be running user code instead of spinning on a P. In
effect, we're dedicating 25% of the CPU to marking even if that means
we have to spin to make that 25%. It also causes issues on Windows
because we can't actually sleep for 100µs (#8687).

Fix this by making dedicated workers no longer participate in the
getfull barrier. Instead, dedicated workers simply return to the
scheduler when they fail to get more work, regardless of what others
workers are doing, and the scheduler only starts new dedicated workers
if there's work available. Everything that needs to be handled by this
barrier is already handled by detection of mark completion.

This makes the system much more symmetric because all workers and
assists now use trygetfull during concurrent mark. It also loosens the
25% CPU target so that we can give some of that 25% back to user code
if there isn't enough work to keep the mark worker busy. And it
eliminates the problematic 100µs sleep on Windows during concurrent
mark (though not during mark termination).

The downside of this is that if we hit a bottleneck in the heap graph
that then expands back out, the system may shut down dedicated workers
and take a while to start them back up. We'll address this in the next
commit.

Updates #12041 and #8687.

No effect on the go1 benchmarks. This slows down the garbage benchmark
by 9%, but we'll more than make it up in the next commit.

name              old time/op  new time/op  delta
XBenchGarbage-12  5.80ms ± 2%  6.32ms ± 4%  +9.03%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)

Change-Id: I65100a9ba005a8b5cf97940798918672ea9dd09b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16297
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
2015-11-04 20:15:39 +00:00
Austin Clements
3a765430c1 cmd/compile: add go:nowritebarrierrec annotation
This introduces a recursive variant of the go:nowritebarrier
annotation that prohibits write barriers not only in the annotated
function, but in all functions it calls, recursively. The error
message gives the shortest call stack from the annotated function to
the function containing the prohibited write barrier, including the
names of the functions and the line numbers of the calls.

To demonstrate the annotation, we apply it to gcmarkwb_m, the write
barrier itself.

This is a new annotation rather than a modification of the existing
go:nowritebarrier annotation because, for better or worse, there are
many go:nowritebarrier functions that do call functions with write
barriers. In most of these cases this is benign because the annotation
was conservative, but it prohibits simply coopting the existing
annotation.

Change-Id: I225ca483c8f699e8436373ed96349e80ca2c2479
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16554
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2015-11-04 14:42:04 +00:00
Dmitry Vyukov
ee0305e036 runtime: remove dead code
runtime.free has long gone.

Change-Id: I058f69e6481b8fa008e1951c29724731a8a3d081
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16593
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2015-11-03 19:20:21 +00:00
Austin Clements
b6c0934a9b runtime: cache two workbufs to reduce contention
Currently the gcWork abstraction caches a single work buffer. As a
result, if a worker is putting and getting pointers right at the
boundary of a work buffer, it can flap between work buffers and
(potentially significantly) increase contention on the global work
buffer lists.

This change modifies gcWork to instead cache two work buffers and
switch off between them. This introduces one buffers' worth of
hysteresis and eliminates the above performance worst case by
amortizing the cost of getting or putting a work buffer over at least
one buffers' worth of work.

In practice, it's difficult to trigger this worst case with reasonably
large work buffers. On the garbage benchmark, this reduces the max
writes/sec to the global work list from 32K to 25K and the median from
6K to 5K. However, if a workload were to trigger this worst case
behavior, it could significantly drive up this contention.

This has negligible effects on the go1 benchmarks and slightly speeds
up the garbage benchmark.

name              old time/op  new time/op  delta
XBenchGarbage-12  5.90ms ± 3%  5.83ms ± 4%  -1.18%  (p=0.011 n=18+18)

