go/src/pkg/runtime/malloc.goc

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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.
// See malloc.h for overview.
//
// TODO(rsc): double-check stats.
package runtime
#include "runtime.h"
#include "arch_GOARCH.h"
#include "malloc.h"
#include "type.h"
#include "typekind.h"
#include "race.h"
#include "stack.h"
#include "../../cmd/ld/textflag.h"
// Mark mheap as 'no pointers', it does not contain interesting pointers but occupies ~45K.
#pragma dataflag NOPTR
MHeap runtime·mheap;
#pragma dataflag NOPTR
2014-01-30 13:28:19 +04:00
MStats mstats;
extern MStats mstats; // defined in zruntime_def_$GOOS_$GOARCH.go
extern volatile intgo runtime·MemProfileRate;
static MSpan* largealloc(uint32, uintptr*);
runtime: adjust GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1 and GODEBUG=gcdead=1 GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1: The allocfreetrace=1 mode prints a stack trace for each block allocated and freed, and also a stack trace for each garbage collection. It was implemented by reusing the heap profiling support: if allocfreetrace=1 then the heap profile was effectively running at 1 sample per 1 byte allocated (always sample). The stack being shown at allocation was the stack gathered for profiling, meaning it was derived only from the program counters and did not include information about function arguments or frame pointers. The stack being shown at free was the allocation stack, not the free stack. If you are generating this log, you can find the allocation stack yourself, but it can be useful to see exactly the sequence that led to freeing the block: was it the garbage collector or an explicit free? Now that the garbage collector runs on an m0 stack, the stack trace for the garbage collector was never interesting. Fix all these problems: 1. Decouple allocfreetrace=1 from heap profiling. 2. Print the standard goroutine stack traces instead of a custom format. 3. Print the stack trace at time of allocation for an allocation, and print the stack trace at time of free (not the allocation trace again) for a free. 4. Print all goroutine stacks at garbage collection. Having all the stacks means that you can see the exact point at which each goroutine was preempted, which is often useful for identifying liveness-related errors. GODEBUG=gcdead=1: This mode overwrites dead pointers with a poison value. Detect the poison value as an invalid pointer during collection, the same way that small integers are invalid pointers. LGTM=khr R=khr CC=golang-codereviews https://golang.org/cl/81670043
2014-04-01 13:30:10 -04:00
static void profilealloc(void *v, uintptr size);
static void settype(MSpan *s, void *v, uintptr typ);
// Allocate an object of at least size bytes.
// Small objects are allocated from the per-thread cache's free lists.
// Large objects (> 32 kB) are allocated straight from the heap.
// If the block will be freed with runtime·free(), typ must be 0.
void*
runtime·mallocgc(uintptr size, Type *typ, uint32 flag)
{
int32 sizeclass;
uintptr tinysize, size0, size1;
intgo rate;
MCache *c;
MSpan *s;
MLink *v, *next;
byte *tiny;
if(size == 0) {
// All 0-length allocations use this pointer.
// The language does not require the allocations to
// have distinct values.
return &runtime·zerobase;
}
2014-06-26 11:54:39 -04:00
if(g->m->mallocing)
runtime·throw("malloc/free - deadlock");
// Disable preemption during settype.
// We can not use m->mallocing for this, because settype calls mallocgc.
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g->m->locks++;
g->m->mallocing = 1;
size0 = size;
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c = g->m->mcache;
if(!runtime·debug.efence && size <= MaxSmallSize) {
if((flag&(FlagNoScan|FlagNoGC)) == FlagNoScan && size < TinySize) {
// Tiny allocator.
//
// Tiny allocator combines several tiny allocation requests
// into a single memory block. The resulting memory block
// is freed when all subobjects are unreachable. The subobjects
// must be FlagNoScan (don't have pointers), this ensures that
// the amount of potentially wasted memory is bounded.
//
// Size of the memory block used for combining (TinySize) is tunable.
// Current setting is 16 bytes, which relates to 2x worst case memory
// wastage (when all but one subobjects are unreachable).
// 8 bytes would result in no wastage at all, but provides less
// opportunities for combining.
// 32 bytes provides more opportunities for combining,
// but can lead to 4x worst case wastage.
// The best case winning is 8x regardless of block size.
//
// Objects obtained from tiny allocator must not be freed explicitly.
// So when an object will be freed explicitly, we ensure that
// its size >= TinySize.
//
// SetFinalizer has a special case for objects potentially coming
// from tiny allocator, it such case it allows to set finalizers
// for an inner byte of a memory block.
//
// The main targets of tiny allocator are small strings and
// standalone escaping variables. On a json benchmark
// the allocator reduces number of allocations by ~12% and
// reduces heap size by ~20%.
tinysize = c->tinysize;
if(size <= tinysize) {
tiny = c->tiny;
// Align tiny pointer for required (conservative) alignment.
if((size&7) == 0)
tiny = (byte*)ROUND((uintptr)tiny, 8);
else if((size&3) == 0)
tiny = (byte*)ROUND((uintptr)tiny, 4);
else if((size&1) == 0)
tiny = (byte*)ROUND((uintptr)tiny, 2);
size1 = size + (tiny - c->tiny);
if(size1 <= tinysize) {
// The object fits into existing tiny block.
v = (MLink*)tiny;
c->tiny += size1;
c->tinysize -= size1;
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g->m->mallocing = 0;
g->m->locks--;
if(g->m->locks == 0 && g->preempt) // restore the preemption request in case we've cleared it in newstack
g->stackguard0 = StackPreempt;
return v;
}
}
// Allocate a new TinySize block.
s = c->alloc[TinySizeClass];
if(s->freelist == nil)
s = runtime·MCache_Refill(c, TinySizeClass);
v = s->freelist;
next = v->next;
s->freelist = next;
s->ref++;
if(next != nil) // prefetching nil leads to a DTLB miss
PREFETCH(next);
((uint64*)v)[0] = 0;
((uint64*)v)[1] = 0;
// See if we need to replace the existing tiny block with the new one
// based on amount of remaining free space.
if(TinySize-size > tinysize) {
c->tiny = (byte*)v + size;
c->tinysize = TinySize - size;
}
size = TinySize;
goto done;
}
// Allocate from mcache free lists.
