This is a rough history of garbage collector bugs and versions. This has been maintained with varying diligence over the years. I made an attempt to include recent contributors here. I apologize for any omissions. ------------------------- Version 1.3 and immediately preceding versions contained spurious assembly language assignments to TMP_SP. Only the assignment in the PC/RT code is necessary. On other machines, with certain compiler options, the assignments can lead to an unsaved register being overwritten. Known to cause problems under SunOS 3.5 WITHOUT the -O option. (With -O the compiler recognizes it as dead code. It probably shouldn't, but that's another story.) Version 1.4 and earlier versions used compile time determined values for the stack base. This no longer works on Sun 3s, since Sun 3/80s use a different stack base. We now use a straightforward heuristic on all machines on which it is known to work (incl. Sun 3s) and compile-time determined values for the rest. There should really be library calls to determine such values. Version 1.5 and earlier did not ensure 8 byte alignment for objects allocated on a sparc based machine. Version 1.8 added ULTRIX support in gc_private.h. Version 1.9 fixed a major bug in gc_realloc. Version 2.0 introduced a consistent naming convention for collector routines and added support for registering dynamic library data segments in the standard mark_roots.c. Most of the data structures were revamped. The treatment of interior pointers was completely changed. Finalization was added. Support for locking was added. Object kinds were added. We added a black listing facility to avoid allocating at addresses known to occur as integers somewhere in the address space. Much of this was accomplished by adapting ideas and code from the PCR collector. The test program was changed and expanded. Version 2.1 was the first stable version since 1.9, and added support for PPCR. Version 2.2 added debugging allocation, and fixed various bugs. Among them: - GC_realloc could fail to extend the size of the object for certain large object sizes. - A blatant subscript range error in GC_printf, which unfortunately wasn't exercised on machines with sufficient stack alignment constraints. - GC_register_displacement did the wrong thing if it was called after any allocation had taken place. - The leak finding code would eventually break after 2048 byte byte objects leaked. - interface.c didn't compile. - The heap size remained much too small for large stacks. - The stack clearing code behaved badly for large stacks, and perhaps on HP/PA machines. Version 2.3 added ALL_INTERIOR_POINTERS and fixed the following bugs: - Missing declaration of etext in the A/UX version. - Some PCR root-finding problems. - Blacklisting was not 100% effective, because the plausible future heap bounds were being miscalculated. - GC_realloc didn't handle out-of-memory correctly. - GC_base could return a nonzero value for addresses inside free blocks. - test.c wasn't really thread safe, and could erroneously report failure in a multithreaded environment. (The locking primitives need to be replaced for other threads packages.) - GC_CONS was thoroughly broken. - On a SPARC with dynamic linking, signals stayed diabled while the client code was running. (Thanks to Manuel Serrano at INRIA for reporting the last two.) Version 2.4 added GC_free_space_divisor as a tuning knob, added support for OS/2 and linux, and fixed the following bugs: - On machines with unaligned pointers (e.g. Sun 3), every 128th word could fail to be considered for marking. - Dynamic_load.c erroneously added 4 bytes to the length of the data and bss sections of the dynamic library. This could result in a bad memory reference if the actual length was a multiple of a page. (Observed on Sun 3. Can probably also happen on a Sun 4.) (Thanks to Robert Brazile for pointing out that the Sun 3 version was broken. Dynamic library handling is still broken on Sun 3s under 4.1.1U1, but apparently not 4.1.1. If you have such a machine, use -Bstatic.) Version 2.5 fixed the following bugs: - Removed an explicit call to exit(1) - Fixed calls to GC_printf and GC_err_printf, so the correct number of arguments are always supplied. The OS/2 C compiler gets confused if the number of actuals and the number of formals differ. (ANSI C doesn't require this to work. The ANSI sanctioned way of doing things causes too many compatibility problems.) Version 3.0 added generational/incremental collection and stubborn objects. Version 3.1 added the following features: - A workaround for a SunOS 4.X SPARC C compiler misfeature that caused problems when the collector was turned into a dynamic library. - A fix for a bug in GC_base that could result in a memory fault. - A fix for a performance bug (and several other misfeatures) pointed out by Dave Detlefs and Al Dosser. - Use of dirty bit information for static data under Solaris 2.X. - DEC Alpha/OSF1 support (thanks to Al Dosser). - Incremental collection on more platforms. - A more refined heap expansion policy. Less space usage by default. - Various minor enhancements to reduce space usage, and to reduce the amount of memory scanned by the collector. - Uncollectable allocation without per object overhead. - More conscientious handling of out-of-memory conditions. - Fixed a bug in debugging stubborn allocation. - Fixed a bug that resulted in occasional erroneous reporting of smashed objects with debugging allocation. - Fixed bogus leak reports of size 4096 blocks with FIND_LEAK. Version 3.2 fixed a serious and not entirely repeatable bug in the incremental collector. It appeared only when dirty bit info on the roots was available, which is normally only under Solaris. It also added GC_general_register_disappearing_link, and some testing code. Interface.c disappeared. Version 3.3 fixes several bugs and adds new ports: - PCR-specific bugs. - Missing locking in GC_free, redundant FASTUNLOCK in GC_malloc_stubborn, and 2 bugs in GC_unregister_disappearing_link. All of the above were pointed out by Neil Sharman (neil@cs.mu.oz.au). - Common symbols allocated by the SunOS4.X dynamic loader were not included in the root set. - Bug in GC_finalize (reported by Brian Beuning and Al Dosser) - Merged Amiga port from Jesper Peterson (untested) - Merged NeXT port from Thomas Funke (significantly modified and untested) Version 3.4: - Fixed a performance bug in GC_realloc. - Updated the amiga port. - Added NetBSD and 386BSD ports. - Added cord library. - Added trivial performance enhancement for ALL_INTERIOR_POINTERS. (Don't scan last word.) Version 3.5 - Minor collections now mark from roots only once, if that doesn't cause an excessive pause. - The stack clearing heuristic was refined to prevent anomalies with very heavily recursive programs and sparse stacks. - Fixed a bug that prevented mark stack growth in some cases. GC_objects_are_marked should be set to TRUE after a call to GC_push_roots and as part of GC_push_marked, since both can now set mark bits. I think this is only a performance bug, but I wouldn't bet on it. It's certainly very hard to argue that the old version was correct. - Fixed an incremental collection bug that prevented it from working at all when HBLKSIZE != getpagesize() - Changed dynamic_loading.c to include gc_priv.h before testing DYNAMIC_LOADING. SunOS dynamic library scanning must have been broken in 3.4. - Object size rounding now adapts to program behavior. - Added a workaround (provided by Manuel Serrano and colleagues) to a long-standing SunOS 4.X (and 3.X?) ld bug that I had incorrectly assumed to have been squished. The collector was broken if the text segment size was within 32 bytes of a multiple of 8K bytes, and if the beginning of the data segment contained interesting roots. The workaround assumes a demand-loadable executable. The original may have have "worked" in some other cases. - Added dynamic library support under IRIX5. - Added support for EMX under OS/2 (thanks to Ari Huttunen). Version 3.6: - fixed a bug in the mark stack growth code that was introduced in 3.4. - fixed Makefile to work around DEC AXP compiler tail recursion bug. Version 3.7: - Added a workaround for an HP/UX compiler bug. - Fixed another stack clearing performance bug. Reworked that code once more. Version 4.0: - Added support for Solaris threads (which was possible only by reimplementing some fraction of Solaris threads, since Sun doesn't currently make the thread debugging interface available). - Added non-threads win32 and win32S support. - (Grudgingly, with suitable muttering of obscenities) renamed files so that the collector distribution could live on a FAT file system. Files that are guaranteed to be useless on a PC still have long names. Gc_inline.h and gc_private.h still exist, but now just include gc_inl.h and gc_priv.h. - Fixed a really obscure bug in finalization that could cause undetected mark stack overflows. (I would be surprised if any real code ever tickled this one.) - Changed finalization code to dynamically resize the hash tables it maintains. (This probably does not matter for well- -written code. It no doubt does for C++ code that overuses destructors.) - Added typed allocation primitives. Rewrote the marker to accommodate them with more reasonable efficiency. This change should also speed up marking for GC_malloc allocated objects a little. See gc_typed.h for new primitives. - Improved debugging facilities slightly. Allocation time stack traces are now kept by default on SPARC/SUNOS4. (Thanks to Scott Schwartz.) - Added better support