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|  | <div class="doc_title"> | 
|  | Accurate Garbage Collection with LLVM | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ol> | 
|  | <li><a href="#introduction">Introduction</a> | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><a href="#feature">Goals and non-goals</a></li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  | </li> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <li><a href="#quickstart">Getting started</a> | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><a href="#quickstart-compiler">In your compiler</a></li> | 
|  | <li><a href="#quickstart-runtime">In your runtime library</a></li> | 
|  | <li><a href="#shadow-stack">About the shadow stack</a></li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  | </li> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <li><a href="#core">Core support</a> | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><a href="#gcattr">Specifying GC code generation: | 
|  | <tt>gc "..."</tt></a></li> | 
|  | <li><a href="#gcroot">Identifying GC roots on the stack: | 
|  | <tt>llvm.gcroot</tt></a></li> | 
|  | <li><a href="#barriers">Reading and writing references in the heap</a> | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><a href="#gcwrite">Write barrier: <tt>llvm.gcwrite</tt></a></li> | 
|  | <li><a href="#gcread">Read barrier: <tt>llvm.gcread</tt></a></li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  | </li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  | </li> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <li><a href="#plugin">Compiler plugin interface</a> | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><a href="#collector-algos">Overview of available features</a></li> | 
|  | <li><a href="#stack-map">Computing stack maps</a></li> | 
|  | <li><a href="#init-roots">Initializing roots to null: | 
|  | <tt>InitRoots</tt></a></li> | 
|  | <li><a href="#custom">Custom lowering of intrinsics: <tt>CustomRoots</tt>, | 
|  | <tt>CustomReadBarriers</tt>, and <tt>CustomWriteBarriers</tt></a></li> | 
|  | <li><a href="#safe-points">Generating safe points: | 
|  | <tt>NeededSafePoints</tt></a></li> | 
|  | <li><a href="#assembly">Emitting assembly code: | 
|  | <tt>GCMetadataPrinter</tt></a></li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  | </li> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <li><a href="#runtime-impl">Implementing a collector runtime</a> | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><a href="#gcdescriptors">Tracing GC pointers from heap | 
|  | objects</a></li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  | </li> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <li><a href="#references">References</a></li> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </ol> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_author"> | 
|  | <p>Written by <a href="mailto:sabre@nondot.org">Chris Lattner</a> and | 
|  | Gordon Henriksen</p> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- *********************************************************************** --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_section"> | 
|  | <a name="introduction">Introduction</a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  | <!-- *********************************************************************** --> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Garbage collection is a widely used technique that frees the programmer from | 
|  | having to know the lifetimes of heap objects, making software easier to produce | 
|  | and maintain. Many programming languages rely on garbage collection for | 
|  | automatic memory management. There are two primary forms of garbage collection: | 
|  | conservative and accurate.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Conservative garbage collection often does not require any special support | 
|  | from either the language or the compiler: it can handle non-type-safe | 
|  | programming languages (such as C/C++) and does not require any special | 
|  | information from the compiler. The | 
|  | <a href="http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Hans_Boehm/gc/">Boehm collector</a> is | 
|  | an example of a state-of-the-art conservative collector.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Accurate garbage collection requires the ability to identify all pointers in | 
|  | the program at run-time (which requires that the source-language be type-safe in | 
|  | most cases). Identifying pointers at run-time requires compiler support to | 
|  | locate all places that hold live pointer variables at run-time, including the | 
|  | <a href="#gcroot">processor stack and registers</a>.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Conservative garbage collection is attractive because it does not require any | 
|  | special compiler support, but it does have problems. In particular, because the | 
|  | conservative garbage collector cannot <i>know</i> that a particular word in the | 
|  | machine is a pointer, it cannot move live objects in the heap (preventing the | 
|  | use of compacting and generational GC algorithms) and it can occasionally suffer | 
|  | from memory leaks due to integer values that happen to point to objects in the | 
|  | program. In addition, some aggressive compiler transformations can break | 
|  | conservative garbage collectors (though these seem rare in practice).</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Accurate garbage collectors do not suffer from any of these problems, but | 
|  | they can suffer from degraded scalar optimization of the program. In particular, | 
|  | because the runtime must be able to identify and update all pointers active in | 
|  | the program, some optimizations are less effective. In practice, however, the | 
|  | locality and performance benefits of using aggressive garbage collection | 
|  | techniques dominates any low-level losses.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>This document describes the mechanisms and interfaces provided by LLVM to | 
|  | support accurate garbage collection.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="feature">Goals and non-goals</a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>LLVM's intermediate representation provides <a href="#intrinsics">garbage | 
|  | collection intrinsics</a> that offer support for a broad class of | 
|  | collector models. For instance, the intrinsics permit:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li>semi-space collectors</li> | 
|  | <li>mark-sweep collectors</li> | 
|  | <li>generational collectors</li> | 
|  | <li>reference counting</li> | 
|  | <li>incremental collectors</li> | 
|  | <li>concurrent collectors</li> | 