name                      old time/op    new time/op    delta
BinaryTree17-12              3.22s ± 4%     3.17s ± 3%  -1.57%  (p=0.009 n=19+20)
Fannkuch11-12                2.44s ± 1%     2.53s ± 4%  +3.78%  (p=0.000 n=18+19)
FmtFprintfEmpty-12          50.2ns ± 2%    50.5ns ± 5%    ~     (p=0.631 n=19+20)
FmtFprintfString-12          167ns ± 1%     166ns ± 1%    ~     (p=0.141 n=20+20)
FmtFprintfInt-12             162ns ± 1%     159ns ± 1%  -1.80%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
FmtFprintfIntInt-12          277ns ± 2%     263ns ± 1%  -4.78%  (p=0.000 n=20+18)
FmtFprintfPrefixedInt-12     240ns ± 1%     232ns ± 2%  -3.25%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
FmtFprintfFloat-12           311ns ± 1%     315ns ± 2%  +1.17%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
FmtManyArgs-12              1.05µs ± 2%    1.03µs ± 2%  -1.72%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
GobDecode-12                8.65ms ± 1%    8.71ms ± 2%  +0.68%  (p=0.001 n=19+20)
GobEncode-12                6.51ms ± 1%    6.54ms ± 1%  +0.42%  (p=0.047 n=20+19)
Gzip-12                      318ms ± 2%     315ms ± 2%  -1.20%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
Gunzip-12                   42.2ms ± 2%    42.1ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.667 n=20+19)
HTTPClientServer-12         62.5µs ± 1%    62.4µs ± 1%    ~     (p=0.110 n=20+18)
JSONEncode-12               16.8ms ± 1%    16.8ms ± 2%    ~     (p=0.569 n=19+20)
JSONDecode-12               60.8ms ± 2%    59.8ms ± 1%  -1.69%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
Mandelbrot200-12            3.87ms ± 1%    3.85ms ± 0%  -0.61%  (p=0.001 n=20+17)
GoParse-12                  3.76ms ± 2%    3.76ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.698 n=20+20)
RegexpMatchEasy0_32-12       100ns ± 2%     101ns ± 2%    ~     (p=0.065 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchEasy0_1K-12       342ns ± 2%     333ns ± 1%  -2.82%  (p=0.000 n=20+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_32-12      83.3ns ± 2%    83.2ns ± 2%    ~     (p=0.692 n=20+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_1K-12       498ns ± 2%     490ns ± 1%  -1.52%  (p=0.000 n=18+20)
RegexpMatchMedium_32-12      131ns ± 2%     131ns ± 2%    ~     (p=0.464 n=20+18)
RegexpMatchMedium_1K-12     39.3µs ± 2%    39.6µs ± 1%  +0.77%  (p=0.000 n=18+19)
RegexpMatchHard_32-12       2.04µs ± 2%    2.06µs ± 1%  +0.69%  (p=0.009 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchHard_1K-12       61.4µs ± 2%    62.1µs ± 1%  +1.21%  (p=0.000 n=19+20)
Revcomp-12                   534ms ± 1%     529ms ± 1%  -0.97%  (p=0.000 n=19+16)
Template-12                 70.4ms ± 2%    70.0ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.070 n=19+19)
TimeParse-12                 359ns ± 3%     344ns ± 1%  -4.15%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
TimeFormat-12                357ns ± 1%     361ns ± 2%  +1.05%  (p=0.002 n=20+20)
[Geo mean]                  62.4µs         62.0µs       -0.56%

name                      old speed      new speed      delta
GobDecode-12              88.7MB/s ± 1%  88.1MB/s ± 2%  -0.68%  (p=0.001 n=19+20)
GobEncode-12               118MB/s ± 1%   117MB/s ± 1%  -0.42%  (p=0.046 n=20+19)
Gzip-12                   60.9MB/s ± 2%  61.7MB/s ± 2%  +1.21%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
Gunzip-12                  460MB/s ± 2%   461MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.661 n=20+19)
JSONEncode-12              116MB/s ± 1%   115MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.555 n=19+20)
JSONDecode-12             31.9MB/s ± 2%  32.5MB/s ± 1%  +1.72%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
GoParse-12                15.4MB/s ± 2%  15.4MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.653 n=20+20)
RegexpMatchEasy0_32-12     317MB/s ± 2%   315MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.141 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchEasy0_1K-12    2.99GB/s ± 2%  3.07GB/s ± 1%  +2.86%  (p=0.000 n=20+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_32-12     384MB/s ± 2%   385MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.672 n=20+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_1K-12    2.06GB/s ± 2%  2.09GB/s ± 1%  +1.54%  (p=0.000 n=18+20)
RegexpMatchMedium_32-12   7.62MB/s ± 2%  7.63MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.800 n=20+18)
RegexpMatchMedium_1K-12   26.0MB/s ± 1%  25.8MB/s ± 1%  -0.77%  (p=0.000 n=18+19)
RegexpMatchHard_32-12     15.7MB/s ± 2%  15.6MB/s ± 1%  -0.69%  (p=0.010 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchHard_1K-12     16.7MB/s ± 2%  16.5MB/s ± 1%  -1.19%  (p=0.000 n=19+20)
Revcomp-12                 476MB/s ± 1%   481MB/s ± 1%  +0.97%  (p=0.000 n=19+16)
Template-12               27.6MB/s ± 2%  27.7MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.071 n=19+19)
[Geo mean]                99.1MB/s       99.3MB/s       +0.27%

