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mgc.go
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// 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 = GCoff.
// 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 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.
// When a stack is scanned, this phase also installs stack barriers to
// track how much of the stack has been active.
// This transition enables write barriers because stack barriers
// assume that writes to higher frames will be tracked by write
// barriers. Technically this only needs write barriers for writes
// to stack slots, but we enable write barriers in general.
// GCscan to GCmark
// In GCmark, work buffers are drained until there are no more
// pointers to scan.
// No scanning of objects (making them black) can happen until all
// Ps have enabled the write barrier, but that already happened in
// the transition to GCscan.
// 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).
// At the end of STW mark termination all spans are marked as "needs sweeping".
//
// The background sweeper goroutine simply sweeps spans one-by-one.
//
// To avoid requesting more OS memory while there are unswept spans, when a
// goroutine needs another span, it first attempts to reclaim that much memory
// by sweeping. 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. When a goroutine needs to allocate large-object span from heap,
// it sweeps spans until it frees at least that many pages into heap. There is
// one case where this may not suffice: 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
_RootFlushCaches = 3
_RootSpans0 = 4
_RootSpansShards = 128
_RootCount = _RootSpans0 + _RootSpansShards
// sweepMinHeapDistance is a lower bound on the heap distance
// (in bytes) reserved for concurrent sweeping between GC
// cycles. This will be scaled by gcpercent/100.
sweepMinHeapDistance = 1024 * 1024
)
// heapminimum is the minimum heap size at which to trigger GC.
// For small heaps, this overrides the usual GOGC*live set rule.
//
// When there is a very small live set but a lot of allocation, simply
// collecting when the heap reaches GOGC*live results in many GC
// cycles and high total per-GC overhead. This minimum amortizes this
// per-GC overhead while keeping the heap reasonably small.
//
// During initialization this is set to 4MB*GOGC/100. In the case of
// GOGC==0, this will set heapminimum to 0, resulting in constant
// collection even when the heap size is small, which is useful for
// debugging.
var heapminimum uint64 = defaultHeapMinimum
// defaultHeapMinimum is the value of heapminimum for GOGC==100.
const defaultHeapMinimum = 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)
_ = setGCPercent(readgogc())
for datap := &firstmoduledata; datap != nil; datap = datap.next {
datap.gcdatamask = progToPointerMask((*byte)(unsafe.Pointer(datap.gcdata)), datap.edata-datap.data)
datap.gcbssmask = progToPointerMask((*byte)(unsafe.Pointer(datap.gcbss)), datap.ebss-datap.bss)
}
memstats.next_gc = heapminimum
}
func readgogc() int32 {
p := gogetenv("GOGC")
if p == "" {
return 100
}
if p == "off" {
return -1
}
return int32(atoi(p))
}
// gcenable is called after the bulk of the runtime initialization,
// just before we're about to start letting user code run.
// It kicks off the background sweeper goroutine and enables GC.
func gcenable() {
c := make(chan int, 1)
go bgsweep(c)
<-c
memstats.enablegc = true // now that runtime is initialized, GC is okay
}
func setGCPercent(in int32) (out int32) {
lock(&mheap_.lock)
out = gcpercent
if in < 0 {
in = -1
}
gcpercent = in
heapminimum = defaultHeapMinimum * uint64(gcpercent) / 100
unlock(&mheap_.lock)
return out
}
// Garbage collector phase.
// Indicates to write barrier and sychronization task to preform.
var gcphase uint32
var writeBarrierEnabled bool // compiler emits references to this in write barriers
// gcBlackenEnabled is 1 if mutator assists and background mark
// workers are allowed to blacken objects. This must only be set when
// gcphase == _GCmark.
var gcBlackenEnabled uint32
// gcBlackenPromptly indicates that optimizations that may
// hide work from the global work queue should be disabled.
//
// If gcBlackenPromptly is true, per-P gcWork caches should
// be flushed immediately and new objects should be allocated black.