|  | <li>cooperative collectors</li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>We hope that the primitive support built into the LLVM IR is sufficient to | 
|  | support a broad class of garbage collected languages including Scheme, ML, Java, | 
|  | C#, Perl, Python, Lua, Ruby, other scripting languages, and more.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>However, LLVM does not itself provide a garbage collector—this should | 
|  | be part of your language's runtime library. LLVM provides a framework for | 
|  | compile time <a href="#plugin">code generation plugins</a>. The role of these | 
|  | plugins is to generate code and data structures which conforms to the <em>binary | 
|  | interface</em> specified by the <em>runtime library</em>. This is similar to the | 
|  | relationship between LLVM and DWARF debugging info, for example. The | 
|  | difference primarily lies in the lack of an established standard in the domain | 
|  | of garbage collection—thus the plugins.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The aspects of the binary interface with which LLVM's GC support is | 
|  | concerned are:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li>Creation of GC-safe points within code where collection is allowed to | 
|  | execute safely.</li> | 
|  | <li>Computation of the stack map. For each safe point in the code, object | 
|  | references within the stack frame must be identified so that the | 
|  | collector may traverse and perhaps update them.</li> | 
|  | <li>Write barriers when storing object references to the heap. These are | 
|  | commonly used to optimize incremental scans in generational | 
|  | collectors.</li> | 
|  | <li>Emission of read barriers when loading object references. These are | 
|  | useful for interoperating with concurrent collectors.</li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>There are additional areas that LLVM does not directly address:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li>Registration of global roots with the runtime.</li> | 
|  | <li>Registration of stack map entries with the runtime.</li> | 
|  | <li>The functions used by the program to allocate memory, trigger a | 
|  | collection, etc.</li> | 
|  | <li>Computation or compilation of type maps, or registration of them with | 
|  | the runtime. These are used to crawl the heap for object | 
|  | references.</li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>In general, LLVM's support for GC does not include features which can be | 
|  | adequately addressed with other features of the IR and does not specify a | 
|  | particular binary interface. On the plus side, this means that you should be | 
|  | able to integrate LLVM with an existing runtime. On the other hand, it leaves | 
|  | a lot of work for the developer of a novel language. However, it's easy to get | 
|  | started quickly and scale up to a more sophisticated implementation as your | 
|  | compiler matures.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- *********************************************************************** --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_section"> | 
|  | <a name="quickstart">Getting started</a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  | <!-- *********************************************************************** --> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Using a GC with LLVM implies many things, for example:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li>Write a runtime library or find an existing one which implements a GC | 
|  | heap.<ol> | 
|  | <li>Implement a memory allocator.</li> | 
|  | <li>Design a binary interface for the stack map, used to identify | 
|  | references within a stack frame on the machine stack.*</li> | 
|  | <li>Implement a stack crawler to discover functions on the call stack.*</li> | 
|  | <li>Implement a registry for global roots.</li> | 
|  | <li>Design a binary interface for type maps, used to identify references | 
|  | within heap objects.</li> | 
|  | <li>Implement a collection routine bringing together all of the above.</li> | 
|  | </ol></li> | 
|  | <li>Emit compatible code from your compiler.<ul> | 
|  | <li>Initialization in the main function.</li> | 
|  | <li>Use the <tt>gc "..."</tt> attribute to enable GC code generation | 
|  | (or <tt>F.setGC("...")</tt>).</li> | 
|  | <li>Use <tt>@llvm.gcroot</tt> to mark stack roots.</li> | 
|  | <li>Use <tt>@llvm.gcread</tt> and/or <tt>@llvm.gcwrite</tt> to | 
|  | manipulate GC references, if necessary.</li> | 
|  | <li>Allocate memory using the GC allocation routine provided by the | 
|  | runtime library.</li> | 
|  | <li>Generate type maps according to your runtime's binary interface.</li> | 
|  | </ul></li> | 
|  | <li>Write a compiler plugin to interface LLVM with the runtime library.*<ul> | 
|  | <li>Lower <tt>@llvm.gcread</tt> and <tt>@llvm.gcwrite</tt> to appropriate | 
|  | code sequences.*</li> | 
|  | <li>Compile LLVM's stack map to the binary form expected by the | 
|  | runtime.</li> | 
|  | </ul></li> | 
|  | <li>Load the plugin into the compiler. Use <tt>llc -load</tt> or link the | 
|  | plugin statically with your language's compiler.*</li> | 
|  | <li>Link program executables with the runtime.</li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>To help with several of these tasks (those indicated with a *), LLVM | 
|  | includes a highly portable, built-in ShadowStack code generator. It is compiled | 
|  | into <tt>llc</tt> and works even with the interpreter and C backends.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="quickstart-compiler">In your compiler</a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>To turn the shadow stack on for your functions, first call:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_code"><pre | 
|  | >F.setGC("shadow-stack");</pre></div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>for each function your compiler emits. Since the shadow stack is built into | 
|  | LLVM, you do not need to load a plugin.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Your compiler must also use <tt>@llvm.gcroot</tt> as documented. | 
|  | Don't forget to create a root for each intermediate value that is generated | 
|  | when evaluating an expression. In <tt>h(f(), g())</tt>, the result of | 
|  | <tt>f()</tt> could easily be collected if evaluating <tt>g()</tt> triggers a | 
|  | collection.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>There's no need to use <tt>@llvm.gcread</tt> and <tt>@llvm.gcwrite</tt> over | 
|  | plain <tt>load</tt> and <tt>store</tt> for now. You will need them when | 
|  | switching to a more advanced GC.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="quickstart-runtime">In your runtime</a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The shadow stack doesn't imply a memory allocation algorithm. A semispace | 
