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authorAustin Seipp <austin@well-typed.com>2014-01-28 06:15:19 -0600
committerAustin Seipp <austin@well-typed.com>2014-01-28 06:54:58 -0600
commit28b031c506122e28e0230a562a4f6fd3d0256d0c (patch)
treeecba3eb2c23549b931339e13ab9d52025b50d6fc /rts/sm/GCTDecl.h
parentf9652e22da592ec0689b4919c003c67dacf28d31 (diff)
downloadhaskell-28b031c506122e28e0230a562a4f6fd3d0256d0c.tar.gz
Refactor GCTDecl.h, and mitigate #7602 a bit
This basically cleans a lot of GCTDecl up - I found it quite hard to read and a bit confusing. The changes are mostly cosmetic: better delineation between the alternative cases and light touchups, and tries to make every branch as consistent as possible. However, this patch does have one significant effect: it will ensure that any LLVM-based compilers will use __thread if they support it. Before, they would simply always use pthread_getspecific and pthread_setspecific, which are almost surely even *more* inefficient. The details are a bit too long and boring to go into here; see #7602. After talking with Simon, we decided to play it safe - __thread can at least be optimized by future clang releases even further on OS X if they choose, and it's safer until we can investigate the pthread implementation further on Mavericks. For Linux, the story isn't so bleak if you use Clang (for whatever reason) - Linux directly writes to `%fs` for __thread slots (while OS X will perform a load followed by an indirect call.) So it should still be fairly competitive, speed-wise. Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <austin@well-typed.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'rts/sm/GCTDecl.h')
-rw-r--r--rts/sm/GCTDecl.h152
1 files changed, 93 insertions, 59 deletions
diff --git a/rts/sm/GCTDecl.h b/rts/sm/GCTDecl.h
index 2c08e10783..affb852ba9 100644
--- a/rts/sm/GCTDecl.h
+++ b/rts/sm/GCTDecl.h
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
- * (c) The GHC Team 1998-2009
+ * (c) The GHC Team 1998-2014
*
* Documentation on the architecture of the Garbage Collector can be
* found in the online commentary:
- *
+ *
* http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Commentary/Rts/Storage/GC
*
* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
@@ -14,94 +14,128 @@
#include "BeginPrivate.h"
-/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- The gct variable is thread-local and points to the current thread's
- gc_thread structure. It is heavily accessed, so we try to put gct
- into a global register variable if possible; if we don't have a
- register then use gcc's __thread extension to create a thread-local
- variable.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
+/* The gct variable is thread-local and points to the current thread's
+ gc_thread structure. It is heavily accessed, and thus high
+ performance access is crucial to parallel (-threaded) workloads.
+
+ First, we try to use a 'global register variable' which is a GCC
+ extension. This reserves the register globally.
+
+ If that's not possible, then we need to use __thread, which is a
+ compiler/OS specific TLS storage mechanism (assumed to be Fast
+ Enough.)
+
+ BUT, some older versions of OS X compilers (llvm-gcc, older Clangs)
+ do not support __thread at all. Modern clang however, does - but on
+ OS X it's not as fast as the Linux (which can write directly into a
+ segment register - see #7602.)
+
+ If we don't support __thread then we do the absolute worst thing:
+ we just use pthread_getspecific and pthread_setspecific (which are
+ horribly slow.)
+*/
-#if defined(THREADED_RTS)
+#define GCT_REG_DECL(type,name,reg) register type name REG(reg);
-#define GLOBAL_REG_DECL(type,name,reg) register type name REG(reg);
-#ifdef llvm_CC_FLAVOR
+/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
+
+/* First: if we're not using the threaded RTS, it's easy: just fake it. */
+#if !defined(THREADED_RTS)
+extern StgWord8 the_gc_thread[];
+#define gct ((gc_thread*)&the_gc_thread)
+#define SET_GCT(to) /*nothing*/
+#define DECLARE_GCT /*nothing*/
+
+#else /* defined(THREADED_RTS) */
+
+/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
+
+/* Now, llvm-gcc and some older Clang compilers do not support
+ __thread. So we have to fallback to the extremely slow case,
+ unfortunately. Note: clang_CC_FLAVOR implies llvm_CC_FLAVOR */
+#if defined(llvm_CC_FLAVOR) && (CC_SUPPORTS_TLS == 0)
+#define gct ((gc_thread *)(pthread_getspecific(gctKey)))
#define SET_GCT(to) (pthread_setspecific(gctKey, to))
-#else
-#define SET_GCT(to) gct = (to)
-#endif
+#define DECLARE_GCT ThreadLocalKey gctKey;
+/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
+/* However, if we *are* using an LLVM based compiler with __thread
+ support, then use that (since LLVM doesn't support global register
+ variables.) */
+#elif defined(llvm_CC_FLAVOR) && (CC_SUPPORTS_TLS == 1)
+extern __thread gc_thread* gct;
+#define SET_GCT(to) gct = (to)
+#define DECLARE_GCT __thread gc_thread* gct;
-#if (defined(i386_HOST_ARCH) && defined(linux_HOST_OS))
-// Using __thread is better than stealing a register on x86/Linux, because
-// we have too few registers available. In my tests it was worth
-// about 5% in GC performance, but of course that might change as gcc
-// improves. -- SDM 2009/04/03
-//
-// For MacOSX, we can use an llvm-based C compiler which will store the gct
-// in a thread local variable using pthreads.
