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go/src/runtime/mgc.go
Dmitry Vyukov 5ef145c809 runtime: bound sudog cache
The unbounded list-based sudog cache can grow infinitely.
This can happen if a goroutine is routinely blocked on one P
and then unblocked and scheduled on another P.
The scenario was reported on golang-nuts list.

We've been here several times. Any unbounded local caches
are bad and grow to infinite size. This change introduces
central sudog cache; local caches become fixed-size
with the only purpose of amortizing accesses to the
central cache.

The change required to move sudog cache from mcache to P,
because mcache is not scanned by GC.

Change-Id: I3bb7b14710354c026dcba28b3d3c8936a8db4e90
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/3742
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
2015-03-04 14:14:29 +00:00

813 lines
25 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2009 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.
// TODO(rsc): The code having to do with the heap bitmap needs very serious cleanup.
// It has gotten completely out of control.
// Garbage collector (GC).
//
// The GC runs concurrently with mutator threads, is type accurate (aka precise), allows multiple
// GC thread to run in parallel. It is a concurrent mark and sweep that uses a write barrier. It is
// non-generational and non-compacting. Allocation is done using size segregated per P allocation
// areas to minimize fragmentation while eliminating locks in the common case.
//
// The algorithm decomposes into several steps.
// This is a high level description of the algorithm being used. For an overview of GC a good
// place to start is Richard Jones' gchandbook.org.
//
// The algorithm's intellectual heritage includes Dijkstra's on-the-fly algorithm, see
// Edsger W. Dijkstra, Leslie Lamport, A. J. Martin, C. S. Scholten, and E. F. M. Steffens. 1978.
// On-the-fly garbage collection: an exercise in cooperation. Commun. ACM 21, 11 (November 1978),
// 966-975.
// For journal quality proofs that these steps are complete, correct, and terminate see
// Hudson, R., and Moss, J.E.B. Copying Garbage Collection without stopping the world.
// Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience 15(3-5), 2003.
//
// 0. Set phase = GCscan from GCoff.
// 1. Wait for all P's to acknowledge phase change.
// At this point all goroutines have passed through a GC safepoint and
// know we are in the GCscan phase.
// 2. GC scans all goroutine stacks, mark and enqueues all encountered pointers
// (marking avoids most duplicate enqueuing but races may produce benign duplication).
// Preempted goroutines are scanned before P schedules next goroutine.
// 3. Set phase = GCmark.
// 4. Wait for all P's to acknowledge phase change.
// 5. Now write barrier marks and enqueues black, grey, or white to white pointers.
// Malloc still allocates white (non-marked) objects.
// 6. Meanwhile GC transitively walks the heap marking reachable objects.
// 7. When GC finishes marking heap, it preempts P's one-by-one and
// retakes partial wbufs (filled by write barrier or during a stack scan of the goroutine
// currently scheduled on the P).
// 8. Once the GC has exhausted all available marking work it sets phase = marktermination.
// 9. Wait for all P's to acknowledge phase change.
// 10. Malloc now allocates black objects, so number of unmarked reachable objects
// monotonically decreases.
// 11. GC preempts P's one-by-one taking partial wbufs and marks all unmarked yet
// reachable objects.
// 12. When GC completes a full cycle over P's and discovers no new grey
// objects, (which means all reachable objects are marked) set phase = GCsweep.
// 13. Wait for all P's to acknowledge phase change.
// 14. Now malloc allocates white (but sweeps spans before use).
// Write barrier becomes nop.
// 15. GC does background sweeping, see description below.
// 16. When sweeping is complete set phase to GCoff.
// 17. When sufficient allocation has taken place replay the sequence starting at 0 above,
// see discussion of GC rate below.
// Changing phases.
// Phases are changed by setting the gcphase to the next phase and possibly calling ackgcphase.
// All phase action must be benign in the presence of a change.
// Starting with GCoff
// GCoff to GCscan
// GSscan scans stacks and globals greying them and never marks an object black.
// Once all the P's are aware of the new phase they will scan gs on preemption.