|  | collector or building atop <tt>malloc</tt> are great places to start, and can | 
|  | be implemented with very little code.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>When it comes time to collect, however, your runtime needs to traverse the | 
|  | stack roots, and for this it needs to integrate with the shadow stack. Luckily, | 
|  | doing so is very simple. (This code is heavily commented to help you | 
|  | understand the data structure, but there are only 20 lines of meaningful | 
|  | code.)</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_code"><pre | 
|  | >/// @brief The map for a single function's stack frame. One of these is | 
|  | ///        compiled as constant data into the executable for each function. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Storage of metadata values is elided if the %metadata parameter to | 
|  | /// @llvm.gcroot is null. | 
|  | struct FrameMap { | 
|  | int32_t NumRoots;    //< Number of roots in stack frame. | 
|  | int32_t NumMeta;     //< Number of metadata entries. May be < NumRoots. | 
|  | const void *Meta[0]; //< Metadata for each root. | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// @brief A link in the dynamic shadow stack. One of these is embedded in the | 
|  | ///        stack frame of each function on the call stack. | 
|  | struct StackEntry { | 
|  | StackEntry *Next;    //< Link to next stack entry (the caller's). | 
|  | const FrameMap *Map; //< Pointer to constant FrameMap. | 
|  | void *Roots[0];      //< Stack roots (in-place array). | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// @brief The head of the singly-linked list of StackEntries. Functions push | 
|  | ///        and pop onto this in their prologue and epilogue. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Since there is only a global list, this technique is not threadsafe. | 
|  | StackEntry *llvm_gc_root_chain; | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// @brief Calls Visitor(root, meta) for each GC root on the stack. | 
|  | ///        root and meta are exactly the values passed to | 
|  | ///        <tt>@llvm.gcroot</tt>. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Visitor could be a function to recursively mark live objects. Or it | 
|  | /// might copy them to another heap or generation. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// @param Visitor A function to invoke for every GC root on the stack. | 
|  | void visitGCRoots(void (*Visitor)(void **Root, const void *Meta)) { | 
|  | for (StackEntry *R = llvm_gc_root_chain; R; R = R->Next) { | 
|  | unsigned i = 0; | 
|  |  | 
|  | // For roots [0, NumMeta), the metadata pointer is in the FrameMap. | 
|  | for (unsigned e = R->Map->NumMeta; i != e; ++i) | 
|  | Visitor(&R->Roots[i], R->Map->Meta[i]); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // For roots [NumMeta, NumRoots), the metadata pointer is null. | 
|  | for (unsigned e = R->Map->NumRoots; i != e; ++i) | 
|  | Visitor(&R->Roots[i], NULL); | 
|  | } | 
|  | }</pre></div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="shadow-stack">About the shadow stack</a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Unlike many GC algorithms which rely on a cooperative code generator to | 
|  | compile stack maps, this algorithm carefully maintains a linked list of stack | 
|  | roots [<a href="#henderson02">Henderson2002</a>]. This so-called "shadow stack" | 
|  | mirrors the machine stack. Maintaining this data structure is slower than using | 
|  | a stack map compiled into the executable as constant data, but has a significant | 
|  | portability advantage because it requires no special support from the target | 
|  | code generator, and does not require tricky platform-specific code to crawl | 
|  | the machine stack.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The tradeoff for this simplicity and portability is:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li>High overhead per function call.</li> | 
|  | <li>Not thread-safe.</li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Still, it's an easy way to get started. After your compiler and runtime are | 
|  | up and running, writing a <a href="#plugin">plugin</a> will allow you to take | 
|  | advantage of <a href="#collector-algos">more advanced GC features</a> of LLVM | 
|  | in order to improve performance.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- *********************************************************************** --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_section"> | 
|  | <a name="core">IR features</a><a name="intrinsics"></a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  | <!-- *********************************************************************** --> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>This section describes the garbage collection facilities provided by the | 
|  | <a href="LangRef.html">LLVM intermediate representation</a>. The exact behavior | 
|  | of these IR features is specified by the binary interface implemented by a | 
|  | <a href="#plugin">code generation plugin</a>, not by this document.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>These facilities are limited to those strictly necessary; they are not | 
|  | intended to be a complete interface to any garbage collector. A program will | 
|  | need to interface with the GC library using the facilities provided by that | 
|  | program.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="gcattr">Specifying GC code generation: <tt>gc "..."</tt></a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_code"><tt> | 
|  | define <i>ty</i> @<i>name</i>(...) <span style="text-decoration: underline">gc "<i>name</i>"</span> { ... | 
|  | </tt></div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The <tt>gc</tt> function attribute is used to specify the desired GC style | 
|  | to the compiler. Its programmatic equivalent is the <tt>setGC</tt> method of | 
|  | <tt>Function</tt>.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Setting <tt>gc "<i>name</i>"</tt> on a function triggers a search for a | 
|  | matching code generation plugin "<i>name</i>"; it is that plugin which defines | 
|  | the exact nature of the code generated to support GC. If none is found, the | 
|  | compiler will raise an error.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Specifying the GC style on a per-function basis allows LLVM to link together | 
|  | programs that use different garbage collection algorithms (or none at all).</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="gcroot">Identifying GC roots on the stack: <tt>llvm.gcroot</tt></a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_code"><tt> | 
|  | void @llvm.gcroot(i8** %ptrloc, i8* %metadata) | 