for small heap applications. - Significantly extended cord package. Fixed a bug in the implementation of lazily read files. Printf and friends now have cord variants. Cord traversals are a bit faster. - Made ALL_INTERIOR_POINTERS recognition the default. - Fixed de so that it can run in constant space, independent of file size. Added simple string searching to cords and de. - Added the Hull-Ellis C++ interface. - Added dynamic library support for OSF/1. (Thanks to Al Dosser and Tim Bingham at DEC.) - Changed argument to GC_expand_hp to be expressed in units of bytes instead of heap blocks. (Necessary since the heap block size now varies depending on configuration. The old version was never very clean.) - Added GC_get_heap_size(). The previous "equivalent" was broken. - Restructured the Makefile a bit. Since version 4.0: - Changed finalization implementation to guarantee that finalization procedures are called outside of the allocation lock, making direct use of the interface a little less dangerous. MAY BREAK EXISTING CLIENTS that assume finalizers are protected by a lock. Since there seem to be few multithreaded clients that use finalization, this is hopefully not much of a problem. - Fixed a gross bug in CORD_prev. - Fixed a bug in blacklst.c that could result in unbounded heap growth during startup on machines that do not clear memory obtained from the OS (e.g. win32S). - Ported de editor to win32/win32S. (This is now the only version with a mouse-sensitive UI.) - Added GC_malloc_ignore_off_page to allocate large arrays in the presence of ALL_INTERIOR_POINTERS. - Changed GC_call_with_alloc_lock to not disable signals in the single-threaded case. - Reduced retry count in GC_collect_or_expand for garbage collecting when out of memory. - Made uncollectable allocations bypass black-listing, as they should. - Fixed a bug in typed_test in test.c that could cause (legitimate) GC crashes. - Fixed some potential synchronization problems in finalize.c - Fixed a real locking problem in typd_mlc.c. - Worked around an AIX 3.2 compiler feature that results in out of bounds memory references. - Partially worked around an IRIX5.2 beta problem (which may or may not persist to the final release). - Fixed a bug in the heap integrity checking code that could result in explicitly deallocated objects being identified as smashed. Fixed a bug in the dbg_mlc stack saving code that caused old argument pointers to be considered live. - Fixed a bug in CORD_ncmp (and hence CORD_str). - Repaired the OS2 port, which had suffered from bit rot in 4.0. Worked around what appears to be CSet/2 V1.0 optimizer bug. - Fixed a Makefile bug for target "c++". Since version 4.1: - Multiple bug fixes/workarounds in the Solaris threads version. (It occasionally failed to locate some register contents for marking. It also turns out that thr_suspend and friends are unreliable in Solaris 2.3. Dirty bit reads appear to be unreliable under some weird circumstances. My stack marking code contained a serious performance bug. The new code is extremely defensive, and has not failed in several cpu hours of testing. But no guarantees ...) - Added MacOS support (thanks to Patrick Beard.) - Fixed several syntactic bugs in gc_c++.h and friends. (These didn't bother g++, but did bother most other compilers.) Fixed gc_c++.h finalization interface. (It didn't.) - 64 bit alignment for allocated objects was not guaranteed in a few cases in which it should have been. - Added GC_malloc_atomic_ignore_off_page. - Added GC_collect_a_little. - Added some prototypes to gc.h. - Some other minor bug fixes (notably in Makefile). - Fixed OS/2 / EMX port (thanks to Ari Huttunen). - Fixed AmigaDOS port. (thanks to Michel Schinz). - Fixed the DATASTART definition under Solaris. There was a 1 in 16K chance of the collector missing the first 64K of static data (and thus crashing). - Fixed some blatant anachronisms in the README file. - Fixed PCR-Makefile for upcoming PPCR release. Since version 4.2: - Fixed SPARC alignment problem with GC_DEBUG. - Fixed Solaris threads /proc workaround. The real problem was an interaction with mprotect. - Incorporated fix from Patrick Beard for gc_c++.h (now gc_cpp.h). - Slightly improved allocator space utilization by fixing the GC_size_map mechanism. - Integrated some Sony News and MIPS RISCos 4.51 patches. (Thanks to Nobuyuki Hikichi of Software Research Associates, Inc. Japan) - Fixed HP_PA alignment problem. (Thanks to xjam@cork.cs.berkeley.edu.) - Added GC_same_obj and friends. Changed GC_base to return 0 for pointers past the end of large objects. Improved GC_base performance with ALL_INTERIOR_POINTERS on machines with a slow integer mod operation. Added GC_PTR_ADD, GC_PTR_STORE, etc. to prepare for preprocessor. - changed the default on most UNIX machines to be that signals are not disabled during critical GC operations. This is still ANSI-conforming, though somewhat dangerous in the presence of signal handlers. But the performance cost of the alternative is sometimes problematic. Can be changed back with a minor Makefile edit. - renamed IS_STRING in gc.h, to CORD_IS_STRING, thus following my own naming convention. Added the function CORD_to_const_char_star. - Fixed a gross bug in GC_finalize. Symptom: occasional address faults in that function. (Thanks to Anselm Baird-Smith (Anselm.BairdSmith@inria.fr) - Added port to ICL DRS6000 running DRS/NX. Restructured things a bit to factor out common code, and remove obsolete code. Collector should now run under SUNOS5 with either mprotect or /proc dirty bits. (Thanks to Douglas Steel (doug@wg.icl.co.uk)). - More bug fixes and workarounds for Solaris 2.X. (These were mostly related to putting the collector in a dynamic library, which didn't really work before. Also SOLARIS_THREADS didn't interact well with dl_open.) Thanks to btlewis@eng.sun.com. - Fixed a serious performance bug on the DEC Alpha. The text segment was getting registered as part of the root set. (Amazingly, the result was still fast enough that the bug was not conspicuous.) The fix works on OSF/1, version 1.3. Hopefully it also works on other versions of OSF/1 ... - Fixed a bug in GC_clear_roots. - Fixed a bug in GC_generic_malloc_words_small that broke gc_inl.h. (Reported by Antoine de Maricourt. I broke it in trying to tweak the Mac port.) - Fixed some problems with cord/de under Linux. - Fixed some cord problems, notably with CORD_riter4. - Added DG/UX port. Thanks to Ben A. Mesander (ben@piglet.cr.usgs.gov) - Added finalization registration routines with weaker ordering constraints. (This is necessary for C++ finalization with multiple inheritance, since the compiler often adds self-cycles.) - Filled the holes in the SCO port. (Thanks to Michael Arnoldus .) - John Ellis' additions to the C++ support: From John: * I completely rewrote the documentation in the interface gc_c++.h (later renamed gc_cpp.h). I've tried to make it both clearer and more precise. * The definition of accessibility now ignores pointers from an finalizable object (an object with a clean-up function) to itself. This allows objects with virtual base classes to be finalizable by the collector. Compilers typically implement virtual base classes using pointers from an object to itself, which under the old definition of accessibility prevented objects with virtual base classes from ever being collected or finalized. * gc_cleanup now includes gc as a virtual base. This was enabled by the change in the definition of accessibility. * I added support for operator new[]. Since most (all?) compilers don't yet support operator new[], it is conditionalized on -DOPERATOR_NEW_ARRAY. The code is untested, but its trivial and looks correct. * The test program test_gc_c++ (later renamed test_cpp.cc) tries to test for the C++-specific functionality not tested by the other programs. - Added include to misc.c. (Needed for ppcr.) - Added PowerMac port. (Thanks to Patrick Beard again.) - Fixed "srcdir"-related Makefile problems. Changed things so that all externally visible include files always appear in the include subdirectory of the source. Made gc.h directly includable from C++ code. (These were at Per Bothner's suggestion.) - Changed Intel code to also mark from ebp (Kevin Warne's suggestion). - Renamed C++ related files so they could live in a FAT file system. (Charles Fiterman's suggestion.) - Changed Windows NT Makefile to include C++ support in gc.lib. Added C++ test as Makefile target. Since version 4.3: - ASM_CLEAR_CODE was erroneously defined for HP PA machines, resulting in a compile error. - Fixed OS/2 Makefile to create a library. (Thanks to Mark Boulter (mboulter@vnet.ibm.com)). - Gc_cleanup objects didn't work if they were created on the stack. Fixed. - One copy of Gc_cpp.h in the distribution was out of synch, and failed to document some known compiler problems with explicit destructor invocation. Partially fixed. There are probably other compilers on which gc_cleanup is miscompiled. - Fixed Makefile to pass C compiler flags to C++ compiler. - Added Mac fixes. - Fixed os_dep.c to work around what appears to be a new and different VirtualQuery bug under newer versions of win32S. - GC_non_gc_bytes was not correctly maintained by GC_free. Fixed. Thanks to James Clark (jjc@jclark.com). - Added GC_set_max_heap_size. - Changed allocation code to ignore blacklisting if it is preventing use of a very large block of memory. This has the advantage that naive code allocating very large objects is much more likely to work. The downside is you might no longer find out that such code should really