// This means that the scanning of preempted gs can't start until all the Ps
// have acknowledged.
// GCscan to GCmark
// GCMark turns on the write barrier which also only greys objects. No scanning
// of objects (making them black) can happen until all the Ps have acknowledged
// the phase change.
// GCmark to GCmarktermination
// The only change here is that we start allocating black so the Ps must acknowledge
// the change before we begin the termination algorithm
// GCmarktermination to GSsweep
// Object currently on the freelist must be marked black for this to work.
// Are things on the free lists black or white? How does the sweep phase work?
// Concurrent sweep.
// The sweep phase proceeds concurrently with normal program execution.
// The heap is swept span-by-span both lazily (when a goroutine needs another span)
// and concurrently in a background goroutine (this helps programs that are not CPU bound).
// However, at the end of the stop-the-world GC phase we don't know the size of the live heap,
// and so next_gc calculation is tricky and happens as follows.
// At the end of the stop-the-world phase next_gc is conservatively set based on total
// heap size; all spans are marked as "needs sweeping".
// Whenever a span is swept, next_gc is decremented by GOGC*newly_freed_memory.
// The background sweeper goroutine simply sweeps spans one-by-one bringing next_gc
// closer to the target value. However, this is not enough to avoid over-allocating memory.
// Consider that a goroutine wants to allocate a new span for a large object and
// there are no free swept spans, but there are small-object unswept spans.
// If the goroutine naively allocates a new span, it can surpass the yet-unknown
// target next_gc value. In order to prevent such cases (1) when a goroutine needs
// to allocate a new small-object span, it sweeps small-object spans for the same
// object size until it frees at least one object; (2) when a goroutine needs to
// allocate large-object span from heap, it sweeps spans until it frees at least
// that many pages into heap. Together these two measures ensure that we don't surpass
// target next_gc value by a large margin. There is an exception: if a goroutine sweeps
// and frees two nonadjacent one-page spans to the heap, it will allocate a new two-page span,
// but there can still be other one-page unswept spans which could be combined into a
// two-page span.
// It's critical to ensure that no operations proceed on unswept spans (that would corrupt
// mark bits in GC bitmap). During GC all mcaches are flushed into the central cache,
// so they are empty. When a goroutine grabs a new span into mcache, it sweeps it.
// When a goroutine explicitly frees an object or sets a finalizer, it ensures that
// the span is swept (either by sweeping it, or by waiting for the concurrent sweep to finish).
// The finalizer goroutine is kicked off only when all spans are swept.
// When the next GC starts, it sweeps all not-yet-swept spans (if any).
// GC rate.
// Next GC is after we've allocated an extra amount of memory proportional to
// the amount already in use. The proportion is controlled by GOGC environment variable
// (100 by default). If GOGC=100 and we're using 4M, we'll GC again when we get to 8M
// (this mark is tracked in next_gc variable). This keeps the GC cost in linear
// proportion to the allocation cost. Adjusting GOGC just changes the linear constant
// (and also the amount of extra memory used).
package runtime
import "unsafe"
const (
_DebugGC = 0
_ConcurrentSweep = true
_FinBlockSize = 4 * 1024
_RootData = 0
_RootBss = 1
_RootFinalizers = 2
_RootSpans = 3
_RootFlushCaches = 4
_RootCount = 5
)
// linker-provided
var data, edata, bss, ebss, gcdata, gcbss, noptrdata, enoptrdata, noptrbss, enoptrbss, end struct{}
//go:linkname weak_cgo_allocate go.weak.runtime._cgo_allocate_internal
var weak_cgo_allocate byte
// Is _cgo_allocate linked into the binary?
//go:nowritebarrier
func have_cgo_allocate() bool {
return &weak_cgo_allocate != nil
}
// Slow for now as we serialize this, since this is on a debug path
// speed is not critical at this point.
var andlock mutex
//go:nowritebarrier
func atomicand8(src *byte, val byte) {
lock(&andlock)
*src &= val
unlock(&andlock)
}
var gcdatamask bitvector
var gcbssmask bitvector
// heapminimum is the minimum number of bytes in the heap.