// Inlined version of SizeToClass().
if(size <= 1024-8)
sizeclass = runtime·size_to_class8[(size+7)>>3];
else
sizeclass = runtime·size_to_class128[(size-1024+127) >> 7];
size = runtime·class_to_size[sizeclass];
s = c->alloc[sizeclass];
if(s->freelist == nil)
s = runtime·MCache_Refill(c, sizeclass);
v = s->freelist;
next = v->next;
s->freelist = next;
s->ref++;
if(next != nil) // prefetching nil leads to a DTLB miss
PREFETCH(next);
if(!(flag & FlagNoZero)) {
v->next = nil;
// block is zeroed iff second word is zero ...
if(size > 2*sizeof(uintptr) && ((uintptr*)v)[1] != 0)
runtime·memclr((byte*)v, size);
}
done:
c->local_cachealloc += size;
} else {
// Allocate directly from heap.
s = largealloc(flag, &size);
v = (void*)(s->start << PageShift);
}
runtime: use uintptr where possible in malloc stats linux/arm OMAP4 pandaboard benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkBinaryTree17 68723297000 37026214000 -46.12% BenchmarkFannkuch11 34962402000 35958435000 +2.85% BenchmarkGobDecode 137298600 124182150 -9.55% BenchmarkGobEncode 60717160 60006700 -1.17% BenchmarkGzip 5647156000 5550873000 -1.70% BenchmarkGunzip 1196350000 1198670000 +0.19% BenchmarkJSONEncode 863012800 782898000 -9.28% BenchmarkJSONDecode 3312989000 2781800000 -16.03% BenchmarkMandelbrot200 45727540 45703120 -0.05% BenchmarkParse 74781800 59990840 -19.78% BenchmarkRevcomp 140043650 139462300 -0.42% BenchmarkTemplate 6467682000 5832153000 -9.83% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkGobDecode 5.59 6.18 1.11x BenchmarkGobEncode 12.64 12.79 1.01x BenchmarkGzip 3.44 3.50 1.02x BenchmarkGunzip 16.22 16.19 1.00x BenchmarkJSONEncode 2.25 2.48 1.10x BenchmarkJSONDecode 0.59 0.70 1.19x BenchmarkParse 0.77 0.97 1.26x BenchmarkRevcomp 18.15 18.23 1.00x BenchmarkTemplate 0.30 0.33 1.10x darwin/386 core duo benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkBinaryTree17 10591616577 9678245733 -8.62% BenchmarkFannkuch11 10758473315 10749303846 -0.09% BenchmarkGobDecode 34379785 34121250 -0.75% BenchmarkGobEncode 23523721 23475750 -0.20% BenchmarkGzip 2486191492 2446539568 -1.59% BenchmarkGunzip 444179328 444250293 +0.02% BenchmarkJSONEncode 221138507 219757826 -0.62% BenchmarkJSONDecode 1056034428 1048975133 -0.67% BenchmarkMandelbrot200 19862516 19868346 +0.03% BenchmarkRevcomp 3742610872 3724821662 -0.48% BenchmarkTemplate 960283112 944791517 -1.61% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkGobDecode 22.33 22.49 1.01x BenchmarkGobEncode 32.63 32.69 1.00x BenchmarkGzip 7.80 7.93 1.02x BenchmarkGunzip 43.69 43.68 1.00x BenchmarkJSONEncode 8.77 8.83 1.01x BenchmarkJSONDecode 1.84 1.85 1.01x BenchmarkRevcomp 67.91 68.24 1.00x BenchmarkTemplate 2.02 2.05 1.01x R=rsc, 0xe2.0x9a.0x9b, mirtchovski CC=golang-dev, minux.ma https://golang.org/cl/6297047
2012-06-08 17:35:14 -04:00
if(!(flag & FlagNoGC))
runtime·markallocated(v, size, size0, typ, !(flag&FlagNoScan));
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g->m->mallocing = 0;
if(raceenabled)
runtime·racemalloc(v, size);
if(runtime·debug.allocfreetrace)
runtime: adjust GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1 and GODEBUG=gcdead=1 GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1: The allocfreetrace=1 mode prints a stack trace for each block allocated and freed, and also a stack trace for each garbage collection. It was implemented by reusing the heap profiling support: if allocfreetrace=1 then the heap profile was effectively running at 1 sample per 1 byte allocated (always sample). The stack being shown at allocation was the stack gathered for profiling, meaning it was derived only from the program counters and did not include information about function arguments or frame pointers. The stack being shown at free was the allocation stack, not the free stack. If you are generating this log, you can find the allocation stack yourself, but it can be useful to see exactly the sequence that led to freeing the block: was it the garbage collector or an explicit free? Now that the garbage collector runs on an m0 stack, the stack trace for the garbage collector was never interesting. Fix all these problems: 1. Decouple allocfreetrace=1 from heap profiling. 2. Print the standard goroutine stack traces instead of a custom format. 3. Print the stack trace at time of allocation for an allocation, and print the stack trace at time of free (not the allocation trace again) for a free. 4. Print all goroutine stacks at garbage collection. Having all the stacks means that you can see the exact point at which each goroutine was preempted, which is often useful for identifying liveness-related errors. GODEBUG=gcdead=1: This mode overwrites dead pointers with a poison value. Detect the poison value as an invalid pointer during collection, the same way that small integers are invalid pointers. LGTM=khr R=khr CC=golang-codereviews https://golang.org/cl/81670043
2014-04-01 13:30:10 -04:00
runtime·tracealloc(v, size, typ);
if(!(flag & FlagNoProfiling) && (rate = runtime·MemProfileRate) > 0) {
if(size < rate && size < c->next_sample)
c->next_sample -= size;
runtime: adjust GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1 and GODEBUG=gcdead=1 GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1: The allocfreetrace=1 mode prints a stack trace for each block allocated and freed, and also a stack trace for each garbage collection. It was implemented by reusing the heap profiling support: if allocfreetrace=1 then the heap profile was effectively running at 1 sample per 1 byte allocated (always sample). The stack being shown at allocation was the stack gathered for profiling, meaning it was derived only from the program counters and did not include information about function arguments or frame pointers. The stack being shown at free was the allocation stack, not the free stack. If you are generating this log, you can find the allocation stack yourself, but it can be useful to see exactly the sequence that led to freeing the block: was it the garbage collector or an explicit free? Now that the garbage collector runs on an m0 stack, the stack trace for the garbage collector was never interesting. Fix all these problems: 1. Decouple allocfreetrace=1 from heap profiling. 2. Print the standard goroutine stack traces instead of a custom format. 3. Print the stack trace at time of allocation for an allocation, and print the stack trace at time of free (not the allocation trace again) for a free. 4. Print all goroutine stacks at garbage collection. Having all the stacks means that you can see the exact point at which each goroutine was preempted, which is often useful for identifying liveness-related errors. GODEBUG=gcdead=1: This mode overwrites dead pointers with a poison value. Detect the poison value as an invalid pointer during collection, the same way that small integers are invalid pointers. LGTM=khr R=khr CC=golang-codereviews https://golang.org/cl/81670043
2014-04-01 13:30:10 -04:00
else
profilealloc(v, size);
}
2014-06-26 11:54:39 -04:00
g->m->locks--;
if(g->m->locks == 0 && g->preempt) // restore the preemption request in case we've cleared it in newstack
g->stackguard0 = StackPreempt;
if(!(flag & FlagNoInvokeGC) && mstats.heap_alloc >= mstats.next_gc)
runtime·gc(0);
return v;
}
static MSpan*
largealloc(uint32 flag, uintptr *sizep)
{
uintptr npages, size;
MSpan *s;
void *v;
// Allocate directly from heap.
