2173 lines
		
	
	
		
			119 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			C
		
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			2173 lines
		
	
	
		
			119 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			C
		
	
	
| /*
 | |
|  * Copyright 1988, 1989 Hans-J. Boehm, Alan J. Demers
 | |
|  * Copyright (c) 1991-1995 by Xerox Corporation.  All rights reserved.
 | |
|  * Copyright 1996-1999 by Silicon Graphics.  All rights reserved.
 | |
|  * Copyright 1999 by Hewlett-Packard Company.  All rights reserved.
 | |
|  * Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc
 | |
|  * Copyright (c) 2000-2011 by Hewlett-Packard Development Company.
 | |
|  * Copyright (c) 2009-2020 Ivan Maidanski
 | |
|  *
 | |
|  * THIS MATERIAL IS PROVIDED AS IS, WITH ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY EXPRESSED
 | |
|  * OR IMPLIED.  ANY USE IS AT YOUR OWN RISK.
 | |
|  *
 | |
|  * Permission is hereby granted to use or copy this program
 | |
|  * for any purpose,  provided the above notices are retained on all copies.
 | |
|  * Permission to modify the code and to distribute modified code is granted,
 | |
|  * provided the above notices are retained, and a notice that the code was
 | |
|  * modified is included with the above copyright notice.
 | |
|  */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /*
 | |
|  * Note that this defines a large number of tuning hooks, which can
 | |
|  * safely be ignored in nearly all cases.  For normal use it suffices
 | |
|  * to call only GC_MALLOC and perhaps GC_REALLOC.
 | |
|  * For better performance, also look at GC_MALLOC_ATOMIC, and
 | |
|  * GC_enable_incremental.  If you need an action to be performed
 | |
|  * immediately before an object is collected, look at GC_register_finalizer.
 | |
|  * Everything else is best ignored unless you encounter performance
 | |
|  * problems.
 | |
|  */
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifndef GC_H
 | |
| #define GC_H
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Help debug mixed up preprocessor symbols.    */
 | |
| #if (defined(WIN64) && !defined(_WIN64)) && defined(_MSC_VER)
 | |
| #pragma message("Warning: Expecting _WIN64 for x64 targets! Notice the leading underscore!")
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #include "gc_version.h"
 | |
|         /* Define version numbers here to allow test on build machine   */
 | |
|         /* for cross-builds.  Note that this defines the header         */
 | |
|         /* version number, which may or may not match that of the       */
 | |
|         /* dynamic library.  GC_get_version() can be used to obtain     */
 | |
|         /* the latter.                                                  */
 | |
| 
 | |
| #include "gc_config_macros.h"
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef __cplusplus
 | |
|   extern "C" {
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| typedef void * GC_PTR;  /* preserved only for backward compatibility    */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Define word and signed_word to be unsigned and signed types of the   */
 | |
| /* size as char * or void *.  There seems to be no way to do this       */
 | |
| /* even semi-portably.  The following is probably no better/worse       */
 | |
| /* than almost anything else.                                           */
 | |
| /* The ANSI standard suggests that size_t and ptrdiff_t might be        */
 | |
| /* better choices.  But those had incorrect definitions on some older   */
 | |
| /* systems.  Notably "typedef int size_t" is WRONG.                     */
 | |
| #ifdef _WIN64
 | |
| # if defined(__int64) && !defined(CPPCHECK)
 | |
|     typedef unsigned __int64 GC_word;
 | |
|     typedef __int64 GC_signed_word;
 | |
| # else
 | |
|     typedef unsigned long long GC_word;
 | |
|     typedef long long GC_signed_word;
 | |
| # endif
 | |
| #else
 | |
|   typedef unsigned long GC_word;
 | |
|   typedef long GC_signed_word;
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Get the GC library version. The returned value is a constant in the  */
 | |
| /* form: ((version_major<<16) | (version_minor<<8) | version_micro).    */
 | |
| GC_API unsigned GC_CALL GC_get_version(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Public read-only variables */
 | |
| /* The supplied getter functions are preferred for new code.            */
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED GC_word GC_gc_no;
 | |
|                         /* Counter incremented per collection.          */
 | |
|                         /* Includes empty GCs at startup.               */
 | |
| GC_API GC_word GC_CALL GC_get_gc_no(void);
 | |
|                         /* GC_get_gc_no() is unsynchronized, so         */
 | |
|                         /* it requires GC_call_with_alloc_lock() to     */
 | |
|                         /* avoid data races on multiprocessors.         */
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef GC_THREADS
 | |
|   GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED int GC_parallel;
 | |
|                         /* GC is parallelized for performance on        */
 | |
|                         /* multiprocessors.  Set to a non-zero value    */
 | |
|                         /* only implicitly if collector is built with   */
 | |
|                         /* PARALLEL_MARK defined, and if either         */
 | |
|                         /* GC_MARKERS (or GC_NPROCS) environment        */
 | |
|                         /* variable is set to > 1, or multiple cores    */
 | |
|                         /* (processors) are available, or the client    */
 | |
|                         /* calls GC_set_markers_count() before the GC   */
 | |
|                         /* initialization.  The getter does             */
 | |
|                         /* not use or need synchronization (i.e.        */
 | |
|                         /* acquiring the GC lock).  GC_parallel value   */
 | |
|                         /* is equal to the number of marker threads     */
 | |
|                         /* minus one (i.e. number of existing parallel  */
 | |
|                         /* marker threads excluding the initiating one).*/
 | |
|   GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_parallel(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* Set the number of marker threads (including the initiating one)    */
 | |
|   /* to the desired value at start-up.  Zero value means the collector  */
 | |
|   /* is to decide.  Has no effect if called after GC initialization.    */
 | |
|   /* If the correct non-zero value is passed, then GC_parallel should   */
 | |
|   /* be set to the value minus one.  The function does not use any      */
 | |
|   /* synchronization.                                                   */
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_markers_count(unsigned);
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Public R/W variables */
 | |
| /* The supplied setter and getter functions are preferred for new code. */
 | |
| 
 | |
| typedef void * (GC_CALLBACK * GC_oom_func)(size_t /* bytes_requested */);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED GC_oom_func GC_oom_fn;
 | |
|                         /* When there is insufficient memory to satisfy */
 | |
|                         /* an allocation request, we return             */
 | |
|                         /* (*GC_oom_fn)(size).  By default this just    */
 | |
|                         /* returns NULL.                                */
 | |
|                         /* If it returns, it must return 0 or a valid   */
 | |
|                         /* pointer to a previously allocated heap       */
 | |
|                         /* object.  GC_oom_fn must not be 0.            */
 | |
|                         /* Both the supplied setter and the getter      */
 | |
|                         /* acquire the GC lock (to avoid data races).   */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_oom_fn(GC_oom_func) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| GC_API GC_oom_func GC_CALL GC_get_oom_fn(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| typedef void (GC_CALLBACK * GC_on_heap_resize_proc)(GC_word /* new_size */);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED GC_on_heap_resize_proc GC_on_heap_resize;
 | |
|                         /* Invoked when the heap grows or shrinks.      */
 | |
|                         /* Called with the world stopped (and the       */
 | |
|                         /* allocation lock held).  May be 0.            */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_on_heap_resize(GC_on_heap_resize_proc);
 | |
| GC_API GC_on_heap_resize_proc GC_CALL GC_get_on_heap_resize(void);
 | |
|                         /* Both the supplied setter and the getter      */
 | |
|                         /* acquire the GC lock (to avoid data races).   */
 | |
| 
 | |
| typedef enum {
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_START /* COLLECTION */,
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_MARK_START,
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_MARK_END,
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_RECLAIM_START,
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_RECLAIM_END,
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_END /* COLLECTION */,
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_PRE_STOP_WORLD /* STOPWORLD_BEGIN */,
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_POST_STOP_WORLD /* STOPWORLD_END */,
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_PRE_START_WORLD /* STARTWORLD_BEGIN */,
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_POST_START_WORLD /* STARTWORLD_END */,
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_THREAD_SUSPENDED,
 | |
|     GC_EVENT_THREAD_UNSUSPENDED
 | |
| } GC_EventType;
 | |
| 
 | |
| typedef void (GC_CALLBACK * GC_on_collection_event_proc)(GC_EventType);
 | |
|                         /* Invoked to indicate progress through the     */
 | |
|                         /* collection process.  Not used for thread     */
 | |
|                         /* suspend/resume notifications.  Called with   */
 | |
|                         /* the GC lock held (or, even, the world        */
 | |
|                         /* stopped).  May be 0 (means no notifier).     */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_on_collection_event(GC_on_collection_event_proc);
 | |
| GC_API GC_on_collection_event_proc GC_CALL GC_get_on_collection_event(void);
 | |
|                         /* Both the supplied setter and the getter      */
 | |
|                         /* acquire the GC lock (to avoid data races).   */
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_THREADS) || (defined(GC_BUILD) && defined(NN_PLATFORM_CTR))
 | |
|   typedef void (GC_CALLBACK * GC_on_thread_event_proc)(GC_EventType,
 | |
|                                                 void * /* thread_id */);
 | |
|                         /* Invoked when a thread is suspended or        */
 | |
|                         /* resumed during collection.  Called with the  */
 | |
|                         /* GC lock held (and the world stopped          */
 | |
|                         /* partially).  May be 0 (means no notifier).   */
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_on_thread_event(GC_on_thread_event_proc);
 | |
|   GC_API GC_on_thread_event_proc GC_CALL GC_get_on_thread_event(void);
 | |
|                         /* Both the supplied setter and the getter      */
 | |
|                         /* acquire the GC lock (to avoid data races).   */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED int GC_find_leak;
 | |
|                         /* Set to true to turn on the leak-finding mode */
 | |
|                         /* (do not actually garbage collect, but simply */
 | |
|                         /* report inaccessible memory that was not      */
 | |
|                         /* deallocated with GC_FREE).  Initial value    */
 | |
|                         /* is determined by FIND_LEAK macro.            */
 | |
|                         /* The value should not typically be modified   */
 | |
|                         /* after GC initialization (and, thus, it does  */
 | |
|                         /* not use or need synchronization).            */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_find_leak(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_find_leak(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED int GC_all_interior_pointers;
 | |
|                         /* Arrange for pointers to object interiors to  */
 | |
|                         /* be recognized as valid.  Typically should    */
 | |
|                         /* not be changed after GC initialization (in   */
 | |
|                         /* case of calling it after the GC is           */
 | |
|                         /* initialized, the setter acquires the GC lock */
 | |
|                         /* (to avoid data races).  The initial value    */
 | |
|                         /* depends on whether the GC is built with      */
 | |
|                         /* ALL_INTERIOR_POINTERS macro defined or not.  */
 | |
|                         /* Unless DONT_ADD_BYTE_AT_END is defined, this */
 | |
|                         /* also affects whether sizes are increased by  */
 | |
|                         /* at least a byte to allow "off the end"       */
 | |
|                         /* pointer recognition.  Must be only 0 or 1.   */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_all_interior_pointers(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_all_interior_pointers(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED int GC_finalize_on_demand;
 | |
|                         /* If nonzero, finalizers will only be run in   */
 | |
|                         /* response to an explicit GC_invoke_finalizers */
 | |
|                         /* call.  The default is determined by whether  */
 | |
|                         /* the FINALIZE_ON_DEMAND macro is defined      */
 | |
|                         /* when the collector is built.                 */
 | |
|                         /* The setter and getter are unsynchronized.    */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_finalize_on_demand(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_finalize_on_demand(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED int GC_java_finalization;
 | |
|                         /* Mark objects reachable from finalizable      */
 | |
|                         /* objects in a separate post-pass.  This makes */
 | |
|                         /* it a bit safer to use non-topologically-     */
 | |
|                         /* ordered finalization.  Default value is      */
 | |
|                         /* determined by JAVA_FINALIZATION macro.       */
 | |
|                         /* Enables register_finalizer_unreachable to    */
 | |
|                         /* work correctly.                              */
 | |
|                         /* The setter and getter are unsynchronized.    */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_java_finalization(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_java_finalization(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| typedef void (GC_CALLBACK * GC_finalizer_notifier_proc)(void);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED GC_finalizer_notifier_proc GC_finalizer_notifier;
 | |
|                         /* Invoked by the collector when there are      */
 | |
|                         /* objects to be finalized.  Invoked at most    */
 | |
|                         /* once per GC cycle.  Never invoked unless     */
 | |
|                         /* GC_finalize_on_demand is set.                */
 | |
|                         /* Typically this will notify a finalization    */
 | |
|                         /* thread, which will call GC_invoke_finalizers */
 | |
|                         /* in response.  May be 0 (means no notifier).  */
 | |
|                         /* Both the supplied setter and the getter      */
 | |
|                         /* acquire the GC lock (to avoid data races).   */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_finalizer_notifier(GC_finalizer_notifier_proc);
 | |
| GC_API GC_finalizer_notifier_proc GC_CALL GC_get_finalizer_notifier(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API
 | |
| # ifndef GC_DONT_GC
 | |
|     GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED
 | |
| # endif
 | |
|   int GC_dont_gc;       /* != 0 ==> Do not collect.  This overrides     */
 | |
|                         /* explicit GC_gcollect() calls as well.        */
