2020-05-03 20:06:22 -06:00
|
|
|
|
using ARMeilleure.Diagnostics;
|
|
|
|
|
using ARMeilleure.Memory;
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
using System;
|
|
|
|
|
using System.Collections.Concurrent;
|
|
|
|
|
using System.Collections.Generic;
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
using System.Diagnostics;
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
|
|
|
|
|
using System.Threading;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
namespace ARMeilleure.Translation
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
using PTC;
|
|
|
|
|
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
class JumpTable
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
// The jump table is a block of (guestAddress, hostAddress) function mappings.
|
|
|
|
|
// Each entry corresponds to one branch in a JIT compiled function. The entries are
|
|
|
|
|
// reserved specifically for each call.
|
|
|
|
|
// The _dependants dictionary can be used to update the hostAddress for any functions that change.
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public const int JumpTableStride = 16; // 8 byte guest address, 8 byte host address.
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
private const int JumpTableSize = 1048576;
|
|
|
|
|
private const int JumpTableByteSize = JumpTableSize * JumpTableStride;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// The dynamic table is also a block of (guestAddress, hostAddress) function mappings.
|
|
|
|
|
// The main difference is that indirect calls and jumps reserve _multiple_ entries on the table.
|
|
|
|
|
// These start out as all 0. When an indirect call is made, it tries to find the guest address on the table.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// If we get to an empty address, the guestAddress is set to the call that we want.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// If we get to a guestAddress that matches our own (or we just claimed it), the hostAddress is read.
|
|
|
|
|
// If it is non-zero, we immediately branch or call the host function.
|
|
|
|
|
// If it is 0, NativeInterface is called to find the rejited address of the call.
|
|
|
|
|
// If none is found, the hostAddress entry stays at 0. Otherwise, the new address is placed in the entry.
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
// If the table size is exhausted and we didn't find our desired address, we fall back to requesting
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
// the function from the JIT.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
public const int DynamicTableElems = 1;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
public const int DynamicTableStride = DynamicTableElems * JumpTableStride;
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
private const int DynamicTableSize = 1048576;
|
|
|
|
|
private const int DynamicTableByteSize = DynamicTableSize * DynamicTableStride;
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
private readonly ReservedRegion _jumpRegion;
|
|
|
|
|
private readonly ReservedRegion _dynamicRegion;
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
private int _tableEnd = 0;
|
|
|
|
|
private int _dynTableEnd = 0;
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public IntPtr JumpPointer => _jumpRegion.Pointer;
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public IntPtr DynamicPointer => _dynamicRegion.Pointer;
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public int TableEnd => _tableEnd;
|
|
|
|
|
public int DynTableEnd => _dynTableEnd;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
public ConcurrentDictionary<ulong, TranslatedFunction> Targets { get; }
|
|
|
|
|
public ConcurrentDictionary<ulong, LinkedList<int>> Dependants { get; } // TODO: Attach to TranslatedFunction or a wrapper class.
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020-05-03 16:54:50 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public JumpTable(IJitMemoryAllocator allocator)
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
{
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
_jumpRegion = new ReservedRegion(allocator, JumpTableByteSize);
|
2020-05-03 16:54:50 -06:00
|
|
|
|
_dynamicRegion = new ReservedRegion(allocator, DynamicTableByteSize);
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
Targets = new ConcurrentDictionary<ulong, TranslatedFunction>();
|
|
|
|
|
Dependants = new ConcurrentDictionary<ulong, LinkedList<int>>();
|
2020-05-03 20:06:22 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Symbols.Add((ulong)_jumpRegion.Pointer.ToInt64(), JumpTableByteSize, JumpTableStride, "JMP_TABLE");
|
|
|
|
|
Symbols.Add((ulong)_dynamicRegion.Pointer.ToInt64(), DynamicTableByteSize, DynamicTableStride, "DYN_TABLE");
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public void Initialize(PtcJumpTable ptcJumpTable, ConcurrentDictionary<ulong, TranslatedFunction> funcs)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
_tableEnd = ptcJumpTable.TableEnd;
|
|
|
|
|
_dynTableEnd = ptcJumpTable.DynTableEnd;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
foreach (ulong guestAddress in ptcJumpTable.Targets)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
if (funcs.TryGetValue(guestAddress, out TranslatedFunction func))
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
Targets.TryAdd(guestAddress, func);
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
throw new KeyNotFoundException($"({nameof(guestAddress)} = 0x{guestAddress:X16})");
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
foreach (var item in ptcJumpTable.Dependants)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
Dependants.TryAdd(item.Key, new LinkedList<int>(item.Value));
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020-05-03 16:54:50 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public void RegisterFunction(ulong address, TranslatedFunction func)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
address &= ~3UL;
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
Targets.AddOrUpdate(address, func, (key, oldFunc) => func);
|
|
|
|
|
long funcPtr = func.FuncPtr.ToInt64();
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Update all jump table entries that target this address.