//
// There is a tension between allocating objects white and
// allocating them black. If white and the objects die before being
// marked they can be collected during this GC cycle. On the other
// hand allocating them black will reduce _GCmarktermination latency
// since more work is done in the mark phase. This tension is resolved
// by allocating white until the mark phase is approaching its end and
// then allocating black for the remainder of the mark phase.
var gcBlackenPromptly bool
const (
_GCoff = iota // GC not running; sweeping in background, write barrier disabled
_GCstw // unused state
_GCscan // GC collecting roots into workbufs, write barrier ENABLED
_GCmark // GC marking from workbufs, write barrier ENABLED
_GCmarktermination // GC mark termination: allocate black, P's help GC, write barrier ENABLED
)
//go:nosplit
func setGCPhase(x uint32) {
atomicstore(&gcphase, x)
writeBarrierEnabled = gcphase == _GCmark || gcphase == _GCmarktermination || gcphase == _GCscan
}
// gcMarkWorkerMode represents the mode that a concurrent mark worker
// should operate in.
//
// Concurrent marking happens through four different mechanisms. One
// is mutator assists, which happen in response to allocations and are
// not scheduled. The other three are variations in the per-P mark
// workers and are distinguished by gcMarkWorkerMode.
type gcMarkWorkerMode int
const (
// gcMarkWorkerDedicatedMode indicates that the P of a mark
// worker is dedicated to running that mark worker. The mark
// worker should run without preemption until concurrent mark
// is done.
gcMarkWorkerDedicatedMode gcMarkWorkerMode = iota
// gcMarkWorkerFractionalMode indicates that a P is currently
// running the "fractional" mark worker. The fractional worker
// is necessary when GOMAXPROCS*gcGoalUtilization is not an
// integer. The fractional worker should run until it is
// preempted and will be scheduled to pick up the fractional
// part of GOMAXPROCS*gcGoalUtilization.
gcMarkWorkerFractionalMode
// gcMarkWorkerIdleMode indicates that a P is running the mark
// worker because it has nothing else to do. The idle worker
// should run until it is preempted and account its time
// against gcController.idleMarkTime.
gcMarkWorkerIdleMode
)
// gcController implements the GC pacing controller that determines
// when to trigger concurrent garbage collection and how much marking
// work to do in mutator assists and background marking.
//
// It uses a feedback control algorithm to adjust the memstats.next_gc
// trigger based on the heap growth and GC CPU utilization each cycle.
// This algorithm optimizes for heap growth to match GOGC and for CPU
// utilization between assist and background marking to be 25% of
// GOMAXPROCS. The high-level design of this algorithm is documented
// at https://golang.org/s/go15gcpacing.
var gcController = gcControllerState{
// Initial trigger ratio guess.
triggerRatio: 7 / 8.0,
}
type gcControllerState struct {
// scanWork is the total scan work performed this cycle. This
// is updated atomically during the cycle. Updates may be
// batched arbitrarily, since the value is only read at the
// end of the cycle.
//
// Currently this is the bytes of heap scanned. For most uses,
// this is an opaque unit of work, but for estimation the
// definition is important.
scanWork int64
// bgScanCredit is the scan work credit accumulated by the
// concurrent background scan. This credit is accumulated by
// the background scan and stolen by mutator assists. This is
// updated atomically. Updates occur in bounded batches, since
// it is both written and read throughout the cycle.
bgScanCredit int64
// assistTime is the nanoseconds spent in mutator assists
// during this cycle. This is updated atomically. Updates
// occur in bounded batches, since it is both written and read
// throughout the cycle.
assistTime int64
// dedicatedMarkTime is the nanoseconds spent in dedicated
// mark workers during this cycle. This is updated atomically
// at the end of the concurrent mark phase.
dedicatedMarkTime int64
// fractionalMarkTime is the nanoseconds spent in the
// fractional mark worker during this cycle. This is updated
// atomically throughout the cycle and will be up-to-date if
// the fractional mark worker is not currently running.
fractionalMarkTime int64
// idleMarkTime is the nanoseconds spent in idle marking
// during this cycle. This is updated atomically throughout
// the cycle.
idleMarkTime int64
// bgMarkStartTime is the absolute start time in nanoseconds
// that the background mark phase started.