 | |
|                         /* Used as a counter, so that nested enabling   */
 | |
|                         /* and disabling work correctly.  Should        */
 | |
|                         /* normally be updated with GC_enable() and     */
 | |
|                         /* GC_disable() calls.  Direct assignment to    */
 | |
|                         /* GC_dont_gc is deprecated.  To check whether  */
 | |
|                         /* GC is disabled, GC_is_disabled() is          */
 | |
|                         /* preferred for new code.                      */
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED int GC_dont_expand;
 | |
|                         /* Do not expand the heap unless explicitly     */
 | |
|                         /* requested or forced to.  The setter and      */
 | |
|                         /* getter are unsynchronized.                   */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_dont_expand(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_dont_expand(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED int GC_use_entire_heap;
 | |
|                 /* Causes the non-incremental collector to use the      */
 | |
|                 /* entire heap before collecting.  This sometimes       */
 | |
|                 /* results in more large block fragmentation, since     */
 | |
|                 /* very large blocks will tend to get broken up         */
 | |
|                 /* during each GC cycle.  It is likely to result in a   */
 | |
|                 /* larger working set, but lower collection             */
 | |
|                 /* frequencies, and hence fewer instructions executed   */
 | |
|                 /* in the collector.                                    */
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED int GC_full_freq;
 | |
|                             /* Number of partial collections between    */
 | |
|                             /* full collections.  Matters only if       */
 | |
|                             /* GC_is_incremental_mode().                */
 | |
|                             /* Full collections are also triggered if   */
 | |
|                             /* the collector detects a substantial      */
 | |
|                             /* increase in the number of in-use heap    */
 | |
|                             /* blocks.  Values in the tens are now      */
 | |
|                             /* perfectly reasonable, unlike for         */
 | |
|                             /* earlier GC versions.                     */
 | |
|                         /* The setter and getter are unsynchronized, so */
 | |
|                         /* GC_call_with_alloc_lock() is required to     */
 | |
|                         /* avoid data races (if the value is modified   */
 | |
|                         /* after the GC is put to multi-threaded mode). */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_full_freq(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_full_freq(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED GC_word GC_non_gc_bytes;
 | |
|                         /* Bytes not considered candidates for          */
 | |
|                         /* collection.  Used only to control scheduling */
 | |
|                         /* of collections.  Updated by                  */
 | |
|                         /* GC_malloc_uncollectable and GC_free.         */
 | |
|                         /* Wizards only.                                */
 | |
|                         /* The setter and getter are unsynchronized, so */
 | |
|                         /* GC_call_with_alloc_lock() is required to     */
 | |
|                         /* avoid data races (if the value is modified   */
 | |
|                         /* after the GC is put to multi-threaded mode). */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_non_gc_bytes(GC_word);
 | |
| GC_API GC_word GC_CALL GC_get_non_gc_bytes(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED int GC_no_dls;
 | |
|                         /* Don't register dynamic library data segments. */
 | |
|                         /* Wizards only.  Should be used only if the     */
 | |
|                         /* application explicitly registers all roots.   */
 | |
|                         /* (In some environments like Microsoft Windows  */
 | |
|                         /* and Apple's Darwin, this may also prevent     */
 | |
|                         /* registration of the main data segment as part */
 | |
|                         /* of the root set.)                             */
 | |
|                         /* The setter and getter are unsynchronized.     */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_no_dls(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_no_dls(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED GC_word GC_free_space_divisor;
 | |
|                         /* We try to make sure that we allocate at      */
 | |
|                         /* least N/GC_free_space_divisor bytes between  */
 | |
|                         /* collections, where N is twice the number     */
 | |
|                         /* of traced bytes, plus the number of untraced */
 | |
|                         /* bytes (bytes in "atomic" objects), plus      */
 | |
|                         /* a rough estimate of the root set size.       */
 | |
|                         /* N approximates GC tracing work per GC.       */
 | |
|                         /* The initial value is GC_FREE_SPACE_DIVISOR.  */
 | |
|                         /* Increasing its value will use less space     */
 | |
|                         /* but more collection time.  Decreasing it     */
 | |
|                         /* will appreciably decrease collection time    */
 | |
|                         /* at the expense of space.                     */
 | |
|                         /* The setter and getter are unsynchronized, so */
 | |
|                         /* GC_call_with_alloc_lock() is required to     */
 | |
|                         /* avoid data races (if the value is modified   */
 | |
|                         /* after the GC is put to multi-threaded mode). */
 | |
|                         /* In GC v7.1 (and before), the setter returned */
 | |
|                         /* the old value.                               */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_free_space_divisor(GC_word);
 | |
| GC_API GC_word GC_CALL GC_get_free_space_divisor(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED GC_word GC_max_retries;
 | |
|                         /* The maximum number of GCs attempted before   */
 | |
|                         /* reporting out of memory after heap           */
 | |
|                         /* expansion fails.  Initially 0.               */
 | |
|                         /* The setter and getter are unsynchronized, so */
 | |
|                         /* GC_call_with_alloc_lock() is required to     */
 | |
|                         /* avoid data races (if the value is modified   */
 | |
|                         /* after the GC is put to multi-threaded mode). */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_max_retries(GC_word);
 | |
| GC_API GC_word GC_CALL GC_get_max_retries(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED char *GC_stackbottom;
 | |
|                                 /* The cold end (bottom) of user stack. */
 | |
|                                 /* May be set in the client prior to    */
 | |
|                                 /* calling any GC_ routines.  This      */
 | |
|                                 /* avoids some overhead, and            */
 | |
|                                 /* potentially some signals that can    */
 | |
|                                 /* confuse debuggers.  Otherwise the    */
 | |
|                                 /* collector attempts to set it         */
 | |
|                                 /* automatically.                       */
 | |
|                                 /* For multi-threaded code, this is the */
 | |
|                                 /* cold end of the stack for the        */
 | |
|                                 /* primordial thread.  Portable clients */
 | |
|                                 /* should use GC_get_stack_base(),      */
 | |
|                                 /* GC_call_with_gc_active() and         */
 | |
|                                 /* GC_register_my_thread() instead.     */
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED int GC_dont_precollect;
 | |
|                                 /* Do not collect as part of GC         */
 | |
|                                 /* initialization.  Should be set only  */
 | |
|                                 /* if the client wants a chance to      */
 | |
|                                 /* manually initialize the root set     */
 | |
|                                 /* before the first collection.         */
 | |
|                                 /* Interferes with blacklisting.        */
 | |
|                                 /* Wizards only.  The setter and getter */
 | |
|                                 /* are unsynchronized (and no external  */
 | |
|                                 /* locking is needed since the value is */
 | |
|                                 /* accessed at GC initialization only). */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_dont_precollect(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_dont_precollect(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED unsigned long GC_time_limit;
 | |
|                                /* If incremental collection is enabled, */
 | |
|                                /* we try to terminate collections       */
 | |
|                                /* after this many milliseconds (plus    */
 | |
|                                /* the amount of nanoseconds as given in */
 | |
|                                /* the latest GC_set_time_limit_tv call, */
 | |
|                                /* if any).  Not a hard time bound.      */
 | |
|                                /* Setting this variable to              */
 | |
|                                /* GC_TIME_UNLIMITED will essentially    */
 | |
|                                /* disable incremental collection while  */
 | |
|                                /* leaving generational collection       */
 | |
|                                /* enabled.                              */
 | |
| #define GC_TIME_UNLIMITED 999999
 | |
|                                /* Setting GC_time_limit to this value   */
 | |
|                                /* will disable the "pause time exceeded"*/
 | |
|                                /* tests.                                */
 | |
|                         /* The setter and getter are unsynchronized, so */
 | |
|                         /* GC_call_with_alloc_lock() is required to     */
 | |
|                         /* avoid data races (if the value is modified   */
 | |
|                         /* after the GC is put to multi-threaded mode). */
 | |
|                         /* The setter does not update the value of the  */
 | |
|                         /* nanosecond part of the time limit (it is     */
 | |
|                         /* zero unless ever set by GC_set_time_limit_tv */
 | |
|                         /* call).                                       */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_time_limit(unsigned long);
 | |
| GC_API unsigned long GC_CALL GC_get_time_limit(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* A portable type definition of time with a nanosecond precision.      */
 | |
| struct GC_timeval_s {
 | |
|   unsigned long tv_ms;  /* time in milliseconds */
 | |
|   unsigned long tv_nsec;/* nanoseconds fraction (<1000000) */
 | |
| };
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Public procedures */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Set/get the time limit of the incremental collections.  This is      */
 | |
| /* similar to GC_set_time_limit and GC_get_time_limit but the time is   */
 | |
| /* provided with the nanosecond precision.  The value of tv_nsec part   */
 | |
| /* should be less than a million.  If the value of tv_ms part is        */
 | |
| /* GC_TIME_UNLIMITED then tv_nsec is ignored.  Initially, the value of  */
 | |
| /* tv_nsec part of the time limit is zero.  The functions do not use    */
 | |
| /* any synchronization.  Defined only if the library has been compiled  */
 | |
| /* without NO_CLOCK.                                                    */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_time_limit_tv(struct GC_timeval_s);
 | |
| GC_API struct GC_timeval_s GC_CALL GC_get_time_limit_tv(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Set/get the minimum value of the ratio of allocated bytes since GC   */
 | |
| /* to the amount of finalizers created since that GC (value >           */
 | |
| /* GC_bytes_allocd / (GC_fo_entries - last_fo_entries)) which triggers  */
 | |
| /* the collection instead heap expansion.  The value has no effect in   */
 | |
| /* the GC incremental mode.  The default value is 10000 unless          */
 | |
| /* GC_ALLOCD_BYTES_PER_FINALIZER macro with a custom value is defined   */
 | |
| /* to build libgc.  The default value might be not the right choice for */
 | |
| /* clients where e.g. most objects have a finalizer.  Zero value        */
 | |
| /* effectively disables taking amount of finalizers in the decision     */
 | |
| /* whether to collect or not.  The functions do not use any             */
 | |
| /* synchronization.                                                     */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_allocd_bytes_per_finalizer(GC_word);
 | |
| GC_API GC_word GC_CALL GC_get_allocd_bytes_per_finalizer(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Tell the collector to start various performance measurements.        */
 | |
| /* Only the total time taken by full collections is calculated, as      */
 | |
| /* of now.  And, currently, there is no way to stop the measurements.   */
 | |
| /* The function does not use any synchronization.  Defined only if the  */
 | |
| /* library has been compiled without NO_CLOCK.                          */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_start_performance_measurement(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Get the total time of all full collections since the start of the    */
 | |
| /* performance measurements.  The measurement unit is one millisecond.  */
 | |
| /* Note that the returned value wraps around on overflow.               */
 | |
| /* The function does not use any synchronization.  Defined only if the  */
 | |
| /* library has been compiled without NO_CLOCK.                          */
 | |
| GC_API unsigned long GC_CALL GC_get_full_gc_total_time(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Set whether the GC will allocate executable memory pages or not.     */
 | |
| /* A non-zero argument instructs the collector to allocate memory with  */
 | |
| /* the executable flag on.  Must be called before the collector is      */
 | |
| /* initialized.  May have no effect on some platforms.  The default     */
 | |
| /* value is controlled by NO_EXECUTE_PERMISSION macro (if present then  */
 | |
| /* the flag is off).  Portable clients should have                      */
 | |
| /* GC_set_pages_executable(1) call (before GC_INIT) provided they are   */
 | |
| /* going to execute code on any of the GC-allocated memory objects.     */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_pages_executable(int);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Returns non-zero value if the GC is set to the allocate-executable   */
 | |
| /* mode.  The mode could be changed by GC_set_pages_executable (before  */
 | |
| /* GC_INIT) unless the former has no effect on the platform.  Does not  */
 | |
| /* use or need synchronization (i.e. acquiring the allocator lock).     */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_pages_executable(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* The setter and getter of the minimum value returned by the internal  */
 | |
| /* min_bytes_allocd().  The value should not be zero; the default value */
 | |
| /* is one.  Not synchronized.                                           */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_min_bytes_allocd(size_t);
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_min_bytes_allocd(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Set/get the size in pages of units operated by GC_collect_a_little.  */