use GC_malloc_ignore_off_page. - Changed GC_printf under win32 to close and reopen the file between calls. FAT file systems otherwise make the log file useless for debugging. - Added GC_try_to_collect and GC_get_bytes_since_gc. These allow starting an abortable collection during idle times. This facility does not require special OS support. (Thanks to Michael Spertus of Geodesic Systems for suggesting this. It was actually an easy addition. Kumar Srikantan previously added a similar facility to a now ancient version of the collector. At the time this was much harder, and the result was less convincing.) - Added some support for the Borland development environment. (Thanks to John Ellis and Michael Spertus.) - Removed a misfeature from checksums.c that caused unexpected heap growth. (Thanks to Scott Schwartz.) - Changed finalize.c to call WARN if it encounters a finalization cycle. WARN is defined in gc_priv.h to write a message, usually to stdout. In many environments, this may be inappropriate. - Renamed NO_PARAMS in gc.h to GC_NO_PARAMS, thus adhering to my own naming convention. - Added GC_set_warn_proc to intercept warnings. - Fixed Amiga port. (Thanks to Michel Schinz (schinz@alphanet.ch).) - Fixed a bug in mark.c that could result in an access to unmapped memory from GC_mark_from_mark_stack on machines with unaligned pointers. - Fixed a win32 specific performance bug that could result in scanning of objects allocated with the system malloc. - Added REDIRECT_MALLOC. Since version 4.4: - Fixed many minor and one major README bugs. (Thanks to Franklin Chen (chen@adi.com) for pointing out many of them.) - Fixed ALPHA/OSF/1 dynamic library support. (Thanks to Jonathan Bachrach (jonathan@harlequin.com)). - Added incremental GC support (MPROTECT_VDB) for Linux (with some help from Bruno Haible). - Altered SPARC recognition tests in gc.h and config.h (mostly as suggested by Fergus Henderson). - Added basic incremental GC support for win32, as implemented by Windows NT and Windows 95. GC_enable_incremental is a noop under win32s, which doesn't implement enough of the VM interface. - Added -DLARGE_CONFIG. - Fixed GC_..._ignore_off_page to also function without -DALL_INTERIOR_POINTERS. - (Hopefully) fixed RS/6000 port. (Only the test was broken.) - Fixed a performance bug in the nonincremental collector running on machines supporting incremental collection with MPROTECT_VDB (e.g. SunOS 4, DEC AXP). This turned into a correctness bug under win32s with win32 incremental collection. (Not all memory protection was disabled.) - Fixed some ppcr related bit rot. - Caused dynamic libraries to be unregistered before reregistering. The old way turned out to be a performance bug on some machines. - GC_root_size was not properly maintained under MSWIN32. - Added -DNO_DEBUGGING and GC_dump. - Fixed a couple of bugs arising with SOLARIS_THREADS + REDIRECT_MALLOC. - Added NetBSD/M68K port. (Thanks to Peter Seebach .) - Fixed a serious realloc bug. For certain object sizes, the collector wouldn't scan the expanded part of the object. (Thanks to Clay Spence (cds@peanut.sarnoff.com) for noticing the problem, and helping me to track it down.) Since version 4.5: - Added Linux ELF support. (Thanks to Arrigo Triulzi .) - GC_base crashed if it was called before any other GC_ routines. This could happen if a gc_cleanup object was allocated outside the heap before any heap allocation. - The heap expansion heuristic was not stable if all objects had finalization enabled. Fixed finalize.c to count memory in finalization queue and avoid explicit deallocation. Changed alloc.c to also consider this count. (This is still not recommended. It's expensive if nothing else.) Thanks to John Ellis for pointing this out. - GC_malloc_uncollectable(0) was broken. Thanks to Phong Vo for pointing this out. - The collector didn't compile under Linux 1.3.X. (Thanks to Fred Gilham for pointing this out.) The current workaround is ugly, but expected to be temporary. - Fixed a formatting problem for SPARC stack traces. - Fixed some '=='s in os_dep.c that should have been assignments. Fortunately these were in code that should never be executed anyway. (Thanks to Fergus Henderson.) - Fixed the heap block allocator to only drop blacklisted blocks in small chunks. Made BL_LIMIT self adjusting. (Both of these were in response to heap growth observed by Paul Graham.) - Fixed the Metrowerks/68K Mac code to also mark from a6. (Thanks to Patrick Beard.) - Significantly updated README.debugging. - Fixed some problems with longjmps out of signal handlers, especially under Solaris. Added a workaround for the fact that siglongjmp doesn't appear to do the right thing with -lthread under Solaris. - Added MSDOS/djgpp port. (Thanks to Mitch Harris (maharri@uiuc.edu).) - Added "make reserved_namespace" and "make user_namespace". The first renames ALL "GC_xxx" identifiers as "_GC_xxx". The second is the inverse transformation. Note that doing this is guaranteed to break all clients written for the other names. - descriptor field for kind NORMAL in GC_obj_kinds with ADD_BYTE_AT_END defined should be -ALIGNMENT not WORDS_TO_BYTES(-1). This is a serious bug on machines with pointer alignment of less than a word. - GC_ignore_self_finalize_mark_proc didn't handle pointers to very near the end of the object correctly. Caused failures of the C++ test on a DEC Alpha with g++. - gc_inl.h still had problems. Partially fixed. Added warnings at the beginning to hopefully specify the remaining dangers. - Added DATAEND definition to config.h. - Fixed some of the .h file organization. Fixed "make floppy". Since version 4.6: - Fixed some compilation problems with -DCHECKSUMS (thanks to Ian Searle) - Updated some Mac specific files to synchronize with Patrick Beard. - Fixed a serious bug for machines with non-word-aligned pointers. (Thanks to Patrick Beard for pointing out the problem. The collector should fail almost any conceivable test immediately on such machines.) Since version 4.7: - Changed a "comment" in a MacOS specific part of mach-dep.c that caused gcc to fail on other platforms. Since version 4.8 - More README.debugging fixes. - Objects ready for finalization, but not finalized in the same GC cycle, could be prematurely collected. This occasionally happened in test_cpp. - Too little memory was obtained from the system for very large objects. That could cause a heap explosion if these objects were not contiguous (e.g. under PCR), and too much of them was blacklisted. - Due to an improper initialization, the collector was too hesitant to allocate blacklisted objects immediately after system startup. - Moved GC_arrays from the data into the bss segment by not explicitly initializing it to zero. This significantly reduces the size of executables, and probably avoids some disk accesses on program startup. It's conceivable that it might break a port that I didn't test. - Fixed EMX_MAKEFILE to reflect the gc_c++.h to gc_cpp.h renaming which occurred a while ago. Since 4.9: - Fixed a typo around a call to GC_collect_or_expand in alloc.c. It broke handling of out of memory. (Thanks to Patrick Beard for noticing.) Since 4.10: - Rationalized (hopefully) GC_try_to_collect in an incremental collection environment. It appeared to not handle a call while a collection was in progress, and was otherwise too conservative. - Merged GC_reclaim_or_delete_all into GC_reclaim_all to get rid of some code. - Added Patrick Beard's Mac fixes, with substantial completely untested modifications. - Fixed the MPROTECT_VDB code to deal with large pages and imprecise fault addresses (as on an UltraSPARC running Solaris 2.5). Note that this was not a problem in the default configuration, which uses PROC_VDB. - The DEC Alpha assembly code needed to restore $gp between calls. Thanks to Fergus Henderson for tracking this down and supplying a patch. - The write command for "de" was completely broken for large files. I used the easiest portable fix, which involved changing the semantics so that f.new is written instead of overwriting f. That's safer anyway. - Added README.solaris2 with a discussion of the possible problems of mixing the collector's sbrk allocation with malloc/realloc. - Changed the data segment starting address for SGI machines. The old code failed under IRIX6. - Required double word alignment for MIPS. - Various minor fixes to remove warnings. - Attempted to fix some Solaris threads problems reported by Zhiying Chen. In particular, the collector could try to fork a thread with the world stopped as part of GC_thr_init. It also failed to deal with the case in which the original thread terminated before the whole process did. - Added -DNO_EXECUTE_PERMISSION. This has a major performance impact on the incremental collector under Irix, and perhaps under other operating systems. - Added some code to support allocating the heap with mmap. This may be preferable under some circumstances. - Integrated dynamic library support for HP. (Thanks to Knut Tvedten .) - Integrated James Clark's win32 threads support, and made a number of changes to it, many of which were suggested by Pontus Rydin. This is still not 100% solid. - Integrated Alistair Crooks' support for UTS4 running on an Amdahl 370-class machine. - Fixed a serious bug in explicitly typed allocation. Objects requiring large descriptors where handled in a way that usually resulted in a segmentation fault in the marker. (Thanks to Jeremy Fitzhardinge for helping to track this down.) - Added partial support for GNU win32 development. (Thanks to Fergus Henderson.) - Added