Change-Id: I68bcbf74ccb716cd5e844a554f67b679135105e6
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16042
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-03 19:12:10 +00:00
Dmitry Vyukov
bf606094ee runtime: fix finalization and profiling of tiny allocations
Handling of special records for tiny allocations has two problems:
1. Once we queue a finalizer we mark the object. As the result any
   subsequent finalizers for the same object will not be queued
   during this GC cycle. If we have 16 finalizers setup (the worst case),
   finalization will take 16 GC cycles. This is what caused misbehave
   of tinyfin.go. The actual flakiness was caused by the fact that fing
   is asynchronous and don't always run before the check.
2. If a tiny block has both finalizer and profile specials,
   it is possible that we both queue finalizer, preserve the object live
   and free the profile record. As the result heap profile can be skewed.

Fix both issues by analyzing all special records for a single object at once.

Also, make tinyfin test stricter and remove reliance on real time.

Also, add a test for the problem 2. Currently heap profile missed about
a half of live memory.

Fixes #13100

Change-Id: I9ae4dc1c44893724138a4565ca5cae29f2e97544
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16591
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
2015-11-03 18:57:18 +00:00
Ilya Tocar
95333aea53 strings: add asm version of Index() for short strings on amd64
Currently we have special case for 1-byte strings,
This extends this to strings shorter than 32 bytes on amd64.
Results (broadwell):

name                 old time/op  new time/op  delta
IndexRune-4          57.4ns ± 0%  57.5ns ± 0%   +0.10%        (p=0.000 n=20+19)
IndexRuneFastPath-4  20.4ns ± 0%  20.4ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
Index-4              21.0ns ± 0%  21.8ns ± 0%   +3.81%        (p=0.000 n=20+20)
LastIndex-4          7.07ns ± 1%  6.98ns ± 0%   -1.21%        (p=0.000 n=20+16)
IndexByte-4          18.3ns ± 0%  18.3ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
IndexHard1-4         1.46ms ± 0%  0.39ms ± 0%  -73.06%        (p=0.000 n=16+16)
IndexHard2-4         1.46ms ± 0%  0.30ms ± 0%  -79.55%        (p=0.000 n=18+18)
IndexHard3-4         1.46ms ± 0%  0.66ms ± 0%  -54.68%        (p=0.000 n=19+19)
LastIndexHard1-4     1.46ms ± 0%  1.46ms ± 0%   -0.01%        (p=0.036 n=18+20)
LastIndexHard2-4     1.46ms ± 0%  1.46ms ± 0%     ~           (p=0.588 n=19+19)
LastIndexHard3-4     1.46ms ± 0%  1.46ms ± 0%     ~           (p=0.283 n=17+20)
IndexTorture-4       11.1µs ± 0%  11.1µs ± 0%   +0.01%        (p=0.000 n=18+17)

Change-Id: I892781549f558f698be4e41f9f568e3d0611efb5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16430
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ilya Tocar <ilya.tocar@intel.com>
2015-11-03 16:04:28 +00:00
Austin Clements
1870572180 runtime: enlarge GC work buffer size
Currently the GC work buffers are only 256 bytes and hence can record
only 24 64-bit pointer. They were reduced from 4K in commits db7fd1c
and a15818f as a way to minimize the amount of work the per-P workbuf
caches could "hide" from the mark phase and carry in to the mark
termination phase. However, this approach wasn't very robust and we
later added a "mark 2" phase to address this problem head-on.

Because of mark 2, there's now no benefit to having very small work
buffers. But there are plenty of downsides: small work buffers
increase contention on the work lists, increase the frequency and
hence net overhead of acquiring and releasing work buffers, and
somewhat increase memory overhead of the GC.

This commit expands work buffers back to 4K (504 64-bit pointers).
This reduces the rate of writes to work.full in the garbage benchmark
from a peak of ~780,000 writes/sec to a peak of ~32,000 writes/sec.

This has negligible effect on the go1 benchmarks. It slightly slows
down the garbage benchmark.

name              old time/op  new time/op  delta
XBenchGarbage-12  5.37ms ± 5%  5.60ms ± 2%  +4.37%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)

Change-Id: Ic9cc28e7a125d23d9faf4f5e690fb8aa9bcdfb28
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/15893
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-03 15:53:38 +00:00
Austin Clements
456528304d runtime: make assists preemptible
Currently, assists are non-preemptible, which means a heavily
assisting G can block other Gs from running. At the beginning of a GC
cycle, it can also delay scang, which will spin until the assist is
done. Since scanning is currently done sequentially, this can
seriously extend the length of the scan phase.