size = *sizep;
if(size + PageSize < size)
runtime·throw("out of memory");
npages = size >> PageShift;
if((size & PageMask) != 0)
npages++;
s = runtime·MHeap_Alloc(&runtime·mheap, npages, 0, 1, !(flag & FlagNoZero));
if(s == nil)
runtime·throw("out of memory");
s->limit = (byte*)(s->start<<PageShift) + size;
*sizep = npages<<PageShift;
v = (void*)(s->start << PageShift);
// setup for mark sweep
runtime·markspan(v, 0, 0, true);
return s;
}
static void
runtime: adjust GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1 and GODEBUG=gcdead=1 GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1: The allocfreetrace=1 mode prints a stack trace for each block allocated and freed, and also a stack trace for each garbage collection. It was implemented by reusing the heap profiling support: if allocfreetrace=1 then the heap profile was effectively running at 1 sample per 1 byte allocated (always sample). The stack being shown at allocation was the stack gathered for profiling, meaning it was derived only from the program counters and did not include information about function arguments or frame pointers. The stack being shown at free was the allocation stack, not the free stack. If you are generating this log, you can find the allocation stack yourself, but it can be useful to see exactly the sequence that led to freeing the block: was it the garbage collector or an explicit free? Now that the garbage collector runs on an m0 stack, the stack trace for the garbage collector was never interesting. Fix all these problems: 1. Decouple allocfreetrace=1 from heap profiling. 2. Print the standard goroutine stack traces instead of a custom format. 3. Print the stack trace at time of allocation for an allocation, and print the stack trace at time of free (not the allocation trace again) for a free. 4. Print all goroutine stacks at garbage collection. Having all the stacks means that you can see the exact point at which each goroutine was preempted, which is often useful for identifying liveness-related errors. GODEBUG=gcdead=1: This mode overwrites dead pointers with a poison value. Detect the poison value as an invalid pointer during collection, the same way that small integers are invalid pointers. LGTM=khr R=khr CC=golang-codereviews https://golang.org/cl/81670043
2014-04-01 13:30:10 -04:00
profilealloc(void *v, uintptr size)
{
uintptr rate;
int32 next;
MCache *c;
2014-06-26 11:54:39 -04:00
c = g->m->mcache;
rate = runtime·MemProfileRate;
if(size < rate) {
// pick next profile time
// If you change this, also change allocmcache.
if(rate > 0x3fffffff) // make 2*rate not overflow
rate = 0x3fffffff;
next = runtime·fastrand1() % (2*rate);
// Subtract the "remainder" of the current allocation.
// Otherwise objects that are close in size to sampling rate
// will be under-sampled, because we consistently discard this remainder.
next -= (size - c->next_sample);
if(next < 0)
next = 0;
c->next_sample = next;
}
runtime: adjust GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1 and GODEBUG=gcdead=1 GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1: The allocfreetrace=1 mode prints a stack trace for each block allocated and freed, and also a stack trace for each garbage collection. It was implemented by reusing the heap profiling support: if allocfreetrace=1 then the heap profile was effectively running at 1 sample per 1 byte allocated (always sample). The stack being shown at allocation was the stack gathered for profiling, meaning it was derived only from the program counters and did not include information about function arguments or frame pointers. The stack being shown at free was the allocation stack, not the free stack. If you are generating this log, you can find the allocation stack yourself, but it can be useful to see exactly the sequence that led to freeing the block: was it the garbage collector or an explicit free? Now that the garbage collector runs on an m0 stack, the stack trace for the garbage collector was never interesting. Fix all these problems: 1. Decouple allocfreetrace=1 from heap profiling. 2. Print the standard goroutine stack traces instead of a custom format. 3. Print the stack trace at time of allocation for an allocation, and print the stack trace at time of free (not the allocation trace again) for a free. 4. Print all goroutine stacks at garbage collection. Having all the stacks means that you can see the exact point at which each goroutine was preempted, which is often useful for identifying liveness-related errors. GODEBUG=gcdead=1: This mode overwrites dead pointers with a poison value. Detect the poison value as an invalid pointer during collection, the same way that small integers are invalid pointers. LGTM=khr R=khr CC=golang-codereviews https://golang.org/cl/81670043
2014-04-01 13:30:10 -04:00
runtime·MProf_Malloc(v, size);
}
void*
runtime·malloc(uintptr size)
{
return runtime·mallocgc(size, nil, FlagNoInvokeGC);
}
// Free the object whose base pointer is v.
void
runtime·free(void *v)
{
int32 sizeclass;
MSpan *s;
MCache *c;
uintptr size;
if(v == nil)
return;
// If you change this also change mgc0.c:/^sweep,
// which has a copy of the guts of free.
