Ok, first I'm sorry for the evil upload. That was the first at hand :$. I'll get a more trustful way to do it the next one... Second, thanks for taking the time to look at it :).
Now, I've some questions:
- this "bug" is particular to Cog, isn't it? I mean, only related to inlining with JIT, so a Stack vm does not play with these rules, right? - Why is voiding the cache hackish? I mean, replacing the special objects array is a very low level operation, and a very special one which is not commonly performed. Voiding the cache looks like normal to me in such a case...
Tx! Guille
On Mon, Mar 25, 2013 at 11:56 PM, Eliot Miranda eliot.miranda@gmail.comwrote:
On Mon, Mar 25, 2013 at 3:22 PM, Camillo Bruni camillobruni@gmail.comwrote:
Thanks for the findings!
you're welcome :)
I opened an issue http://bugs.pharo.org/issues/id/10134 with the contents of your solution.
I think for completeness we should implement both solution, and of course use the one that does not #becomeForward: in the standard case.
To be clear, becomeForward: is the correct way to install the specialObjectsArray. The issue is what entries in the specialObjectsArray need to remain constant. The Character table, the compactClassesArray, all the classes and a few other entries (semaphores, etc) must remain the same. This could do with better documenting of the method :-/
On 2013-03-25, at 19:52, Eliot Miranda eliot.miranda@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Guille,
thanks for this. The problem is that Pharo's recreateSpecialObjectsArray uses newCompactClassesArray to recreate the compact classes array and on Cog that is not supported. Cog caches the compactClassesArray (specialObjectsArray at: 29) in every jitted method prolog to reduce the time taken to derive the receiver's class in
message
lookup. The Pharo 2.0 code for recreating the specialObjectsArray can therefore create a dangling pointer where the only reference to the old compactClassesArray is in machine code, and the machine code GC doesn't cope with there being roots in machine code. Note that Cog also caches
the
characterTable and class SmallInteger in machine code.
There are two solutions to this. One would be to reuse the compactClassesArray (my recommendation). So
that
recreateSpecialObjectsArray looks like
... "An array of the 255 Characters in ascii order. Cog inlines table into machine code at: prim so do not regenerate it." newArray at: 25 put: Character characterTable. ... "A 32-element array with up to 32 classes that have compact instances. Cog inlines table into machine code class lookup so do not regenerate
it."
newArray at: 29 put: self compactClassesArray. ...
where compactClassesArray, like Character characterTable, answers the existing object.
The second solution (rather hackish) is to void all machine code on installing the new specialObjectsArray. e.g. recreateSpecialObjectsArray "Smalltalk recreateSpecialObjectsArray" "To external package developers: **** DO NOT OVERRIDE THIS METHOD. ***** If you are writing a plugin and need additional special object(s) for
your
own use, use addGCRoot() function and use own, separate special objects registry
"
"The Special Objects Array is an array of objects used by the Squeak virtual machine. Its contents are critical and accesses to it by the VM are unchecked, so don't even think of playing here unless you know what you are doing." "Replace the interpreter's reference in one atomic operation. Void machine code to avoid crashing Cog." | newSpecialObjectsArray | newSpecialObjectsArray := self newSpecialObjectsArray. self specialObjectsArray becomeForward: newSpecialObjectsArray. Smalltalk vm voidCogVMState
this is my fault for not ensuring recreateSpecialObjectsArray was
properly
commented. I had commented the inlining of Character table, but not the inlining of the CompactClasses array. Apologies.
HTH, Eliot
On Sat, Mar 23, 2013 at 10:19 AM, Guillermo Polito < guillermopolito@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi!
In my quest to crash the vm, i've found an ugly common case :(. I am trying to port the opendbx driver to 2.0, but I'm getting vm
crashes
when my configuration loads FFI :(. I updated my configuration to load version 1.7 of FFI (which I assume is the latest).
I tried to do it in Pharo 2.0 with latest pharovm, and with eliot's Cog 2701 from his website, failing in both cases. The snippet of code that gets a sistematic crash is:
Gofer it smalltalkhubUser: 'DBXTalk' project: 'DBXTalkDriver'; package: 'ConfigurationOfOpenDBXDriver'; load. ((Smalltalk at: #ConfigurationOfOpenDBXDriver) project version:#stable) load
This snippet crashes always with a segmentation fault (at least the fifteen times i tried :), with several different output in the
console...
Surprisingly, if I load FFI alone and not from the OpenDBXDriver configuration, it loads well... :/
So I'm deferring the OpenDBX port a bit longer :(
Thanks! Guille
-- best, Eliot
-- best, Eliot