bgMarkStartTime int64
// assistTime is the absolute start time in nanoseconds that
// mutator assists were enabled.
assistStartTime int64
// heapGoal is the goal memstats.heap_live for when this cycle
// ends. This is computed at the beginning of each cycle.
heapGoal uint64
// dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded is the number of dedicated mark
// workers that need to be started. This is computed at the
// beginning of each cycle and decremented atomically as
// dedicated mark workers get started.
dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded int64
// assistRatio is the ratio of allocated bytes to scan work
// that should be performed by mutator assists. This is
// computed at the beginning of each cycle and updated every
// time heap_scan is updated.
assistRatio float64
// fractionalUtilizationGoal is the fraction of wall clock
// time that should be spent in the fractional mark worker.
// For example, if the overall mark utilization goal is 25%
// and GOMAXPROCS is 6, one P will be a dedicated mark worker
// and this will be set to 0.5 so that 50% of the time some P
// is in a fractional mark worker. This is computed at the
// beginning of each cycle.
fractionalUtilizationGoal float64
// triggerRatio is the heap growth ratio at which the garbage
// collection cycle should start. E.g., if this is 0.6, then
// GC should start when the live heap has reached 1.6 times
// the heap size marked by the previous cycle. This is updated
// at the end of of each cycle.
triggerRatio float64
_ [_CacheLineSize]byte
// fractionalMarkWorkersNeeded is the number of fractional
// mark workers that need to be started. This is either 0 or
// 1. This is potentially updated atomically at every
// scheduling point (hence it gets its own cache line).
fractionalMarkWorkersNeeded int64
_ [_CacheLineSize]byte
}
// startCycle resets the GC controller's state and computes estimates
// for a new GC cycle. The caller must hold worldsema.
func (c *gcControllerState) startCycle() {
c.scanWork = 0
c.bgScanCredit = 0
c.assistTime = 0
c.dedicatedMarkTime = 0
c.fractionalMarkTime = 0
c.idleMarkTime = 0
// If this is the first GC cycle or we're operating on a very
// small heap, fake heap_marked so it looks like next_gc is
// the appropriate growth from heap_marked, even though the
// real heap_marked may not have a meaningful value (on the
// first cycle) or may be much smaller (resulting in a large
// error response).
if memstats.next_gc <= heapminimum {
memstats.heap_marked = uint64(float64(memstats.next_gc) / (1 + c.triggerRatio))
memstats.heap_reachable = memstats.heap_marked
}
// Compute the heap goal for this cycle
c.heapGoal = memstats.heap_reachable + memstats.heap_reachable*uint64(gcpercent)/100
// Compute the total mark utilization goal and divide it among
// dedicated and fractional workers.
totalUtilizationGoal := float64(gomaxprocs) * gcGoalUtilization
c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded = int64(totalUtilizationGoal)
c.fractionalUtilizationGoal = totalUtilizationGoal - float64(c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded)
if c.fractionalUtilizationGoal > 0 {
c.fractionalMarkWorkersNeeded = 1
} else {
c.fractionalMarkWorkersNeeded = 0
}
// Clear per-P state
for _, p := range &allp {
if p == nil {
break
}
p.gcAssistTime = 0
}
// Compute initial values for controls that are updated
// throughout the cycle.
c.revise()
if debug.gcpacertrace > 0 {
print("pacer: assist ratio=", c.assistRatio,
" (scan ", memstats.heap_scan>>20, " MB in ",
work.initialHeapLive>>20, "->",
c.heapGoal>>20, " MB)",
" workers=", c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded,
"+", c.fractionalMarkWorkersNeeded, "\n")
}
}
// revise updates the assist ratio during the GC cycle to account for
// improved estimates. This should be called either under STW or
// whenever memstats.heap_scan is updated (with mheap_.lock held).
func (c *gcControllerState) revise() {
// Compute the expected scan work. This is a strict upper
// bound on the possible scan work in the current heap.