 | |
| /* The value should not be zero.  Not synchronized.                     */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_rate(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_rate(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Set/get the maximum number of prior attempts at the world-stop       */
 | |
| /* marking.  Not synchronized.                                          */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_max_prior_attempts(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_max_prior_attempts(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Control whether to disable algorithm deciding if a collection should */
 | |
| /* be started when we allocated enough to amortize GC.  Both the setter */
 | |
| /* and the getter acquire the GC lock (to avoid data races).            */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_disable_automatic_collection(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_disable_automatic_collection(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Overrides the default handle-fork mode.  Non-zero value means GC     */
 | |
| /* should install proper pthread_atfork handlers.  Has effect only if   */
 | |
| /* called before GC_INIT.  Clients should invoke GC_set_handle_fork     */
 | |
| /* with non-zero argument if going to use fork with GC functions called */
 | |
| /* in the forked child.  (Note that such client and atfork handlers     */
 | |
| /* activities are not fully POSIX-compliant.)  GC_set_handle_fork       */
 | |
| /* instructs GC_init to setup GC fork handlers using pthread_atfork,    */
 | |
| /* the latter might fail (or, even, absent on some targets) causing     */
 | |
| /* abort at GC initialization.  Issues with missing (or failed)         */
 | |
| /* pthread_atfork() could be avoided by invocation                      */
 | |
| /* of GC_set_handle_fork(-1) at application start-up and surrounding    */
 | |
| /* each fork() with the relevant GC_atfork_prepare/parent/child calls.  */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_handle_fork(int);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Routines to handle POSIX fork() manually (no-op if handled           */
 | |
| /* automatically).  GC_atfork_prepare should be called immediately      */
 | |
| /* before fork(); GC_atfork_parent should be invoked just after fork in */
 | |
| /* the branch that corresponds to parent process (i.e., fork result is  */
 | |
| /* non-zero); GC_atfork_child is to be called immediately in the child  */
 | |
| /* branch (i.e., fork result is 0). Note that GC_atfork_child() call    */
 | |
| /* should, of course, precede GC_start_mark_threads call (if any).      */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_atfork_prepare(void);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_atfork_parent(void);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_atfork_child(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Initialize the collector.  Portable clients should call GC_INIT()    */
 | |
| /* from the main program instead.                                       */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_init(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Returns non-zero (TRUE) if and only if the collector is initialized  */
 | |
| /* (or, at least, the initialization is in progress).                   */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_is_init_called(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Perform the collector shutdown.  (E.g. dispose critical sections on  */
 | |
| /* Win32 target.)  A duplicate invocation is a no-op.  GC_INIT should   */
 | |
| /* not be called after the shutdown.  See also GC_win32_free_heap().    */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_deinit(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* General purpose allocation routines, with roughly malloc calling     */
 | |
| /* conv.  The atomic versions promise that no relevant pointers are     */
 | |
| /* contained in the object.  The non-atomic versions guarantee that the */
 | |
| /* new object is cleared.  GC_malloc_uncollectable allocates            */
 | |
| /* an object that is scanned for pointers to collectible                */
 | |
| /* objects, but is not itself collectible.  The object is scanned even  */
 | |
| /* if it does not appear to be reachable.  GC_malloc_uncollectable and  */
 | |
| /* GC_free called on the resulting object implicitly update             */
 | |
| /* GC_non_gc_bytes appropriately.                                       */
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_malloc(size_t /* size_in_bytes */);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_malloc_atomic(size_t /* size_in_bytes */);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC char * GC_CALL GC_strdup(const char *);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC char * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_strndup(const char *, size_t) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_malloc_uncollectable(size_t /* size_in_bytes */);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED void * GC_CALL GC_malloc_stubborn(size_t);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* GC_memalign() is not well tested.                                    */
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(2) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_memalign(size_t /* align */, size_t /* lb */);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_posix_memalign(void ** /* memptr */, size_t /* align */,
 | |
|                         size_t /* lb */) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Explicitly deallocate an object.  Dangerous if used incorrectly.     */
 | |
| /* Requires a pointer to the base of an object.                         */
 | |
| /* An object should not be enabled for finalization (and it should not  */
 | |
| /* contain registered disappearing links of any kind) when it is        */
 | |
| /* explicitly deallocated.                                              */
 | |
| /* GC_free(0) is a no-op, as required by ANSI C for free.               */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_free(void *);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* The "stubborn" objects allocation is not supported anymore.  Exists  */
 | |
| /* only for the backward compatibility.                                 */
 | |
| #define GC_MALLOC_STUBBORN(sz)  GC_MALLOC(sz)
 | |
| #define GC_NEW_STUBBORN(t)      GC_NEW(t)
 | |
| #define GC_CHANGE_STUBBORN(p)   GC_change_stubborn(p)
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED void GC_CALL GC_change_stubborn(const void *);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Inform the collector that the object has been changed.               */
 | |
| /* Only non-NULL pointer stores into the object are considered to be    */
 | |
| /* changes.  Matters only if the incremental collection is enabled in   */
 | |
| /* the manual VDB mode (otherwise the function does nothing).           */
 | |
| /* Should be followed typically by GC_reachable_here called for each    */
 | |
| /* of the stored pointers.                                              */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_end_stubborn_change(const void *) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return a pointer to the base (lowest address) of an object given     */
 | |
| /* a pointer to a location within the object.                           */
 | |
| /* I.e., map an interior pointer to the corresponding base pointer.     */
 | |
| /* Note that with debugging allocation, this returns a pointer to the   */
 | |
| /* actual base of the object, i.e. the debug information, not to        */
 | |
| /* the base of the user object.                                         */
 | |
| /* Return 0 if displaced_pointer doesn't point to within a valid        */
 | |
| /* object.                                                              */
 | |
| /* Note that a deallocated object in the garbage collected heap         */
 | |
| /* may be considered valid, even if it has been deallocated with        */
 | |
| /* GC_free.                                                             */
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_base(void * /* displaced_pointer */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return non-zero (TRUE) if and only if the argument points to         */
 | |
| /* somewhere in GC heap.  Primary use is as a fast alternative to       */
 | |
| /* GC_base to check whether the pointed object is allocated by GC       */
 | |
| /* or not.  It is assumed that the collector is already initialized.    */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_is_heap_ptr(const void *);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Given a pointer to the base of an object, return its size in bytes.  */
 | |
| /* The returned size may be slightly larger than what was originally    */
 | |
| /* requested.                                                           */
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_size(const void * /* obj_addr */) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* For compatibility with C library.  This is occasionally faster than  */
 | |
| /* a malloc followed by a bcopy.  But if you rely on that, either here  */
 | |
| /* or with the standard C library, your code is broken.  In my          */
 | |
| /* opinion, it shouldn't have been invented, but now we're stuck. -HB   */
 | |
| /* The resulting object has the same kind as the original.              */
 | |
| /* It is an error to have changes enabled for the original object.      */
 | |
| /* It does not change the content of the object from its beginning to   */
 | |
| /* the minimum of old size and new_size_in_bytes; the content above in  */
 | |
| /* case of object size growth is initialized to zero (not guaranteed    */
 | |
| /* for atomic object type).  The function follows ANSI conventions for  */
 | |
| /* NULL old_object (i.e., equivalent to GC_malloc regardless of new     */
 | |
| /* size).  If new size is zero (and old_object is non-NULL) then the    */
 | |
| /* call is equivalent to GC_free (and NULL is returned).  If old_object */
 | |
| /* is non-NULL, it must have been returned by an earlier call to        */
 | |
| /* GC_malloc* or GC_realloc.  In case of the allocation failure, the    */
 | |
| /* memory pointed by old_object is untouched (and not freed).           */
 | |
| /* If the returned pointer is not the same as old_object and both of    */
 | |
| /* them are non-NULL then old_object is freed.  Returns either NULL (in */
 | |
| /* case of the allocation failure or zero new size) or pointer to the   */
 | |
| /* allocated memory.                                                    */
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_realloc(void * /* old_object */,
 | |
|                                  size_t /* new_size_in_bytes */)
 | |
|                         /* 'realloc' attr */ GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(2);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Explicitly increase the heap size.   */
 | |
| /* Returns 0 on failure, 1 on success.  */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_expand_hp(size_t /* number_of_bytes */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Limit the heap size to n bytes.  Useful when you're debugging,       */
 | |
| /* especially on systems that don't handle running out of memory well.  */
 | |
| /* n == 0 ==> unbounded.  This is the default.  This setter function is */
 | |
| /* unsynchronized (so it might require GC_call_with_alloc_lock to avoid */
 | |
| /* data races).                                                         */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_max_heap_size(GC_word /* n */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Inform the collector that a certain section of statically allocated  */
 | |
| /* memory contains no pointers to garbage collected memory.  Thus it    */
 | |
| /* need not be scanned.  This is sometimes important if the application */
 | |
| /* maps large read/write files into the address space, which could be   */
 | |
| /* mistaken for dynamic library data segments on some systems.          */
 | |
| /* Both section start and end are not needed to be pointer-aligned.     */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_exclude_static_roots(void * /* low_address */,
 | |
|                                             void * /* high_address_plus_1 */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Clear the number of entries in the exclusion table.  Wizards only.   */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_clear_exclusion_table(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Clear the set of root segments.  Wizards only.                       */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_clear_roots(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Add a root segment.  Wizards only.                                   */
 | |
| /* Both segment start and end are not needed to be pointer-aligned.     */
 | |
| /* low_address must not be greater than high_address_plus_1.            */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_add_roots(void * /* low_address */,
 | |
|                                  void * /* high_address_plus_1 */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Remove a root segment.  Wizards only.                                */
 | |
| /* May be unimplemented on some platforms.                              */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_remove_roots(void * /* low_address */,
 | |
|                                     void * /* high_address_plus_1 */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Add a displacement to the set of those considered valid by the       */
 | |
| /* collector.  GC_register_displacement(n) means that if p was returned */
 | |
| /* by GC_malloc, then (char *)p + n will be considered to be a valid    */
 | |
| /* pointer to p.  N must be small and less than the size of p.          */
 | |
| /* (All pointers to the interior of objects from the stack are          */
 | |
| /* considered valid in any case.  This applies to heap objects and      */
 | |
| /* static data.)                                                        */
 | |
| /* Preferably, this should be called before any other GC procedures.    */
 | |
| /* Calling it later adds to the probability of excess memory            */
 | |
| /* retention.                                                           */
 | |
| /* This is a no-op if the collector has recognition of                  */
 | |
| /* arbitrary interior pointers enabled, which is now the default.       */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_register_displacement(size_t /* n */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* The following version should be used if any debugging allocation is  */
 | |
| /* being done.                                                          */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_debug_register_displacement(size_t /* n */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Explicitly trigger a full, world-stop collection.    */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_gcollect(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Same as above but ignores the default stop_func setting and tries to */
 | |
| /* unmap as much memory as possible (regardless of the corresponding    */
 | |
| /* switch setting).  The recommended usage: on receiving a system       */
 | |
| /* low-memory event; before retrying a system call failed because of    */
 | |
| /* the system is running out of resources.                              */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_gcollect_and_unmap(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Trigger a full world-stopped collection.  Abort the collection if    */
 | |
| /* and when stop_func returns a nonzero value.  Stop_func will be       */
 | |
| /* called frequently, and should be reasonably fast.  (stop_func is     */
 | |
| /* called with the allocation lock held and the world might be stopped; */
 | |
| /* it's not allowed for stop_func to manipulate pointers to the garbage */
 | |
| /* collected heap or call most of GC functions.)  This works even       */
 | |
| /* if virtual dirty bits, and hence incremental collection is not       */
 | |
| /* available for this architecture.  Collections can be aborted faster  */
 | |
| /* than normal pause times for incremental collection.  However,        */
 | |