|  | </tt></div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The <tt>llvm.gcroot</tt> intrinsic is used to inform LLVM that a stack | 
|  | variable references an object on the heap and is to be tracked for garbage | 
|  | collection. The exact impact on generated code is specified by a <a | 
|  | href="#plugin">compiler plugin</a>.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>A compiler which uses mem2reg to raise imperative code using <tt>alloca</tt> | 
|  | into SSA form need only add a call to <tt>@llvm.gcroot</tt> for those variables | 
|  | which a pointers into the GC heap.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>It is also important to mark intermediate values with <tt>llvm.gcroot</tt>. | 
|  | For example, consider <tt>h(f(), g())</tt>. Beware leaking the result of | 
|  | <tt>f()</tt> in the case that <tt>g()</tt> triggers a collection.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The first argument <b>must</b> be a value referring to an alloca instruction | 
|  | or a bitcast of an alloca. The second contains a pointer to metadata that | 
|  | should be associated with the pointer, and <b>must</b> be a constant or global | 
|  | value address. If your target collector uses tags, use a null pointer for | 
|  | metadata.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The <tt>%metadata</tt> argument can be used to avoid requiring heap objects | 
|  | to have 'isa' pointers or tag bits. [<a href="#appel89">Appel89</a>, <a | 
|  | href="#goldberg91">Goldberg91</a>, <a href="#tolmach94">Tolmach94</a>] If | 
|  | specified, its value will be tracked along with the location of the pointer in | 
|  | the stack frame.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Consider the following fragment of Java code:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | { | 
|  | Object X;   // A null-initialized reference to an object | 
|  | ... | 
|  | } | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>This block (which may be located in the middle of a function or in a loop | 
|  | nest), could be compiled to this LLVM code:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | Entry: | 
|  | ;; In the entry block for the function, allocate the | 
|  | ;; stack space for X, which is an LLVM pointer. | 
|  | %X = alloca %Object* | 
|  |  | 
|  | ;; Tell LLVM that the stack space is a stack root. | 
|  | ;; Java has type-tags on objects, so we pass null as metadata. | 
|  | %tmp = bitcast %Object** %X to i8** | 
|  | call void @llvm.gcroot(i8** %X, i8* null) | 
|  | ... | 
|  |  | 
|  | ;; "CodeBlock" is the block corresponding to the start | 
|  | ;;  of the scope above. | 
|  | CodeBlock: | 
|  | ;; Java null-initializes pointers. | 
|  | store %Object* null, %Object** %X | 
|  |  | 
|  | ... | 
|  |  | 
|  | ;; As the pointer goes out of scope, store a null value into | 
|  | ;; it, to indicate that the value is no longer live. | 
|  | store %Object* null, %Object** %X | 
|  | ... | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="barriers">Reading and writing references in the heap</a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Some collectors need to be informed when the mutator (the program that needs | 
|  | garbage collection) either reads a pointer from or writes a pointer to a field | 
|  | of a heap object. The code fragments inserted at these points are called | 
|  | <em>read barriers</em> and <em>write barriers</em>, respectively. The amount of | 
|  | code that needs to be executed is usually quite small and not on the critical | 
|  | path of any computation, so the overall performance impact of the barrier is | 
|  | tolerable.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Barriers often require access to the <em>object pointer</em> rather than the | 
|  | <em>derived pointer</em> (which is a pointer to the field within the | 
|  | object). Accordingly, these intrinsics take both pointers as separate arguments | 
|  | for completeness. In this snippet, <tt>%object</tt> is the object pointer, and | 
|  | <tt>%derived</tt> is the derived pointer:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre> | 
|  | ;; An array type. | 
|  | %class.Array = type { %class.Object, i32, [0 x %class.Object*] } | 
|  | ... | 
|  |  | 
|  | ;; Load the object pointer from a gcroot. | 
|  | %object = load %class.Array** %object_addr | 
|  |  | 
|  | ;; Compute the derived pointer. | 
|  | %derived = getelementptr %object, i32 0, i32 2, i32 %n</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>LLVM does not enforce this relationship between the object and derived | 
|  | pointer (although a <a href="#plugin">plugin</a> might). However, it would be | 
|  | an unusual collector that violated it.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The use of these intrinsics is naturally optional if the target GC does | 
|  | require the corresponding barrier. Such a GC plugin will replace the intrinsic | 
|  | calls with the corresponding <tt>load</tt> or <tt>store</tt> instruction if they | 
|  | are used.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsubsection"> | 
|  | <a name="gcwrite">Write barrier: <tt>llvm.gcwrite</tt></a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_code"><tt> | 
|  | void @llvm.gcwrite(i8* %value, i8* %object, i8** %derived) | 
|  | </tt></div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>For write barriers, LLVM provides the <tt>llvm.gcwrite</tt> intrinsic | 
|  | function. It has exactly the same semantics as a non-volatile <tt>store</tt> to | 
|  | the derived pointer (the third argument). The exact code generated is specified | 
|  | by a <a href="#plugin">compiler plugin</a>.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Many important algorithms require write barriers, including generational | 
|  | and concurrent collectors. Additionally, write barriers could be used to | 
|  | implement reference counting.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsubsection"> | 
|  | <a name="gcread">Read barrier: <tt>llvm.gcread</tt></a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_code"><tt> | 
|  | i8* @llvm.gcread(i8* %object, i8** %derived)<br> | 
|  | </tt></div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>For read barriers, LLVM provides the <tt>llvm.gcread</tt> intrinsic function. | 
|  | It has exactly the same semantics as a non-volatile <tt>load</tt> from the | 
|  | derived pointer (the second argument). The exact code generated is specified by | 
|  | a <a href="#plugin">compiler plugin</a>.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Read barriers are needed by fewer algorithms than write barriers, and may | 
|  | have a greater performance impact since pointer reads are more frequent than | 