+/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
+/* Next up: Using __thread is better than stealing a register on
+ x86/Linux, because we have too few registers available. In my
+ tests it was worth about 5% in GC performance, but of course that
+ might change as gcc improves. -- SDM 2009/04/03 */
+#elif (defined(i386_HOST_ARCH) && defined(linux_HOST_OS))
extern __thread gc_thread* gct;
+#define SET_GCT(to) gct = (to)
#define DECLARE_GCT __thread gc_thread* gct;
-#elif defined(llvm_CC_FLAVOR)
-// LLVM does not support the __thread extension and will generate
-// incorrect code for global register variables. If we are compiling
-// with a C compiler that uses an LLVM back end (clang or llvm-gcc) then we
-// use pthread_getspecific() to handle the thread local storage for gct.
-#define gct ((gc_thread *)(pthread_getspecific(gctKey)))
-#define DECLARE_GCT ThreadLocalKey gctKey;
+/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
-#elif defined(sparc_HOST_ARCH)
-// On SPARC we can't pin gct to a register. Names like %l1 are just offsets
-// into the register window, which change on each function call.
-//
-// There are eight global (non-window) registers, but they're used for other purposes.
-// %g0 -- always zero
-// %g1 -- volatile over function calls, used by the linker
-// %g2-%g3 -- used as scratch regs by the C compiler (caller saves)
-// %g4 -- volatile over function calls, used by the linker
-// %g5-%g7 -- reserved by the OS
+/* Next up: On SPARC we can't pin gct to a register. Names like %l1
+ are just offsets into the register window, which change on each
+ function call.
+ There are eight global (non-window) registers, but they're used for other
+ purposes:
+
+ %g0 -- always zero
+ %g1 -- volatile over function calls, used by the linker
+ %g2-%g3 -- used as scratch regs by the C compiler (caller saves)
+ %g4 -- volatile over function calls, used by the linker
+ %g5-%g7 -- reserved by the OS
+*/
+#elif defined(sparc_HOST_ARCH)
extern __thread gc_thread* gct;
+#define SET_GCT(to) gct = (to)
#define DECLARE_GCT __thread gc_thread* gct;
+/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
+/* Next up: generally, if REG_Base is defined and we're *not* using
+ i386, then actually declare the needed register. The catch for i386
+ here is that REG_Base is %ebx, but that is also used for -fPIC, so
+ it can't be stolen */
#elif defined(REG_Base) && !defined(i386_HOST_ARCH)
-// on i386, REG_Base is %ebx which is also used for PIC, so we don't
-// want to steal it
-
-GLOBAL_REG_DECL(gc_thread*, gct, REG_Base)
+GCT_REG_DECL(gc_thread*, gct, REG_Base);
+#define SET_GCT(to) gct = (to)
#define DECLARE_GCT /* nothing */
+/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
+/* Next up: if REG_R1 is available after checking REG_Base, we're
+ gonna steal it in every case we can. */
#elif defined(REG_R1)
-
-GLOBAL_REG_DECL(gc_thread*, gct, REG_R1)
+GCT_REG_DECL(gc_thread*, gct, REG_R1);
+#define SET_GCT(to) gct = (to)
#define DECLARE_GCT /* nothing */
+/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
-#elif defined(__GNUC__)
-
+/* Finally, as an absolute fallback, if none of the above tests check
+ out but we *do* have __thread support, then use that. */
+#elif CC_SUPPORTS_TLS == 1
extern __thread gc_thread* gct;
+#define SET_GCT(to) gct = (to)
#define DECLARE_GCT __thread gc_thread* gct;
-#else
-
-#error Cannot find a way to declare the thread-local gct
+/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
+/* Impossible! */
+#else
+#error Cannot find a way to declare the thread-local gc variable!
#endif
-#else // not the threaded RTS
-
-extern StgWord8 the_gc_thread[];
-
-#define gct ((gc_thread*)&the_gc_thread)
-#define SET_GCT(to) /*nothing*/
-#define DECLARE_GCT /*nothing*/
-
#endif // THREADED_RTS
#include "EndPrivate.h"