bottleneck by java.lang.Class.getAnnotations() - rebased patch (original) (raw)
Peter Levart peter.levart at gmail.com
Wed Dec 12 12:31:59 UTC 2012
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Hi all,
Ok, no problem. So here's a patch that summarizes what I did in the previous patch, but only for reflective fields (Field[], Method[], Constructor[]) not including annotations:
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/101777488/jdk8-tl/JEP-149.c/webrev/index.html
The annotations part is unchanged semantically, but I had to:
- modify private method clearCachesOnClassRedefinition to only include invalidation of annotations and declaredAnnotations fields. I also renamed it to clearAnnotationCachesOnClassRedefinition
- renamed lastRedefinedCountto lastAnnotationsRedefinedCountand, since this field is now only accessed while holding a lock (from synchronized initAnnotationsIfNecessary), I removed the volatile keyword.
That's it.
While looking at this unchanged part of code some more, I see other races as well. For example: two concurrent accesses to annotations combined with redefinition of a class can result in NPE. Here's a serial execution:
Thread 1: getAnnotation(annotationType); initAnnotationsIfNecessary();
VM: classRedefinedCount++;
Thread 2: getAnnotation(annotationType); initAnnotationsIfNecessary(); clearAnnotationCachesOnClassRedefinition(); annotations = null;
Thread 1: return AnnotationSupport.getOneAnnotation(annotations, annotationClass); // 'annotations' field can be null
So this needs to be fixed sooner or later.
Joel!
Are your JSR 308 canges involving java.lang.Class too?
Regards, Peter
On 12/12/2012 11:59 AM, Joel Borggrén-Franck wrote:
Hi all,
First, thanks all of you that are involved in this! I agree with David here, lets split this up (for now) and do reflective objects in the context of jep-149 and annotations separately. As you may know there are even more annotation coming in with JSR 308 annotations on type (use), so I want to complete that work first and then do the effort of reducing contention and overhead for both type and regular annotations and also fixing up the behaviour for redefine/retransform class. One other point to consider is that some of the fields in java/lang/reflect/ classes are known by the VM so not all changes in Java-land are actually doable. Glancing over your patches very quickly I don't think you have done anything to upset the VM, but then I am not an expert in this area. Also, with the VM permgen changes we might have to rethink our assumptions in order to reduce total overhead. For example as I understand it previously we could just ship the same pointer into permgen for the annotations arrays, now that isn't possible so we create a new copy of the array for every Field/Method/Constructor instance. Perhaps there is some clever way of eliminating those copies. So while I think your patches generally makes sense, I think it is prudent to delay this for annotations until all our new annotation features are in. cheers /Joel On Dec 10, 2012, at 7:18 AM, David Holmes <david.holmes at oracle.com> wrote:
Hi Peter,
Sorry for the delay on this. Generally your VolatileData and my ReflectionHelper are doing a similar job. But I agree with your reasoning that all of the cached SoftReferences are likely to be cleared at once, and so a SoftReference to a helper object with direct references, is more effective than a direct reference to a helper object with SoftReferences. My initial stance with this was very conservative as the more change that is introduced the more uncertainty there is about the impact. I say the above primarily because I think, if I am to proceed with this, I will need to separate out the general reflection caching changes from the annotation changes. There are a number of reasons for this: First, I'm not at all familiar with the implementation of annotations at the VM or Java level, and the recent changes in this area just exacerbate my ignorance of the mechanics. So I don't feel qualified to evaluate that aspect. Second, the bulk of the reflection caching code is simplified by the fact that due to current constraints on class redefinition the caching is effectively idempotent for fields/methods/constructors. But that is not the case for annotations. Finally, the use of synchronization with the annotations method is perplexing me. I sent Joe a private email on this but I may as well raise it here - and I think you have alluded to this in your earlier emails as well: initAnnotationsIfNecessary() is a synchronized instance method but I can not find any other code in the VM that synchronizes on the Class object's monitor. So if this synchronization is trying to establish consistency in the face of class redefinition, I do not see where class redefinition is participating in the synchronization! So what I would like to do is take your basic VolatileData part of the patch and run with it for JEP-149 purposes, while separating the annotations issue so they can be dealt with by the experts in that particular area. I'm sorry it has taken so long to arrive at a fairly negative position, but I need someone else to take up the annotations gauntlet and run with it. Thanks, David On 3/12/2012 5:41 PM, Peter Levart wrote: Hi David, Alan, Alexander and others,
In the meanwhile I have added another annotations space optimization to the patch. If a Class doesn't inherit any annotations from a superclass, which I think is a common case, it assigns the same Map instance to "annotations" as well as "declaredAnnotations" fields. Previously - and in the original code - this only happened for java.lang.Object and interfaces. Here's the updated webrev: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/101777488/jdk8-tl/JEP-149/webrev.02/index.html I have also rewritten the performance micro-benchmarks. With the addition of repeating annotations, one performance aspect surfaces: when asking for a particular annotation type on a Class and that annotation is not present, the new repeating annotations support method AnnotationSupport.getOneAnnotation asks for @ContainedBy meta-annotation on the annotation type. This can result in an even more apparent synchronization hot-spot with original code that uses synchronized initAnnotationsIfNecessary(). This aspect is tested with the 3rd test. Other 2 tests test the same thing as before but are more stable now, since now they measure retrieval of 5 different annotation types from each AnnotatedElement, previously they only measured retrieval of 1 which was very sensitive to HashMap irregularities (it could happen that a particular key mapped to a bucket that was overloaded in one test-run and not in another)... Here're the new tests: https://raw.github.com/plevart/jdk8-tl/JEP-149/test/src/test/ReflectionTest.java And the corresponding results when run on an i7 CPU on Linux: https://raw.github.com/plevart/jdk8-tl/JEP-149/test/benchmarkresultsi7-2600K.txt
Regards, Peter
On 12/03/2012 02:15 AM, David Holmes wrote: On 1/12/2012 4:54 AM, Alan Bateman wrote: On 30/11/2012 18:36, Peter Levart wrote: : So, what do you think? What kind of tests should I prepare in addidion to those 3 so that the patch might get a consideration? I think this is good work and thanks for re-basing your patch. I know David plans to do a detail review. I think it will require extensive performance testing too, perhaps with some large applications. Indeed I do plan a detailed review and have initiated some initial performance tests. I am also swamped but will try to get to the review this week - and will also need to check the referenced annotations updates. David -Alan
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