diff options
author | Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org> | 2017-08-02 20:34:06 -0400 |
---|---|---|
committer | Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> | 2018-06-15 08:18:48 -1000 |
commit | 194125e3ebd553acb02aaf3797a4f0387493fe94 (patch) | |
tree | 52dbde720bee78205de3d475cabf1e80bfc24388 /include/exec | |
parent | 95590e24af11236ef334f6bc3e2b71404a790ddb (diff) |
translate-all: protect TB jumps with a per-destination-TB lock
This applies to both user-mode and !user-mode emulation.
Instead of relying on a global lock, protect the list of incoming
jumps with tb->jmp_lock. This lock also protects tb->cflags,
so update all tb->cflags readers outside tb->jmp_lock to use
atomic reads via tb_cflags().
In order to find the destination TB (and therefore its jmp_lock)
from the origin TB, we introduce tb->jmp_dest[].
I considered not using a linked list of jumps, which simplifies
code and makes the struct smaller. However, it unnecessarily increases
memory usage, which results in a performance decrease. See for
instance these numbers booting+shutting down debian-arm:
Time (s) Rel. err (%) Abs. err (s) Rel. slowdown (%)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
before 20.88 0.74 0.154512 0.
after 20.81 0.38 0.079078 -0.33524904
GTree 21.02 0.28 0.058856 0.67049808
GHashTable + xxhash 21.63 1.08 0.233604 3.5919540
Using a hash table or a binary tree to keep track of the jumps
doesn't really pay off, not only due to the increased memory usage,
but also because most TBs have only 0 or 1 jumps to them. The maximum
number of jumps when booting debian-arm that I measured is 35, but
as we can see in the histogram below a TB with that many incoming jumps
is extremely rare; the average TB has 0.80 incoming jumps.
n_jumps: 379208; avg jumps/tb: 0.801099
dist: [0.0,1.0)|▄█▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁ ▁▁▁▁▁▁ ▁▁▁ ▁▁▁ ▁|[34.0,35.0]
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'include/exec')
-rw-r--r-- | include/exec/exec-all.h | 35 |
1 files changed, 22 insertions, 13 deletions
diff --git a/include/exec/exec-all.h b/include/exec/exec-all.h index 4f07a17052..3c2a0efb55 100644 --- a/include/exec/exec-all.h +++ b/include/exec/exec-all.h @@ -345,7 +345,7 @@ struct TranslationBlock { #define CF_LAST_IO 0x00008000 /* Last insn may be an IO access. */ #define CF_NOCACHE 0x00010000 /* To be freed after execution */ #define CF_USE_ICOUNT 0x00020000 -#define CF_INVALID 0x00040000 /* TB is stale. Setters need tb_lock */ +#define CF_INVALID 0x00040000 /* TB is stale. Set with @jmp_lock held */ #define CF_PARALLEL 0x00080000 /* Generate code for a parallel context */ /* cflags' mask for hashing/comparison */ #define CF_HASH_MASK \ @@ -364,6 +364,9 @@ struct TranslationBlock { uintptr_t page_next[2]; tb_page_addr_t page_addr[2]; + /* jmp_lock placed here to fill a 4-byte hole. Its documentation is below */ + QemuSpin jmp_lock; + /* The following data are used to directly call another TB from * the code of this one. This can be done either by emitting direct or * indirect native jump instructions. These jumps are reset so that the TB @@ -375,20 +378,26 @@ struct TranslationBlock { #define TB_JMP_RESET_OFFSET_INVALID 0xffff /* indicates no jump generated */ uintptr_t jmp_target_arg[2]; /* target address or offset */ - /* Each TB has an associated circular list of TBs jumping to this one. - * jmp_list_first points to the first TB jumping to this one. - * jmp_list_next is used to point to the next TB in a list. - * Since each TB can have two jumps, it can participate in two lists. - * jmp_list_first and jmp_list_next are 4-byte aligned pointers to a - * TranslationBlock structure, but the two least significant bits of - * them are used to encode which data field of the pointed TB should - * be used to traverse the list further from that TB: - * 0 => jmp_list_next[0], 1 => jmp_list_next[1], 2 => jmp_list_first. - * In other words, 0/1 tells which jump is used in the pointed TB, - * and 2 means that this is a pointer back to the target TB of this list. + /* + * Each TB has a NULL-terminated list (jmp_list_head) of incoming jumps. + * Each TB can have two outgoing jumps, and therefore can participate + * in two lists. The list entries are kept in jmp_list_next[2]. The least + * significant bit (LSB) of the pointers in these lists is used to encode + * which of the two list entries is to be used in the pointed TB. + * + * List traversals are protected by jmp_lock. The destination TB of each + * outgoing jump is kept in jmp_dest[] so that the appropriate jmp_lock + * can be acquired from any origin TB. + * + * jmp_dest[] are tagged pointers as well. The LSB is set when the TB is + * being invalidated, so that no further outgoing jumps from it can be set. + * + * jmp_lock also protects the CF_INVALID cflag; a jump must not be chained + * to a destination TB that has CF_INVALID set. */ + uintptr_t jmp_list_head; uintptr_t jmp_list_next[2]; - uintptr_t jmp_list_first; + uintptr_t jmp_dest[2]; }; extern bool parallel_cpus; |