Fix this by making assists preemptible. Since the assist holds work
buffers and runs on the system stack, this must be done cooperatively:
we make gcDrainN return on preemption, and make the assist return from
the system stack and voluntarily Gosched.

This is prerequisite to enlarging the work buffers. Without this
change, the delays and spinning in scang increase significantly.

This has no effect on the go1 benchmarks.

name              old time/op  new time/op  delta
XBenchGarbage-12  5.72ms ± 4%  5.37ms ± 5%  -6.11%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)

Change-Id: I829e732a0f23b126da633516a1a9ec1a508fdbf1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/15894
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-03 15:53:31 +00:00
Austin Clements
15aa6bbd5a runtime: replace assist sleep loop with park/ready
GC assists must block until the assist can be satisfied (either
through stealing credit or doing work) or the GC cycle ends.
Currently, this is implemented as a retry loop with a 100 µs delay.
This obviously isn't ideal, as it wastes CPU and delays mutator
execution. It also has the somewhat peculiar downside that sleeping a
G requires allocation, and this requires working around recursive
allocation.

Replace this timed delay with a proper scheduling queue. When an
assist can't be satisfied immediately, it adds the allocating G to a
queue and parks it. Any time background scan credit is flushed, it
consults this queue, directly satisfies the debt of queued assists,
and wakes up satisfied assists before flushing any remaining credit to
the background credit pool.

No effect on the go1 benchmarks. Slightly speeds up the garbage
benchmark.

name              old time/op  new time/op  delta
XBenchGarbage-12  5.81ms ± 1%  5.72ms ± 4%  -1.65%  (p=0.011 n=20+20)

Updates #12041.

Change-Id: I8ee3b6274dd097b12b10a8030796a958a4b0e7b7
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/15890
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-03 15:53:25 +00:00
Austin Clements
0ca4488cc1 runtime: change p.runq from []*g to []guintptr
This eliminates many write barriers in the scheduler code that are
unnecessary and will interfere with upcoming changes where the garbage
collector will have to invoke run queue functions in contexts that
must not have write barriers.

Change-Id: I702d0ac99cfd00ffff406e7362917db6a43e7e55
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16556
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2015-11-03 15:53:18 +00:00
Todd Neal
e3e0122ae2 test: use go:noinline consistently
Replace various implementations of inlining prevention with
"go:noinline"

Change-Id: Iac90895c3a62d6f4b7a6c72e11e165d15a0abfa4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16510
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Todd Neal <todd@tneal.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-11-03 02:01:34 +00:00
Ilya Tocar
0e23ca41d9 bytes: speed up Compare() on amd64
Use AVX2 if available.
Results (haswell), below:

name                           old time/op    new time/op     delta
BytesCompare1-6                  11.4ns ± 0%     11.4ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
BytesCompare2-6                  11.4ns ± 0%     11.4ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
BytesCompare4-6                  11.4ns ± 0%     11.4ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
BytesCompare8-6                  9.29ns ± 2%     8.76ns ± 0%   -5.72%        (p=0.000 n=16+17)
BytesCompare16-6                 9.29ns ± 2%     9.20ns ± 0%   -1.02%        (p=0.000 n=20+16)
BytesCompare32-6                 11.4ns ± 1%     11.4ns ± 0%     ~           (p=0.191 n=20+20)
BytesCompare64-6                 14.4ns ± 0%     13.1ns ± 0%   -8.68%        (p=0.000 n=20+20)
BytesCompare128-6                20.2ns ± 0%     18.5ns ± 0%   -8.27%        (p=0.000 n=16+20)
BytesCompare256-6                29.3ns ± 0%     24.5ns ± 0%  -16.38%        (p=0.000 n=16+16)
BytesCompare512-6                46.8ns ± 0%     37.1ns ± 0%  -20.78%        (p=0.000 n=18+16)
BytesCompare1024-6               82.9ns ± 0%     62.3ns ± 0%  -24.86%        (p=0.000 n=20+14)
BytesCompare2048-6                155ns ± 0%      112ns ± 0%  -27.74%        (p=0.000 n=20+20)
CompareBytesEqual-6              10.1ns ± 1%     10.0ns ± 1%     ~           (p=0.527 n=20+20)
CompareBytesToNil-6              10.0ns ± 2%      9.4ns ± 0%   -6.57%        (p=0.000 n=20+17)
CompareBytesEmpty-6              8.76ns ± 0%     8.76ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
CompareBytesIdentical-6          8.76ns ± 0%     8.76ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)
CompareBytesSameLength-6         10.6ns ± 1%     10.6ns ± 1%     ~           (p=0.240 n=20+20)
CompareBytesDifferentLength-6    10.6ns ± 0%     10.6ns ± 1%     ~           (p=1.000 n=20+20)
CompareBytesBigUnaligned-6        132±s ± 1%      105±s ± 1%  -20.61%        (p=0.000 n=20+18)
CompareBytesBig-6                 125±s ± 1%      105±s ± 1%  -16.31%        (p=0.000 n=20+20)
CompareBytesBigIdentical-6       8.13ns ± 0%     8.13ns ± 0%     ~     (all samples are equal)