optional support for Java-style finalization semantics. (Thanks to Patrick Bridges.) This is recommended only for Java implementations. - GC_malloc_uncollectable faulted instead of returning 0 when out of memory. (Thanks to dan@math.uiuc.edu for noticing.) - Calls to GC_base before the collector was initialized failed on a DEC Alpha. (Thanks to Matthew Flatt.) - Added base pointer checking to GC_REGISTER_FINALIZER in debugging mode, at the suggestion of Jeremy Fitzhardinge. - GC_debug_realloc failed for uncollectable objects. (Thanks to Jeremy Fitzhardinge.) - Explicitly typed allocation could crash if it ran out of memory. (Thanks to Jeremy Fitzhardinge.) - Added minimal support for a DEC Alpha running Linux. - Fixed a problem with allocation of objects whose size overflowed ptrdiff_t. (This now fails unconditionally, as it should.) - Added the beginning of Irix pthread support. - Integrated Xiaokun Zhu's fixes for djgpp 2.01. - Added SGI-style STL allocator support (gc_alloc.h). - Fixed a serious bug in README.solaris2. Multithreaded programs must include gc.h with SOLARIS_THREADS defined. - Changed GC_free so it actually deallocates uncollectable objects. (Thanks to Peter Chubb for pointing out the problem.) - Added Linux ELF support for dynamic libararies. (Thanks again to Patrick Bridges.) - Changed the Borland cc configuration so that the assembler is not required. - Fixed a bug in the C++ test that caused it to fail in 64-bit environments. Since 4.11: - Fixed ElfW definition in dyn_load.c. (Thanks to Fergus Henderson.) This prevented the dynamic library support from compiling on some older ELF Linux systems. - Fixed UTS4 port (which I apparently mangled during the integration) (Thanks to again to Alistair Crooks.) - "Make C++" failed on Suns with SC4.0, due to a problem with "bool". Fixed in gc_priv.h. - Added more pieces for GNU win32. (Thanks to Timothy N. Newsham.) The current state of things should suffice for at least some applications. - Changed the out of memory retry count handling as suggested by Kenjiro Taura. (This matters only if GC_max_retries > 0, which is no longer the default.) - If a /proc read failed repeatedly, GC_written_pages was not updated correctly. (Thanks to Peter Chubb for diagnosing this.) - Under unlikely circumstances, the allocator could infinite loop in an out of memory situation. (Thanks again to Kenjiro Taura for identifying the problem and supplying a fix.) - Fixed a syntactic error in the DJGPP code. (Thanks to Fergus Henderson for finding this by inspection.) Also fixed a test program problem with DJGPP (Thanks to Peter Monks.) - Atomic uncollectable objects were not treated correctly by the incremental collector. This resulted in weird log statistics and occasional performance problems. (Thanks to Peter Chubb for pointing this out.) - Fixed some problems resulting from compilers that dont define __STDC__. In this case void * and char * were used inconsistently in some cases. (Void * should not have been used at all. If you have an ANSI superset compiler that does not define __STDC__, please compile with -D__STDC__=0. Thanks to Manuel Serrano and others for pointing out the problem.) - Fixed a compilation problem on Irix with -n32 and -DIRIX_THREADS. Also fixed some other IRIX_THREADS problems which may or may not have had observable symptoms. - Fixed an HP PA compilation problem in dyn_load.c. (Thanks to Philippe Queinnec.) - SEGV fault handlers sometimes did not get reset correctly. (Thanks to David Pickens.) - Added a fix for SOLARIS_THREADS on Intel. (Thanks again to David Pickens.) This probably needs more work to become functional. - Fixed struct sigcontext_struct in os_dep.c for compilation under Linux 2.1.X. (Thanks to Fergus Henderson.) - Changed the DJGPP STACKBOTTOM and DATASTART values to those suggested by Kristian Kristensen. These may still not be right, but it is it is likely to work more often than what was there before. They may even be exactly right. - Added a #include to test_cpp.cc. This appears to help with HP/UX and gcc. (Thanks to assar@sics.se.) - Version 4.11 failed to run in incremental mode on recent 64-bit Irix kernels. This was a problem related to page unaligned heap segments. Changed the code to page align heap sections on all platforms. (I had mistakenly identified this as a kernel problem earlier. It was not.) - Version 4.11 did not make allocated storage executable, except on one or two platforms, due to a bug in a #if test. (Thanks to Dave Grove for pointing this out.) - Added sparc_sunos4_mach_dep.s to support Sun's compilers under SunOS4. - Added GC_exclude_static_roots. - Fixed the object size mapping algorithm. This shouldn't matter, but the old code was ugly. - Heap checking code could die if one of the allocated objects was larger than its base address. (Unsigned underflow problem. Thanks to Clay Spence for isolating the problem.) - Added RS6000 (AIX) dynamic library support and fixed STACK_BOTTOM. (Thanks to Fred Stearns.) - Added Fergus Henderson's patches for improved robustness with large heaps and lots of blacklisting. - Added Peter Chubb's changes to support Solaris Pthreads, to support MMAP allocation in Solaris, to allow Solaris to find dynamic libraries through /proc, to add malloc_typed_ignore_off_page, and a few other minor features and bug fixes. - The Solaris 2 port should not use sbrk. I received confirmation from Sun that the use of sbrk and malloc in the same program is not supported. The collector now defines USE_MMAP by default on Solaris. - Replaced the djgpp makefile with Gary Leavens' version. - Fixed MSWIN32 detection test. - Added Fergus Henderson's patches to allow putting the collector into a DLL under GNU win32. - Added Ivan V. Demakov's port to Watcom C on X86. - Added Ian Piumarta's Linux/PowerPC port. - On Brian Burton's suggestion added PointerFreeGC to the placement options in gc_cpp.h. This is of course unsafe, and may be controversial. On the other hand, it seems to be needed often enough that it's worth adding as a standard facility. Since 4.12: - Fixed a crucial bug in the Watcom port. There was a redundant decl of GC_push_one in gc_priv.h. - Added FINALIZE_ON_DEMAND. - Fixed some pre-ANSI cc problems in test.c. - Removed getpagesize() use for Solaris. It seems to be missing in one or two versions. - Fixed bool handling for SPARCCompiler version 4.2. - Fixed some files in include that had gotten unlinked from the main copy. - Some RS/6000 fixes (missing casts). Thanks to Toralf Foerster. - Fixed several problems in GC_debug_realloc, affecting mostly the FIND_LEAK case. - GC_exclude_static_roots contained a buggy unsigned comparison to terminate a loop. (Thanks to Wilson Ho.) - CORD_str failed if the substring occurred at the last possible position. (Only affects cord users.) - Fixed Linux code to deal with RedHat 5.0 and integrated Peter Bigot's os_dep.c code for dealing with various Linux versions. - Added workaround for Irix pthreads sigaction bug and possible signal misdirection problems. Since alpha1: - Changed RS6000 STACKBOTTOM. - Integrated Patrick Beard's Mac changes. - Alpha1 didn't compile on Irix m.n, m < 6. - Replaced Makefile.dj with a new one from Gary Leavens. - Added Andrew Stitcher's changes to support SCO OpenServer. - Added PRINT_BLACK_LIST, to allow debugging of high densities of false pointers. - Added code to debug allocator to keep track of return address in GC_malloc caller, thus giving a bit more context. - Changed default behavior of large block allocator to more aggressively avoid fragmentation. This is likely to slow down the collector when it succeeds at reducing space cost. - Integrated Fergus Henderson's CYGWIN32 changes. They are untested, but needed for newer versions. - USE_MMAP had some serious bugs. This caused the collector to fail consistently on Solaris with -DSMALL_CONFIG. - Added Linux threads support, thanks largely to Fergus Henderson. Since alpha2: - Fixed more Linux threads problems. - Changed default GC_free_space_divisor to 3 with new large block allocation. (Thanks to Matthew Flatt for some measurements that suggest the old value sometimes favors space too much over time.) - More CYGWIN32 fixes. - Integrated Tyson-Dowd's Linux-M68K port. - Minor HP PA and DEC UNIX fixes from Fergus Henderson. - Integrated Christoffe Raffali's Linux-SPARC changes. - Allowed for one more GC fixup iteration after a full GC in incremental mode. Some quick measurements suggested that this significantly reduces pause times even with smaller GC_RATE values. - Moved some more GC data structures into GC_arrays. This decreases pause times and GC overhead, but makes debugging slightly less convenient. - Fixed namespace pollution problem ("excl_table"). - Made GC_incremental a constant for -DSMALL_CONFIG, hopefully shrinking that slightly. - Added some win32 threads fixes. - Integrated Ivan Demakov and David Stes' Watcom fixes. - Various other minor fixes contributed by many people. - Renamed config.h to gcconfig.h, since config.h tends to be used for many other things. - Integrated Matthew Flatt's support for 68K MacOS "far globals". - Fixed up some of the dynamic library Makefile targets for consistency across platforms. - Fixed a USE_MMAP typo that caused out-of-memory handling to fail on Solaris. - Added code to test.c to test thread creation a bit more. - Integrated GC_win32_free_heap, as suggested by Ivan Demakov. - Fixed Solaris 2.7 stack base finding problem. (This may actually have been done in an earlier alpha release.) Since alpha3: - Fixed MSWIN32 recognition test, which interfered