//
// You might consider dividing this by 2 (or by
// (100+GOGC)/100) to counter this over-estimation, but
// benchmarks show that this has almost no effect on mean
// mutator utilization, heap size, or assist time and it
// introduces the danger of under-estimating and letting the
// mutator outpace the garbage collector.
scanWorkExpected := memstats.heap_scan
// Compute the mutator assist ratio so by the time the mutator
// allocates the remaining heap bytes up to next_gc, it will
// have done (or stolen) the estimated amount of scan work.
heapDistance := int64(c.heapGoal) - int64(work.initialHeapLive)
if heapDistance <= 1024*1024 {
// heapDistance can be negative if GC start is delayed
// or if the allocation that pushed heap_live over
// next_gc is large or if the trigger is really close
// to GOGC. We don't want to set the assist negative
// (or divide by zero, or set it really high), so
// enforce a minimum on the distance.
heapDistance = 1024 * 1024
}
c.assistRatio = float64(scanWorkExpected) / float64(heapDistance)
}
// endCycle updates the GC controller state at the end of the
// concurrent part of the GC cycle.
func (c *gcControllerState) endCycle() {
h_t := c.triggerRatio // For debugging
// Proportional response gain for the trigger controller. Must
// be in [0, 1]. Lower values smooth out transient effects but
// take longer to respond to phase changes. Higher values
// react to phase changes quickly, but are more affected by
// transient changes. Values near 1 may be unstable.
const triggerGain = 0.5
// Compute next cycle trigger ratio. First, this computes the
// "error" for this cycle; that is, how far off the trigger
// was from what it should have been, accounting for both heap
// growth and GC CPU utilization. We compute the actual heap
// growth during this cycle and scale that by how far off from
// the goal CPU utilization we were (to estimate the heap
// growth if we had the desired CPU utilization). The
// difference between this estimate and the GOGC-based goal
// heap growth is the error.
//
// TODO(austin): next_gc is based on heap_reachable, not
// heap_marked, which means the actual growth ratio
// technically isn't comparable to the trigger ratio.
goalGrowthRatio := float64(gcpercent) / 100
actualGrowthRatio := float64(memstats.heap_live)/float64(memstats.heap_marked) - 1
assistDuration := nanotime() - c.assistStartTime
// Assume background mark hit its utilization goal.
utilization := gcGoalUtilization
// Add assist utilization; avoid divide by zero.
if assistDuration > 0 {
utilization += float64(c.assistTime) / float64(assistDuration*int64(gomaxprocs))
}
triggerError := goalGrowthRatio - c.triggerRatio - utilization/gcGoalUtilization*(actualGrowthRatio-c.triggerRatio)
// Finally, we adjust the trigger for next time by this error,
// damped by the proportional gain.
c.triggerRatio += triggerGain * triggerError
if c.triggerRatio < 0 {
// This can happen if the mutator is allocating very
// quickly or the GC is scanning very slowly.
c.triggerRatio = 0
} else if c.triggerRatio > goalGrowthRatio*0.95 {
// Ensure there's always a little margin so that the
// mutator assist ratio isn't infinity.
c.triggerRatio = goalGrowthRatio * 0.95
}
if debug.gcpacertrace > 0 {
// Print controller state in terms of the design
// document.
H_m_prev := memstats.heap_marked
H_T := memstats.next_gc
h_a := actualGrowthRatio
H_a := memstats.heap_live
h_g := goalGrowthRatio
H_g := int64(float64(H_m_prev) * (1 + h_g))
u_a := utilization
u_g := gcGoalUtilization
W_a := c.scanWork
print("pacer: H_m_prev=", H_m_prev,
" h_t=", h_t, " H_T=", H_T,
" h_a=", h_a, " H_a=", H_a,
" h_g=", h_g, " H_g=", H_g,
" u_a=", u_a, " u_g=", u_g,
" W_a=", W_a,
" goalΔ=", goalGrowthRatio-h_t,
" actualΔ=", h_a-h_t,
" u_a/u_g=", u_a/u_g,
"\n")
}
}
// findRunnableGCWorker returns the background mark worker for _p_ if it
// should be run. This must only be called when gcBlackenEnabled != 0.