|  | writes.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- *********************************************************************** --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_section"> | 
|  | <a name="plugin">Implementing a collector plugin</a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  | <!-- *********************************************************************** --> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>User code specifies which GC code generation to use with the <tt>gc</tt> | 
|  | function attribute or, equivalently, with the <tt>setGC</tt> method of | 
|  | <tt>Function</tt>.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>To implement a GC plugin, it is necessary to subclass | 
|  | <tt>llvm::GCStrategy</tt>, which can be accomplished in a few lines of | 
|  | boilerplate code. LLVM's infrastructure provides access to several important | 
|  | algorithms. For an uncontroversial collector, all that remains may be to | 
|  | compile LLVM's computed stack map to assembly code (using the binary | 
|  | representation expected by the runtime library). This can be accomplished in | 
|  | about 100 lines of code.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>This is not the appropriate place to implement a garbage collected heap or a | 
|  | garbage collector itself. That code should exist in the language's runtime | 
|  | library. The compiler plugin is responsible for generating code which | 
|  | conforms to the binary interface defined by library, most essentially the | 
|  | <a href="#stack-map">stack map</a>.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>To subclass <tt>llvm::GCStrategy</tt> and register it with the compiler:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre>// lib/MyGC/MyGC.cpp - Example LLVM GC plugin | 
|  |  | 
|  | #include "llvm/CodeGen/GCStrategy.h" | 
|  | #include "llvm/CodeGen/GCMetadata.h" | 
|  | #include "llvm/Support/Compiler.h" | 
|  |  | 
|  | using namespace llvm; | 
|  |  | 
|  | namespace { | 
|  | class VISIBILITY_HIDDEN MyGC : public GCStrategy { | 
|  | public: | 
|  | MyGC() {} | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | GCRegistry::Add<MyGC> | 
|  | X("mygc", "My bespoke garbage collector."); | 
|  | }</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>This boilerplate collector does nothing. More specifically:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><tt>llvm.gcread</tt> calls are replaced with the corresponding | 
|  | <tt>load</tt> instruction.</li> | 
|  | <li><tt>llvm.gcwrite</tt> calls are replaced with the corresponding | 
|  | <tt>store</tt> instruction.</li> | 
|  | <li>No safe points are added to the code.</li> | 
|  | <li>The stack map is not compiled into the executable.</li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Using the LLVM makefiles (like the <a | 
|  | href="http://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project/llvm/trunk/projects/sample/">sample | 
|  | project</a>), this code can be compiled as a plugin using a simple | 
|  | makefile:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | ># lib/MyGC/Makefile | 
|  |  | 
|  | LEVEL := ../.. | 
|  | LIBRARYNAME = <var>MyGC</var> | 
|  | LOADABLE_MODULE = 1 | 
|  |  | 
|  | include $(LEVEL)/Makefile.common</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Once the plugin is compiled, code using it may be compiled using <tt>llc | 
|  | -load=<var>MyGC.so</var></tt> (though <var>MyGC.so</var> may have some other | 
|  | platform-specific extension):</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | >$ cat sample.ll | 
|  | define void @f() gc "mygc" { | 
|  | entry: | 
|  | ret void | 
|  | } | 
|  | $ llvm-as < sample.ll | llc -load=MyGC.so</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>It is also possible to statically link the collector plugin into tools, such | 
|  | as a language-specific compiler front-end.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="collector-algos">Overview of available features</a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p><tt>GCStrategy</tt> provides a range of features through which a plugin | 
|  | may do useful work. Some of these are callbacks, some are algorithms that can | 
|  | be enabled, disabled, or customized. This matrix summarizes the supported (and | 
|  | planned) features and correlates them with the collection techniques which | 
|  | typically require them.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <table> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th>Algorithm</th> | 
|  | <th>Done</th> | 
|  | <th>shadow stack</th> | 
|  | <th>refcount</th> | 
|  | <th>mark-sweep</th> | 
|  | <th>copying</th> | 
|  | <th>incremental</th> | 
|  | <th>threaded</th> | 
|  | <th>concurrent</th> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead"><a href="#stack-map">stack map</a></th> | 
|  | <td>✔</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead"><a href="#init-roots">initialize roots</a></th> | 
|  | <td>✔</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr class="doc_warning"> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead">derived pointers</th> | 
|  | <td>NO</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘*</td> | 
|  | <td>✘*</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead"><em><a href="#custom">custom lowering</a></em></th> | 
|  | <td>✔</td> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead indent">gcroot</th> | 
|  | <td>✔</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead indent">gcwrite</th> | 
|  | <td>✔</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead indent">gcread</th> | 
|  | <td>✔</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead"><em><a href="#safe-points">safe points</a></em></th> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead indent">in calls</th> | 
|  | <td>✔</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead indent">before calls</th> | 
|  | <td>✔</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr class="doc_warning"> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead indent">for loops</th> | 
|  | <td>NO</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead indent">before escape</th> | 
|  | <td>✔</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr class="doc_warning"> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead">emit code at safe points</th> | 
|  | <td>NO</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead"><em>output</em></th> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | <th></th> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead indent"><a href="#assembly">assembly</a></th> | 
|  | <td>✔</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | <td>✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr class="doc_warning"> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead indent">JIT</th> | 