| /* aborted collections do no useful work; the next collection needs     */
 | |
| /* to start from the beginning.  stop_func must not be 0.               */
 | |
| /* GC_try_to_collect() returns 0 if the collection was aborted (or the  */
 | |
| /* collections are disabled), 1 if it succeeded.                        */
 | |
| typedef int (GC_CALLBACK * GC_stop_func)(void);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_try_to_collect(GC_stop_func /* stop_func */)
 | |
|                                                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Set and get the default stop_func.  The default stop_func is used by */
 | |
| /* GC_gcollect() and by implicitly trigged collections (except for the  */
 | |
| /* case when handling out of memory).  Must not be 0.                   */
 | |
| /* Both the setter and getter acquire the GC lock to avoid data races.  */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_stop_func(GC_stop_func /* stop_func */)
 | |
|                                                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| GC_API GC_stop_func GC_CALL GC_get_stop_func(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return the number of bytes in the heap.  Excludes collector private  */
 | |
| /* data structures.  Excludes the unmapped memory (returned to the OS). */
 | |
| /* Includes empty blocks and fragmentation loss.  Includes some pages   */
 | |
| /* that were allocated but never written.                               */
 | |
| /* This is an unsynchronized getter, so it should be called typically   */
 | |
| /* with the GC lock held to avoid data races on multiprocessors (the    */
 | |
| /* alternative is to use GC_get_heap_usage_safe or GC_get_prof_stats    */
 | |
| /* API calls instead).                                                  */
 | |
| /* This getter remains lock-free (unsynchronized) for compatibility     */
 | |
| /* reason since some existing clients call it from a GC callback        */
 | |
| /* holding the allocator lock.  (This API function and the following    */
 | |
| /* four ones below were made thread-safe in GC v7.2alpha1 and           */
 | |
| /* reverted back in v7.2alpha7 for the reason described.)               */
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_heap_size(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return a lower bound on the number of free bytes in the heap         */
 | |
| /* (excluding the unmapped memory space).  This is an unsynchronized    */
 | |
| /* getter (see GC_get_heap_size comment regarding thread-safety).       */
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_free_bytes(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return the size (in bytes) of the unmapped memory (which is returned */
 | |
| /* to the OS but could be remapped back by the collector later unless   */
 | |
| /* the OS runs out of system/virtual memory). This is an unsynchronized */
 | |
| /* getter (see GC_get_heap_size comment regarding thread-safety).       */
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_unmapped_bytes(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return the number of bytes allocated since the last collection.      */
 | |
| /* This is an unsynchronized getter (see GC_get_heap_size comment       */
 | |
| /* regarding thread-safety).                                            */
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_bytes_since_gc(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return the number of explicitly deallocated bytes of memory since    */
 | |
| /* the recent collection.  This is an unsynchronized getter.            */
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_expl_freed_bytes_since_gc(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return the total number of bytes allocated in this process.          */
 | |
| /* Never decreases, except due to wrapping.  This is an unsynchronized  */
 | |
| /* getter (see GC_get_heap_size comment regarding thread-safety).       */
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_total_bytes(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return the total number of bytes obtained from OS.  Includes the     */
 | |
| /* unmapped memory.  Never decreases.  It is an unsynchronized getter.  */
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_obtained_from_os_bytes(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return the heap usage information.  This is a thread-safe (atomic)   */
 | |
| /* alternative for the five above getters.   (This function acquires    */
 | |
| /* the allocator lock thus preventing data racing and returning the     */
 | |
| /* consistent result.)  Passing NULL pointer is allowed for any         */
 | |
| /* argument.  Returned (filled in) values are of word type.             */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_get_heap_usage_safe(GC_word * /* pheap_size */,
 | |
|                                            GC_word * /* pfree_bytes */,
 | |
|                                            GC_word * /* punmapped_bytes */,
 | |
|                                            GC_word * /* pbytes_since_gc */,
 | |
|                                            GC_word * /* ptotal_bytes */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Structure used to query GC statistics (profiling information).       */
 | |
| /* More fields could be added in the future.  To preserve compatibility */
 | |
| /* new fields should be added only to the end, and no deprecated fields */
 | |
| /* should be removed from.                                              */
 | |
| struct GC_prof_stats_s {
 | |
|   GC_word heapsize_full;
 | |
|             /* Heap size in bytes (including the area unmapped to OS).  */
 | |
|             /* Same as GC_get_heap_size() + GC_get_unmapped_bytes().    */
 | |
|   GC_word free_bytes_full;
 | |
|             /* Total bytes contained in free and unmapped blocks.       */
 | |
|             /* Same as GC_get_free_bytes() + GC_get_unmapped_bytes().   */
 | |
|   GC_word unmapped_bytes;
 | |
|             /* Amount of memory unmapped to OS.  Same as the value      */
 | |
|             /* returned by GC_get_unmapped_bytes().                     */
 | |
|   GC_word bytes_allocd_since_gc;
 | |
|             /* Number of bytes allocated since the recent collection.   */
 | |
|             /* Same as returned by GC_get_bytes_since_gc().             */
 | |
|   GC_word allocd_bytes_before_gc;
 | |
|             /* Number of bytes allocated before the recent garbage      */
 | |
|             /* collection.  The value may wrap.  Same as the result of  */
 | |
|             /* GC_get_total_bytes() - GC_get_bytes_since_gc().          */
 | |
|   GC_word non_gc_bytes;
 | |
|             /* Number of bytes not considered candidates for garbage    */
 | |
|             /* collection.  Same as returned by GC_get_non_gc_bytes().  */
 | |
|   GC_word gc_no;
 | |
|             /* Garbage collection cycle number.  The value may wrap     */
 | |
|             /* (and could be -1).  Same as returned by GC_get_gc_no().  */
 | |
|   GC_word markers_m1;
 | |
|             /* Number of marker threads (excluding the initiating one). */
 | |
|             /* Same as returned by GC_get_parallel (or 0 if the         */
 | |
|             /* collector is single-threaded).                           */
 | |
|   GC_word bytes_reclaimed_since_gc;
 | |
|             /* Approximate number of reclaimed bytes after recent GC.   */
 | |
|   GC_word reclaimed_bytes_before_gc;
 | |
|             /* Approximate number of bytes reclaimed before the recent  */
 | |
|             /* garbage collection.  The value may wrap.                 */
 | |
|   GC_word expl_freed_bytes_since_gc;
 | |
|             /* Number of bytes freed explicitly since the recent GC.    */
 | |
|             /* Same as returned by GC_get_expl_freed_bytes_since_gc().  */
 | |
|   GC_word obtained_from_os_bytes;
 | |
|             /* Total amount of memory obtained from OS, in bytes.       */
 | |
| };
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Atomically get GC statistics (various global counters).  Clients     */
 | |
| /* should pass the size of the buffer (of GC_prof_stats_s type) to fill */
 | |
| /* in the values - this is for interoperability between different GC    */
 | |
| /* versions, an old client could have fewer fields, and vice versa,     */
 | |
| /* client could use newer gc.h (with more entries declared in the       */
 | |
| /* structure) than that of the linked libgc binary; in the latter case, */
 | |
| /* unsupported (unknown) fields are filled in with -1.  Return the size */
 | |
| /* (in bytes) of the filled in part of the structure (excluding all     */
 | |
| /* unknown fields, if any).                                             */
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_prof_stats(struct GC_prof_stats_s *,
 | |
|                                         size_t /* stats_sz */);
 | |
| #ifdef GC_THREADS
 | |
|   /* Same as above but unsynchronized (i.e., not holding the allocation */
 | |
|   /* lock).  Clients should call it using GC_call_with_alloc_lock to    */
 | |
|   /* avoid data races on multiprocessors.                               */
 | |
|   GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_prof_stats_unsafe(struct GC_prof_stats_s *,
 | |
|                                                  size_t /* stats_sz */);
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Get the element value (converted to bytes) at a given index of       */
 | |
| /* size_map table which provides requested-to-actual allocation size    */
 | |
| /* mapping.  Assumes the collector is initialized.  Returns -1 if the   */
 | |
| /* index is out of size_map table bounds. Does not use synchronization, */
 | |
| /* thus clients should call it using GC_call_with_alloc_lock typically  */
 | |
| /* to avoid data races on multiprocessors.                              */
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_size_map_at(int i);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Count total memory use in bytes by all allocated blocks.  Acquires   */
 | |
| /* the lock.                                                            */
 | |
| GC_API size_t GC_CALL GC_get_memory_use(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Disable garbage collection.  Even GC_gcollect calls will be          */
 | |
| /* ineffective.                                                         */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_disable(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return non-zero (TRUE) if and only if garbage collection is disabled */
 | |
| /* (i.e., GC_dont_gc value is non-zero).  Does not acquire the lock.    */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_is_disabled(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Try to re-enable garbage collection.  GC_disable() and GC_enable()   */
 | |
| /* calls nest.  Garbage collection is enabled if the number of calls to */
 | |
| /* both functions is equal.                                             */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_enable(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Select whether to use the manual VDB mode for the incremental        */
 | |
| /* collection.  Has no effect if called after enabling the incremental  */
 | |
| /* collection.  The default value is off unless the collector is        */
 | |
| /* compiled with MANUAL_VDB defined.  The manual VDB mode should be     */
 | |
| /* used only if the client has the appropriate GC_END_STUBBORN_CHANGE   */
 | |
| /* and GC_reachable_here (or, alternatively, GC_PTR_STORE_AND_DIRTY)    */
 | |
| /* calls (to ensure proper write barriers).  Both the setter and getter */
 | |
| /* are not synchronized, and are defined only if the library has been   */
 | |
| /* compiled without SMALL_CONFIG.                                       */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_manual_vdb_allowed(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_manual_vdb_allowed(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Enable incremental/generational collection.  Not advisable unless    */
 | |
| /* dirty bits are available or most heap objects are pointer-free       */
 | |
| /* (atomic) or immutable.  Don't use in leak finding mode.  Ignored if  */
 | |
| /* GC_dont_gc is non-zero.  Only the generational piece of this is      */
 | |
| /* functional if GC_time_limit is set to GC_TIME_UNLIMITED.  Causes     */
 | |
| /* thread-local variant of GC_gcj_malloc() to revert to locked          */
 | |
| /* allocation.  Must be called before any such GC_gcj_malloc() calls.   */
 | |
| /* For best performance, should be called as early as possible.         */
 | |
| /* On some platforms, calling it later may have adverse effects.        */
 | |
| /* Safe to call before GC_INIT().  Includes a  GC_init() call.          */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_enable_incremental(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Return non-zero (TRUE) if and only if the incremental mode is on.    */
 | |
| /* Does not acquire the lock.                                           */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_is_incremental_mode(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| #define GC_PROTECTS_POINTER_HEAP  1 /* May protect non-atomic objects.  */
 | |
| #define GC_PROTECTS_PTRFREE_HEAP  2
 | |
| #define GC_PROTECTS_STATIC_DATA   4 /* Currently never.                 */
 | |
| #define GC_PROTECTS_STACK         8 /* Probably impractical.            */
 | |
| 
 | |
| #define GC_PROTECTS_NONE 0
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Does incremental mode write-protect pages?  Returns zero or  */
 | |
| /* more of the above GC_PROTECTS_*, or'ed together.             */
 | |
| /* The collector is assumed to be initialized before this call. */
 | |
| /* The result is not affected by GC_set_manual_vdb_allowed().   */
 | |
| /* Call of GC_enable_incremental() may change the result to     */
 | |
| /* GC_PROTECTS_NONE if some implementation is chosen at runtime */
 | |
| /* not needing to write-protect the pages.                      */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_incremental_protection_needs(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Force start of incremental collection.  Acquires the GC lock.        */
 | |
| /* No-op unless GC incremental mode is on.                              */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_start_incremental_collection(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Perform some garbage collection work, if appropriate.        */
 | |
| /* Return 0 if there is no more work to be done (including the  */
 | |
| /* case when garbage collection is not appropriate).            */
 | |
| /* Typically performs an amount of work corresponding roughly   */
 | |
| /* to marking from one page.  May do more work if further       */
 | |
| /* progress requires it, e.g. if incremental collection is      */
 | |
| /* disabled.  It is reasonable to call this in a wait loop      */
 | |
| /* until it returns 0.                                          */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_collect_a_little(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Allocate an object of size lb bytes.  The client guarantees that     */
 | |
| /* as long as the object is live, it will be referenced by a pointer    */
 | |
| /* that points to somewhere within the first 256 bytes of the object.   */
 | |
| /* (This should normally be declared volatile to prevent the compiler   */
 | |
| /* from invalidating this assertion.)  This routine is only useful      */
 | |
| /* if a large array is being allocated.  It reduces the chance of       */
 | |
| /* accidentally retaining such an array as a result of scanning an      */
 | |
| /* integer that happens to be an address inside the array.  (Actually,  */
 | |
| /* it reduces the chance of the allocator not finding space for such    */
 | |
| /* an array, since it will try hard to avoid introducing such a false   */
 | |
| /* reference.)  On a SunOS 4.X or MS Windows system this is recommended */
 | |
| /* for arrays likely to be larger than 100 KB or so.  For other systems,*/
 | |
| /* or if the collector is not configured to recognize all interior      */
 | |
| /* pointers, the threshold is normally much higher.                     */
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_malloc_ignore_off_page(size_t /* lb */);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_malloc_atomic_ignore_off_page(size_t /* lb */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef GC_ADD_CALLER