// This cleans up the corner case of where we have a very small live set but a lot
// of allocations and collecting every GOGC * live set is expensive.
var heapminimum = uint64(4 << 20)
// Initialized from $GOGC. GOGC=off means no GC.
var gcpercent int32
func gcinit() {
if unsafe.Sizeof(workbuf{}) != _WorkbufSize {
throw("size of Workbuf is suboptimal")
}
work.markfor = parforalloc(_MaxGcproc)
gcpercent = readgogc()
gcdatamask = unrollglobgcprog((*byte)(unsafe.Pointer(&gcdata)), uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&edata))-uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&data)))
gcbssmask = unrollglobgcprog((*byte)(unsafe.Pointer(&gcbss)), uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&ebss))-uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&bss)))
memstats.next_gc = heapminimum
}
func setGCPercent(in int32) (out int32) {
lock(&mheap_.lock)
out = gcpercent
if in < 0 {
in = -1
}
gcpercent = in
unlock(&mheap_.lock)
return out
}
// Trigger the concurrent GC when 1/triggerratio memory is available to allocate.
// Adjust this ratio as part of a scheme to ensure that mutators have enough
// memory to allocate in durring a concurrent GC cycle.
var triggerratio = int64(8)
// Determine whether to initiate a GC.
// If the GC is already working no need to trigger another one.
// This should establish a feedback loop where if the GC does not
// have sufficient time to complete then more memory will be
// requested from the OS increasing heap size thus allow future
// GCs more time to complete.
// memstat.heap_alloc and memstat.next_gc reads have benign races
// A false negative simple does not start a GC, a false positive
// will start a GC needlessly. Neither have correctness issues.
func shouldtriggergc() bool {
return triggerratio*(int64(memstats.next_gc)-int64(memstats.heap_alloc)) <= int64(memstats.next_gc) && atomicloaduint(&bggc.working) == 0
}
var work struct {
full uint64 // lock-free list of full blocks workbuf
empty uint64 // lock-free list of empty blocks workbuf
partial uint64 // lock-free list of partially filled blocks workbuf
pad0 [_CacheLineSize]uint8 // prevents false-sharing between full/empty and nproc/nwait
nproc uint32
tstart int64
nwait uint32
ndone uint32
alldone note
markfor *parfor
// Copy of mheap.allspans for marker or sweeper.
spans []*mspan
}
// GC runs a garbage collection.
func GC() {
startGC(gcForceBlockMode)
}
const (
gcBackgroundMode = iota // concurrent GC
gcForceMode // stop-the-world GC now
gcForceBlockMode // stop-the-world GC now and wait for sweep
)
func startGC(mode int) {
// The gc is turned off (via enablegc) until the bootstrap has completed.
// Also, malloc gets called in the guts of a number of libraries that might be
// holding locks. To avoid deadlocks during stoptheworld, don't bother
// trying to run gc while holding a lock. The next mallocgc without a lock
// will do the gc instead.
mp := acquirem()
if gp := getg(); gp == mp.g0 || mp.locks > 1 || !memstats.enablegc || panicking != 0 || gcpercent < 0 {
releasem(mp)
return
}
releasem(mp)
mp = nil
if mode != gcBackgroundMode {
// special synchronous cases
gc(mode)
return
}
// trigger concurrent GC
lock(&bggc.lock)
if !bggc.started {
bggc.working = 1
bggc.started = true
go backgroundgc()
} else if bggc.working == 0 {
bggc.working = 1
ready(bggc.g)
}
unlock(&bggc.lock)
}
// State of the background concurrent GC goroutine.
var bggc struct {
lock mutex
g *g
working uint
started bool
}
// backgroundgc is running in a goroutine and does the concurrent GC work.