with cygwin. - Removed unnecessary gc_watcom.asm from distribution. Removed some obsolete README.win32 text. - Added Alpha Linux incremental GC support. (Thanks to Philipp Tomsich for code for retrieving the fault address in a signal handler.) Changed Linux signal handler context argument to be a pointer. - Took care of some new warnings generated by the 7.3 SGI compiler. - Integrated Phillip Musumeci's FreeBSD/ELF fixes. - -DIRIX_THREADS was broken with the -o32 ABI (typo in gc_priv.h> Since 4.13: - Fixed GC_print_source_ptr to not use a prototype. - generalized CYGWIN test. - gc::new did the wrong thing with PointerFreeGC placement. (Thanks to Rauli Ruohonen.) - In the ALL_INTERIOR_POINTERS (default) case, some callee-save register values could fail to be scanned if the register was saved and reused in a GC frame. This showed up in verbose mode with gctest compiled with an unreleased SGI compiler. I vaguely recall an old bug report that may have been related. The bug was probably quite old. (The problem was that the stack scanning could be deferred until after the relevant frame was overwritten, and the new save location might be outside the scanned area. Fixed by more eager stack scanning.) - PRINT_BLACK_LIST had some problems. A few source addresses were garbage. - Replaced Makefile.dj and added -I flags to cord make targets. (Thanks to Gary Leavens.) - GC_try_to_collect was broken with the nonincremental collector. - gc_cleanup destructors could pass the wrong address to GC_register_finalizer_ignore_self in the presence of multiple inheritance. (Thanks to Darrell Schiebel.) - Changed PowerPC Linux stack finding code. Since 4.14alpha1 - -DSMALL_CONFIG did not work reliably with large (> 4K) pages. Recycling the mark stack during expansion could result in a size zero heap segment, which confused things. (This was probably also an issue with the normal config and huge pages.) - Did more work to make sure that callee-save registers were scanned completely, even with the setjmp-based code. Added USE_GENERIC_PUSH_REGS macro to facilitate testing on machines I have access to. - Added code to explicitly push register contents for win32 threads. This seems to be necessary. (Thanks to Pierre de Rop.) Since 4.14alpha2 - changed STACKBOTTOM for DJGPP (Thanks to Salvador Eduardo Tropea). Since 4.14 - Reworked large block allocator. Now uses multiple doubly linked free lists to approximate best fit. - Changed heap expansion heuristic. Entirely free blocks are no longer counted towards the heap size. This seems to have a major impact on heap size stability; the old version could expand the heap way too much in the presence of large block fragmentation. - added -DGC_ASSERTIONS and some simple assertions inside the collector. This is mainlyt for collector debugging. - added -DUSE_MUNMAP to allow the heap to shrink. Suupported on only a few UNIX-like platforms for now. - added GC_dump_regions() for debugging of fragmentation issues. - Changed PowerPC pointer alignment under Linux to 4. (This needs checking by someone who has one. The suggestions came to me via a rather circuitous path.) - Changed the Linux/Alpha port to walk the data segment backwards until it encounters a SIGSEGV. The old way to find the start of the data segment broke with a recent release. - cordxtra.c needed to call GC_REGISTER_FINALIZER instead of GC_register_finalizer, so that it would continue to work with GC_DEBUG. - allochblk sometimes cleared the wrong block for debugging purposes when it dropped blacklisted blocks. This could result in spurious error reports with GC_DEBUG. - added MACOS X Server support. (Thanks to Andrew Stone.) - Changed the Solaris threads code to ignore stack limits > 8 MB with a warning. Empirically, it is not safe to access arbitrary pages in such large stacks. And the dirty bit implementation does not guarantee that none of them will be accessed. - Integrated Martin Tauchmann's Amiga changes. - Integrated James Dominy's OpenBSD/SPARC port. Since 5.0alpha1 - Fixed bugs introduced in alpha1 (OpenBSD & large block initialization). - Added -DKEEP_BACK_PTRS and backptr.h interface. (The implementation idea came from Al Demers.) Since 5.0alpha2 - Added some highly incomplete code to support a copied young generation. Comments on nursery.h are appreciated. - Changed -DFIND_LEAK, -DJAVA_FINALIZATION, and -DFINALIZE_ON_DEMAND, so the same effect could be obtained with a runtime switch. This is a step towards standardizing on a single dynamic GC library. - Significantly changed the way leak detection is handled, as a consequence of the above. Since 5.0 alpha3 - Added protection fault handling patch for Linux/M68K from Fergus Henderson and Roman Hodek. - Removed the tests for SGI_SOURCE in new_gc_alloc.h. This was causing that interface to fail on nonSGI platforms. - Changed the Linux stack finding code to use /proc, after changing it to use HEURISTIC1. (Thanks to David Mossberger for pointing out the /proc hook.) - Added HP/UX incremental GC support and HP/UX 11 thread support. Thread support is currently still flakey. - Added basic Linux/IA64 support. - Integrated Anthony Green's PicoJava support. - Integrated Scott Ananian's StrongARM/NetBSD support. - Fixed some fairly serious performance bugs in the incremental collector. These have probably been there essentially forever. (Mark bits were sometimes set before scanning dirty pages. The reclaim phase unnecessarily dirtied full small object pages.) - Changed the reclaim phase to ignore nearly full pages to avoid touching them. - Limited GC_black_list_spacing to roughly the heap growth increment. - Changed full collection triggering heuristic to decrease full GC frequency by default, but to explicitly trigger full GCs during heap growth. This doesn't always improve things, but on average it's probably a win. - GC_debug_free(0, ...) failed. Thanks to Fergus Henderson for the bug report and fix. Since 5.0 alpha4 - GC_malloc_explicitly_typed and friends sometimes failed to initialize first word. - Added allocation routines and support in the marker for mark descriptors in a type structure referenced by the first word of an object. This was introduced to support gcj, but hopefully in a way that makes it generically useful. - Added GC_requested_heapsize, and inhibited collections in nonincremental mode if the actual used heap size is less than what was explicitly requested. - The Solaris pthreads version of GC_pthread_create didn't handle a NULL attribute pointer. Solaris thread support used the wrong default thread stack size. (Thanks to Melissa O'Neill for the patch.) - Changed PUSH_CONTENTS macro to no longer modify first parameter. This usually doesn't matter, but it was certainly an accident waiting to happen ... - Added GC_register_finalizer_no_order and friends to gc.h. They're needed by Java implementations. - Integrated a fix for a win32 deadlock resulting from clock() calling malloc. (Thanks to Chris Dodd.) - Integrated Hiroshi Kawashima's port to Linux/MIPS. This was designed for a handheld platform, and may or may not be sufficient for other machines. - Fixed a va_arg problem with the %c specifier in cordprnt.c. It appears that this was always broken, but recent versions of gcc are the first to report the (statically detectable) bug. - Added an attempt at a more general solution to dlopen races/deadlocks. GC_dlopen now temporarily disables collection. Still not ideal, but ... - Added -DUSE_I686_PREFETCH, -DUSE_3DNOW_PREFETCH, and support for IA64 prefetch instructions. May improve performance measurably, but I'm not sure the code will run correctly on processors that don't support the instruction. Won't build except with very recent gcc. - Added caching for header lookups in the marker. This seems to result in a barely measurable performance gain. Added support for interleaved lookups of two pointers, but unconfigured that since the performance gain is currently near zero, and it adds to code size. - Changed Linux DATA_START definition to check both data_start and __data_start, since nothing else seems to be portable. - Added -DUSE_LD_WRAP to optionally take advantage of the GNU ld function wrapping mechanism. Probably currently useful only on Linux. - Moved some variables for the scratch allocator into GC_arrays, on Martin Hirzel's suggestion. - Fixed a win32 threads bug that caused the collector to not look for interior pointers from one of the thread stacks without ALL_INTERIOR_POINTERS. (Thanks to Jeff Sturm.) - Added Mingw32 support. (Thanks again to Jeff Sturm for the patch.) - Changed the alpha port to use the generic register scanning code instead of alpha_mach_dep.s. Alpha_mach_dep.s doesn't look for pointers in fp registers, but gcc sometimes spills pointers there. (Thanks to Manuel Serrano for helping me debug this by email.) Changed the IA64 code to do something similar for similar reasons. [5.0alpha5 doesn't really exist, but it may have escaped.] Since 5.0alpha6: - -DREDIRECT_MALLOC was broken in alpha6. Fixed. - Cleaned up gc_ccp.h slightly, thus also causing the HP C++ compiler to accept it. - Removed accidental reference to dbg_mlc.c, which caused dbg_mlc.o to be linked into every executable. - Added PREFETCH to bitmap marker. Changed it to use the header cache. - GC_push_marked sometimes pushed one object too many, resulting in a segmentation fault in GC_mark_from_mark_stack. This was probably an old bug. It finally showed up in gctest on win32. - Gc_priv.h erroneously #defined GC_incremental to be TRUE instead of FALSE when SMALL_CONFIG was defined. This was no doubt