 | |
| # define GC_EXTRAS GC_RETURN_ADDR, __FILE__, __LINE__
 | |
| # define GC_EXTRA_PARAMS GC_word ra, const char * s, int i
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_EXTRAS __FILE__, __LINE__
 | |
| # define GC_EXTRA_PARAMS const char * s, int i
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* The following is only defined if the library has been suitably       */
 | |
| /* compiled:                                                            */
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_malloc_atomic_uncollectable(size_t /* size_in_bytes */);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_malloc_atomic_uncollectable(size_t, GC_EXTRA_PARAMS);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Debugging (annotated) allocation.  GC_gcollect will check            */
 | |
| /* objects allocated in this way for overwrites, etc.                   */
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_malloc(size_t /* size_in_bytes */, GC_EXTRA_PARAMS);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_malloc_atomic(size_t /* size_in_bytes */, GC_EXTRA_PARAMS);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC char * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_strdup(const char *, GC_EXTRA_PARAMS);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC char * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_strndup(const char *, size_t, GC_EXTRA_PARAMS)
 | |
|                                                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_malloc_uncollectable(size_t /* size_in_bytes */,
 | |
|                                       GC_EXTRA_PARAMS);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_malloc_stubborn(size_t /* size_in_bytes */, GC_EXTRA_PARAMS);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_malloc_ignore_off_page(size_t /* size_in_bytes */,
 | |
|                                         GC_EXTRA_PARAMS);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_malloc_atomic_ignore_off_page(size_t /* size_in_bytes */,
 | |
|                                         GC_EXTRA_PARAMS);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_debug_free(void *);
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_debug_realloc(void * /* old_object */,
 | |
|                         size_t /* new_size_in_bytes */, GC_EXTRA_PARAMS)
 | |
|                         /* 'realloc' attr */ GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(2);
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_DEPRECATED void GC_CALL GC_debug_change_stubborn(const void *);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_debug_end_stubborn_change(const void *)
 | |
|                                                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Routines that allocate objects with debug information (like the      */
 | |
| /* above), but just fill in dummy file and line number information.     */
 | |
| /* Thus they can serve as drop-in malloc/realloc replacements.  This    */
 | |
| /* can be useful for two reasons:                                       */
 | |
| /* 1) It allows the collector to be built with DBG_HDRS_ALL defined     */
 | |
| /*    even if some allocation calls come from 3rd party libraries       */
 | |
| /*    that can't be recompiled.                                         */
 | |
| /* 2) On some platforms, the file and line information is redundant,    */
 | |
| /*    since it can be reconstructed from a stack trace.  On such        */
 | |
| /*    platforms it may be more convenient not to recompile, e.g. for    */
 | |
| /*    leak detection.  This can be accomplished by instructing the      */
 | |
| /*    linker to replace malloc/realloc with these.                      */
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(1) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_malloc_replacement(size_t /* size_in_bytes */);
 | |
| GC_API /* 'realloc' attr */ GC_ATTR_ALLOC_SIZE(2) void * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_realloc_replacement(void * /* object_addr */,
 | |
|                                      size_t /* size_in_bytes */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef GC_DEBUG_REPLACEMENT
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC(sz) GC_debug_malloc_replacement(sz)
 | |
| # define GC_REALLOC(old, sz) GC_debug_realloc_replacement(old, sz)
 | |
| #elif defined(GC_DEBUG)
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC(sz) GC_debug_malloc(sz, GC_EXTRAS)
 | |
| # define GC_REALLOC(old, sz) GC_debug_realloc(old, sz, GC_EXTRAS)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC(sz) GC_malloc(sz)
 | |
| # define GC_REALLOC(old, sz) GC_realloc(old, sz)
 | |
| #endif /* !GC_DEBUG_REPLACEMENT && !GC_DEBUG */
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef GC_DEBUG
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC_ATOMIC(sz) GC_debug_malloc_atomic(sz, GC_EXTRAS)
 | |
| # define GC_STRDUP(s) GC_debug_strdup(s, GC_EXTRAS)
 | |
| # define GC_STRNDUP(s, sz) GC_debug_strndup(s, sz, GC_EXTRAS)
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC_ATOMIC_UNCOLLECTABLE(sz) \
 | |
|                         GC_debug_malloc_atomic_uncollectable(sz, GC_EXTRAS)
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC_UNCOLLECTABLE(sz) \
 | |
|                         GC_debug_malloc_uncollectable(sz, GC_EXTRAS)
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC_IGNORE_OFF_PAGE(sz) \
 | |
|                         GC_debug_malloc_ignore_off_page(sz, GC_EXTRAS)
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC_ATOMIC_IGNORE_OFF_PAGE(sz) \
 | |
|                         GC_debug_malloc_atomic_ignore_off_page(sz, GC_EXTRAS)
 | |
| # define GC_FREE(p) GC_debug_free(p)
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_FINALIZER(p, f, d, of, od) \
 | |
|       GC_debug_register_finalizer(p, f, d, of, od)
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_FINALIZER_IGNORE_SELF(p, f, d, of, od) \
 | |
|       GC_debug_register_finalizer_ignore_self(p, f, d, of, od)
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_FINALIZER_NO_ORDER(p, f, d, of, od) \
 | |
|       GC_debug_register_finalizer_no_order(p, f, d, of, od)
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_FINALIZER_UNREACHABLE(p, f, d, of, od) \
 | |
|       GC_debug_register_finalizer_unreachable(p, f, d, of, od)
 | |
| # define GC_END_STUBBORN_CHANGE(p) GC_debug_end_stubborn_change(p)
 | |
| # define GC_PTR_STORE_AND_DIRTY(p, q) GC_debug_ptr_store_and_dirty(p, q)
 | |
| # define GC_GENERAL_REGISTER_DISAPPEARING_LINK(link, obj) \
 | |
|       GC_general_register_disappearing_link(link, \
 | |
|                                         GC_base((/* no const */ void *)(obj)))
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_LONG_LINK(link, obj) \
 | |
|       GC_register_long_link(link, GC_base((/* no const */ void *)(obj)))
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_DISPLACEMENT(n) GC_debug_register_displacement(n)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC_ATOMIC(sz) GC_malloc_atomic(sz)
 | |
| # define GC_STRDUP(s) GC_strdup(s)
 | |
| # define GC_STRNDUP(s, sz) GC_strndup(s, sz)
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC_ATOMIC_UNCOLLECTABLE(sz) GC_malloc_atomic_uncollectable(sz)
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC_UNCOLLECTABLE(sz) GC_malloc_uncollectable(sz)
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC_IGNORE_OFF_PAGE(sz) \
 | |
|                         GC_malloc_ignore_off_page(sz)
 | |
| # define GC_MALLOC_ATOMIC_IGNORE_OFF_PAGE(sz) \
 | |
|                         GC_malloc_atomic_ignore_off_page(sz)
 | |
| # define GC_FREE(p) GC_free(p)
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_FINALIZER(p, f, d, of, od) \
 | |
|       GC_register_finalizer(p, f, d, of, od)
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_FINALIZER_IGNORE_SELF(p, f, d, of, od) \
 | |
|       GC_register_finalizer_ignore_self(p, f, d, of, od)
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_FINALIZER_NO_ORDER(p, f, d, of, od) \
 | |
|       GC_register_finalizer_no_order(p, f, d, of, od)
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_FINALIZER_UNREACHABLE(p, f, d, of, od) \
 | |
|       GC_register_finalizer_unreachable(p, f, d, of, od)
 | |
| # define GC_END_STUBBORN_CHANGE(p) GC_end_stubborn_change(p)
 | |
| # define GC_PTR_STORE_AND_DIRTY(p, q) GC_ptr_store_and_dirty(p, q)
 | |
| # define GC_GENERAL_REGISTER_DISAPPEARING_LINK(link, obj) \
 | |
|       GC_general_register_disappearing_link(link, obj)
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_LONG_LINK(link, obj) \
 | |
|       GC_register_long_link(link, obj)
 | |
| # define GC_REGISTER_DISPLACEMENT(n) GC_register_displacement(n)
 | |
| #endif /* !GC_DEBUG */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* The following are included because they are often convenient, and    */
 | |
| /* reduce the chance for a misspecified size argument.  But calls may   */
 | |
| /* expand to something syntactically incorrect if t is a complicated    */
 | |
| /* type expression.  Note that, unlike C++ new operator, these ones     */
 | |
| /* may return NULL (if out of memory).                                  */
 | |
| #define GC_NEW(t)               ((t*)GC_MALLOC(sizeof(t)))
 | |
| #define GC_NEW_ATOMIC(t)        ((t*)GC_MALLOC_ATOMIC(sizeof(t)))
 | |
| #define GC_NEW_UNCOLLECTABLE(t) ((t*)GC_MALLOC_UNCOLLECTABLE(sizeof(t)))
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef GC_REQUIRE_WCSDUP
 | |
|   /* This might be unavailable on some targets (or not needed). */
 | |
|   /* wchar_t should be defined in stddef.h */
 | |
|   GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC wchar_t * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_wcsdup(const wchar_t *) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
|   GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC wchar_t * GC_CALL
 | |
|         GC_debug_wcsdup(const wchar_t *, GC_EXTRA_PARAMS) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| # ifdef GC_DEBUG
 | |
| #   define GC_WCSDUP(s) GC_debug_wcsdup(s, GC_EXTRAS)
 | |
| # else
 | |
| #   define GC_WCSDUP(s) GC_wcsdup(s)
 | |
| # endif
 | |
| #endif /* GC_REQUIRE_WCSDUP */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Finalization.  Some of these primitives are grossly unsafe.          */
 | |
| /* The idea is to make them both cheap, and sufficient to build         */
 | |
| /* a safer layer, closer to Modula-3, Java, or PCedar finalization.     */
 | |
| /* The interface represents my conclusions from a long discussion       */
 | |
| /* with Alan Demers, Dan Greene, Carl Hauser, Barry Hayes,              */
 | |
| /* Christian Jacobi, and Russ Atkinson.  It's not perfect, and          */
 | |
| /* probably nobody else agrees with it.     Hans-J. Boehm  3/13/92      */
 | |
| typedef void (GC_CALLBACK * GC_finalization_proc)(void * /* obj */,
 | |
|                                                   void * /* client_data */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_register_finalizer(void * /* obj */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc /* fn */, void * /* cd */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc * /* ofn */, void ** /* ocd */)
 | |
|                                                 GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_debug_register_finalizer(void * /* obj */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc /* fn */, void * /* cd */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc * /* ofn */, void ** /* ocd */)
 | |
|                                                 GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
|         /* When obj is no longer accessible, invoke             */
 | |
|         /* (*fn)(obj, cd).  If a and b are inaccessible, and    */
 | |
|         /* a points to b (after disappearing links have been    */
 | |
|         /* made to disappear), then only a will be              */
 | |
|         /* finalized.  (If this does not create any new         */
 | |
|         /* pointers to b, then b will be finalized after the    */
 | |
|         /* next collection.)  Any finalizable object that       */
 | |
|         /* is reachable from itself by following one or more    */
 | |
|         /* pointers will not be finalized (or collected).       */
 | |
|         /* Thus cycles involving finalizable objects should     */
 | |
|         /* be avoided, or broken by disappearing links.         */
 | |
|         /* All but the last finalizer registered for an object  */
 | |
|         /* is ignored.                                          */
 | |
|         /* No-op in the leak-finding mode.                      */
 | |
|         /* Finalization may be removed by passing 0 as fn.      */
 | |
|         /* Finalizers are implicitly unregistered when they are */
 | |
|         /* enqueued for finalization (i.e. become ready to be   */
 | |
|         /* finalized).                                          */
 | |
|         /* The old finalizer and client data are stored in      */
 | |
|         /* *ofn and *ocd.  (ofn and/or ocd may be NULL.         */
 | |
|         /* The allocation lock is held while *ofn and *ocd are  */
 | |
|         /* updated.  In case of error (no memory to register    */
 | |
|         /* new finalizer), *ofn and *ocd remain unchanged.)     */
 | |
|         /* Fn is never invoked on an accessible object,         */
 | |
|         /* provided hidden pointers are converted to real       */
 | |
|         /* pointers only if the allocation lock is held, and    */
 | |
|         /* such conversions are not performed by finalization   */
 | |
|         /* routines.                                            */
 | |
|         /* If GC_register_finalizer is aborted as a result of   */
 | |
|         /* a signal, the object may be left with no             */
 | |
|         /* finalization, even if neither the old nor new        */
 | |
|         /* finalizer were NULL.                                 */
 | |
|         /* Obj should be the starting address of an object      */
 | |
|         /* allocated by GC_malloc or friends. Obj may also be   */
 | |
|         /* NULL or point to something outside GC heap (in this  */
 | |
|         /* case, fn is ignored, *ofn and *ocd are set to NULL). */
 | |
|         /* Note that any garbage collectible object referenced  */
 | |
|         /* by cd will be considered accessible until the        */
 | |
|         /* finalizer is invoked.                                */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Another versions of the above follow.  It ignores            */
 | |
| /* self-cycles, i.e. pointers from a finalizable object to      */
 | |
| /* itself.  There is a stylistic argument that this is wrong,   */
 | |
| /* but it's unavoidable for C++, since the compiler may         */
 | |
| /* silently introduce these.  It's also benign in that specific */
 | |
| /* case.  And it helps if finalizable objects are split to      */
 | |
| /* avoid cycles.                                                */
 | |
| /* Note that cd will still be viewed as accessible, even if it  */
 | |
| /* refers to the object itself.                                 */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_register_finalizer_ignore_self(void * /* obj */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc /* fn */, void * /* cd */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc * /* ofn */, void ** /* ocd */)
 | |
|                                                 GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_debug_register_finalizer_ignore_self(void * /* obj */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc /* fn */, void * /* cd */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc * /* ofn */, void ** /* ocd */)
 | |
|                                                 GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Another version of the above.  It ignores all cycles.        */
 | |
| /* It should probably only be used by Java implementations.     */
 | |
| /* Note that cd will still be viewed as accessible, even if it  */
 | |
| /* refers to the object itself.                                 */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_register_finalizer_no_order(void * /* obj */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc /* fn */, void * /* cd */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc * /* ofn */, void ** /* ocd */)
 | |
|                                                 GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_debug_register_finalizer_no_order(void * /* obj */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc /* fn */, void * /* cd */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc * /* ofn */, void ** /* ocd */)