// bggc holds the state of the backgroundgc.
func backgroundgc() {
bggc.g = getg()
for {
gc(gcBackgroundMode)
lock(&bggc.lock)
bggc.working = 0
goparkunlock(&bggc.lock, "Concurrent GC wait", traceEvGoBlock)
}
}
func gc(mode int) {
// Ok, we're doing it! Stop everybody else
semacquire(&worldsema, false)
// Pick up the remaining unswept/not being swept spans concurrently
for gosweepone() != ^uintptr(0) {
sweep.nbgsweep++
}
mp := acquirem()
mp.preemptoff = "gcing"
releasem(mp)
gctimer.count++
if mode == gcBackgroundMode {
gctimer.cycle.sweepterm = nanotime()
}
if trace.enabled {
traceGoSched()
traceGCStart()
}
systemstack(stoptheworld)
systemstack(finishsweep_m) // finish sweep before we start concurrent scan.
if mode == gcBackgroundMode { // Do as much work concurrently as possible
systemstack(func() {
gcphase = _GCscan
// Concurrent scan.
starttheworld()
gctimer.cycle.scan = nanotime()
gcscan_m()
gctimer.cycle.installmarkwb = nanotime()
// Sync.
stoptheworld()
gcphase = _GCmark
harvestwbufs()
// Concurrent mark.
starttheworld()
gctimer.cycle.mark = nanotime()
var gcw gcWork
gcDrain(&gcw)
gcw.dispose()
// Begin mark termination.
gctimer.cycle.markterm = nanotime()
stoptheworld()
gcphase = _GCoff
})
} else {
// For non-concurrent GC (mode != gcBackgroundMode)
// The g stacks have not been scanned so clear g state
// such that mark termination scans all stacks.
gcResetGState()
}
startTime := nanotime()
if mp != acquirem() {
throw("gcwork: rescheduled")
}
// TODO(rsc): Should the concurrent GC clear pools earlier?
clearpools()
_g_ := getg()
_g_.m.traceback = 2
gp := _g_.m.curg
casgstatus(gp, _Grunning, _Gwaiting)
gp.waitreason = "garbage collection"
// Run gc on the g0 stack. We do this so that the g stack
// we're currently running on will no longer change. Cuts
// the root set down a bit (g0 stacks are not scanned, and
// we don't need to scan gc's internal state). We also
// need to switch to g0 so we can shrink the stack.
systemstack(func() {
gcMark(startTime)
if debug.gccheckmark > 0 {
// Run a full stop-the-world mark using checkmark bits,
// to check that we didn't forget to mark anything during
// the concurrent mark process.
initCheckmarks()
gcMark(startTime)
clearCheckmarks()
}
gcSweep(mode)
if debug.gctrace > 1 {
startTime = nanotime()
// The g stacks have been scanned so
// they have gcscanvalid==true and gcworkdone==true.
// Reset these so that all stacks will be rescanned.
gcResetGState()
finishsweep_m()
gcMark(startTime)
gcSweep(mode)
}
})
_g_.m.traceback = 0
casgstatus(gp, _Gwaiting, _Grunning)
if trace.enabled {
traceGCDone()
traceGoStart()
}
// all done
mp.preemptoff = ""
if mode == gcBackgroundMode {
gctimer.cycle.sweep = nanotime()
}
semrelease(&worldsema)
if mode == gcBackgroundMode {
if gctimer.verbose > 1 {
GCprinttimes()
} else if gctimer.verbose > 0 {
calctimes() // ignore result
}
}
systemstack(starttheworld)
releasem(mp)
mp = nil
// now that gc is done, kick off finalizer thread if needed
if !concurrentSweep {
// give the queued finalizers, if any, a chance to run
Gosched()
}
}
// gcMark runs the mark (or, for concurrent GC, mark termination)
// STW is in effect at this point.