name                           old speed      new speed       delta
CompareBytesBigUnaligned-6     7.94GB/s ± 1%  10.01GB/s ± 1%  +25.96%        (p=0.000 n=20+18)
CompareBytesBig-6              8.38GB/s ± 1%  10.01GB/s ± 1%  +19.48%        (p=0.000 n=20+20)
CompareBytesBigIdentical-6      129TB/s ± 0%    129TB/s ± 0%   +0.01%        (p=0.003 n=17+19)

Change-Id: I820f31bab4582dd4204b146bb077c0d2f24cd8f5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16434
Run-TryBot: Ilya Tocar <ilya.tocar@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2015-11-02 18:39:38 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
35d71d6727 cmd/go, runtime: define GOBUILDMODE_shared rather than shared when dynamically linking
To avoid collisions with what existing code may already be doing.

Change-Id: Ice639440aafc0724714c25333d90a49954372230
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16503
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-11-01 19:52:33 +00:00
Austin Clements
fbf273250f runtime: perform mark 2 root re-scanning in GC workers
This moves another root scanning task out of the GC coordinator and
parallelizes it on the GC workers.

This has negligible effect on the go1 benchmarks and the garbage
benchmark.

name              old time/op  new time/op  delta
XBenchGarbage-12  5.24ms ± 1%  5.26ms ± 1%  +0.30%  (p=0.007 n=18+17)

name                      old time/op    new time/op    delta
BinaryTree17-12              3.20s ± 5%     3.21s ± 5%    ~     (p=0.264 n=20+18)
Fannkuch11-12                2.46s ± 1%     2.54s ± 2%  +3.09%  (p=0.000 n=18+20)
FmtFprintfEmpty-12          49.9ns ± 4%    50.0ns ± 5%    ~     (p=0.356 n=20+20)
FmtFprintfString-12          170ns ± 1%     170ns ± 2%    ~     (p=0.815 n=19+20)
FmtFprintfInt-12             160ns ± 1%     159ns ± 1%  -0.63%  (p=0.003 n=18+19)
FmtFprintfIntInt-12          270ns ± 1%     267ns ± 1%  -1.00%  (p=0.000 n=19+18)
FmtFprintfPrefixedInt-12     238ns ± 1%     232ns ± 1%  -2.28%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
FmtFprintfFloat-12           310ns ± 2%     313ns ± 2%  +0.93%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
FmtManyArgs-12              1.06µs ± 1%    1.04µs ± 1%  -1.93%  (p=0.000 n=20+19)
GobDecode-12                8.63ms ± 1%    8.70ms ± 1%  +0.81%  (p=0.001 n=20+19)
GobEncode-12                6.52ms ± 1%    6.56ms ± 1%  +0.66%  (p=0.000 n=20+19)
Gzip-12                      318ms ± 1%     319ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.405 n=17+18)
Gunzip-12                   42.1ms ± 2%    42.0ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.771 n=20+19)
HTTPClientServer-12         62.6µs ± 1%    62.9µs ± 1%  +0.41%  (p=0.038 n=20+20)
JSONEncode-12               16.9ms ± 1%    16.9ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.077 n=18+20)
JSONDecode-12               60.7ms ± 1%    62.3ms ± 1%  +2.73%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
Mandelbrot200-12            3.86ms ± 1%    3.85ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.084 n=19+20)
GoParse-12                  3.75ms ± 2%    3.73ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.107 n=20+19)
RegexpMatchEasy0_32-12       100ns ± 2%     101ns ± 2%  +0.97%  (p=0.001 n=20+19)
RegexpMatchEasy0_1K-12       342ns ± 2%     332ns ± 2%  -2.86%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_32-12      83.2ns ± 2%    82.8ns ± 2%    ~     (p=0.108 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchEasy1_1K-12       495ns ± 2%     490ns ± 2%  -1.04%  (p=0.000 n=18+19)
RegexpMatchMedium_32-12      130ns ± 2%     131ns ± 2%    ~     (p=0.291 n=20+20)
RegexpMatchMedium_1K-12     39.3µs ± 1%    39.9µs ± 1%  +1.54%  (p=0.000 n=18+20)
RegexpMatchHard_32-12       2.02µs ± 1%    2.05µs ± 2%  +1.19%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
RegexpMatchHard_1K-12       60.9µs ± 1%    61.5µs ± 1%  +0.99%  (p=0.000 n=18+18)
Revcomp-12                   535ms ± 1%     531ms ± 1%  -0.82%  (p=0.000 n=17+17)
Template-12                 73.0ms ± 1%    74.1ms ± 1%  +1.47%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
TimeParse-12                 356ns ± 2%     348ns ± 1%  -2.30%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
TimeFormat-12                347ns ± 1%     353ns ± 1%  +1.68%  (p=0.000 n=19+20)
[Geo mean]                  62.3µs         62.4µs       +0.12%