 | |
|                                                 GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* This is a special finalizer that is useful when an object's  */
 | |
| /* finalizer must be run when the object is known to be no      */
 | |
| /* longer reachable, not even from other finalizable objects.   */
 | |
| /* It behaves like "normal" finalization, except that the       */
 | |
| /* finalizer is not run while the object is reachable from      */
 | |
| /* other objects specifying unordered finalization.             */
 | |
| /* Effectively it allows an object referenced, possibly         */
 | |
| /* indirectly, from an unordered finalizable object to override */
 | |
| /* the unordered finalization request.                          */
 | |
| /* This can be used in combination with finalizer_no_order so   */
 | |
| /* as to release resources that must not be released while an   */
 | |
| /* object can still be brought back to life by other            */
 | |
| /* finalizers.                                                  */
 | |
| /* Only works if GC_java_finalization is set.  Probably only    */
 | |
| /* of interest when implementing a language that requires       */
 | |
| /* unordered finalization (e.g. Java, C#).                      */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_register_finalizer_unreachable(void * /* obj */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc /* fn */, void * /* cd */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc * /* ofn */, void ** /* ocd */)
 | |
|                                                 GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_debug_register_finalizer_unreachable(void * /* obj */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc /* fn */, void * /* cd */,
 | |
|                         GC_finalization_proc * /* ofn */, void ** /* ocd */)
 | |
|                                                 GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| #define GC_NO_MEMORY 2  /* Failure due to lack of memory.       */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* The following routine may be used to break cycles between    */
 | |
| /* finalizable objects, thus causing cyclic finalizable         */
 | |
| /* objects to be finalized in the correct order.  Standard      */
 | |
| /* use involves calling GC_register_disappearing_link(&p),      */
 | |
| /* where p is a pointer that is not followed by finalization    */
 | |
| /* code, and should not be considered in determining            */
 | |
| /* finalization order.                                          */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_register_disappearing_link(void ** /* link */)
 | |
|                                                 GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
|         /* Link should point to a field of a heap allocated     */
 | |
|         /* object obj.  *link will be cleared when obj is       */
 | |
|         /* found to be inaccessible.  This happens BEFORE any   */
 | |
|         /* finalization code is invoked, and BEFORE any         */
 | |
|         /* decisions about finalization order are made.         */
 | |
|         /* This is useful in telling the finalizer that         */
 | |
|         /* some pointers are not essential for proper           */
 | |
|         /* finalization.  This may avoid finalization cycles.   */
 | |
|         /* Note that obj may be resurrected by another          */
 | |
|         /* finalizer, and thus the clearing of *link may        */
 | |
|         /* be visible to non-finalization code.                 */
 | |
|         /* There's an argument that an arbitrary action should  */
 | |
|         /* be allowed here, instead of just clearing a pointer. */
 | |
|         /* But this causes problems if that action alters, or   */
 | |
|         /* examines connectivity.  Returns GC_DUPLICATE if link */
 | |
|         /* was already registered, GC_SUCCESS if registration   */
 | |
|         /* succeeded, GC_NO_MEMORY if it failed for lack of     */
 | |
|         /* memory, and GC_oom_fn did not handle the problem.    */
 | |
|         /* Only exists for backward compatibility.  See below:  */
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_general_register_disappearing_link(void ** /* link */,
 | |
|                                                     const void * /* obj */)
 | |
|                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(2);
 | |
|         /* A slight generalization of the above. *link is       */
 | |
|         /* cleared when obj first becomes inaccessible.  This   */
 | |
|         /* can be used to implement weak pointers easily and    */
 | |
|         /* safely. Typically link will point to a location      */
 | |
|         /* holding a disguised pointer to obj.  (A pointer      */
 | |
|         /* inside an "atomic" object is effectively disguised.) */
 | |
|         /* In this way, weak pointers are broken before any     */
 | |
|         /* object reachable from them gets finalized.           */
 | |
|         /* Each link may be registered only with one obj value, */
 | |
|         /* i.e. all objects but the last one (link registered   */
 | |
|         /* with) are ignored.  This was added after a long      */
 | |
|         /* email discussion with John Ellis.                    */
 | |
|         /* link must be non-NULL (and be properly aligned).     */
 | |
|         /* obj must be a pointer to the first word of an object */
 | |
|         /* allocated by GC_malloc or friends.   A link          */
 | |
|         /* disappears when it is unregistered manually, or when */
 | |
|         /* (*link) is cleared, or when the object containing    */
 | |
|         /* this link is garbage collected.  It is unsafe to     */
 | |
|         /* explicitly deallocate the object containing link.    */
 | |
|         /* Explicit deallocation of obj may or may not cause    */
 | |
|         /* link to eventually be cleared.                       */
 | |
|         /* No-op in the leak-finding mode.                      */
 | |
|         /* This function can be used to implement certain types */
 | |
|         /* of weak pointers.  Note, however, this generally     */
 | |
|         /* requires that the allocation lock is held (see       */
 | |
|         /* GC_call_with_alloc_lock() below) when the disguised  */
 | |
|         /* pointer is accessed.  Otherwise a strong pointer     */
 | |
|         /* could be recreated between the time the collector    */
 | |
|         /* decides to reclaim the object and the link is        */
 | |
|         /* cleared.  Returns GC_SUCCESS if registration         */
 | |
|         /* succeeded (a new link is registered), GC_DUPLICATE   */
 | |
|         /* if link was already registered (with some object),   */
 | |
|         /* GC_NO_MEMORY if registration failed for lack of      */
 | |
|         /* memory (and GC_oom_fn did not handle the problem),   */
 | |
|         /* GC_UNIMPLEMENTED if GC_find_leak is true.            */
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_move_disappearing_link(void ** /* link */,
 | |
|                                              void ** /* new_link */)
 | |
|                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(2);
 | |
|         /* Moves a link previously registered via               */
 | |
|         /* GC_general_register_disappearing_link (or            */
 | |
|         /* GC_register_disappearing_link).  Does not change the */
 | |
|         /* target object of the weak reference.  Does not       */
 | |
|         /* change (*new_link) content.  May be called with      */
 | |
|         /* new_link equal to link (to check whether link has    */
 | |
|         /* been registered).  Returns GC_SUCCESS on success,    */
 | |
|         /* GC_DUPLICATE if there is already another             */
 | |
|         /* disappearing link at the new location (never         */
 | |
|         /* returned if new_link is equal to link), GC_NOT_FOUND */
 | |
|         /* if no link is registered at the original location.   */
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_unregister_disappearing_link(void ** /* link */);
 | |
|         /* Undoes a registration by either of the above two     */
 | |
|         /* routines.  Returns 0 if link was not actually        */
 | |
|         /* registered (otherwise returns 1).                    */
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_register_long_link(void ** /* link */,
 | |
|                                     const void * /* obj */)
 | |
|                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(2);
 | |
|         /* Similar to GC_general_register_disappearing_link but */
 | |
|         /* *link only gets cleared when obj becomes truly       */
 | |
|         /* inaccessible.  An object becomes truly inaccessible  */
 | |
|         /* when it can no longer be resurrected from its        */
 | |
|         /* finalizer (e.g. by assigning itself to a pointer     */
 | |
|         /* traceable from root).  This can be used to implement */
 | |
|         /* long weak pointers easily and safely.                */
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_move_long_link(void ** /* link */,
 | |
|                                      void ** /* new_link */)
 | |
|                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(2);
 | |
|         /* Similar to GC_move_disappearing_link but for a link  */
 | |
|         /* previously registered via GC_register_long_link.     */
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_unregister_long_link(void ** /* link */);
 | |
|         /* Similar to GC_unregister_disappearing_link but for a */
 | |
|         /* registration by either of the above two routines.    */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Support of toggle-ref style of external memory management    */
 | |
| /* without hooking up to the host retain/release machinery.     */
 | |
| /* The idea of toggle-ref is that an external reference to      */
 | |
| /* an object is kept and it can be either a strong or weak      */
 | |
| /* reference; a weak reference is used when the external peer   */
 | |
| /* has no interest in the object, and a strong otherwise.       */
 | |
| typedef enum {
 | |
|    GC_TOGGLE_REF_DROP,
 | |
|    GC_TOGGLE_REF_STRONG,
 | |
|    GC_TOGGLE_REF_WEAK
 | |
| } GC_ToggleRefStatus;
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* The callback is to decide (return) the new state of a given  */
 | |
| /* object.  Invoked by the collector for all objects registered */
 | |
| /* for toggle-ref processing.  Invoked with the allocation lock */
 | |
| /* held (but the "world" is running).                           */
 | |
| typedef GC_ToggleRefStatus (GC_CALLBACK *GC_toggleref_func)(void * /* obj */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Set (register) a callback that decides the state of a given  */
 | |
| /* object (by, probably, inspecting its native state).          */
 | |
| /* The argument may be 0 (means no callback).  Both the setter  */
 | |
| /* and the getter acquire the allocation lock (to avoid data    */
 | |
| /* races).                                                      */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_toggleref_func(GC_toggleref_func);
 | |
| GC_API GC_toggleref_func GC_CALL GC_get_toggleref_func(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Register a given object for toggle-ref processing.  It will  */
 | |
| /* be stored internally and the toggle-ref callback will be     */
 | |
| /* invoked on the object until the callback returns             */
 | |
| /* GC_TOGGLE_REF_DROP or the object is collected.  If is_strong */
 | |
| /* is true then the object is registered with a strong ref,     */
 | |
| /* a weak one otherwise.  Returns GC_SUCCESS if registration    */
 | |
| /* succeeded (or no callback registered yet), GC_NO_MEMORY if   */
 | |
| /* it failed for lack of memory.                                */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_toggleref_add(void * /* obj */, int /* is_strong */)
 | |
|                                                 GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Finalizer callback support.  Invoked by the collector (with  */
 | |
| /* the allocation lock held) for each unreachable object        */
 | |
| /* enqueued for finalization.                                   */
 | |
| typedef void (GC_CALLBACK * GC_await_finalize_proc)(void * /* obj */);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_await_finalize_proc(GC_await_finalize_proc);
 | |
| GC_API GC_await_finalize_proc GC_CALL GC_get_await_finalize_proc(void);
 | |
|                         /* Zero means no callback.  The setter  */
 | |
|                         /* and getter acquire the lock too.     */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Returns !=0 if GC_invoke_finalizers has something to do.     */
 | |
| /* Does not use any synchronization.                            */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_should_invoke_finalizers(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_invoke_finalizers(void);
 | |
|         /* Run finalizers for all objects that are ready to     */
 | |
|         /* be finalized.  Return the number of finalizers       */
 | |
|         /* that were run.  Normally this is also called         */
 | |
|         /* implicitly during some allocations.  If              */
 | |
|         /* GC_finalize_on_demand is nonzero, it must be called  */
 | |
|         /* explicitly.                                          */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Explicitly tell the collector that an object is reachable    */
 | |
| /* at a particular program point.  This prevents the argument   */
 | |
| /* pointer from being optimized away, even it is otherwise no   */
 | |
| /* longer needed.  It should have no visible effect in the      */
 | |
| /* absence of finalizers or disappearing links.  But it may be  */
 | |
| /* needed to prevent finalizers from running while the          */
 | |
| /* associated external resource is still in use.                */
 | |
| /* The function is sometimes called keep_alive in other         */
 | |
| /* settings.                                                    */
 | |
| #if defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__INTEL_COMPILER)
 | |
| # define GC_reachable_here(ptr) \
 | |
|                 __asm__ __volatile__(" " : : "X"(ptr) : "memory")
 | |
| #else
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_noop1(GC_word);
 | |
| # ifdef LINT2
 | |
| #   define GC_reachable_here(ptr) GC_noop1(~(GC_word)(ptr)^(~(GC_word)0))
 | |
|                 /* The expression matches the one of COVERT_DATAFLOW(). */
 | |
| # else
 | |
| #   define GC_reachable_here(ptr) GC_noop1((GC_word)(ptr))
 | |
| # endif
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* GC_set_warn_proc can be used to redirect or filter warning messages. */
 | |
| /* p may not be a NULL pointer.  msg is printf format string (arg must  */
 | |
| /* match the format).  Both the setter and the getter acquire the GC    */
 | |
| /* lock (to avoid data races).  In GC v7.1 (and before), the setter     */
 | |
| /* returned the old warn_proc value.                                    */
 | |
| typedef void (GC_CALLBACK * GC_warn_proc)(char * /* msg */,
 | |
|                                           GC_word /* arg */);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_warn_proc(GC_warn_proc /* p */) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| /* GC_get_warn_proc returns the current warn_proc.                      */
 | |
| GC_API GC_warn_proc GC_CALL GC_get_warn_proc(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* GC_ignore_warn_proc may be used as an argument for GC_set_warn_proc  */
 | |
| /* to suppress all warnings (unless statistics printing is turned on).  */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALLBACK GC_ignore_warn_proc(char *, GC_word);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Change file descriptor of GC log.  Unavailable on some targets.      */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_log_fd(int);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* abort_func is invoked on GC fatal aborts (just before OS-dependent   */
 | |
| /* abort or exit(1) is called).  Must be non-NULL.  The default one     */
 | |
| /* outputs msg to stderr provided msg is non-NULL.  msg is NULL if      */
 | |