2014-06-26 11:54:39 -04:00
if(g->m->mallocing)
runtime·throw("malloc/free - deadlock");
2014-06-26 11:54:39 -04:00
g->m->mallocing = 1;
if(!runtime·mlookup(v, nil, nil, &s)) {
runtime·printf("free %p: not an allocated block\n", v);
runtime·throw("free runtime·mlookup");
}
size = s->elemsize;
sizeclass = s->sizeclass;
// Objects that are smaller than TinySize can be allocated using tiny alloc,
// if then such object is combined with an object with finalizer, we will crash.
if(size < TinySize)
runtime·throw("freeing too small block");
runtime: adjust GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1 and GODEBUG=gcdead=1 GODEBUG=allocfreetrace=1: The allocfreetrace=1 mode prints a stack trace for each block allocated and freed, and also a stack trace for each garbage collection. It was implemented by reusing the heap profiling support: if allocfreetrace=1 then the heap profile was effectively running at 1 sample per 1 byte allocated (always sample). The stack being shown at allocation was the stack gathered for profiling, meaning it was derived only from the program counters and did not include information about function arguments or frame pointers. The stack being shown at free was the allocation stack, not the free stack. If you are generating this log, you can find the allocation stack yourself, but it can be useful to see exactly the sequence that led to freeing the block: was it the garbage collector or an explicit free? Now that the garbage collector runs on an m0 stack, the stack trace for the garbage collector was never interesting. Fix all these problems: 1. Decouple allocfreetrace=1 from heap profiling. 2. Print the standard goroutine stack traces instead of a custom format. 3. Print the stack trace at time of allocation for an allocation, and print the stack trace at time of free (not the allocation trace again) for a free. 4. Print all goroutine stacks at garbage collection. Having all the stacks means that you can see the exact point at which each goroutine was preempted, which is often useful for identifying liveness-related errors. GODEBUG=gcdead=1: This mode overwrites dead pointers with a poison value. Detect the poison value as an invalid pointer during collection, the same way that small integers are invalid pointers. LGTM=khr R=khr CC=golang-codereviews https://golang.org/cl/81670043
2014-04-01 13:30:10 -04:00
if(runtime·debug.allocfreetrace)
runtime·tracefree(v, size);
runtime: concurrent GC sweep Moves sweep phase out of stoptheworld by adding background sweeper goroutine and lazy on-demand sweeping. It turned out to be somewhat trickier than I expected, because there is no point in time when we know size of live heap nor consistent number of mallocs and frees. So everything related to next_gc, mprof, memstats, etc becomes trickier. At the end of GC next_gc is conservatively set to heap_alloc*GOGC, which is much larger than real value. But after every sweep next_gc is decremented by freed*GOGC. So when everything is swept next_gc becomes what it should be. For mprof I had to introduce 3-generation scheme (allocs, revent_allocs, prev_allocs), because by the end of GC we know number of frees for the *previous* GC. Significant caution is required to not cross yet-unknown real value of next_gc. This is achieved by 2 means: 1. Whenever I allocate a span from MCentral, I sweep a span in that MCentral. 2. Whenever I allocate N pages from MHeap, I sweep until at least N pages are returned to heap. This provides quite strong guarantees that heap does not grow when it should now. http-1 allocated 7036 7033 -0.04% allocs 60 60 +0.00% cputime 51050 46700 -8.52% gc-pause-one 34060569 1777993 -94.78% gc-pause-total 2554 133 -94.79% latency-50 178448 170926 -4.22% latency-95 284350 198294 -30.26% latency-99 345191 220652 -36.08% rss 101564416 101007360 -0.55% sys-gc 6606832 6541296 -0.99% sys-heap 88801280 87752704 -1.18% sys-other 7334208 7405928 +0.98% sys-stack 524288 524288 +0.00% sys-total 103266608 102224216 -1.01% time 50339 46533 -7.56% virtual-mem 292990976 293728256 +0.25% garbage-1 allocated 2983818 2990889 +0.24% allocs 62880 62902 +0.03% cputime 16480000 16190000 -1.76% gc-pause-one 828462467 487875135 -41.11% gc-pause-total 4142312 2439375 -41.11% rss 1151709184 1153712128 +0.17% sys-gc 66068352 66068352 +0.00% sys-heap 1039728640 1039728640 +0.00% sys-other 37776064 40770176 +7.93% sys-stack 8781824 8781824 +0.00% sys-total 1152354880 1155348992 +0.26% time 16496998 16199876 -1.80% virtual-mem 1409564672 1402281984 -0.52% LGTM=rsc R=golang-codereviews, sameer, rsc, iant, jeremyjackins, gobot CC=golang-codereviews, khr https://golang.org/cl/46430043
2014-02-12 22:16:42 +04:00
// Ensure that the span is swept.
// If we free into an unswept span, we will corrupt GC bitmaps.
runtime·MSpan_EnsureSwept(s);
if(s->specials != nil)
runtime·freeallspecials(s, v, size);
2014-06-26 11:54:39 -04:00
c = g->m->mcache;
if(sizeclass == 0) {
// Large object.
s->needzero = 1;
// Must mark v freed before calling unmarkspan and MHeap_Free:
// they might coalesce v into other spans and change the bitmap further.
runtime·markfreed(v);
runtime·unmarkspan(v, s->npages<<PageShift);
// NOTE(rsc,dvyukov): The original implementation of efence
// in CL 22060046 used SysFree instead of SysFault, so that
// the operating system would eventually give the memory
// back to us again, so that an efence program could run
// longer without running out of memory. Unfortunately,
// calling SysFree here without any kind of adjustment of the
// heap data structures means that when the memory does
// come back to us, we have the wrong metadata for it, either in
// the MSpan structures or in the garbage collection bitmap.
// Using SysFault here means that the program will run out of
// memory fairly quickly in efence mode, but at least it won't
// have mysterious crashes due to confused memory reuse.