|  | <td>NO</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr class="doc_warning"> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead indent">obj</th> | 
|  | <td>NO</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr class="doc_warning"> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead">live analysis</th> | 
|  | <td>NO</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr class="doc_warning"> | 
|  | <th class="rowhead">register map</th> | 
|  | <td>NO</td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td></td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | <td class="optl">✘</td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="10"> | 
|  | <div><span class="doc_warning">*</span> Derived pointers only pose a | 
|  | hazard to copying collectors.</div> | 
|  | <div><span class="optl">✘</span> in gray denotes a feature which | 
|  | could be utilized if available.</div> | 
|  | </td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | </table> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>To be clear, the collection techniques above are defined as:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <dl> | 
|  | <dt>Shadow Stack</dt> | 
|  | <dd>The mutator carefully maintains a linked list of stack roots.</dd> | 
|  | <dt>Reference Counting</dt> | 
|  | <dd>The mutator maintains a reference count for each object and frees an | 
|  | object when its count falls to zero.</dd> | 
|  | <dt>Mark-Sweep</dt> | 
|  | <dd>When the heap is exhausted, the collector marks reachable objects starting | 
|  | from the roots, then deallocates unreachable objects in a sweep | 
|  | phase.</dd> | 
|  | <dt>Copying</dt> | 
|  | <dd>As reachability analysis proceeds, the collector copies objects from one | 
|  | heap area to another, compacting them in the process. Copying collectors | 
|  | enable highly efficient "bump pointer" allocation and can improve locality | 
|  | of reference.</dd> | 
|  | <dt>Incremental</dt> | 
|  | <dd>(Including generational collectors.) Incremental collectors generally have | 
|  | all the properties of a copying collector (regardless of whether the | 
|  | mature heap is compacting), but bring the added complexity of requiring | 
|  | write barriers.</dd> | 
|  | <dt>Threaded</dt> | 
|  | <dd>Denotes a multithreaded mutator; the collector must still stop the mutator | 
|  | ("stop the world") before beginning reachability analysis. Stopping a | 
|  | multithreaded mutator is a complicated problem. It generally requires | 
|  | highly platform specific code in the runtime, and the production of | 
|  | carefully designed machine code at safe points.</dd> | 
|  | <dt>Concurrent</dt> | 
|  | <dd>In this technique, the mutator and the collector run concurrently, with | 
|  | the goal of eliminating pause times. In a <em>cooperative</em> collector, | 
|  | the mutator further aids with collection should a pause occur, allowing | 
|  | collection to take advantage of multiprocessor hosts. The "stop the world" | 
|  | problem of threaded collectors is generally still present to a limited | 
|  | extent. Sophisticated marking algorithms are necessary. Read barriers may | 
|  | be necessary.</dd> | 
|  | </dl> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>As the matrix indicates, LLVM's garbage collection infrastructure is already | 
|  | suitable for a wide variety of collectors, but does not currently extend to | 
|  | multithreaded programs. This will be added in the future as there is | 
|  | interest.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="stack-map">Computing stack maps</a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>LLVM automatically computes a stack map. One of the most important features | 
|  | of a <tt>GCStrategy</tt> is to compile this information into the executable in | 
|  | the binary representation expected by the runtime library.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The stack map consists of the location and identity of each GC root in the | 
|  | each function in the module. For each root:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><tt>RootNum</tt>: The index of the root.</li> | 
|  | <li><tt>StackOffset</tt>: The offset of the object relative to the frame | 
|  | pointer.</li> | 
|  | <li><tt>RootMetadata</tt>: The value passed as the <tt>%metadata</tt> | 
|  | parameter to the <a href="#gcroot"><tt>@llvm.gcroot</tt></a> intrinsic.</li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Also, for the function as a whole:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><tt>getFrameSize()</tt>: The overall size of the function's initial | 
|  | stack frame, not accounting for any dynamic allocation.</li> | 
|  | <li><tt>roots_size()</tt>: The count of roots in the function.</li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>To access the stack map, use <tt>GCFunctionMetadata::roots_begin()</tt> and | 
|  | -<tt>end()</tt> from the <tt><a | 
|  | href="#assembly">GCMetadataPrinter</a></tt>:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | >for (iterator I = begin(), E = end(); I != E; ++I) { | 
|  | GCFunctionInfo *FI = *I; | 
|  | unsigned FrameSize = FI->getFrameSize(); | 
|  | size_t RootCount = FI->roots_size(); | 
|  |  | 
|  | for (GCFunctionInfo::roots_iterator RI = FI->roots_begin(), | 
|  | RE = FI->roots_end(); | 
|  | RI != RE; ++RI) { | 
|  | int RootNum = RI->Num; | 
|  | int RootStackOffset = RI->StackOffset; | 
|  | Constant *RootMetadata = RI->Metadata; | 
|  | } | 
|  | }</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>If the <tt>llvm.gcroot</tt> intrinsic is eliminated before code generation by | 
|  | a custom lowering pass, LLVM will compute an empty stack map. This may be useful | 
|  | for collector plugins which implement reference counting or a shadow stack.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="init-roots">Initializing roots to null: <tt>InitRoots</tt></a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | >MyGC::MyGC() { | 
|  | InitRoots = true; | 
|  | }</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>When set, LLVM will automatically initialize each root to <tt>null</tt> upon | 
|  | entry to the function. This prevents the GC's sweep phase from visiting | 
|  | uninitialized pointers, which will almost certainly cause it to crash. This | 
|  | initialization occurs before custom lowering, so the two may be used | 
|  | together.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Since LLVM does not yet compute liveness information, there is no means of | 
|  | distinguishing an uninitialized stack root from an initialized one. Therefore, | 
|  | this feature should be used by all GC plugins. It is enabled by default.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="custom">Custom lowering of intrinsics: <tt>CustomRoots</tt>, | 