| /* invoked before exit(1) otherwise msg is non-NULL (i.e., if invoked   */
 | |
| /* before abort).  Both the setter and getter acquire the GC lock.      */
 | |
| /* Both the setter and getter are defined only if the library has been  */
 | |
| /* compiled without SMALL_CONFIG.                                       */
 | |
| typedef void (GC_CALLBACK * GC_abort_func)(const char * /* msg */);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_abort_func(GC_abort_func) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| GC_API GC_abort_func GC_CALL GC_get_abort_func(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* A portable way to abort the application because of not enough memory.*/
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_abort_on_oom(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* The following is intended to be used by a higher level       */
 | |
| /* (e.g. Java-like) finalization facility.  It is expected      */
 | |
| /* that finalization code will arrange for hidden pointers to   */
 | |
| /* disappear.  Otherwise objects can be accessed after they     */
 | |
| /* have been collected.                                         */
 | |
| /* Should not be used in the leak-finding mode.                 */
 | |
| /* Note that putting pointers in atomic objects or in           */
 | |
| /* non-pointer slots of "typed" objects is equivalent to        */
 | |
| /* disguising them in this way, and may have other advantages.  */
 | |
| typedef GC_word GC_hidden_pointer;
 | |
| #define GC_HIDE_POINTER(p) (~(GC_hidden_pointer)(p))
 | |
| /* Converting a hidden pointer to a real pointer requires verifying     */
 | |
| /* that the object still exists.  This involves acquiring the           */
 | |
| /* allocator lock to avoid a race with the collector.                   */
 | |
| #define GC_REVEAL_POINTER(p) ((void *)GC_HIDE_POINTER(p))
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(I_HIDE_POINTERS) || defined(GC_I_HIDE_POINTERS)
 | |
|   /* This exists only for compatibility (the GC-prefixed symbols are    */
 | |
|   /* preferred for new code).                                           */
 | |
| # define HIDE_POINTER(p) GC_HIDE_POINTER(p)
 | |
| # define REVEAL_POINTER(p) GC_REVEAL_POINTER(p)
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* The routines to acquire/release the allocator lock.                  */
 | |
| /* The lock is not reentrant.  GC_alloc_unlock() should not be called   */
 | |
| /* unless the lock is acquired by the current thread.                   */
 | |
| #ifdef GC_THREADS
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_alloc_lock(void);
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_alloc_unlock(void);
 | |
| #else
 | |
|   /* No need for real locking if the client is single-threaded.         */
 | |
| # define GC_alloc_lock() (void)0
 | |
| # define GC_alloc_unlock() (void)0
 | |
| #endif /* !GC_THREADS */
 | |
| 
 | |
| typedef void * (GC_CALLBACK * GC_fn_type)(void * /* client_data */);
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_call_with_alloc_lock(GC_fn_type /* fn */,
 | |
|                                 void * /* client_data */) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* These routines are intended to explicitly notify the collector       */
 | |
| /* of new threads.  Often this is unnecessary because thread creation   */
 | |
| /* is implicitly intercepted by the collector, using header-file        */
 | |
| /* defines, or linker-based interception.  In the long run the intent   */
 | |
| /* is to always make redundant registration safe.  In the short run,    */
 | |
| /* this is being implemented a platform at a time.                      */
 | |
| /* The interface is complicated by the fact that we probably will not   */
 | |
| /* ever be able to automatically determine the stack bottom for thread  */
 | |
| /* stacks on all platforms.                                             */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Structure representing the bottom (cold end) of a thread stack.      */
 | |
| /* On most platforms this contains just a single address.               */
 | |
| struct GC_stack_base {
 | |
|   void * mem_base;      /* the bottom of the general-purpose stack */
 | |
| # if defined(__ia64) || defined(__ia64__) || defined(_M_IA64)
 | |
|     void * reg_base;    /* the bottom of the register stack */
 | |
| # endif
 | |
| };
 | |
| 
 | |
| typedef void * (GC_CALLBACK * GC_stack_base_func)(
 | |
|                 struct GC_stack_base * /* sb */, void * /* arg */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Call a function with a stack base structure corresponding to         */
 | |
| /* somewhere in the GC_call_with_stack_base frame.  This often can      */
 | |
| /* be used to provide a sufficiently accurate stack bottom.  And we     */
 | |
| /* implement it everywhere.                                             */
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_call_with_stack_base(GC_stack_base_func /* fn */,
 | |
|                                         void * /* arg */) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| #define GC_SUCCESS 0
 | |
| #define GC_DUPLICATE 1          /* Was already registered.              */
 | |
| #define GC_NO_THREADS 2         /* No thread support in GC.             */
 | |
|         /* GC_NO_THREADS is not returned by any GC function anymore.    */
 | |
| #define GC_UNIMPLEMENTED 3 /* Not yet implemented on this platform.     */
 | |
| #define GC_NOT_FOUND 4          /* Requested link not found (returned   */
 | |
|                                 /* by GC_move_disappearing_link).       */
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_DARWIN_THREADS) || defined(GC_WIN32_THREADS)
 | |
|   /* Use implicit thread registration and processing (via Win32 DllMain */
 | |
|   /* or Darwin task_threads).  Deprecated.  Must be called before       */
 | |
|   /* GC_INIT() and other GC routines.  Should be avoided if             */
 | |
|   /* GC_pthread_create, GC_beginthreadex (or GC_CreateThread) could be  */
 | |
|   /* called instead.  Disables parallelized GC on Win32.                */
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_use_threads_discovery(void);
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef GC_THREADS
 | |
|   /* Suggest the GC to use the specific signal to suspend threads.      */
 | |
|   /* Has no effect after GC_init and on non-POSIX systems.              */
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_suspend_signal(int);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* Suggest the GC to use the specific signal to resume threads.       */
 | |
|   /* Has no effect after GC_init and on non-POSIX systems.              */
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_thr_restart_signal(int);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* Return the signal number (constant after initialization) used by   */
 | |
|   /* the GC to suspend threads on POSIX systems.  Return -1 otherwise.  */
 | |
|   GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_suspend_signal(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* Return the signal number (constant after initialization) used by   */
 | |
|   /* the garbage collector to restart (resume) threads on POSIX         */
 | |
|   /* systems.  Return -1 otherwise.                                     */
 | |
|   GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_thr_restart_signal(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* Restart marker threads after POSIX fork in child.  Meaningless in  */
 | |
|   /* other situations.  Should not be called if fork followed by exec.  */
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_start_mark_threads(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* Explicitly enable GC_register_my_thread() invocation.              */
 | |
|   /* Done implicitly if a GC thread-creation function is called (or     */
 | |
|   /* implicit thread registration is activated, or the collector is     */
 | |
|   /* compiled with GC_ALWAYS_MULTITHREADED defined).  Otherwise, it     */
 | |
|   /* must be called from the main (or any previously registered) thread */
 | |
|   /* between the collector initialization and the first explicit        */
 | |
|   /* registering of a thread (it should be called as late as possible). */
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_allow_register_threads(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* Register the current thread, with the indicated stack bottom, as   */
 | |
|   /* a new thread whose stack(s) should be traced by the GC.  If it     */
 | |
|   /* is not implicitly called by the GC, this must be called before a   */
 | |
|   /* thread can allocate garbage collected memory, or assign pointers   */
 | |
|   /* to the garbage collected heap.  Once registered, a thread will be  */
 | |
|   /* stopped during garbage collections.                                */
 | |
|   /* This call must be previously enabled (see above).                  */
 | |
|   /* This should never be called from the main thread, where it is      */
 | |
|   /* always done implicitly.  This is normally done implicitly if GC_   */
 | |
|   /* functions are called to create the thread, e.g. by including gc.h  */
 | |
|   /* (which redefines some system functions) before calling the system  */
 | |
|   /* thread creation function.  Nonetheless, thread cleanup routines    */
 | |
|   /* (e.g., pthread key destructor) typically require manual thread     */
 | |
|   /* registering (and unregistering) if pointers to GC-allocated        */
 | |
|   /* objects are manipulated inside.                                    */
 | |
|   /* It is also always done implicitly on some platforms if             */
 | |
|   /* GC_use_threads_discovery() is called at start-up.  Except for the  */
 | |
|   /* latter case, the explicit call is normally required for threads    */
 | |
|   /* created by third-party libraries.                                  */
 | |
|   /* A manually registered thread requires manual unregistering.        */
 | |
|   /* Returns GC_SUCCESS on success, GC_DUPLICATE if already registered. */
 | |
|   GC_API int GC_CALL GC_register_my_thread(const struct GC_stack_base *)
 | |
|                                                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* Return non-zero (TRUE) if and only if the calling thread is        */
 | |
|   /* registered with the garbage collector.                             */
 | |
|   GC_API int GC_CALL GC_thread_is_registered(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* Notify the collector about the stack and the alt-stack of the      */
 | |
|   /* current thread.  stack_start/size is used to determine the stack   */
 | |
|   /* boundaries when a thread is suspended while it is on an alt-stack. */
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_register_altstack(void * /* stack_start */,
 | |
|                                            GC_word /* stack_size */,
 | |
|                                            void * /* altstack_base */,
 | |
|                                            GC_word /* altstack_size */);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* Unregister the current thread.  Only an explicitly registered      */
 | |
|   /* thread (i.e. for which GC_register_my_thread() returns GC_SUCCESS) */
 | |
|   /* is allowed (and required) to call this function.  (As a special    */
 | |
|   /* exception, it is also allowed to once unregister the main thread.) */
 | |
|   /* The thread may no longer allocate garbage collected memory or      */
 | |
|   /* manipulate pointers to the garbage collected heap after making     */
 | |
|   /* this call.  Specifically, if it wants to return or otherwise       */
 | |
|   /* communicate a pointer to the garbage-collected heap to another     */
 | |
|   /* thread, it must do this before calling GC_unregister_my_thread,    */
 | |
|   /* most probably by saving it in a global data structure.  Must not   */
 | |
|   /* be called inside a GC callback function (except for                */
 | |
|   /* GC_call_with_stack_base() one).                                    */
 | |
|   GC_API int GC_CALL GC_unregister_my_thread(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* Stop/start the world explicitly.  Not recommended for general use. */
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_stop_world_external(void);
 | |
|   GC_API void GC_CALL GC_start_world_external(void);
 | |
| #endif /* GC_THREADS */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Wrapper for functions that are likely to block (or, at least, do not */
 | |
| /* allocate garbage collected memory and/or manipulate pointers to the  */
 | |
| /* garbage collected heap) for an appreciable length of time.  While fn */
 | |
| /* is running, the collector is said to be in the "inactive" state for  */
 | |
| /* the current thread (this means that the thread is not suspended and  */
 | |
| /* the thread's stack frames "belonging" to the functions in the        */
 | |
| /* "inactive" state are not scanned during garbage collections).  It is */
 | |
| /* assumed that the collector is already initialized and the current    */
 | |
| /* thread is registered.  It is allowed for fn to call                  */
 | |
| /* GC_call_with_gc_active() (even recursively), thus temporarily        */
 | |
| /* toggling the collector's state back to "active".  The latter         */
 | |
| /* technique might be used to make stack scanning more precise (i.e.    */
 | |
| /* scan only stack frames of functions that allocate garbage collected  */
 | |
| /* memory and/or manipulate pointers to the garbage collected heap).    */
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_do_blocking(GC_fn_type /* fn */,
 | |
|                                 void * /* client_data */) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Call a function switching to the "active" state of the collector for */
 | |
| /* the current thread (i.e. the user function is allowed to call any    */
 | |
| /* GC function and/or manipulate pointers to the garbage collected      */
 | |
| /* heap).  GC_call_with_gc_active() has the functionality opposite to   */
 | |
| /* GC_do_blocking() one.  It is assumed that the collector is already   */
 | |
| /* initialized and the current thread is registered.  fn may toggle     */
 | |
| /* the collector thread's state temporarily to "inactive" one by using  */
 | |
| /* GC_do_blocking.  GC_call_with_gc_active() often can be used to       */
 | |
| /* provide a sufficiently accurate stack bottom.                        */
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_call_with_gc_active(GC_fn_type /* fn */,
 | |
|                                 void * /* client_data */) GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Attempt to fill in the GC_stack_base structure with the stack bottom */
 | |
| /* for this thread.  This appears to be required to implement anything  */
 | |
| /* like the JNI AttachCurrentThread in an environment in which new      */
 | |
| /* threads are not automatically registered with the collector.         */
 | |
| /* It is also unfortunately hard to implement well on many platforms.   */
 | |
| /* Returns GC_SUCCESS or GC_UNIMPLEMENTED.  This function acquires the  */
 | |
| /* GC lock on some platforms.                                           */
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_stack_base(struct GC_stack_base *)
 | |
|                                                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Fill in the GC_stack_base structure with the cold end (bottom) of    */
 | |
| /* the stack of the current thread (or coroutine).                      */
 | |
| /* Unlike GC_get_stack_base, it retrieves the value stored in the       */
 | |
| /* collector (which is initially set by the collector upon the thread   */
 | |
| /* is started or registered manually but it could be later updated by   */
 | |
| /* client using GC_set_stackbottom).  Returns the GC-internal non-NULL  */
 | |
| /* handle of the thread which could be passed to GC_set_stackbottom     */
 | |
| /* later.  It is assumed that the collector is already initialized and  */
 | |
| /* the thread is registered.  Acquires the GC lock to avoid data races. */
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_get_my_stackbottom(struct GC_stack_base *)
 | |
|                                                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Set the cool end of the user (coroutine) stack of the specified      */
 | |
| /* thread.  The GC thread handle is either the one returned by          */