// It should be possible to switch back to SysFree if we also
// implement and then call some kind of MHeap_DeleteSpan.
if(runtime·debug.efence) {
s->limit = nil; // prevent mlookup from finding this span
runtime·SysFault((void*)(s->start<<PageShift), size);
} else
runtime·MHeap_Free(&runtime·mheap, s, 1);
c->local_nlargefree++;
c->local_largefree += size;
} else {
// Small object.
if(size > 2*sizeof(uintptr))
((uintptr*)v)[1] = (uintptr)0xfeedfeedfeedfeedll; // mark as "needs to be zeroed"
else if(size > sizeof(uintptr))
((uintptr*)v)[1] = 0;
// Must mark v freed before calling MCache_Free:
// it might coalesce v and other blocks into a bigger span
// and change the bitmap further.
c->local_nsmallfree[sizeclass]++;
c->local_cachealloc -= size;
if(c->alloc[sizeclass] == s) {
// We own the span, so we can just add v to the freelist
runtime·markfreed(v);
((MLink*)v)->next = s->freelist;
s->freelist = v;
s->ref--;
} else {
// Someone else owns this span. Add to free queue.
runtime·MCache_Free(c, v, sizeclass, size);
}
}
2014-06-26 11:54:39 -04:00
g->m->mallocing = 0;
}
int32
runtime·mlookup(void *v, byte **base, uintptr *size, MSpan **sp)
{
uintptr n, i;
byte *p;
MSpan *s;
2014-06-26 11:54:39 -04:00
g->m->mcache->local_nlookup++;
if (sizeof(void*) == 4 && g->m->mcache->local_nlookup >= (1<<30)) {
runtime: use uintptr where possible in malloc stats linux/arm OMAP4 pandaboard benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkBinaryTree17 68723297000 37026214000 -46.12% BenchmarkFannkuch11 34962402000 35958435000 +2.85% BenchmarkGobDecode 137298600 124182150 -9.55% BenchmarkGobEncode 60717160 60006700 -1.17% BenchmarkGzip 5647156000 5550873000 -1.70% BenchmarkGunzip 1196350000 1198670000 +0.19% BenchmarkJSONEncode 863012800 782898000 -9.28% BenchmarkJSONDecode 3312989000 2781800000 -16.03% BenchmarkMandelbrot200 45727540 45703120 -0.05% BenchmarkParse 74781800 59990840 -19.78% BenchmarkRevcomp 140043650 139462300 -0.42% BenchmarkTemplate 6467682000 5832153000 -9.83% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkGobDecode 5.59 6.18 1.11x BenchmarkGobEncode 12.64 12.79 1.01x BenchmarkGzip 3.44 3.50 1.02x BenchmarkGunzip 16.22 16.19 1.00x BenchmarkJSONEncode 2.25 2.48 1.10x BenchmarkJSONDecode 0.59 0.70 1.19x BenchmarkParse 0.77 0.97 1.26x BenchmarkRevcomp 18.15 18.23 1.00x BenchmarkTemplate 0.30 0.33 1.10x darwin/386 core duo benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkBinaryTree17 10591616577 9678245733 -8.62% BenchmarkFannkuch11 10758473315 10749303846 -0.09% BenchmarkGobDecode 34379785 34121250 -0.75% BenchmarkGobEncode 23523721 23475750 -0.20% BenchmarkGzip 2486191492 2446539568 -1.59% BenchmarkGunzip 444179328 444250293 +0.02% BenchmarkJSONEncode 221138507 219757826 -0.62% BenchmarkJSONDecode 1056034428 1048975133 -0.67% BenchmarkMandelbrot200 19862516 19868346 +0.03% BenchmarkRevcomp 3742610872 3724821662 -0.48% BenchmarkTemplate 960283112 944791517 -1.61% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkGobDecode 22.33 22.49 1.01x BenchmarkGobEncode 32.63 32.69 1.00x BenchmarkGzip 7.80 7.93 1.02x BenchmarkGunzip 43.69 43.68 1.00x BenchmarkJSONEncode 8.77 8.83 1.01x BenchmarkJSONDecode 1.84 1.85 1.01x BenchmarkRevcomp 67.91 68.24 1.00x BenchmarkTemplate 2.02 2.05 1.01x R=rsc, 0xe2.0x9a.0x9b, mirtchovski CC=golang-dev, minux.ma https://golang.org/cl/6297047
2012-06-08 17:35:14 -04:00
// purge cache stats to prevent overflow
runtime·lock(&runtime·mheap);
2014-06-26 11:54:39 -04:00
runtime·purgecachedstats(g->m->mcache);
runtime·unlock(&runtime·mheap);
runtime: use uintptr where possible in malloc stats linux/arm OMAP4 pandaboard benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkBinaryTree17 68723297000 37026214000 -46.12% BenchmarkFannkuch11 34962402000 35958435000 +2.85% BenchmarkGobDecode 137298600 124182150 -9.55% BenchmarkGobEncode 60717160 60006700 -1.17% BenchmarkGzip 5647156000 5550873000 -1.70% BenchmarkGunzip 1196350000 1198670000 +0.19% BenchmarkJSONEncode 863012800 782898000 -9.28% BenchmarkJSONDecode 3312989000 2781800000 -16.03% BenchmarkMandelbrot200 45727540 45703120 -0.05% BenchmarkParse 74781800 59990840 -19.78% BenchmarkRevcomp 140043650 139462300 -0.42% BenchmarkTemplate 6467682000 5832153000 -9.83% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkGobDecode 5.59 6.18 1.11x BenchmarkGobEncode 12.64 12.79 1.01x BenchmarkGzip 3.44 3.50 1.02x BenchmarkGunzip 16.22 16.19 1.00x BenchmarkJSONEncode 2.25 2.48 1.10x BenchmarkJSONDecode 0.59 0.70 1.19x BenchmarkParse 0.77 0.97 1.26x BenchmarkRevcomp 18.15 18.23 1.00x BenchmarkTemplate 0.30 0.33 1.10x darwin/386 core duo benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkBinaryTree17 10591616577 9678245733 -8.62% BenchmarkFannkuch11 10758473315 10749303846 -0.09% BenchmarkGobDecode 34379785 34121250 -0.75% BenchmarkGobEncode 23523721 23475750 -0.20% BenchmarkGzip 2486191492 2446539568 -1.59% BenchmarkGunzip 444179328 444250293 +0.02% BenchmarkJSONEncode 221138507 219757826 -0.62% BenchmarkJSONDecode 1056034428 1048975133 -0.67% BenchmarkMandelbrot200 19862516 19868346 +0.03% BenchmarkRevcomp 3742610872 3724821662 -0.48% BenchmarkTemplate 960283112 944791517 -1.61% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkGobDecode 22.33 22.49 1.01x BenchmarkGobEncode 32.63 32.69 1.00x BenchmarkGzip 7.80 7.93 1.02x BenchmarkGunzip 43.69 43.68 1.00x BenchmarkJSONEncode 8.77 8.83 1.01x BenchmarkJSONDecode 1.84 1.85 1.01x BenchmarkRevcomp 67.91 68.24 1.00x BenchmarkTemplate 2.02 2.05 1.01x R=rsc, 0xe2.0x9a.0x9b, mirtchovski CC=golang-dev, minux.ma https://golang.org/cl/6297047
2012-06-08 17:35:14 -04:00
}
s = runtime·MHeap_LookupMaybe(&runtime·mheap, v);
if(sp)
*sp = s;
if(s == nil) {
if(base)
*base = nil;
if(size)
*size = 0;
return 0;
}
p = (byte*)((uintptr)s->start<<PageShift);
if(s->sizeclass == 0) {
// Large object.