name                      old speed      new speed      delta
GobDecode-12              88.9MB/s ± 1%  88.2MB/s ± 1%  -0.81%  (p=0.001 n=20+19)
GobEncode-12               118MB/s ± 1%   117MB/s ± 1%  -0.66%  (p=0.000 n=20+19)
Gzip-12                   60.9MB/s ± 1%  60.8MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.409 n=17+18)
Gunzip-12                  461MB/s ± 2%   462MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.765 n=20+19)
JSONEncode-12              115MB/s ± 1%   115MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.078 n=18+20)
JSONDecode-12             32.0MB/s ± 1%  31.1MB/s ± 1%  -2.65%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
GoParse-12                15.5MB/s ± 2%  15.5MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.111 n=20+19)
RegexpMatchEasy0_32-12     318MB/s ± 2%   314MB/s ± 2%  -1.27%  (p=0.000 n=20+19)
RegexpMatchEasy0_1K-12    2.99GB/s ± 1%  3.08GB/s ± 2%  +2.94%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_32-12     385MB/s ± 2%   386MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.105 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchEasy1_1K-12    2.07GB/s ± 1%  2.09GB/s ± 2%  +1.06%  (p=0.000 n=18+19)
RegexpMatchMedium_32-12   7.64MB/s ± 2%  7.61MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.179 n=20+20)
RegexpMatchMedium_1K-12   26.1MB/s ± 1%  25.7MB/s ± 1%  -1.52%  (p=0.000 n=18+20)
RegexpMatchHard_32-12     15.8MB/s ± 1%  15.6MB/s ± 2%  -1.18%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
RegexpMatchHard_1K-12     16.8MB/s ± 2%  16.6MB/s ± 1%  -0.90%  (p=0.000 n=19+18)
Revcomp-12                 475MB/s ± 1%   479MB/s ± 1%  +0.83%  (p=0.000 n=17+17)
Template-12               26.6MB/s ± 1%  26.2MB/s ± 1%  -1.45%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
[Geo mean]                99.0MB/s       98.7MB/s       -0.32%

Change-Id: I6ea44d7a59aaa6851c64695277ab65645ff9d32e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16070
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2015-10-30 22:46:39 +00:00
Austin Clements
82d14d77da runtime: perform concurrent scan in GC workers
Currently the concurrent root scan is performed in its entirety by the
GC coordinator before entering concurrent mark (which enables GC
workers). This scan is done sequentially, which can prolong the scan
phase, delay the mark phase, and means that the scan phase does not
obey the 25% CPU goal. Furthermore, there's no need to complete the
root scan before starting marking (in fact, we already allow GC
assists to happen during the scan phase), so this acts as an
unnecessary barrier between root scanning and marking.

This change shifts the root scan work out of the GC coordinator and in
to the GC workers. The coordinator simply sets up the scan state and
enqueues the right number of root scan jobs. The GC workers then drain
the root scan jobs prior to draining heap scan jobs.

This parallelizes the root scan process, makes it obey the 25% CPU
goal, and effectively eliminates root scanning as an isolated phase,
allowing the system to smoothly transition from root scanning to heap
marking. This also eliminates a major non-STW responsibility of the GC
coordinator, which will make it easier to switch to a decentralized
state machine. Finally, it puts us in a good position to perform root
scanning in assists as well, which will help satisfy assists at the
beginning of the GC cycle.

This is mostly straightforward. One tricky aspect is that we have to
deal with preemption deadlock: where two non-preemptible gorountines
are trying to preempt each other to perform a stack scan. Given the
context where this happens, the only instance of this is two
background workers trying to scan each other. We avoid this by simply
not scanning the stacks of background workers during the concurrent
phase; this is safe because we'll scan them during mark termination
(and their stacks are *very* small and should not contain any new
pointers).