func (c *gcControllerState) findRunnableGCWorker(_p_ *p) *g {
if gcBlackenEnabled == 0 {
throw("gcControllerState.findRunnable: blackening not enabled")
}
if _p_.gcBgMarkWorker == nil {
throw("gcControllerState.findRunnable: no background mark worker")
}
if work.bgMark1.done != 0 && work.bgMark2.done != 0 {
// Background mark is done. Don't schedule background
// mark worker any more. (This is not just an
// optimization. Without this we can spin scheduling
// the background worker and having it return
// immediately with no work to do.)
return nil
}
decIfPositive := func(ptr *int64) bool {
if *ptr > 0 {
if xaddint64(ptr, -1) >= 0 {
return true
}
// We lost a race
xaddint64(ptr, +1)
}
return false
}
if decIfPositive(&c.dedicatedMarkWorkersNeeded) {
// This P is now dedicated to marking until the end of
// the concurrent mark phase.
_p_.gcMarkWorkerMode = gcMarkWorkerDedicatedMode
// TODO(austin): This P isn't going to run anything
// else for a while, so kick everything out of its run
// queue.
} else {
if _p_.gcw.wbuf == 0 && work.full == 0 && work.partial == 0 {
// No work to be done right now. This can
// happen at the end of the mark phase when
// there are still assists tapering off. Don't
// bother running background mark because
// it'll just return immediately.
if work.nwait == work.nproc {
// There are also no workers, which
// means we've reached a completion point.
// There may not be any workers to
// signal it, so signal it here.
readied := false
if gcBlackenPromptly {
if work.bgMark1.done == 0 {
throw("completing mark 2, but bgMark1.done == 0")
}
readied = work.bgMark2.complete()
} else {
readied = work.bgMark1.complete()
}
if readied {
// complete just called ready,
// but we're inside the
// scheduler. Let it know that
// that's okay.
resetspinning()
}
}
return nil
}
if !decIfPositive(&c.fractionalMarkWorkersNeeded) {
// No more workers are need right now.
return nil
}
// This P has picked the token for the fractional worker.
// Is the GC currently under or at the utilization goal?
// If so, do more work.
//
// We used to check whether doing one time slice of work
// would remain under the utilization goal, but that has the
// effect of delaying work until the mutator has run for
// enough time slices to pay for the work. During those time
// slices, write barriers are enabled, so the mutator is running slower.
// Now instead we do the work whenever we're under or at the
// utilization work and pay for it by letting the mutator run later.
// This doesn't change the overall utilization averages, but it
// front loads the GC work so that the GC finishes earlier and
// write barriers can be turned off sooner, effectively giving
// the mutator a faster machine.
//
// The old, slower behavior can be restored by setting
// gcForcePreemptNS = forcePreemptNS.
const gcForcePreemptNS = 0
// TODO(austin): We could fast path this and basically
// eliminate contention on c.fractionalMarkWorkersNeeded by
// precomputing the minimum time at which it's worth
// next scheduling the fractional worker. Then Ps
// don't have to fight in the window where we've
// passed that deadline and no one has started the
// worker yet.
//
// TODO(austin): Shorter preemption interval for mark
// worker to improve fairness and give this
// finer-grained control over schedule?
now := nanotime() - gcController.bgMarkStartTime
then := now + gcForcePreemptNS
timeUsed := c.fractionalMarkTime + gcForcePreemptNS
if then > 0 && float64(timeUsed)/float64(then) > c.fractionalUtilizationGoal {
// Nope, we'd overshoot the utilization goal
xaddint64(&c.fractionalMarkWorkersNeeded, +1)
return nil
}
_p_.gcMarkWorkerMode = gcMarkWorkerFractionalMode
}
// Run the background mark worker
gp := _p_.gcBgMarkWorker
casgstatus(gp, _Gwaiting, _Grunnable)
if trace.enabled {
traceGoUnpark(gp, 0)
}
return gp
}
// gcGoalUtilization is the goal CPU utilization for background
// marking as a fraction of GOMAXPROCS.
const gcGoalUtilization = 0.25
// gcBgCreditSlack is the amount of scan work credit background
// scanning can accumulate locally before updating
// gcController.bgScanCredit. Lower values give mutator assists more
// accurate accounting of background scanning. Higher values reduce
// memory contention.
const gcBgCreditSlack = 2000
// gcAssistTimeSlack is the nanoseconds of mutator assist time that
// can accumulate on a P before updating gcController.assistTime.
const gcAssistTimeSlack = 5000
// 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_live read has a benign race.