if(base)
*base = p;
if(size)
*size = s->npages<<PageShift;
return 1;
}
n = s->elemsize;
if(base) {
i = ((byte*)v - p)/n;
*base = p + i*n;
}
if(size)
*size = n;
return 1;
}
void
runtime·purgecachedstats(MCache *c)
{
MHeap *h;
int32 i;
// Protected by either heap or GC lock.
h = &runtime·mheap;
mstats.heap_alloc += c->local_cachealloc;
c->local_cachealloc = 0;
mstats.nlookup += c->local_nlookup;
c->local_nlookup = 0;
h->largefree += c->local_largefree;
c->local_largefree = 0;
h->nlargefree += c->local_nlargefree;
c->local_nlargefree = 0;
for(i=0; i<nelem(c->local_nsmallfree); i++) {
h->nsmallfree[i] += c->local_nsmallfree[i];
c->local_nsmallfree[i] = 0;
}
}
2014-01-30 13:28:19 +04:00
// Size of the trailing by_size array differs between Go and C,
// NumSizeClasses was changed, but we can not change Go struct because of backward compatibility.
// sizeof_C_MStats is what C thinks about size of Go struct.
uintptr runtime·sizeof_C_MStats = sizeof(MStats) - (NumSizeClasses - 61) * sizeof(mstats.by_size[0]);
#define MaxArena32 (2U<<30)
void
runtime·mallocinit(void)
{
byte *p, *p1;
uintptr arena_size, bitmap_size, spans_size, p_size;
extern byte end[];
uintptr limit;
uint64 i;
bool reserved;
p = nil;
p_size = 0;
arena_size = 0;
bitmap_size = 0;
spans_size = 0;
reserved = false;
// for 64-bit build
USED(p);
USED(p_size);
USED(arena_size);
USED(bitmap_size);
USED(spans_size);
runtime·InitSizes();
if(runtime·class_to_size[TinySizeClass] != TinySize)
runtime·throw("bad TinySizeClass");
// limit = runtime·memlimit();
// See https://code.google.com/p/go/issues/detail?id=5049
// TODO(rsc): Fix after 1.1.
limit = 0;
// Set up the allocation arena, a contiguous area of memory where
// allocated data will be found. The arena begins with a bitmap large
// enough to hold 4 bits per allocated word.
if(sizeof(void*) == 8 && (limit == 0 || limit > (1<<30))) {
// On a 64-bit machine, allocate from a single contiguous reservation.
// 128 GB (MaxMem) should be big enough for now.
//
// The code will work with the reservation at any address, but ask
// SysReserve to use 0x0000XXc000000000 if possible (XX=00...7f).
// Allocating a 128 GB region takes away 37 bits, and the amd64
// doesn't let us choose the top 17 bits, so that leaves the 11 bits
// in the middle of 0x00c0 for us to choose. Choosing 0x00c0 means
// that the valid memory addresses will begin 0x00c0, 0x00c1, ..., 0x00df.
// In little-endian, that's c0 00, c1 00, ..., df 00. None of those are valid
// UTF-8 sequences, and they are otherwise as far away from
// ff (likely a common byte) as possible. If that fails, we try other 0xXXc0
// addresses. An earlier attempt to use 0x11f8 caused out of memory errors
// on OS X during thread allocations. 0x00c0 causes conflicts with
// AddressSanitizer which reserves all memory up to 0x0100.
// These choices are both for debuggability and to reduce the
// odds of the conservative garbage collector not collecting memory
// because some non-pointer block of memory had a bit pattern
// that matched a memory address.
//
// Actually we reserve 136 GB (because the bitmap ends up being 8 GB)
// but it hardly matters: e0 00 is not valid UTF-8 either.
//
// If this fails we fall back to the 32 bit memory mechanism
arena_size = MaxMem;
bitmap_size = arena_size / (sizeof(void*)*8/4);
spans_size = arena_size / PageSize * sizeof(runtime·mheap.spans[0]);
spans_size = ROUND(spans_size, PageSize);
for(i = 0; i <= 0x7f; i++) {
p = (void*)(i<<40 | 0x00c0ULL<<32);
p_size = bitmap_size + spans_size + arena_size + PageSize;
p = runtime·SysReserve(p, p_size, &reserved);
if(p != nil)
break;
}
}
if (p == nil) {
// On a 32-bit machine, we can't typically get away
// with a giant virtual address space reservation.
// Instead we map the memory information bitmap
// immediately after the data segment, large enough
// to handle another 2GB of mappings (256 MB),
// along with a reservation for another 512 MB of memory.
// When that gets used up, we'll start asking the kernel
// for any memory anywhere and hope it's in the 2GB
// following the bitmap (presumably the executable begins
// near the bottom of memory, so we'll have to use up
// most of memory before the kernel resorts to giving out
// memory before the beginning of the text segment).