//TODO go:nowritebarrier
func gcMark(start_time int64) {
if debug.allocfreetrace > 0 {
tracegc()
}
t0 := start_time
work.tstart = start_time
gcphase = _GCmarktermination
var t1 int64
if debug.gctrace > 0 {
t1 = nanotime()
}
gcCopySpans()
work.nwait = 0
work.ndone = 0
work.nproc = uint32(gcprocs())
if trace.enabled {
traceGCScanStart()
}
parforsetup(work.markfor, work.nproc, uint32(_RootCount+allglen), false, markroot)
if work.nproc > 1 {
noteclear(&work.alldone)
helpgc(int32(work.nproc))
}
var t2 int64
if debug.gctrace > 0 {
t2 = nanotime()
}
harvestwbufs() // move local workbufs onto global queues where the GC can find them
gchelperstart()
parfordo(work.markfor)
var gcw gcWork
gcDrain(&gcw)
gcw.dispose()
if work.full != 0 {
throw("work.full != 0")
}
if work.partial != 0 {
throw("work.partial != 0")
}
gcphase = _GCoff
var t3 int64
if debug.gctrace > 0 {
t3 = nanotime()
}
if work.nproc > 1 {
notesleep(&work.alldone)
}
if trace.enabled {
traceGCScanDone()
}
shrinkfinish()
cachestats()
// next_gc calculation is tricky with concurrent sweep since we don't know size of live heap
// estimate what was live heap size after previous GC (for printing only)
heap0 := memstats.next_gc * 100 / (uint64(gcpercent) + 100)
// conservatively set next_gc to high value assuming that everything is live
// concurrent/lazy sweep will reduce this number while discovering new garbage
memstats.next_gc = memstats.heap_alloc + memstats.heap_alloc*uint64(gcpercent)/100
if memstats.next_gc < heapminimum {
memstats.next_gc = heapminimum
}
if trace.enabled {
traceNextGC()
}
t4 := nanotime()
atomicstore64(&memstats.last_gc, uint64(unixnanotime())) // must be Unix time to make sense to user
memstats.pause_ns[memstats.numgc%uint32(len(memstats.pause_ns))] = uint64(t4 - t0)
memstats.pause_end[memstats.numgc%uint32(len(memstats.pause_end))] = uint64(t4)
memstats.pause_total_ns += uint64(t4 - t0)
memstats.numgc++
if memstats.debuggc {
print("pause ", t4-t0, "\n")
}
if debug.gctrace > 0 {
heap1 := memstats.heap_alloc
var stats gcstats
updatememstats(&stats)
if heap1 != memstats.heap_alloc {
print("runtime: mstats skew: heap=", heap1, "/", memstats.heap_alloc, "\n")
throw("mstats skew")
}
obj := memstats.nmalloc - memstats.nfree
stats.nprocyield += work.markfor.nprocyield
stats.nosyield += work.markfor.nosyield
stats.nsleep += work.markfor.nsleep
print("gc", memstats.numgc, "(", work.nproc, "): ",
(t1-t0)/1000, "+", (t2-t1)/1000, "+", (t3-t2)/1000, "+", (t4-t3)/1000, " us, ",
heap0>>20, " -> ", heap1>>20, " MB, ",
obj, " (", memstats.nmalloc, "-", memstats.nfree, ") objects, ",
gcount(), " goroutines, ",
len(work.spans), "/", sweep.nbgsweep, "/", sweep.npausesweep, " sweeps, ",
stats.nhandoff, "(", stats.nhandoffcnt, ") handoff, ",
work.markfor.nsteal, "(", work.markfor.nstealcnt, ") steal, ",
stats.nprocyield, "/", stats.nosyield, "/", stats.nsleep, " yields\n")
sweep.nbgsweep = 0
sweep.npausesweep = 0
}
}
func gcSweep(mode int) {
gcCopySpans()
lock(&mheap_.lock)
mheap_.sweepgen += 2
mheap_.sweepdone = 0
sweep.spanidx = 0
unlock(&mheap_.lock)
if !_ConcurrentSweep || mode == gcForceBlockMode {
// Special case synchronous sweep.