a major performance bug for the default win32 configuration. - Removed -DSMALL_CONFIG from NT_MAKEFILE. It seemed like an anchronism now that the average PC has 64MB or so. - Integrated Bryce McKinley's patches for linux threads and dynamic loading from the libgcj tree. Turned on dynamic loading support for Linux/PPC. - Changed the stack finding code to use environ on HP/UX. (Thanks to Gustavo Rodriguez-Rivera for the suggestion.) This should probably be done on other platforms, too. Since I can't test those, that'll wait until after 5.0. Since 5.0alpha7: - Fixed threadlibs.c for linux threads. -DUSE_LD_WRAP was broken and -ldl was omitted. Fixed Linux stack finding code to handle -DUSE_LD_WRAP correctly. - Added MSWIN32 exception handler around marker, so that the collector can recover from root segments that are unmapped during the collection. This caused occasional failures under Windows 98, and may also be an issue under Windows NT/2000. Since 5.0 - Fixed a gc.h header bug which showed up under Irix. (Thanks to Dan Sullivan.) - Fixed a typo in GC_double_descr in typd_mlc.c. This probably could result in objects described by array descriptors not getting traced correctly. (Thanks to Ben Hutchings for pointing this out.) - The block nearly full tests in reclaim.c were not correct for 64 bit environments. This could result in unnecessary heap growth under unlikely conditions. Since 5.1 - dyn_load.c declared GC_scratch_last_end_ptr as an extern even if it was defined as a macro. This prevented the collector from building on Irix. - We quietly assumed that indirect mark descriptors were never 0. Our own typed allocation interface violated that. This could result in segmentation faults in the marker with typed allocation. - Fixed a _DUSE_MUNMAP bug in the heap block allocation code. (Thanks to Ben Hutchings for the patch.) - Taught the collector about VC++ handling array operator new. (Thanks again to Ben Hutchings for the patch.) - The two copies of gc_hdrs.h had diverged. Made one a link to the other again. Since 5.2 (A few 5.2 patches are not in 6.0alpha1) - Fixed _end declaration for OSF1. - There were lots of spurious leak reports in leak detection mode, caused by the fact that some pages were not being swept, and hence unmarked objects weren't making it onto free lists. (This bug dated back to 5.0.) - Fixed a typo in the liblinuxgc.so Makefile rule. - Added the GetExitCodeThread to Win32 GC_stop_world to (mostly) work around a Windows 95 GetOpenFileName problem. (Thanks to Jacob Navia.) Since 5.3 - Fixed a typo that prevented compilation with -DUSE_3DNOW_PREFETCH. (Thanks to Shawn Wagner for actually testing this.) - Fixed GC_is_thread_stack in solaris_threads.c. It forgot to return a value in the common case. I wonder why nobody noticed? - Fixed another silly syntax problem in GC_double_descr. (Thanks to Fergus Henderson for finding it.) - Fixed a GC_gcj_malloc bug: It tended to release the allocator lock twice. Since 5.4 (A few 5.3 patches are not in 6.0alpha2) - Added HP/PA prefetch support. - Added -DDBG_HDRS_ALL and -DSHORT_DBG_HDRS to reduce the cost and improve the reliability of generating pointer backtrace information, e.g. in the Bigloo environment. - Added parallel marking support (-DPARALLEL_MARK). This currently works only under IA32 and IA64 Linux, but it shouldn't be hard to adapt to other platforms. This is intended to be a lighter-weight (less new code, probably not as scalable) solution than the work by Toshio Endo et al, at the University of Tokyo. A number of their ideas were reused, though the code wasn't, and the underlying data structure is significantly different. In particular, we keep the global mark stack as a single shared data structure, but most of the work is done on smaller thread-local mark stacks. - Changed GC_malloc_many to be cheaper, and to require less mutual exclusion with -DPARALLEL_MARK. - Added full support for thread local allocation under Linux (-DTHREAD_LOCAL_ALLOC). This is a thin veneer on GC_malloc_many, and should be easily portable to other platforms, especially those that support pthreads. - CLEAR_DOUBLE was not always getting invoked when it should have been. - GC_gcj_malloc and friends used different out of memory handling than everything else, probably because I forgot about one when I implemented the other. They now both call GC_oom_fn(), not GC_oom_action(). - Integrated Jakub Jelinek's fixes for Linux/SPARC. - Moved GC_objfreelist, GC_aobjfreelist, and GC_words_allocd out of GC_arrays, and separately registered the first two as excluded roots. This makes code compiled with gc_inl.h less dependent on the collector version. (It would be nice to remove the inclusion of gc_priv.h by gc_inl.h completely, but we're not there yet. The locking definitions in gc_priv.h are still referenced.) This change was later coniditoned on SEPARATE_GLOBALS, which is not defined by default, since it involves a performance hit. - Register GC_obj_kinds separately as an excluded root region. The attempt to register it with GC_arrays was usually failing. (This wasn't serious, but seemed to generate some confusion.) - Moved backptr.h to gc_backptr.h. Since 6.0alpha1 - Added USE_MARK_BYTES to reduce the need for compare-and-swap on platforms for which that's expensive. - Fixed a locking bug ib GC_gcj_malloc and some locking assertion problems. - Added a missing volatile to OR_WORD and renamed the parameter to GC_compare_and_swap so it's not a C++ reserved word. (Thanks to Toshio Endo for pointing out both of those.) - Changed Linux dynamic library registration code to look at /proc/self/maps instead of the rld data structures when REDIRECT_MALLOC is defined. Otherwise some of the rld data data structures may be prematurely garbage collected. (Thanks to Eric Benson for helping to track this down.) - Fixed USE_LD_WRAP a bit more, so it should now work without threads. - Renamed XXX_THREADS macros to GC_XXX_THREADS for namespace correctness. Tomporarily added some backward compatibility definitions. Renamed USE_LD_WRAP to GC_USE_LD_WRAP. - Many MACOSX POWERPC changes, some additions to the gctest output, and a few minor generic bug fixes. (Thanks to Dietmar Planitzer.) Since 6.0 alpha2 - Fixed the /proc/self/maps code to not seek, since that apparently is not reliable across all interesting kernels. - Fixed some compilation problems in the absence of PARALLEL_MARK (introduced in alpha2). - Fixed an algorithmic problem with PARALLEL_MARK. If work needs to be given back to the main mark "stack", the BOTTOM entries of the local stack should be given away, not the top ones. This has substantial performance impact, especially for > 2 processors, from what I can tell. - Extracted gc_lock.h from gc_priv.h. This should eventually make it a bit easier to avoid including gc_priv.h in clients. - Moved all include files to include/ and removed duplicate links to the same file. The old scheme was a bad idea because it was too easy to get the copies out of sync, and many systems don't support hard links. Unfortunately, it's likely that I broke some of the non-Unix Makefiles in the process, although I tried to update them appropriately. - Removed the partial support for a copied nursery. It's not clear that this would be a tremendous win, since we don't consistently lose to generational copying collectors. And it would significantly complicate many things. May be reintroduced if/when it really turns out to win. - Removed references to IRIX_JDK_THREADS, since I believe there never were and never will be any clients. - Added some code to linux_threads.c to possibly support HPUX threads using the Linux code. Unfortunately, it doesn't work yet, and is currently disabled. - Added support under Linux/X86 for saving the call chain, both in (debug) objects for client debugging, and in GC_arrays._last_stack for GC debugging. This was previously supported only under Solaris. It is not enabled by default under X86, since it requires that code be compiled to explicitly dave frame pointers on the call stack. (With gcc this currently happens by default, but is often turned off explicitly.) To turn it on, define SAVE_CALL_CHAIN. Since 6.0 alpha3 - Moved up the detection of mostly full blocks to the initiatiation of the sweep phase. This eliminates some lock conention in the PARALLEL_MARK case, as multiple threads try to look at mostly full blocks concurrently. - Restored the code in GC_malloc_many that grabs a prefix of the global free list. This avoids the case in which every GC_malloc_many call tries and fails to allocate a new heap block, and the returns a single object from the global free list. - Some minor fixes in new_hblk.c. (Attempted to build free lists in order of increasing addresses instead of decreasing addresses for cache performance reasons. But this seems to be only a very minor gain with -DEAGER_SWEEP, and a loss in other cases. So the change was backed out.) - Fixed some of the documentation. (Thanks in large part to Fergus Henderson.) - Fixed the Linux USE_PROC_FOR_LIBRARIES code to deal with apps that perform large numbers of mmaps. (Thanks to Eric Benson.) Also fixed that code to deal with short reads. - Added GC_get_total_bytes(). - Fixed leak detection mode to avoid spurious messages under linuxthreads. (This should also now be easy for the other supported threads packages. But the code is tricky enough that I'm hesitant to do it without being able to test. Everything allocated in the GC thread support itself should be explicitly deallocated.) - Made it possible (with luck) to redirect malloc to