//
// Alternatively we could reserve 512 MB bitmap, enough
// for 4GB of mappings, and then accept any memory the
// kernel threw at us, but normally that's a waste of 512 MB
// of address space, which is probably too much in a 32-bit world.
bitmap_size = MaxArena32 / (sizeof(void*)*8/4);
arena_size = 512<<20;
spans_size = MaxArena32 / PageSize * sizeof(runtime·mheap.spans[0]);
if(limit > 0 && arena_size+bitmap_size+spans_size > limit) {
bitmap_size = (limit / 9) & ~((1<<PageShift) - 1);
arena_size = bitmap_size * 8;
spans_size = arena_size / PageSize * sizeof(runtime·mheap.spans[0]);
}
spans_size = ROUND(spans_size, PageSize);
// SysReserve treats the address we ask for, end, as a hint,
// not as an absolute requirement. If we ask for the end
// of the data segment but the operating system requires
// a little more space before we can start allocating, it will
// give out a slightly higher pointer. Except QEMU, which
// is buggy, as usual: it won't adjust the pointer upward.
// So adjust it upward a little bit ourselves: 1/4 MB to get
// away from the running binary image and then round up
// to a MB boundary.
p = (byte*)ROUND((uintptr)end + (1<<18), 1<<20);
p_size = bitmap_size + spans_size + arena_size + PageSize;
p = runtime·SysReserve(p, p_size, &reserved);
if(p == nil)
runtime·throw("runtime: cannot reserve arena virtual address space");
}
// PageSize can be larger than OS definition of page size,
// so SysReserve can give us a PageSize-unaligned pointer.
// To overcome this we ask for PageSize more and round up the pointer.
p1 = (byte*)ROUND((uintptr)p, PageSize);
runtime·mheap.spans = (MSpan**)p1;
runtime·mheap.bitmap = p1 + spans_size;
runtime·mheap.arena_start = p1 + spans_size + bitmap_size;
runtime·mheap.arena_used = runtime·mheap.arena_start;
runtime·mheap.arena_end = p + p_size;
runtime·mheap.arena_reserved = reserved;
if(((uintptr)runtime·mheap.arena_start & (PageSize-1)) != 0)
runtime·throw("misrounded allocation in mallocinit");
// Initialize the rest of the allocator.
runtime·MHeap_Init(&runtime·mheap);
2014-06-26 11:54:39 -04:00
g->m->mcache = runtime·allocmcache();
// See if it works.
runtime·free(runtime·malloc(TinySize));
}
void*
runtime·MHeap_SysAlloc(MHeap *h, uintptr n)
{
byte *p, *p_end;
uintptr p_size;
bool reserved;
if(n > h->arena_end - h->arena_used) {
// We are in 32-bit mode, maybe we didn't use all possible address space yet.
// Reserve some more space.
byte *new_end;
p_size = ROUND(n + PageSize, 256<<20);
new_end = h->arena_end + p_size;
if(new_end <= h->arena_start + MaxArena32) {
// TODO: It would be bad if part of the arena
// is reserved and part is not.
p = runtime·SysReserve(h->arena_end, p_size, &reserved);
if(p == h->arena_end) {
h->arena_end = new_end;
h->arena_reserved = reserved;
}
else if(p+p_size <= h->arena_start + MaxArena32) {
// Keep everything page-aligned.
// Our pages are bigger than hardware pages.
h->arena_end = p+p_size;
h->arena_used = p + (-(uintptr)p&(PageSize-1));
h->arena_reserved = reserved;
} else {
uint64 stat;
stat = 0;
runtime·SysFree(p, p_size, &stat);
}
}
}
if(n <= h->arena_end - h->arena_used) {
// Keep taking from our reservation.
p = h->arena_used;
runtime·SysMap(p, n, h->arena_reserved, &mstats.heap_sys);
h->arena_used += n;
runtime·MHeap_MapBits(h);
runtime·MHeap_MapSpans(h);
if(raceenabled)
runtime·racemapshadow(p, n);
if(((uintptr)p & (PageSize-1)) != 0)
runtime·throw("misrounded allocation in MHeap_SysAlloc");
return p;
}
// If using 64-bit, our reservation is all we have.
if(h->arena_end - h->arena_start >= MaxArena32)
return nil;
// On 32-bit, once the reservation is gone we can
// try to get memory at a location chosen by the OS
// and hope that it is in the range we allocated bitmap for.
p_size = ROUND(n, PageSize) + PageSize;
p = runtime·SysAlloc(p_size, &mstats.heap_sys);
if(p == nil)
return nil;
if(p < h->arena_start || p+p_size - h->arena_start >= MaxArena32) {
runtime·printf("runtime: memory allocated by OS (%p) not in usable range [%p,%p)\n",
p, h->arena_start, h->arena_start+MaxArena32);
runtime·SysFree(p, p_size, &mstats.heap_sys);
return nil;
}
p_end = p + p_size;
p += -(uintptr)p & (PageSize-1);
if(p+n > h->arena_used) {
h->arena_used = p+n;
if(p_end > h->arena_end)
h->arena_end = p_end;
runtime·MHeap_MapBits(h);
runtime·MHeap_MapSpans(h);
if(raceenabled)
runtime·racemapshadow(p, n);
}
if(((uintptr)p & (PageSize-1)) != 0)
runtime·throw("misrounded allocation in MHeap_SysAlloc");
return p;
}
static struct
{
Lock;
byte* pos;
byte* end;
} persistent;
enum
{
PersistentAllocChunk = 256<<10,
PersistentAllocMaxBlock = 64<<10, // VM reservation granularity is 64K on windows
};
// Wrapper around SysAlloc that can allocate small chunks.
// There is no associated free operation.
// Intended for things like function/type/debug-related persistent data.
