Commit Graph

20 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joel Dice
039916b519 fix incorrect offset in compile-powerpc.S 2011-02-26 17:08:08 -07:00
Joel Dice
9e1ee7e974 enable Linux PowerPC build 2011-02-26 12:45:22 -07:00
Joel Dice
6025ba736e fix return of double values from Java to native code on PowerPC 2011-02-22 19:16:54 -07:00
Joel Dice
309c1cac6d fix PowerPC tails and continuations builds 2011-01-30 19:11:23 -07:00
Joel Dice
1187613ad0 partial fix for PowerPC build 2011-01-29 20:04:29 -07:00
Joel Dice
a5742f5985 update copyright years 2010-12-05 20:21:09 -07:00
Joel Dice
0bd6822ed7 fix PowerPC build 2010-12-03 13:42:13 -07:00
Joel Dice
74930d75e7 update PowerPC assembly Thread field offsets
The new Thread::defaultHeap declaration has increased the offset of all
the fields following it.

This commit also makes vmInvoke_returnAddress global so it can be refered
to from compile.cpp.
2010-06-24 19:35:07 -06:00
Joel Dice
9559aca825 fix Thread.getStackTrace race conditions
Implementing Thread.getStackTrace is tricky.  A thread may interrupt
another thread at any time to grab a stack trace, including while the
latter is executing Java code, JNI code, helper thunks, VM code, or
while transitioning between any of these.

To create a stack trace we use several context fields associated with
the target thread, including snapshots of the instruction pointer,
stack pointer, and frame pointer.  These fields must be current,
accurate, and consistent with each other in order to get a reliable
trace.  Otherwise, we risk crashing the VM by trying to walk garbage
stack frames or by misinterpreting the size and/or content of
legitimate frames.

This commit addresses sensitive transition points such as entering the
helper thunks which bridge the transitions from Java to native code
(where we must save the stack and frame registers for use from native
code) and stack unwinding (where we must atomically update the thread
context fields to indicate which frame we are unwinding to).  When
grabbing a trace for another thread, we determine what kind of code we
caught the thread executing in and use that information to choose the
thread context values with which to begin the trace.  See
MyProcessor::getStackTrace::Visitor::visit for details.

In order to atomically update the thread context fields, we do the
following:

 1. Create a temporary "transition" object to serve as a staging area
    and populate it with the new field values.

 2. Update a transition pointer in the thread object to point to the
    object created above.  As long as this pointer is non-null,
    interrupting threads will use the context values in the staging
    object instead of those in the thread object.

 3. Update the fields in the thread object.

 4. Clear the transition pointer in the thread object.

We use a memory barrier between each of these steps to ensure they are
made visible to other threads in program order.  See
MyThread::doTransition for details.
2010-06-15 19:10:48 -06:00
Joel Dice
c9b9db1621 reimplement Java object monitors (second try)
See commit 8120bee4dc for the original
problem description and solution.  That commit and a couple of related
ones had to be reverted when we found they had introduced GC-safety
regressions leading to crashes.

This commit restores the reverted code and fixes the regressions.
2010-02-04 17:56:21 -07:00
Joel Dice
48834be209 revert recent commits to reimplement Java object monitors
We're seeing race conditions which occasionally lead to assertion
failures and thus crashes, so I'm reverting these changes for now:

29309fb414
e92674cb73
8120bee4dc
2010-02-04 08:18:39 -07:00
Joel Dice
29309fb414 update Thread field offsets to reflect recent additions
Every time we add or remove fields to Thread, we need to update the
assembly code to reflect the new offsets.
2010-02-02 12:26:09 -07:00
Joel Dice
e825da60aa update continuation constants to reflect new field offsets 2009-10-30 00:45:46 +00:00
Joel Dice
d99f8df6e6 several bugfixes for powerpc continuations 2009-05-28 18:56:05 -06:00
Joel Dice
2608a2ee43 progress towards powerpc continuation and tail call support 2009-05-26 19:02:39 -06:00
Joel Dice
3e6c30a4b5 always return an 8-byte value (or void) from native functions called from Java
This is important on the 32-bit OS X PowerPC ABI, since the location
of the low 32-bits of a return value change depending on whether the
entire value is 64-bits or not.
2009-02-28 14:20:43 -07:00
Joel Dice
571615a79f fix stack space calculation in compile-powerpc.S 2009-02-24 18:28:05 -07:00
Joel Dice
a9e85e5de8 fix compare instruction syntax in compile-powerpc.S 2009-02-18 17:46:07 -07:00
Joel Dice
c88e3fa230 ensure stack alignment in compile-x86.S and update vmInvoke to accept frame size parameter 2009-02-16 19:49:28 -07:00
Joel Dice
ba4e2a6582 rename compile.S to compile-x86.S and add compile-powerpc.S 2009-02-16 08:21:12 -07:00