|  | <tt>CustomReadBarriers</tt>, and <tt>CustomWriteBarriers</tt></a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>For GCs which use barriers or unusual treatment of stack roots, these | 
|  | flags allow the collector to perform arbitrary transformations of the LLVM | 
|  | IR:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | >class MyGC : public GCStrategy { | 
|  | public: | 
|  | MyGC() { | 
|  | CustomRoots = true; | 
|  | CustomReadBarriers = true; | 
|  | CustomWriteBarriers = true; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | virtual bool initializeCustomLowering(Module &M); | 
|  | virtual bool performCustomLowering(Function &F); | 
|  | };</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>If any of these flags are set, then LLVM suppresses its default lowering for | 
|  | the corresponding intrinsics and instead calls | 
|  | <tt>performCustomLowering</tt>.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>LLVM's default action for each intrinsic is as follows:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><tt>llvm.gcroot</tt>: Leave it alone. The code generator must see it | 
|  | or the stack map will not be computed.</li> | 
|  | <li><tt>llvm.gcread</tt>: Substitute a <tt>load</tt> instruction.</li> | 
|  | <li><tt>llvm.gcwrite</tt>: Substitute a <tt>store</tt> instruction.</li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>If <tt>CustomReadBarriers</tt> or <tt>CustomWriteBarriers</tt> are specified, | 
|  | then <tt>performCustomLowering</tt> <strong>must</strong> eliminate the | 
|  | corresponding barriers.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p><tt>performCustomLowering</tt> must comply with the same restrictions as <a | 
|  | href="WritingAnLLVMPass.html#runOnFunction"><tt | 
|  | >FunctionPass::runOnFunction</tt></a>. | 
|  | Likewise, <tt>initializeCustomLowering</tt> has the same semantics as <a | 
|  | href="WritingAnLLVMPass.html#doInitialization_mod"><tt | 
|  | >Pass::doInitialization(Module&)</tt></a>.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The following can be used as a template:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | >#include "llvm/Module.h" | 
|  | #include "llvm/IntrinsicInst.h" | 
|  |  | 
|  | bool MyGC::initializeCustomLowering(Module &M) { | 
|  | return false; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | bool MyGC::performCustomLowering(Function &F) { | 
|  | bool MadeChange = false; | 
|  |  | 
|  | for (Function::iterator BB = F.begin(), E = F.end(); BB != E; ++BB) | 
|  | for (BasicBlock::iterator II = BB->begin(), E = BB->end(); II != E; ) | 
|  | if (IntrinsicInst *CI = dyn_cast<IntrinsicInst>(II++)) | 
|  | if (Function *F = CI->getCalledFunction()) | 
|  | switch (F->getIntrinsicID()) { | 
|  | case Intrinsic::gcwrite: | 
|  | // Handle llvm.gcwrite. | 
|  | CI->eraseFromParent(); | 
|  | MadeChange = true; | 
|  | break; | 
|  | case Intrinsic::gcread: | 
|  | // Handle llvm.gcread. | 
|  | CI->eraseFromParent(); | 
|  | MadeChange = true; | 
|  | break; | 
|  | case Intrinsic::gcroot: | 
|  | // Handle llvm.gcroot. | 
|  | CI->eraseFromParent(); | 
|  | MadeChange = true; | 
|  | break; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | return MadeChange; | 
|  | }</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="safe-points">Generating safe points: <tt>NeededSafePoints</tt></a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>LLVM can compute four kinds of safe points:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | >namespace GC { | 
|  | /// PointKind - The type of a collector-safe point. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | enum PointKind { | 
|  | Loop,    //< Instr is a loop (backwards branch). | 
|  | Return,  //< Instr is a return instruction. | 
|  | PreCall, //< Instr is a call instruction. | 
|  | PostCall //< Instr is the return address of a call. | 
|  | }; | 
|  | }</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>A collector can request any combination of the four by setting the | 
|  | <tt>NeededSafePoints</tt> mask:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | >MyGC::MyGC() { | 
|  | NeededSafePoints = 1 << GC::Loop | 
|  | | 1 << GC::Return | 
|  | | 1 << GC::PreCall | 
|  | | 1 << GC::PostCall; | 
|  | }</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>It can then use the following routines to access safe points.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | >for (iterator I = begin(), E = end(); I != E; ++I) { | 
|  | GCFunctionInfo *MD = *I; | 
|  | size_t PointCount = MD->size(); | 
|  |  | 
|  | for (GCFunctionInfo::iterator PI = MD->begin(), | 
|  | PE = MD->end(); PI != PE; ++PI) { | 
|  | GC::PointKind PointKind = PI->Kind; | 
|  | unsigned PointNum = PI->Num; | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | </pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Almost every collector requires <tt>PostCall</tt> safe points, since these | 
|  | correspond to the moments when the function is suspended during a call to a | 
|  | subroutine.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Threaded programs generally require <tt>Loop</tt> safe points to guarantee | 
|  | that the application will reach a safe point within a bounded amount of time, | 
|  | even if it is executing a long-running loop which contains no function | 
|  | calls.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Threaded collectors may also require <tt>Return</tt> and <tt>PreCall</tt> | 
|  | safe points to implement "stop the world" techniques using self-modifying code, | 
|  | where it is important that the program not exit the function without reaching a | 
|  | safe point (because only the topmost function has been patched).</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- ======================================================================= --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_subsection"> | 
|  | <a name="assembly">Emitting assembly code: <tt>GCMetadataPrinter</tt></a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>LLVM allows a plugin to print arbitrary assembly code before and after the | 
|  | rest of a module's assembly code. At the end of the module, the GC can compile | 
|  | the LLVM stack map into assembly code. (At the beginning, this information is not | 
|  | yet computed.)</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Since AsmWriter and CodeGen are separate components of LLVM, a separate | 
|  | abstract base class and registry is provided for printing assembly code, the | 
|  | <tt>GCMetadaPrinter</tt> and <tt>GCMetadataPrinterRegistry</tt>. The AsmWriter | 
|  | will look for such a subclass if the <tt>GCStrategy</tt> sets | 
|  | <tt>UsesMetadata</tt>:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | >MyGC::MyGC() { | 
