// Copyright 2011 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. /* Stack layout parameters. Included both by runtime (compiled via 6c) and linkers (compiled via gcc). The per-goroutine g->stackguard is set to point StackGuard bytes above the bottom of the stack. Each function compares its stack pointer against g->stackguard to check for overflow. To cut one instruction from the check sequence for functions with tiny frames, the stack is allowed to protrude StackSmall bytes below the stack guard. Functions with large frames don't bother with the check and always call morestack. The sequences are (for amd64, others are similar): guard = g->stackguard frame = function's stack frame size argsize = size of function arguments (call + return) stack frame size <= StackSmall: CMPQ guard, SP JHI 3(PC) MOVQ m->morearg, $(argsize << 32) CALL morestack(SB) stack frame size > StackSmall but < StackBig LEAQ (frame-StackSmall)(SP), R0 CMPQ guard, R0 JHI 3(PC) MOVQ m->morearg, $(argsize << 32) CALL morestack(SB) stack frame size >= StackBig: MOVQ m->morearg, $((argsize << 32) | frame) CALL morestack(SB) The bottom StackGuard - StackSmall bytes are important: there has to be enough room to execute functions that refuse to check for stack overflow, either because they need to be adjacent to the actual caller's frame (deferproc) or because they handle the imminent stack overflow (morestack). For example, deferproc might call malloc, which does one of the above checks (without allocating a full frame), which might trigger a call to morestack. This sequence needs to fit in the bottom section of the stack. On amd64, morestack's frame is 40 bytes, and deferproc's frame is 56 bytes. That fits well within the StackGuard - StackSmall = 128 bytes at the bottom. The linkers explore all possible call traces involving non-splitting functions to make sure that this limit cannot be violated. */ enum { // StackSystem is a number of additional bytes to add // to each stack below the usual guard area for OS-specific // purposes like signal handling. Used on Windows because // it does not use a separate stack. #ifdef GOOS_windows StackSystem = 512 * sizeof(uintptr), #else StackSystem = 0, #endif // The amount of extra stack to allocate beyond the size // needed for the single frame that triggered the split. StackExtra = 1024, // The minimum stack segment size to allocate. // If the amount needed for the splitting frame + StackExtra // is less than this number, the stack will have this size instead. StackMin = 4096, FixedStack = StackMin + StackSystem, // Functions that need frames bigger than this call morestack // unconditionally. That is, on entry to a function it is assumed // that the amount of space available in the current stack segment // couldn't possibly be bigger than StackBig. If stack segments // do run with more space than StackBig, the space may not be // used efficiently. As a result, StackBig should not be significantly // smaller than StackMin or StackExtra. StackBig = 4096, // The stack guard is a pointer this many bytes above the // bottom of the stack. StackGuard = 256 + StackSystem, // After a stack split check the SP is allowed to be this // many bytes below the stack guard. This saves an instruction // in the checking sequence for tiny frames. StackSmall = 128, // The maximum number of bytes that a chain of NOSPLIT // functions can use. StackLimit = StackGuard - StackSystem - StackSmall, // The assumed size of the top-of-stack data block. // The actual size can be smaller than this but cannot be larger. // Checked in proc.c's runtime.malg. StackTop = 72, };