GC_local_malloc. Since 6.0 alpha4 - Changed the definition of GC_pause in linux_threads.c to use a volatile asm. Some versions of gcc apparently optimize away writes to local volatile variables. This caused poor locking behaviour starting at about 4 processors. - Added GC_start_blocking(), GC_end_blocking() calls and wrapper for sleep to linux_threads.c. The first two calls could be used to generally avoid sending GC signals to blocked threads, avoiding both premature wakeups and unnecessary overhead. - Fixed a serious bug in thread-local allocation. At thread termination, GC_free could get called on small integers. Changed the code for thread termination to more efficiently return left-over free-lists. - Integrated Kjetil Matheussen's BeOS support. - Rearranged the directory structure to create the doc and tests subdirectories. - Sort of integrated Eric Benson's patch for OSF1. This provided basic OSF1 thread support by suitably extending hpux_irix_threads.c. Based on earlier email conversations with David Butenhof, I suspect that it will be more reliable in the long run to base this on linux_threads.c instead. Thus I attempted to patch up linux_threads.c based on Eric's code. The result is almost certainly broken, but hopefully close enough that someone with access to a machine can pick it up. - Integrated lots of minor changes from the NetBSD distribution. (These were supplied by David Brownlee. I'm not sure about the original authors.) - Hacked a bit more on the HP/UX thread-support in linux_threads.c. It now appears to work in the absence of incremental collection. Renamed hpux_irix_threads.c back to irix_threads.c, and removed the attempt to support HPUX there. - Changed gc.h to define _REENTRANT in cases in which it should already have been defined. It is still safer to also define it on the command line. Since 6.0alpha5: - Changed the definition of DATASTART on ALPHA and IA64, where data_start and __data_start are not defined by earlier versions of glibc. This might need to be fixed on other platforms as well. - Changed the way the stack base and backing store base are found on IA64. This should now remain reliable on future kernels. But since it relies on /proc, it will no longer work in the simulated NUE environment. - Made the call to random() in dbg_mlc.c with -DKEEP_BACK_PTRS dependent on the OS. On non-Unix systems, rand() should be used instead. Handled small RAND_MAX. (Thanks to Peter Ross for pointing this out.) - Fixed the cord make rules to create the cord subdirectory, if necessary. (Thanks to Doug Moen.) - Changed fo_object_size calculation in finalize.c. Turned finalization of nonheap object into a no-op. Removed anachronism from GC_size() implementation. - Changed GC_push_dirty call in solaris_threads.c to GC_push_selected. It was missed in a previous renaming. (Thanks to Vladimir Tsichevski for pointing this out.) - Arranged to not not mask SIGABRT in linux_threads.c. (Thanks to Bryce McKinlay.) - Added GC_no_dls hook for applications that want to register their own roots. - Integrated Kjetil Matheussen's Amiga changes. - Added FREEBSD_STACKBOTTOM. Changed the X86/FreeBSD port to use it. (Thanks to Matthew Flatt.) - Added pthread_detach interception for platforms supported by linux_threads.c and irix_threads.c. Should also be added for Solaris? - Changed the USE_MMAP code to check for the case in which we got the high end of the address space, i.e. mem_ptr + mem_sz == 0. It appears that this can happen under Solaris 7. It seems to be allowed by what I would claim is an oversight in the mmap specification. (Thanks to Toshio Endo for pointing out the problem.) - Cleanup of linux_threads.c. Some code was originally cloned from irix_threads.c and now unnecessary. Some comments were obviously wrong. - (Mostly) fixed a longstanding problem with setting of dirty bits from a signal handler. In the presence of threads, dirty bits could get lost, since the etting of a bit in the bit vector was not atomic with respect to other updates. The fix is 100% correct only for platforms for which GC_test_and_set is defined. The goal is to make that all platforms with thread support. Matters only if incremental GC and threads are both enabled. - made GC_all_interior_pointers (a.k.a. ALL_INTERIOR_POINTERS) an initialization time, instead of build-time option. This is a nontrivial, high risk change. It should slow down the code measurably only if MERGE_SIZES is not defined, which is a very nonstandard configuration. - Added doc/README.environment, and implemented what it describes. This allows a number of additional configuration options to be set through the environment. It documents a few previously undocumented options. - Integrated Eric Benson's leak testing improvements. - Removed the option to throw away the beginning of each page (DISCARD_WORDS). This became less and less useful as processors enforce stricter alignment. And it hadn't been tested in ages, and was thus probably broken anyway. Since 6.0alpha6: - Added GC_finalizer_notifier. Fixed GC_finalize_on_demand. (The variable actually wasn't being tested at the right points. The build-time flag was.) - Added Tom Tromey's S390 Linux patch. - Added code to push GC_finalize_now in GC_push_finalizer_structures. (Thanks to Matthew Flatt.) - Added GC_push_gc_structures() to push all GC internal roots. - Integrated some FreeBSD changes from Matthew Flatt. - It looks like USRSTACK is not always correctly defined under Solaris. Hacked gcconfig.h to attempt to work around the problem. The result is not well tested. (Thanks again to Matthew Flatt for pointing this out. The gross hack is mine. - HB) - Added Ji-Yong Chung's win32 threads and C++ fixes. - Arranged for hpux_test_and_clear.s to no longer be needed or built. It was causing build problems with gas, and it's not clear this is better than the pthreads alternative on this platform. - Some MINGW32 fixes from Hubert Garavel. - Added Initial Hitachi SH4 port from Kaz Kojima. - Ported thread-local allocation and parallel mark code to HP/UX on PA_RISC. - Made include/gc_mark.h more public and separated out the really private pieces. This is probably still not quite sufficient for clients that want to supply their own kind of type information. But it's a start. This involved lots of identifier renaming to make it namespace clean. - Added GC_dont_precollect for clients that need complete control over the root set. - GC_is_visible didn't do the right thing with gcj objects. (Not that many people are likely to care, but ...) - Don't redefine read with GC_USE_LD_WRAP. - Initial port to LINUX/HP_PA. Incremental collection and threads are not yet supported. (Incremental collection should work if you have the right kernel. Threads may work with a sufficiently patched pthread library.) - Changed gcconfig.h to recognize __i386__ as an alternative to i386 in many places. (Thanks to Benjamin Lerman.) - Made win32_threads.c more tolerant of detaching a thread that it didn't know about. (Thanks to Paul Nash.) - Added Makefile.am and configure.in from gcc to the distribution, with minimal changes. For the moment, those are just placeholders. In the future, we're planning to switch to a GNU-style build environment for Un*x-like systems, though the old Makefile will remain as a backup. - Turned off STUBBORN_ALLOC by default, and added it back as a Makefile option. - Redistributed some functions between malloc.c and mallocx.c, so that simple statically linked apps no longer pull in mallocx.o. - Changed large object allocation to clear the first and last few words of each block before releassing the lock. Otherwise the marker could see objects with nonsensical type descriptors. - Fixed a couple of subtle problems that could result in not recognizing interior pointers from the stack. (I believe these were introduced in 6.0alpha6.) - GC_debug_free_inner called GC_free, which tried to reacquire the allocator lock, and hence deadlocked. (DBG_HDRS_ALL probably never worked with threads?) - Fixed several problems with back traces. Accidental references to a free list could cause the free list pointer to be overwritten by a back pointer. There seemed to be some problems with the encoding of root and finalizer references. Since 6.0alpha7: - Changed GC_debug_malloc_replacement and GC_debug_realloc_replacement so that they compile under Irix. (Thanks to Dave Love.) - Updated powerpc_macosx_mach_dep.s so that it works if the collector is in a dynamic library. (Thanks to Andrew Begel.) - Transformed README.debugging into debugging.html, updating and expanding it in the process. Added gcdescr.html and tree.html from the web site to the GC distribution. - Fixed several problems related to PRINT_BLACK_LIST. This involved restructuring some of the marker macros. - Fixed some problems with the sizing of objects with debug information. Finalization was broken KEEP_BACK_PTRS or PRINT_BLACK_LIST. Reduced the object size with SHORT_DEBUG_HDRS by another word. - The "Needed to allocate blacklisted ..." warning had inadvertently been turned off by default, due to a buggy test in allchblk.c. Turned it back on. - Removed the marker macros to deal with 2 pointers in interleaved fashion. They were messy and the performance improvement seemed minimal. We'll leave such scheduling issues to the compiler. - Changed Linux/PowerPC test to also check for __powerpc__ in response to a discussion on the gcc mailing list. - On Matthew Flatt's suggestion removed the "static" from the jmp_buf declaration in GC_generic_push_regs. This was causing problems in systems that register all of