// 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 memstats.heap_live >= memstats.next_gc && atomicloaduint(&bggc.working) == 0
}
// bgMarkSignal synchronizes the GC coordinator and background mark workers.
type bgMarkSignal struct {
// Workers race to cas to 1. Winner signals coordinator.
done uint32
// Coordinator to wake up.
lock mutex
g *g
wake bool
}
func (s *bgMarkSignal) wait() {
lock(&s.lock)
if s.wake {
// Wakeup already happened
unlock(&s.lock)
} else {
s.g = getg()
goparkunlock(&s.lock, "mark wait (idle)", traceEvGoBlock, 1)
}
s.wake = false
s.g = nil
}
// complete signals the completion of this phase of marking. This can
// be called multiple times during a cycle; only the first call has
// any effect.
//
// The caller should arrange to deschedule itself as soon as possible
// after calling complete in order to let the coordinator goroutine
// run.
func (s *bgMarkSignal) complete() bool {
if cas(&s.done, 0, 1) {
// This is the first worker to reach this completion point.
// Signal the main GC goroutine.
lock(&s.lock)
if s.g == nil {
// It hasn't parked yet.
s.wake = true
} else {
ready(s.g, 0)
}
unlock(&s.lock)
return true
}
return false
}
func (s *bgMarkSignal) clear() {
s.done = 0
}
var work struct {
full uint64 // lock-free list of full blocks workbuf
empty uint64 // lock-free list of empty blocks workbuf
// TODO(rlh): partial no longer used, remove. (issue #11922)
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
bgMarkReady note // signal background mark worker has started
bgMarkDone uint32 // cas to 1 when at a background mark completion point
// Background mark completion signaling
// Coordination for the 2 parts of the mark phase.
bgMark1 bgMarkSignal
bgMark2 bgMarkSignal
// Copy of mheap.allspans for marker or sweeper.
spans []*mspan
// totaltime is the CPU nanoseconds spent in GC since the
// program started if debug.gctrace > 0.
totaltime int64
// bytesMarked is the number of bytes marked this cycle. This
// includes bytes blackened in scanned objects, noscan objects
// that go straight to black, and permagrey objects scanned by
// markroot during the concurrent scan phase. This is updated
// atomically during the cycle. Updates may be batched
// arbitrarily, since the value is only read at the end of the
// cycle.
//
// Because of benign races during marking, this number may not
// be the exact number of marked bytes, but it should be very
// close.
bytesMarked uint64
// initialHeapLive is the value of memstats.heap_live at the
// beginning of this GC cycle.
initialHeapLive uint64
}
// GC runs a garbage collection and blocks the caller until the
// garbage collection is complete. It may also block the entire
// program.
func GC() {
startGC(gcForceBlockMode, false)
}
const (
gcBackgroundMode = iota // concurrent GC
gcForceMode // stop-the-world GC now
gcForceBlockMode // stop-the-world GC now and wait for sweep
)
// startGC starts a GC cycle. If mode is gcBackgroundMode, this will
// start GC in the background and return. Otherwise, this will block
// until the new GC cycle is started and finishes. If forceTrigger is
// true, it indicates that GC should be started regardless of the
// current heap size.