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
if (Dependants.TryGetValue(address, out LinkedList<int> myDependants))
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
lock (myDependants)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
foreach (int entry in myDependants)
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
{
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
IntPtr addr = GetEntryAddressJumpTable(entry);
|
|
|
|
|
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
Marshal.WriteInt64(addr, 8, funcPtr);
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public int ReserveTableEntry(long ownerAddress, long address, bool isJump)
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
{
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
int entry = Interlocked.Increment(ref _tableEnd);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ExpandIfNeededJumpTable(entry);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Is the address we have already registered? If so, put the function address in the jump table.
|
|
|
|
|
// If not, it will point to the direct call stub.
|
|
|
|
|
long value = DirectCallStubs.DirectCallStub(isJump).ToInt64();
|
|
|
|
|
if (Targets.TryGetValue((ulong)address, out TranslatedFunction func))
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
{
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
value = func.FuncPtr.ToInt64();
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Make sure changes to the function at the target address update this jump table entry.
|
|
|
|
|
LinkedList<int> targetDependants = Dependants.GetOrAdd((ulong)address, (addr) => new LinkedList<int>());
|
|
|
|
|
lock (targetDependants)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
targetDependants.AddLast(entry);
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
IntPtr addr = GetEntryAddressJumpTable(entry);
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
Marshal.WriteInt64(addr, 0, address);
|
|
|
|
|
Marshal.WriteInt64(addr, 8, value);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
return entry;
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
public int ReserveDynamicEntry(bool isJump)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
int entry = Interlocked.Increment(ref _dynTableEnd);
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
ExpandIfNeededDynamicTable(entry);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Initialize all host function pointers to the indirect call stub.
|
|
|
|
|
IntPtr addr = GetEntryAddressDynamicTable(entry);
|
|
|
|
|
long stubPtr = DirectCallStubs.IndirectCallStub(isJump).ToInt64();
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
for (int i = 0; i < DynamicTableElems; i++)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
Marshal.WriteInt64(addr, i * JumpTableStride + 8, stubPtr);
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
return entry;
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public void ExpandIfNeededJumpTable(int entries)
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
{
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
Debug.Assert(entries > 0);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (entries < JumpTableSize)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
_jumpRegion.ExpandIfNeeded((ulong)((entries + 1) * JumpTableStride));
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
else
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
throw new OutOfMemoryException("JIT Direct Jump Table exhausted.");
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
}
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public void ExpandIfNeededDynamicTable(int entries)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
Debug.Assert(entries > 0);
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
if (entries < DynamicTableSize)
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
{
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
_dynamicRegion.ExpandIfNeeded((ulong)((entries + 1) * DynamicTableStride));
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
}
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
else
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
{
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
throw new OutOfMemoryException("JIT Dynamic Jump Table exhausted.");
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
}
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
}
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public IntPtr GetEntryAddressJumpTable(int entry)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
Debug.Assert(entry >= 1 && entry <= _tableEnd);
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
return _jumpRegion.Pointer + entry * JumpTableStride;
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
2020-06-16 12:28:02 -06:00
|
|
|
|
public IntPtr GetEntryAddressDynamicTable(int entry)
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
Debug.Assert(entry >= 1 && entry <= _dynTableEnd);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
return _dynamicRegion.Pointer + entry * DynamicTableStride;
|
Use a Jump Table for direct and indirect calls/jumps, removing transitions to managed (#975)
* Implement Jump Table for Native Calls
NOTE: this slows down rejit considerably! Not recommended to be used
without codegen optimisation or AOT.
- Does not work on Linux
- A32 needs an additional commit.
* A32 Support
(WIP)
* Actually write Direct Call pointers to the table
That would help.
* Direct Calls: Rather than returning to the translator, attempt to keep within the native stack frame.
A return to the translator can still happen, but only by exceptionally
bubbling up to it.
Also:
- Always translate lowCq as a function. Faster interop with the direct
jumps, and this will be useful in future if we want to do speculative
translation.
- Tail Call Detection: after the decoding stage, detect if we do a tail
call, and avoid translating into it. Detected if a jump is made to an
address outwith the contiguous sequence of blocks surrounding the entry
point. The goal is to reduce code touched by jit and rejit.
* A32 Support
* Use smaller max function size for lowCq, fix exceptional returns
When a return has an unexpected value and there is no code block
following this one, we now return the value rather than continuing.
* CompareAndSwap (buggy)
* Ensure CompareAndSwap does not get optimized away.
* Use CompareAndSwap to make the dynamic table thread safe.
* Tail call for linux, throw on too many arguments.
* Combine CompareAndSwap 128 and 32/64.
They emit different IR instructions since their PreAllocator behaviour
is different, but now they just have one function on EmitterContext.
* Fix issues separating from optimisations.
* Use a stub to find and execute missing functions.
This allows us to skip doing many runtime comparisons and branches, and reduces the amount of code we need to emit significantly.
For the indirect call table, this stub also does the work of moving in the highCq address to the table when one is found.
* Make Jump Tables and Jit Cache dynmically resize
Reserve virtual memory, commit as needed.
* Move TailCallRemover to its own class.
* Multithreaded Translation (based on heuristic)
A poor one, at that. Need to get core count for a better one, which
means a lot of OS specific garbage.
* Better priority management for background threads.
* Bound core limit a bit more
Past a certain point the load is not paralellizable and starts stealing from the main thread. Likely due to GC, memory, heap allocation thread contention. Reduce by one core til optimisations come to improve the situation.
* Fix memory management on linux.
* Temporary solution to some sync problems.
This will make sure threads exit correctly, most of the time. There is a potential race where setting the sync counter to 0 does nothing (counter stays at what it was before, thread could take too long to exit), but we need to find a better way to do this anyways. Synchronization frequency has been tightened as we never enter blockwise segments of code. Essentially this means, check every x functions or loop iterations, before lowcq blocks existed and were worth just as much. Ideally it should be done in a better way, since functions can be anywhere from 1 to 5000 instructions. (maybe based on host timer, or an interrupt flag from a scheduler thread)
* Address feedback minus CompareAndSwap change.
* Use default ReservedRegion granularity.
* Merge CompareAndSwap with its V128 variant.
* We already got the source, no need to do it again.
* Make sure all background translation threads exit.
* Fix CompareAndSwap128
Detection criteria was a bit scuffed.
* Address Comments.
2020-03-11 21:20:55 -06:00
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
}
|