their own roots. It looks far more correct to me without the "static" anyway. - Fixed several problems with thread local allocation of pointerfree or typed objects. The collector was reclaiming thread-local free lists, since it wasn't following the link fields. - There was apparently a long-standing race condition related to multithreaded incremental collection. A collection could be started and a thread stopped between the memory unprotect system call and the setting of the corresponding dirt bit. I believe this did not affect Solaris or PCR, which use a different dirty-bit implementation. Fixed this by installing signal handlers with sigaction instead of signal, and disabling the thread suspend signal while in the write-protect handler. (It is unclear whether this scenario ever actually occurred. I found it while tracking down the following:) - Incremental collection did not cooperate correctly with the PARALLEL_MARK implementation of GC_malloc_many or the local_malloc primitves. It still doesn't work well, but it shouldn't lose memory anymore. - Integrated some changes from the gcc source tree that I had previously missed. (Thanks to Bryce McKinley for the reminder/diff.) - Added Makefile.direct as a copy of the default Makefile, which would normally be overwritten if configure is run. - Changed the gc.tar target in Makefile.direct to embed the version number in the gc directory name. This will affect future tar file distributions. - Changed the Irix dynamic library finding code to no longer try to eliminate writable text segments under Irix6.x, since that is probably no longer necessary, and can apparently be unsafe on occasion. (Thanks to Shiro Kawai for pointing this out.) - GC_cleanup with GC_DEBUG enabled passed a real object base address to GC_debug_register_finalizer_ignore_self, which expected a pointer past the debug header. Call GC_register_finalizer_ignore_self instead, even with debugging enabled. (Thanks to Jean-Daniel Fekete for catching this.) - The collector didn't build with call chain saving enabled but NARGS=0. (Thanks to Maarten Thibaut.) - Fixed up the GNU-style build files enough so that they work in some obvious cases. - Added initial port to Digital Mars compiler for win32. (Thanks to Walter Bright.) Since 6.0alpha8: - added README.macros. - Made gc.mak a symbolic link to work around winzip's tendency to ignore hard links. - Simplified the setting of NEED_FIND_LIMIT in os_dep.c, possibly breaking it on untested platforms. - Integrated initial GNU HURD port. (Thanks to Chris Lingard and Igor Khavkine.) - A few more fixes for Digital Mars compiler (Walter Bright). - Fixed gcc version recognition. Renamed OPERATOR_NEW_ARRAY to GC_OPERATOR_NEW_ARRAY. Changed GC_OPERATOR_NEW_ARRAY to be the default. It can be overridden with -DGC_NO_OPERATOR_NEW_ARRAY. (Thanks to Cesar Eduardo Barros.) - Changed the byte size to free-list mapping in thread local allocation so that size 0 allocations are handled correctly. - Fixed Linux/MIPS stackbottom for new toolchain. (Thanks to Ryan Murray.) - Changed finalization registration to invoke GC_oom_fn when it runs out of memory. - Removed lvalue cast in finalize.c. This caused some debug configurations not to build with some non-gcc compilers. Since 6.0alpha9: - Two more bug fixes for KEEP_BACK_PTRS and DBG_HDRS_ALL. - Fixed a stack clearing problem that resulted in SIGILL with a misaligned stack pointer for multithreaded SPARC builds. - Integrated another HURD patch (thanks to Igor Khavkine). Since 6.0: - Non-debug, atomic allocations could result in bogus smashed object reports with debugging on. (Thanks to Patrick Doyle for the small test case.) - Fixed GC_get_register_stack_base (Itanium only) to work around a glibc 2.2.4 bug. - Initial port to HP/UX on Itanium. Thread support and both 32 and 64 bit ABIs appear to work. Parallel mark support doesn't yet, due to some inline assembly code issues. Thread local allocation does appear to work. - ifdef'ed out glibc2.1/Itanium workaround. I suspect nobody is using that combination anymore. - Added a patch to make new_gc_alloc.h usable with gcc3.0. (Thanks to Dimitris Vyzovitis for the patch.) - Debugged 64-bit support on HP/UX PA-RISC. - Turned on dynamic loading support for FreeBSD/ELF. (Thanks to Peter Housel.) - Unregistering of finalizers with debugging allocation was broken. (Thanks to Jani Kajala for the test case.) - Old finalizers were not returned correctly from GC_debug_register_finalizer. - Disabled MPROTECT_VDB for Linux/M68K based on a report that it doesn't work. - Cleaned up some statistics gathering code in reclaim.c (Thanks to Walter Bright.) - Added some support for OpenBSD/ELF/Linux. (Thanks to Suzuki Toshiya.) - Added Jakub Jelinek's patch to use dl_iterate_phdr for dynamic library traversal to dyn_load.c. Changed it to weakly reference dl_iterate_phdr, so that the old code is stilll used with old versions of glibc. - Cleaned up feature test macros for various threads packages and integrated (partially functional) FreeBSD threads code from Loren Rittle. It's likely that the cleanup broke something, since it touched lots of code. It's also likelly that it fixed some unreported bugs in the less common thread implementations, since some of the original code didn't stand up to close scrutiny. Support for the next pthreads implementation should be easier to add. Since 6.1alpha1: - No longer wrap read by default in multithreaded applications. It was pointed out on the libgcj list that this holds the allocation lock for way too long if the read blocks. For now, reads into the heap are broken with incremental collection. It's possible to turn this back on if you make sure that read calls don't block (e.g. by calling select first). - Fix ifdef in Solaris_threads.h to refer to GC_SOLARIS_THREADS. - Added check for environment variable GC_IGNORE_GCJ_INFO. - Added printing of stop-the-world GC times if GC_PRINT_STATS environment variable is set. - The calloc definition in leak_detector.h was missing parentheses, and realloc was missing a second argument to GC_REALLOC. (Thanks to Elrond (elrondsamba-tng.org).) - Added GC_PRINT_BACK_HEIGHT environment variable and associated code, mostly in the new file backgraph.c. See doc/README.environment. - Added -DUSE_GLOBAL_ALLOC to work around a Windows NT issue. (Thanks to Jonathan Clark.) - Integrated port to NEC EWS4800 (MIPS-based workstation, with somewhat different address-space layout). This may help for other machines with holes in the data segment. (Thanks to Hironori Sakamoto.) - Changed the order in which GC_push_roots and friends push things onto the mark stack. GC_push_all calls need to come first, since we can't necessarily recovere if those overflow the mark stack. (Thanks to Matthew Flatt for tracking down the problem.) - Some minor cleanups to mostly support the Intel compiler on Linux/IA64. Since 6.1 alpha2: - Minor cleanup on the gcconfig.h section for SPARC. - Minor fix to support Intel compiler for I386/Linux. (Thanks to Sven Hartrumpf.) - Added SPARC V9 (64-bit) support. (Thanks to Jeff Sturm.) - Restructured the way in which we determine whether or not to keep call stacks for debug allocation. By default SAVE_CALL_COUNT is now zero on all platforms. Added SAVE_CALL_NARGS parameters. If possible, use execinfo.h to capture call stack. (This should add support for a number of new platforms, though often at considerable runtime expense.) - Try to print symbolic information for call stacks. On Linux, we do this with a combination of execinfo.h and running addr2line in a separate process. This is both much more expensive and much more useful. Amazingly, it seems to be fast enough for most purposes. - Redefined strdup if -DREDIRECT_MALLOC is given. - Changed incremental collector and MPROTECT_VDB implementation so that, under favorable conditions, pointerfree objects are not protected. Added GC_incremental_protection_needs() to determine ahead of time whether pointerfree objects may be protected. Replaced GC_write_hint() with GC_remove_protection(). - Added test for GC_ENABLE_INCREMENTAL environment variable. - Made GC_time_limit runtime configurable. Added GC_PAUSE_TIME_TARGET environment variable. - Eliminated GC_page_sz, a duplicate of GC_page_size. - Caused the Solaris and Irix thread creation primitives to call GC_init_inner(). To do: - There seem to be outstanding issues on Solaris/X86, possibly with finding the data segment starting address. Information/patches would be appreciated. - Very large root set sizes (> 16 MB or so) could cause the collector to abort with an unexpected mark stack overflow. (Thanks again to Peter Chubb.) NOT YET FIXED. Workaround is to increase the initial size. - The SGI version of the collector marks from mmapped pages, even if they are not part of dynamic library static data areas. This causes performance problems with some SGI libraries that use mmap as a bitmap allocator. NOT YET FIXED. It may be possible to turn off DYNAMIC_LOADING in the collector as a workaround. It may also be possible to conditionally intercept mmap and use GC_exclude_static_roots. The real fix is to walk rld data structures, which looks possible. - Incremental collector should handle large objects better. Currently, it looks like the whole object is treated as dirty if any part of it is. - Cord/cordprnt.c doesn't build on a few platforms (notably PowerPC), since we make some unwarranted assumptions about how varargs are handled. This currently makes the cord-aware versions of printf unusable on some platforms. Fixing this is unfortunately not trivial.