// Sweep all spans eagerly.
for sweepone() != ^uintptr(0) {
sweep.npausesweep++
}
// Do an additional mProf_GC, because all 'free' events are now real as well.
mProf_GC()
mProf_GC()
return
}
// Background sweep.
lock(&sweep.lock)
if !sweep.started {
go bgsweep()
sweep.started = true
} else if sweep.parked {
sweep.parked = false
ready(sweep.g)
}
unlock(&sweep.lock)
mProf_GC()
}
func gcCopySpans() {
// Cache runtime.mheap_.allspans in work.spans to avoid conflicts with
// resizing/freeing allspans.
// New spans can be created while GC progresses, but they are not garbage for
// this round:
// - new stack spans can be created even while the world is stopped.
// - new malloc spans can be created during the concurrent sweep
// Even if this is stop-the-world, a concurrent exitsyscall can allocate a stack from heap.
lock(&mheap_.lock)
// Free the old cached mark array if necessary.
if work.spans != nil && &work.spans[0] != &h_allspans[0] {
sysFree(unsafe.Pointer(&work.spans[0]), uintptr(len(work.spans))*unsafe.Sizeof(work.spans[0]), &memstats.other_sys)
}
// Cache the current array for sweeping.
mheap_.gcspans = mheap_.allspans
work.spans = h_allspans
unlock(&mheap_.lock)
}
// gcResetGState resets the GC state of all G's and returns the length
// of allgs.
func gcResetGState() (numgs int) {
// This may be called during a concurrent phase, so make sure
// allgs doesn't change.
lock(&allglock)
for _, gp := range allgs {
gp.gcworkdone = false // set to true in gcphasework
gp.gcscanvalid = false // stack has not been scanned
}
numgs = len(allgs)
unlock(&allglock)
return
}
// Hooks for other packages
var poolcleanup func()
//go:linkname sync_runtime_registerPoolCleanup sync.runtime_registerPoolCleanup
func sync_runtime_registerPoolCleanup(f func()) {
poolcleanup = f
}
func clearpools() {
// clear sync.Pools
if poolcleanup != nil {
poolcleanup()
}
// Clear central sudog cache.
// Leave per-P caches alone, they have strictly bounded size.
// Disconnect cached list before dropping it on the floor,
// so that a dangling ref to one entry does not pin all of them.
lock(&sched.sudoglock)
var sg, sgnext *sudog
for sg = sched.sudogcache; sg != nil; sg = sgnext {
sgnext = sg.next
sg.next = nil
}
sched.sudogcache = nil
unlock(&sched.sudoglock)
for _, p := range &allp {
if p == nil {
break
}
// clear tinyalloc pool
if c := p.mcache; c != nil {
c.tiny = nil
c.tinyoffset = 0
}
// clear defer pools
for i := range p.deferpool {
// disconnect cached list before dropping it on the floor,
// so that a dangling ref to one entry does not pin all of them.
var d, dlink *_defer
for d = p.deferpool[i]; d != nil; d = dlink {
dlink = d.link
d.link = nil
}
p.deferpool[i] = nil
}
}
}
// Timing
//go:nowritebarrier
func gchelper() {
_g_ := getg()
_g_.m.traceback = 2
gchelperstart()
if trace.enabled {
traceGCScanStart()
}
// parallel mark for over GC roots
parfordo(work.markfor)
if gcphase != _GCscan {
var gcw gcWork
gcDrain(&gcw) // blocks in getfull
gcw.dispose()
}
if trace.enabled {
traceGCScanDone()
}
nproc := work.nproc // work.nproc can change right after we increment work.ndone
if xadd(&work.ndone, +1) == nproc-1 {
notewakeup(&work.alldone)
}
_g_.m.traceback = 0
}
func gchelperstart() {
_g_ := getg()
if _g_.m.helpgc < 0 || _g_.m.helpgc >= _MaxGcproc {
throw("gchelperstart: bad m->helpgc")
}
if _g_ != _g_.m.g0 {
throw("gchelper not running on g0 stack")
}
}
// gcchronograph holds timer information related to GC phases
// max records the maximum time spent in each GC phase since GCstarttimes.
// total records the total time spent in each GC phase since GCstarttimes.