This change also switches the root marking during mark termination to
use the same gcDrain-based code path as concurrent mark. This
shouldn't affect performance because STW root marking was already
parallel and tasks switched to heap marking immediately when no more
root marking tasks were available. However, it simplifies the code and
unifies these code paths.

This has negligible effect on the go1 benchmarks. It slightly slows
down the garbage benchmark, possibly by making GC run slightly more
frequently.

name              old time/op  new time/op  delta
XBenchGarbage-12  5.10ms ± 1%  5.24ms ± 1%  +2.87%  (p=0.000 n=18+18)

name                      old time/op    new time/op    delta
BinaryTree17-12              3.25s ± 3%     3.20s ± 5%  -1.57%  (p=0.013 n=20+20)
Fannkuch11-12                2.45s ± 1%     2.46s ± 1%  +0.38%  (p=0.019 n=20+18)
FmtFprintfEmpty-12          49.7ns ± 3%    49.9ns ± 4%    ~     (p=0.851 n=19+20)
FmtFprintfString-12          170ns ± 2%     170ns ± 1%    ~     (p=0.775 n=20+19)
FmtFprintfInt-12             161ns ± 1%     160ns ± 1%  -0.78%  (p=0.000 n=19+18)
FmtFprintfIntInt-12          267ns ± 1%     270ns ± 1%  +1.04%  (p=0.000 n=19+19)
FmtFprintfPrefixedInt-12     238ns ± 2%     238ns ± 1%    ~     (p=0.133 n=18+19)
FmtFprintfFloat-12           311ns ± 1%     310ns ± 2%  -0.35%  (p=0.023 n=20+19)
FmtManyArgs-12              1.08µs ± 1%    1.06µs ± 1%  -2.31%  (p=0.000 n=20+20)
GobDecode-12                8.65ms ± 1%    8.63ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.377 n=18+20)
GobEncode-12                6.49ms ± 1%    6.52ms ± 1%  +0.37%  (p=0.015 n=20+20)
Gzip-12                      319ms ± 3%     318ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.975 n=19+17)
Gunzip-12                   41.9ms ± 1%    42.1ms ± 2%  +0.65%  (p=0.004 n=19+20)
HTTPClientServer-12         61.7µs ± 1%    62.6µs ± 1%  +1.40%  (p=0.000 n=18+20)
JSONEncode-12               16.8ms ± 1%    16.9ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.239 n=20+18)
JSONDecode-12               58.4ms ± 1%    60.7ms ± 1%  +3.85%  (p=0.000 n=19+20)
Mandelbrot200-12            3.86ms ± 0%    3.86ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.092 n=18+19)
GoParse-12                  3.75ms ± 2%    3.75ms ± 2%    ~     (p=0.708 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchEasy0_32-12       100ns ± 1%     100ns ± 2%  +0.60%  (p=0.010 n=17+20)
RegexpMatchEasy0_1K-12       341ns ± 1%     342ns ± 2%    ~     (p=0.203 n=20+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_32-12      82.5ns ± 2%    83.2ns ± 2%  +0.83%  (p=0.007 n=19+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_1K-12       495ns ± 1%     495ns ± 2%    ~     (p=0.970 n=19+18)
RegexpMatchMedium_32-12      130ns ± 2%     130ns ± 2%  +0.59%  (p=0.039 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchMedium_1K-12     39.2µs ± 1%    39.3µs ± 1%    ~     (p=0.214 n=18+18)
RegexpMatchHard_32-12       2.03µs ± 2%    2.02µs ± 1%    ~     (p=0.166 n=18+19)
RegexpMatchHard_1K-12       61.0µs ± 1%    60.9µs ± 1%    ~     (p=0.169 n=20+18)
Revcomp-12                   533ms ± 1%     535ms ± 1%    ~     (p=0.071 n=19+17)
Template-12                 68.1ms ± 2%    73.0ms ± 1%  +7.26%  (p=0.000 n=19+20)
TimeParse-12                 355ns ± 2%     356ns ± 2%    ~     (p=0.530 n=19+20)
TimeFormat-12                357ns ± 2%     347ns ± 1%  -2.59%  (p=0.000 n=20+19)
[Geo mean]                  62.1µs         62.3µs       +0.31%