|  | UsesMetadata = true; | 
|  | }</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>This separation allows JIT-only clients to be smaller.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Note that LLVM does not currently have analogous APIs to support code | 
|  | generation in the JIT, nor using the object writers.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | >// lib/MyGC/MyGCPrinter.cpp - Example LLVM GC printer | 
|  |  | 
|  | #include "llvm/CodeGen/GCMetadataPrinter.h" | 
|  | #include "llvm/Support/Compiler.h" | 
|  |  | 
|  | using namespace llvm; | 
|  |  | 
|  | namespace { | 
|  | class VISIBILITY_HIDDEN MyGCPrinter : public GCMetadataPrinter { | 
|  | public: | 
|  | virtual void beginAssembly(std::ostream &OS, AsmPrinter &AP, | 
|  | const TargetAsmInfo &TAI); | 
|  |  | 
|  | virtual void finishAssembly(std::ostream &OS, AsmPrinter &AP, | 
|  | const TargetAsmInfo &TAI); | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | GCMetadataPrinterRegistry::Add<MyGCPrinter> | 
|  | X("mygc", "My bespoke garbage collector."); | 
|  | }</pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The collector should use <tt>AsmPrinter</tt> and <tt>TargetAsmInfo</tt> to | 
|  | print portable assembly code to the <tt>std::ostream</tt>. The collector itself | 
|  | contains the stack map for the entire module, and may access the | 
|  | <tt>GCFunctionInfo</tt> using its own <tt>begin()</tt> and <tt>end()</tt> | 
|  | methods. Here's a realistic example:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <blockquote><pre | 
|  | >#include "llvm/CodeGen/AsmPrinter.h" | 
|  | #include "llvm/Function.h" | 
|  | #include "llvm/Target/TargetMachine.h" | 
|  | #include "llvm/Target/TargetData.h" | 
|  | #include "llvm/Target/TargetAsmInfo.h" | 
|  |  | 
|  | void MyGCPrinter::beginAssembly(std::ostream &OS, AsmPrinter &AP, | 
|  | const TargetAsmInfo &TAI) { | 
|  | // Nothing to do. | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | void MyGCPrinter::finishAssembly(std::ostream &OS, AsmPrinter &AP, | 
|  | const TargetAsmInfo &TAI) { | 
|  | // Set up for emitting addresses. | 
|  | const char *AddressDirective; | 
|  | int AddressAlignLog; | 
|  | if (AP.TM.getTargetData()->getPointerSize() == sizeof(int32_t)) { | 
|  | AddressDirective = TAI.getData32bitsDirective(); | 
|  | AddressAlignLog = 2; | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | AddressDirective = TAI.getData64bitsDirective(); | 
|  | AddressAlignLog = 3; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Put this in the data section. | 
|  | AP.SwitchToDataSection(TAI.getDataSection()); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // For each function... | 
|  | for (iterator FI = begin(), FE = end(); FI != FE; ++FI) { | 
|  | GCFunctionInfo &MD = **FI; | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Emit this data structure: | 
|  | // | 
|  | // struct { | 
|  | //   int32_t PointCount; | 
|  | //   struct { | 
|  | //     void *SafePointAddress; | 
|  | //     int32_t LiveCount; | 
|  | //     int32_t LiveOffsets[LiveCount]; | 
|  | //   } Points[PointCount]; | 
|  | // } __gcmap_<FUNCTIONNAME>; | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Align to address width. | 
|  | AP.EmitAlignment(AddressAlignLog); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Emit the symbol by which the stack map entry can be found. | 
|  | std::string Symbol; | 
|  | Symbol += TAI.getGlobalPrefix(); | 
|  | Symbol += "__gcmap_"; | 
|  | Symbol += MD.getFunction().getName(); | 
|  | if (const char *GlobalDirective = TAI.getGlobalDirective()) | 
|  | OS << GlobalDirective << Symbol << "\n"; | 
|  | OS << TAI.getGlobalPrefix() << Symbol << ":\n"; | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Emit PointCount. | 
|  | AP.EmitInt32(MD.size()); | 
|  | AP.EOL("safe point count"); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // And each safe point... | 
|  | for (GCFunctionInfo::iterator PI = MD.begin(), | 
|  | PE = MD.end(); PI != PE; ++PI) { | 
|  | // Align to address width. | 
|  | AP.EmitAlignment(AddressAlignLog); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Emit the address of the safe point. | 
|  | OS << AddressDirective | 
|  | << TAI.getPrivateGlobalPrefix() << "label" << PI->Num; | 
|  | AP.EOL("safe point address"); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Emit the stack frame size. | 
|  | AP.EmitInt32(MD.getFrameSize()); | 
|  | AP.EOL("stack frame size"); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Emit the number of live roots in the function. | 
|  | AP.EmitInt32(MD.live_size(PI)); | 
|  | AP.EOL("live root count"); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // And for each live root... | 
|  | for (GCFunctionInfo::live_iterator LI = MD.live_begin(PI), | 
|  | LE = MD.live_end(PI); | 
|  | LI != LE; ++LI) { | 
|  | // Print its offset within the stack frame. | 
|  | AP.EmitInt32(LI->StackOffset); | 
|  | AP.EOL("stack offset"); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | </pre></blockquote> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- *********************************************************************** --> | 
|  | <div class="doc_section"> | 
|  | <a name="references">References</a> | 
|  | </div> | 
|  | <!-- *********************************************************************** --> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <div class="doc_text"> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p><a name="appel89">[Appel89]</a> Runtime Tags Aren't Necessary. Andrew | 
|  | W. Appel. Lisp and Symbolic Computation 19(7):703-705, July 1989.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p><a name="goldberg91">[Goldberg91]</a> Tag-free garbage collection for | 
|  | strongly typed programming languages. Benjamin Goldberg. ACM SIGPLAN | 
|  | PLDI'91.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p><a name="tolmach94">[Tolmach94]</a> Tag-free garbage collection using | 
|  | explicit type parameters. Andrew Tolmach. Proceedings of the 1994 ACM | 
|  | conference on LISP and functional programming.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p><a name="henderson02">[Henderson2002]</a> <a | 
|  | href="http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/henderson02accurate.html"> | 
|  | Accurate Garbage Collection in an Uncooperative Environment</a>. | 
|  | Fergus Henderson. International Symposium on Memory Management 2002.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </div> | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | <!-- *********************************************************************** --> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <hr> | 
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|  | Last modified: $Date$ | 
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