func startGC(mode int, forceTrigger bool) {
// 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 stop-the-world, 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 || mp.preemptoff != "" || !memstats.enablegc || panicking != 0 || gcpercent < 0 {
releasem(mp)
return
}
releasem(mp)
mp = nil
if debug.gcstoptheworld == 1 {
mode = gcForceMode
} else if debug.gcstoptheworld == 2 {
mode = gcForceBlockMode
}
if mode != gcBackgroundMode {
// special synchronous cases
gc(mode)
return
}
// trigger concurrent GC
readied := false
lock(&bggc.lock)
// The trigger was originally checked speculatively, so
// recheck that this really should trigger GC. (For example,
// we may have gone through a whole GC cycle since the
// speculative check.)
if !(forceTrigger || shouldtriggergc()) {
unlock(&bggc.lock)
return
}
if !bggc.started {
bggc.working = 1
bggc.started = true
readied = true
go backgroundgc()
} else if bggc.working == 0 {
bggc.working = 1
readied = true
ready(bggc.g, 0)
}
unlock(&bggc.lock)
if readied {
// This G just started or ready()d the GC goroutine.
// Switch directly to it by yielding.
Gosched()
}
}
// 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, 1)
}
}
func gc(mode int) {
// Timing/utilization tracking
var stwprocs, maxprocs int32
var tSweepTerm, tScan, tInstallWB, tMark, tMarkTerm int64
// debug.gctrace variables
var heap0, heap1, heap2, heapGoal uint64
// memstats statistics
var now, pauseStart, pauseNS int64
// Ok, we're doing it! Stop everybody else
semacquire(&worldsema, false)
// Pick up the remaining unswept/not being swept spans concurrently
//
// This shouldn't happen if we're being invoked in background
// mode since proportional sweep should have just finished
// sweeping everything, but rounding errors, etc, may leave a
// few spans unswept. In forced mode, this is necessary since
// GC can be forced at any point in the sweeping cycle.
for gosweepone() != ^uintptr(0) {
sweep.nbgsweep++
}
if trace.enabled {
traceGCStart()
}
if mode == gcBackgroundMode {
gcBgMarkStartWorkers()
}
now = nanotime()
stwprocs, maxprocs = gcprocs(), gomaxprocs
tSweepTerm = now
heap0 = memstats.heap_live
pauseStart = now
systemstack(stopTheWorldWithSema)
systemstack(finishsweep_m) // finish sweep before we start concurrent scan.
// clearpools before we start the GC. If we wait they memory will not be
// reclaimed until the next GC cycle.
clearpools()
gcResetMarkState()
if mode == gcBackgroundMode { // Do as much work concurrently as possible
gcController.startCycle()
heapGoal = gcController.heapGoal
systemstack(func() {
// Enter scan phase. This enables write
// barriers to track changes to stack frames
// above the stack barrier.
//
// TODO: This has evolved to the point where
// we carefully ensure invariants we no longer
// depend on. Either:
//
// 1) Enable full write barriers for the scan,
// but eliminate the ragged barrier below
// (since the start the world ensures all Ps
// have observed the write barrier enable) and
// consider draining during the scan.
//
// 2) Only enable write barriers for writes to
// the stack at this point, and then enable
// write barriers for heap writes when we
// enter the mark phase. This means we cannot
// drain in the scan phase and must perform a
// ragged barrier to ensure all Ps have
// enabled heap write barriers before we drain
// or enable assists.
//
// 3) Don't install stack barriers over frame
// boundaries where there are up-pointers.
setGCPhase(_GCscan)
gcBgMarkPrepare() // Must happen before assist enable.
// At this point all Ps have enabled the write
// barrier, thus maintaining the no white to
// black invariant. Enable mutator assists to
// put back-pressure on fast allocating
// mutators.
atomicstore(&gcBlackenEnabled, 1)
// Concurrent scan.
startTheWorldWithSema()
now = nanotime()
pauseNS += now - pauseStart
tScan = now
gcController.assistStartTime = now
gcscan_m()
// Enter mark phase.
tInstallWB = nanotime()
setGCPhase(_GCmark)
// Ensure all Ps have observed the phase
// change and have write barriers enabled
// before any blackening occurs.
forEachP(func(*p) {})
})
// Concurrent mark.
tMark = nanotime()
// Enable background mark workers and wait for
// background mark completion.
gcController.bgMarkStartTime = nanotime()