name                      old speed      new speed      delta
GobDecode-12              88.7MB/s ± 1%  88.9MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.377 n=18+20)
GobEncode-12               118MB/s ± 1%   118MB/s ± 1%  -0.37%  (p=0.015 n=20+20)
Gzip-12                   60.9MB/s ± 3%  60.9MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.944 n=19+17)
Gunzip-12                  464MB/s ± 1%   461MB/s ± 2%  -0.64%  (p=0.004 n=19+20)
JSONEncode-12              115MB/s ± 1%   115MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.236 n=20+18)
JSONDecode-12             33.2MB/s ± 1%  32.0MB/s ± 1%  -3.71%  (p=0.000 n=19+20)
GoParse-12                15.5MB/s ± 2%  15.5MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.702 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchEasy0_32-12     320MB/s ± 1%   318MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.094 n=18+20)
RegexpMatchEasy0_1K-12    3.00GB/s ± 1%  2.99GB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.194 n=20+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_32-12     388MB/s ± 2%   385MB/s ± 2%  -0.83%  (p=0.008 n=19+19)
RegexpMatchEasy1_1K-12    2.07GB/s ± 1%  2.07GB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.964 n=19+18)
RegexpMatchMedium_32-12   7.68MB/s ± 1%  7.64MB/s ± 2%  -0.57%  (p=0.020 n=19+20)
RegexpMatchMedium_1K-12   26.1MB/s ± 1%  26.1MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.211 n=18+18)
RegexpMatchHard_32-12     15.8MB/s ± 1%  15.8MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.180 n=18+19)
RegexpMatchHard_1K-12     16.8MB/s ± 1%  16.8MB/s ± 2%    ~     (p=0.236 n=20+19)
Revcomp-12                 477MB/s ± 1%   475MB/s ± 1%    ~     (p=0.071 n=19+17)
Template-12               28.5MB/s ± 2%  26.6MB/s ± 1%  -6.77%  (p=0.000 n=19+20)
[Geo mean]                 100MB/s       99.0MB/s       -0.82%

Change-Id: I875bf6ceb306d1ee2f470cabf88aa6ede27c47a0
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16059
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-10-30 22:46:31 +00:00
Austin Clements
4cca1cc05e runtime: consolidate "out of GC work" checks
We already have gcMarkWorkAvailable, but the check for GC mark work is
open-coded in several places. Generalize gcMarkWorkAvailable slightly
and replace these open-coded checks with calls to gcMarkWorkAvailable.

In addition to cleaning up the code, this puts us in a better position
to make this check slightly more complicated.

Change-Id: I1b29883300ecd82a1bf6be193e9b4ee96582a860
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16058
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-10-30 22:46:22 +00:00
Russ Cox
bf1de1b141 runtime: introduce GOTRACEBACK=single, now the default
Abandon (but still support) the old numbering system.

GOTRACEBACK=none is old 0
GOTRACEBACK=single is the new behavior
GOTRACEBACK=all is old 1
GOTRACEBACK=system is old 2
GOTRACEBACK=crash is unchanged

See doc comment change in runtime1.go for details.

Filed #13107 to decide whether to change default back to GOTRACEBACK=all for Go 1.6 release.
If you run into programs where printing only the current goroutine omits
needed information, please add details in a comment on that issue.

Fixes #12366.

Change-Id: I82ca8b99b5d86dceb3f7102d38d2659d45dbe0db
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16512
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2015-10-30 18:43:44 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
c9b8cab16c cmd/internal/obj, cmd/link, runtime: handle TLS more like a platform linker on ppc64
On ppc64x, the thread pointer, held in R13, points 0x7000 bytes past where
thread-local storage begins (presumably to maximize the amount of storage that
can be accessed with a 16-bit signed displacement). The relocations used to
indicate thread-local storage to the platform linker account for this, so to be
able to support external linking we need to change things so the linker applies
this offset instead of the runtime assembly.

Change-Id: I2556c249ab2d802cae62c44b2b4c5b44787d7059
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14233
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2015-10-29 22:24:29 +00:00
Michael Hudson-Doyle
8537ff8a39 runtime/cgo: export _cgo_reginit on ppc64x
This is needed to make external linking work.

Change-Id: I4cf7edb4ea318849cab92a697952f8745eed40c4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/14237
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-10-29 00:38:43 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
f6fd086d5e runtime: add missing word in comment
Change-Id: Iffe27445e35ec071cf0920a05c81b8a97a3ed712
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16431
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2015-10-28 23:09:44 +00:00
David Crawshaw
73ff7cb1ed runtime: c-shared entrypoint for linux/arm64
Change-Id: I7dab124842f5209097a8d5a802fcbdde650654fa
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/16395
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-10-28 21:21:33 +00:00