// If align is 0, uses default align (currently 8).
void*
runtime·persistentalloc(uintptr size, uintptr align, uint64 *stat)
{
byte *p;
if(align != 0) {
if(align&(align-1))
runtime·throw("persistentalloc: align is not a power of 2");
if(align > PageSize)
runtime·throw("persistentalloc: align is too large");
} else
align = 8;
if(size >= PersistentAllocMaxBlock)
return runtime·SysAlloc(size, stat);
runtime·lock(&persistent);
persistent.pos = (byte*)ROUND((uintptr)persistent.pos, align);
if(persistent.pos + size > persistent.end) {
persistent.pos = runtime·SysAlloc(PersistentAllocChunk, &mstats.other_sys);
if(persistent.pos == nil) {
runtime·unlock(&persistent);
runtime·throw("runtime: cannot allocate memory");
}
persistent.end = persistent.pos + PersistentAllocChunk;
}
p = persistent.pos;
persistent.pos += size;
runtime·unlock(&persistent);
if(stat != &mstats.other_sys) {
// reaccount the allocation against provided stat
runtime·xadd64(stat, size);
runtime·xadd64(&mstats.other_sys, -(uint64)size);
}
return p;
}
// Runtime stubs.
void*
runtime·mal(uintptr n)
{
return runtime·mallocgc(n, nil, 0);
}
#pragma textflag NOSPLIT
runtime: use goc2c as much as possible Package runtime's C functions written to be called from Go started out written in C using carefully constructed argument lists and the FLUSH macro to write a result back to memory. For some functions, the appropriate parameter list ended up being architecture-dependent due to differences in alignment, so we added 'goc2c', which takes a .goc file containing Go func declarations but C bodies, rewrites the Go func declaration to equivalent C declarations for the target architecture, adds the needed FLUSH statements, and writes out an equivalent C file. That C file is compiled as part of package runtime. Native Client's x86-64 support introduces the most complex alignment rules yet, breaking many functions that could until now be portably written in C. Using goc2c for those avoids the breakage. Separately, Keith's work on emitting stack information from the C compiler would require the hand-written functions to add #pragmas specifying how many arguments are result parameters. Using goc2c for those avoids maintaining #pragmas. For both reasons, use goc2c for as many Go-called C functions as possible. This CL is a replay of the bulk of CL 15400047 and CL 15790043, both of which were reviewed as part of the NaCl port and are checked in to the NaCl branch. This CL is part of bringing the NaCl code into the main tree. No new code here, just reformatting and occasional movement into .h files. LGTM=r R=dave, alex.brainman, r CC=golang-codereviews https://golang.org/cl/65220044
2014-02-20 15:58:47 -05:00
func new(typ *Type) (ret *uint8) {
ret = runtime·mallocgc(typ->size, typ, typ->kind&KindNoPointers ? FlagNoScan : 0);
}
static void*
cnew(Type *typ, intgo n)
{
if(n < 0 || (typ->size > 0 && n > MaxMem/typ->size))
runtime·panicstring("runtime: allocation size out of range");
return runtime·mallocgc(typ->size*n, typ, typ->kind&KindNoPointers ? FlagNoScan : 0);
}
// same as runtime·new, but callable from C
void*
runtime·cnew(Type *typ)
{
return cnew(typ, 1);
}
void*
runtime·cnewarray(Type *typ, intgo n)
{
return cnew(typ, n);
}
func GC() {
runtime·gc(2); // force GC and do eager sweep
}
func SetFinalizer(obj Eface, finalizer Eface) {
byte *base;
uintptr size;
FuncType *ft;
int32 i;
uintptr nret;
Type *t;
Type *fint;
PtrType *ot;
Iface iface;
if(obj.type == nil) {
runtime·printf("runtime.SetFinalizer: first argument is nil interface\n");
goto throw;
}
if((obj.type->kind&KindMask) != KindPtr) {
runtime·printf("runtime.SetFinalizer: first argument is %S, not pointer\n", *obj.type->string);
goto throw;
}
ot = (PtrType*)obj.type;
// As an implementation detail we do not run finalizers for zero-sized objects,
// because we use &runtime·zerobase for all such allocations.
if(ot->elem != nil && ot->elem->size == 0)
return;
// The following check is required for cases when a user passes a pointer to composite literal,
// but compiler makes it a pointer to global. For example:
// var Foo = &Object{}
// func main() {
// runtime.SetFinalizer(Foo, nil)
// }
// See issue 7656.
if((byte*)obj.data < runtime·mheap.arena_start || runtime·mheap.arena_used <= (byte*)obj.data)
return;
if(!runtime·mlookup(obj.data, &base, &size, nil) || obj.data != base) {
// As an implementation detail we allow to set finalizers for an inner byte
// of an object if it could come from tiny alloc (see mallocgc for details).
if(ot->elem == nil || (ot->elem->kind&KindNoPointers) == 0 || ot->elem->size >= TinySize) {
runtime·printf("runtime.SetFinalizer: pointer not at beginning of allocated block (%p)\n", obj.data);
goto throw;
}
}
if(finalizer.type != nil) {
runtime·createfing();
if(finalizer.type->kind != KindFunc)
goto badfunc;
ft = (FuncType*)finalizer.type;
if(ft->dotdotdot || ft->in.len != 1)
goto badfunc;
fint = *(Type**)ft->in.array;
if(fint == obj.type) {
// ok - same type
} else if(fint->kind == KindPtr && (fint->x == nil || fint->x->name == nil || obj.type->x == nil || obj.type->x->name == nil) && ((PtrType*)fint)->elem == ((PtrType*)obj.type)->elem) {
// ok - not same type, but both pointers,
// one or the other is unnamed, and same element type, so assignable.
} else if(fint->kind == KindInterface && ((InterfaceType*)fint)->mhdr.len == 0) {
// ok - satisfies empty interface
} else if(fint->kind == KindInterface && runtime·ifaceE2I2((InterfaceType*)fint, obj, &iface)) {
// ok - satisfies non-empty interface
} else
goto badfunc;
// compute size needed for return parameters
nret = 0;
for(i=0; i<ft->out.len; i++) {
t = ((Type**)ft->out.array)[i];
nret = ROUND(nret, t->align) + t->size;
}
nret = ROUND(nret, sizeof(void*));
ot = (PtrType*)obj.type;
if(!runtime·addfinalizer(obj.data, finalizer.data, nret, fint, ot)) {
runtime·printf("runtime.SetFinalizer: finalizer already set\n");
goto throw;
}
} else {
// NOTE: asking to remove a finalizer when there currently isn't one set is OK.
runtime·removefinalizer(obj.data);
}
return;
badfunc:
runtime·printf("runtime.SetFinalizer: cannot pass %S to finalizer %S\n", *obj.type->string, *finalizer.type->string);
throw:
runtime·throw("runtime.SetFinalizer");
}
// For testing.
func GCMask(x Eface) (mask Slice) {
runtime·getgcmask(x.data, x.type, &mask.array, &mask.len);
mask.cap = mask.len;
}