// cycle records the absolute time (as returned by nanoseconds()) that each GC phase last started at.
type gcchronograph struct {
count int64
verbose int64
maxpause int64
max gctimes
total gctimes
cycle gctimes
}
// gctimes records the time in nanoseconds of each phase of the concurrent GC.
type gctimes struct {
sweepterm int64 // stw
scan int64
installmarkwb int64 // stw
mark int64
markterm int64 // stw
sweep int64
}
var gctimer gcchronograph
// GCstarttimes initializes the gc times. All previous times are lost.
func GCstarttimes(verbose int64) {
gctimer = gcchronograph{verbose: verbose}
}
// GCendtimes stops the gc timers.
func GCendtimes() {
gctimer.verbose = 0
}
// calctimes converts gctimer.cycle into the elapsed times, updates gctimer.total
// and updates gctimer.max with the max pause time.
func calctimes() gctimes {
var times gctimes
var max = func(a, b int64) int64 {
if a > b {
return a
}
return b
}
times.sweepterm = gctimer.cycle.scan - gctimer.cycle.sweepterm
gctimer.total.sweepterm += times.sweepterm
gctimer.max.sweepterm = max(gctimer.max.sweepterm, times.sweepterm)
gctimer.maxpause = max(gctimer.maxpause, gctimer.max.sweepterm)
times.scan = gctimer.cycle.installmarkwb - gctimer.cycle.scan
gctimer.total.scan += times.scan
gctimer.max.scan = max(gctimer.max.scan, times.scan)
times.installmarkwb = gctimer.cycle.mark - gctimer.cycle.installmarkwb
gctimer.total.installmarkwb += times.installmarkwb
gctimer.max.installmarkwb = max(gctimer.max.installmarkwb, times.installmarkwb)
gctimer.maxpause = max(gctimer.maxpause, gctimer.max.installmarkwb)
times.mark = gctimer.cycle.markterm - gctimer.cycle.mark
gctimer.total.mark += times.mark
gctimer.max.mark = max(gctimer.max.mark, times.mark)
times.markterm = gctimer.cycle.sweep - gctimer.cycle.markterm
gctimer.total.markterm += times.markterm
gctimer.max.markterm = max(gctimer.max.markterm, times.markterm)
gctimer.maxpause = max(gctimer.maxpause, gctimer.max.markterm)
return times
}
// GCprinttimes prints latency information in nanoseconds about various
// phases in the GC. The information for each phase includes the maximum pause
// and total time since the most recent call to GCstarttimes as well as
// the information from the most recent Concurent GC cycle. Calls from the
// application to runtime.GC() are ignored.
func GCprinttimes() {
if gctimer.verbose == 0 {
println("GC timers not enabled")
return
}
// Explicitly put times on the heap so printPhase can use it.
times := new(gctimes)
*times = calctimes()
cycletime := gctimer.cycle.sweep - gctimer.cycle.sweepterm
pause := times.sweepterm + times.installmarkwb + times.markterm
gomaxprocs := GOMAXPROCS(-1)
printlock()
print("GC: #", gctimer.count, " ", cycletime, "ns @", gctimer.cycle.sweepterm, " pause=", pause, " maxpause=", gctimer.maxpause, " goroutines=", allglen, " gomaxprocs=", gomaxprocs, "\n")
printPhase := func(label string, get func(*gctimes) int64, procs int) {
print("GC: ", label, " ", get(times), "ns\tmax=", get(&gctimer.max), "\ttotal=", get(&gctimer.total), "\tprocs=", procs, "\n")
}
printPhase("sweep term:", func(t *gctimes) int64 { return t.sweepterm }, gomaxprocs)
printPhase("scan: ", func(t *gctimes) int64 { return t.scan }, 1)
printPhase("install wb:", func(t *gctimes) int64 { return t.installmarkwb }, gomaxprocs)
printPhase("mark: ", func(t *gctimes) int64 { return t.mark }, 1)
printPhase("mark term: ", func(t *gctimes) int64 { return t.markterm }, gomaxprocs)
printunlock()
}