 | |
| /* GC_get_my_stackbottom or NULL (the latter designates the current     */
 | |
| /* thread).  The caller should hold the GC lock (e.g. using             */
 | |
| /* GC_call_with_alloc_lock).  Also, the function could be used for      */
 | |
| /* setting GC_stackbottom value (the bottom of the primordial thread)   */
 | |
| /* before the collector is initialized (the GC lock is not needed to be */
 | |
| /* acquired in this case).                                              */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_stackbottom(void * /* gc_thread_handle */,
 | |
|                                        const struct GC_stack_base *)
 | |
|                                                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(2);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* The following routines are primarily intended for use with a         */
 | |
| /* preprocessor which inserts calls to check C pointer arithmetic.      */
 | |
| /* They indicate failure by invoking the corresponding _print_proc.     */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Check that p and q point to the same object.                 */
 | |
| /* Fail conspicuously if they don't.                            */
 | |
| /* Returns the first argument.                                  */
 | |
| /* Succeeds if neither p nor q points to the heap.              */
 | |
| /* May succeed if both p and q point to between heap objects.   */
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_same_obj(void * /* p */, void * /* q */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Checked pointer pre- and post- increment operations.  Note that      */
 | |
| /* the second argument is in units of bytes, not multiples of the       */
 | |
| /* object size.  This should either be invoked from a macro, or the     */
 | |
| /* call should be automatically generated.                              */
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_pre_incr(void **, ptrdiff_t /* how_much */)
 | |
|                                                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_post_incr(void **, ptrdiff_t /* how_much */)
 | |
|                                                         GC_ATTR_NONNULL(1);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Check that p is visible                                              */
 | |
| /* to the collector as a possibly pointer containing location.          */
 | |
| /* If it isn't fail conspicuously.                                      */
 | |
| /* Returns the argument in all cases.  May erroneously succeed          */
 | |
| /* in hard cases.  (This is intended for debugging use with             */
 | |
| /* untyped allocations.  The idea is that it should be possible, though */
 | |
| /* slow, to add such a call to all indirect pointer stores.)            */
 | |
| /* Currently useless for multi-threaded worlds.                         */
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_is_visible(void * /* p */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Check that if p is a pointer to a heap page, then it points to       */
 | |
| /* a valid displacement within a heap object.                           */
 | |
| /* Fail conspicuously if this property does not hold.                   */
 | |
| /* Uninteresting with GC_all_interior_pointers.                         */
 | |
| /* Always returns its argument.                                         */
 | |
| GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_is_valid_displacement(void * /* p */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Explicitly dump the GC state.  This is most often called from the    */
 | |
| /* debugger, or by setting the GC_DUMP_REGULARLY environment variable,  */
 | |
| /* but it may be useful to call it from client code during debugging.   */
 | |
| /* The current collection number is printed in the header of the dump.  */
 | |
| /* Acquires the GC lock to avoid data races.                            */
 | |
| /* Defined only if the library has been compiled without NO_DEBUGGING.  */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_dump(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* The same as GC_dump but allows to specify the name of dump and does  */
 | |
| /* not acquire the lock.  If name is non-NULL, it is printed to help    */
 | |
| /* identifying individual dumps.  Otherwise the current collection      */
 | |
| /* number is used as the name.                                          */
 | |
| /* Defined only if the library has been compiled without NO_DEBUGGING.  */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_dump_named(const char * /* name */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Dump information about each block of every GC memory section.        */
 | |
| /* Defined only if the library has been compiled without NO_DEBUGGING.  */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_dump_regions(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Dump information about every registered disappearing link and        */
 | |
| /* finalizable object.                                                  */
 | |
| /* Defined only if the library has been compiled without NO_DEBUGGING.  */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_dump_finalization(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Safer, but slow, pointer addition.  Probably useful mainly with      */
 | |
| /* a preprocessor.  Useful only for heap pointers.                      */
 | |
| /* Only the macros without trailing digits are meant to be used         */
 | |
| /* by clients.  These are designed to model the available C pointer     */
 | |
| /* arithmetic expressions.                                              */
 | |
| /* Even then, these are probably more useful as                         */
 | |
| /* documentation than as part of the API.                               */
 | |
| /* Note that GC_PTR_ADD evaluates the first argument more than once.    */
 | |
| #if defined(GC_DEBUG) && defined(__GNUC__)
 | |
| # define GC_PTR_ADD3(x, n, type_of_result) \
 | |
|         ((type_of_result)GC_same_obj((x)+(n), (x)))
 | |
| # define GC_PRE_INCR3(x, n, type_of_result) \
 | |
|         ((type_of_result)GC_pre_incr((void **)(&(x)), (n)*sizeof(*x)))
 | |
| # define GC_POST_INCR3(x, n, type_of_result) \
 | |
|         ((type_of_result)GC_post_incr((void **)(&(x)), (n)*sizeof(*x)))
 | |
| # define GC_PTR_ADD(x, n) GC_PTR_ADD3(x, n, __typeof__(x))
 | |
| # define GC_PRE_INCR(x, n) GC_PRE_INCR3(x, n, __typeof__(x))
 | |
| # define GC_POST_INCR(x) GC_POST_INCR3(x, 1, __typeof__(x))
 | |
| # define GC_POST_DECR(x) GC_POST_INCR3(x, -1, __typeof__(x))
 | |
| #else /* !GC_DEBUG || !__GNUC__ */
 | |
|   /* We can't do this right without typeof, which ANSI decided was not    */
 | |
|   /* sufficiently useful.  Without it we resort to the non-debug version. */
 | |
|   /* TODO: This should eventually support C++0x decltype. */
 | |
| # define GC_PTR_ADD(x, n) ((x)+(n))
 | |
| # define GC_PRE_INCR(x, n) ((x) += (n))
 | |
| # define GC_POST_INCR(x) ((x)++)
 | |
| # define GC_POST_DECR(x) ((x)--)
 | |
| #endif /* !GC_DEBUG || !__GNUC__ */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Safer assignment of a pointer to a non-stack location.       */
 | |
| #ifdef GC_DEBUG
 | |
| # define GC_PTR_STORE(p, q) \
 | |
|         (*(void **)GC_is_visible((void *)(p)) = \
 | |
|                     GC_is_valid_displacement((void *)(q)))
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_PTR_STORE(p, q) (*(void **)(p) = (void *)(q))
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* GC_PTR_STORE_AND_DIRTY(p,q) is equivalent to GC_PTR_STORE(p,q)       */
 | |
| /* followed by GC_END_STUBBORN_CHANGE(p) and GC_reachable_here(q)       */
 | |
| /* (assuming p and q do not have side effects).                         */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_ptr_store_and_dirty(void * /* p */,
 | |
|                                            const void * /* q */);
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_debug_ptr_store_and_dirty(void * /* p */,
 | |
|                                                  const void * /* q */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Functions called to report pointer checking errors */
 | |
| GC_API void (GC_CALLBACK * GC_same_obj_print_proc)(void * /* p */,
 | |
|                                                    void * /* q */);
 | |
| GC_API void (GC_CALLBACK * GC_is_valid_displacement_print_proc)(void *);
 | |
| GC_API void (GC_CALLBACK * GC_is_visible_print_proc)(void *);
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef GC_PTHREADS
 | |
|   /* For pthread support, we generally need to intercept a number of    */
 | |
|   /* thread library calls.  We do that here by macro defining them.     */
 | |
| # ifdef __cplusplus
 | |
|     } /* extern "C" */
 | |
| # endif
 | |
| # include "gc_pthread_redirects.h"
 | |
| # ifdef __cplusplus
 | |
|     extern "C" {
 | |
| # endif
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* This returns a list of objects, linked through their first word.     */
 | |
| /* Its use can greatly reduce lock contention problems, since the       */
 | |
| /* allocation lock can be acquired and released many fewer times.       */
 | |
| GC_API GC_ATTR_MALLOC void * GC_CALL GC_malloc_many(size_t /* lb */);
 | |
| #define GC_NEXT(p) (*(void * *)(p))     /* Retrieve the next element    */
 | |
|                                         /* in returned list.            */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* A filter function to control the scanning of dynamic libraries.      */
 | |
| /* If implemented, called by GC before registering a dynamic library    */
 | |
| /* (discovered by GC) section as a static data root (called only as     */
 | |
| /* a last reason not to register).  The filename of the library, the    */
 | |
| /* address and the length of the memory region (section) are passed.    */
 | |
| /* This routine should return nonzero if that region should be scanned. */
 | |
| /* Always called with the allocation lock held.  Depending on the       */
 | |
| /* platform, might be called with the "world" stopped.                  */
 | |
| typedef int (GC_CALLBACK * GC_has_static_roots_func)(
 | |
|                                         const char * /* dlpi_name */,
 | |
|                                         void * /* section_start */,
 | |
|                                         size_t /* section_size */);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Register a new callback (a user-supplied filter) to control the      */
 | |
| /* scanning of dynamic libraries.  Replaces any previously registered   */
 | |
| /* callback.  May be 0 (means no filtering).  May be unused on some     */
 | |
| /* platforms (if the filtering is unimplemented or inappropriate).      */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_register_has_static_roots_callback(
 | |
|                                         GC_has_static_roots_func);
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if !defined(CPPCHECK) && !defined(GC_WINDOWS_H_INCLUDED) && defined(WINAPI)
 | |
|   /* windows.h is included before gc.h */
 | |
| # define GC_WINDOWS_H_INCLUDED
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_WIN32_THREADS) \
 | |
|     && (!defined(GC_PTHREADS) || defined(GC_BUILD) \
 | |
|         || defined(GC_WINDOWS_H_INCLUDED))
 | |
|                 /* Note: for Cygwin and pthreads-win32, this is skipped */
 | |
|                 /* unless windows.h is included before gc.h.            */
 | |
| 
 | |
| # if (!defined(GC_NO_THREAD_DECLS) || defined(GC_BUILD)) \
 | |
|      && !defined(GC_DONT_INCL_WINDOWS_H)
 | |
| 
 | |
| #   ifdef __cplusplus
 | |
|       } /* Including windows.h in an extern "C" context no longer works. */
 | |
| #   endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #   if !defined(_WIN32_WCE) && !defined(__CEGCC__)
 | |
| #     include <process.h> /* For _beginthreadex, _endthreadex */
 | |
| #   endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #   if defined(GC_BUILD) || !defined(GC_DONT_INCLUDE_WINDOWS_H)
 | |
| #     include <windows.h>
 | |
| #     define GC_WINDOWS_H_INCLUDED
 | |
| #   endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #   ifdef __cplusplus
 | |
|       extern "C" {
 | |
| #   endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #   ifdef GC_UNDERSCORE_STDCALL
 | |
|       /* Explicitly prefix exported/imported WINAPI (__stdcall) symbols */
 | |
|       /* with '_' (underscore).  Might be useful if MinGW/x86 is used.  */
 | |
| #     define GC_CreateThread _GC_CreateThread
 | |
| #     define GC_ExitThread _GC_ExitThread
 | |
| #   endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #   ifndef DECLSPEC_NORETURN
 | |
|       /* Typically defined in winnt.h. */
 | |
| #     ifdef GC_WINDOWS_H_INCLUDED
 | |
| #       define DECLSPEC_NORETURN /* empty */
 | |
| #     else
 | |
| #       define DECLSPEC_NORETURN __declspec(noreturn)
 | |
| #     endif
 | |
| #   endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #   if !defined(_UINTPTR_T) && !defined(_UINTPTR_T_DEFINED) \
 | |
|        && !defined(UINTPTR_MAX)
 | |
|       typedef GC_word GC_uintptr_t;
 | |
| #   else
 | |
|       typedef uintptr_t GC_uintptr_t;
 | |
| #   endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #   ifdef _WIN64
 | |
| #     define GC_WIN32_SIZE_T GC_uintptr_t
 | |
| #   elif defined(GC_WINDOWS_H_INCLUDED)
 | |
| #     define GC_WIN32_SIZE_T DWORD
 | |
| #   else
 | |
| #     define GC_WIN32_SIZE_T unsigned long
 | |
| #   endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #   ifdef GC_INSIDE_DLL
 | |
|       /* Export GC DllMain to be invoked from client DllMain.   */
 | |
| #     ifdef GC_UNDERSCORE_STDCALL
 | |
| #       define GC_DllMain _GC_DllMain
 | |
| #     endif
 | |
| #     ifdef GC_WINDOWS_H_INCLUDED
 | |
|         GC_API BOOL WINAPI GC_DllMain(HINSTANCE /* inst */,
 | |
|                                       ULONG /* reason */,
 | |
|                                       LPVOID /* reserved */);
 | |
| #     else
 | |
|         GC_API int __stdcall GC_DllMain(void *, unsigned long, void *);
 | |
| #     endif
 | |
| #   endif /* GC_INSIDE_DLL */
 | |
| 
 | |
|     /* All threads must be created using GC_CreateThread or             */
 | |
|     /* GC_beginthreadex, or must explicitly call GC_register_my_thread  */
 | |
|     /* (and call GC_unregister_my_thread before thread termination), so */
 | |
|     /* that they will be recorded in the thread table.  For backward    */
 | |
|     /* compatibility, it is possible to build the GC with GC_DLL        */
 | |
|     /* defined, and to call GC_use_threads_discovery.  This implicitly  */
 | |
|     /* registers all created threads, but appears to be less robust.    */
 | |
|     /* Currently the collector expects all threads to fall through and  */
 | |
|     /* terminate normally, or call GC_endthreadex() or GC_ExitThread,   */
 | |
|     /* so that the thread is properly unregistered.                     */
 | |
| #   ifdef GC_WINDOWS_H_INCLUDED
 | |
|       GC_API HANDLE WINAPI GC_CreateThread(
 | |
|                 LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES /* lpThreadAttributes */,
 | |
|                 GC_WIN32_SIZE_T /* dwStackSize */,
 | |
|                 LPTHREAD_START_ROUTINE /* lpStartAddress */,
 | |
|                 LPVOID /* lpParameter */, DWORD /* dwCreationFlags */,
 | |
|                 LPDWORD /* lpThreadId */);
 | |
| 
 | |
|       GC_API DECLSPEC_NORETURN void WINAPI GC_ExitThread(
 | |
|                                                 DWORD /* dwExitCode */);
 | |
| #   else
 | |
|       struct _SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES;
 | |
|       GC_API void *__stdcall GC_CreateThread(struct _SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES *,
 | |
|                                 GC_WIN32_SIZE_T,
 | |
|                                 unsigned long (__stdcall *)(void *),
 | |
|                                 void *, unsigned long, unsigned long *);
 | |
|       GC_API DECLSPEC_NORETURN void __stdcall GC_ExitThread(unsigned long);
 | |
| #   endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #   if !defined(_WIN32_WCE) && !defined(__CEGCC__)
 | |
|       GC_API GC_uintptr_t GC_CALL GC_beginthreadex(
 | |
|                         void * /* security */, unsigned /* stack_size */,
 | |
|                         unsigned (__stdcall *)(void *),
 | |
|                         void * /* arglist */, unsigned /* initflag */,
 | |
|                         unsigned * /* thrdaddr */);
 | |
| 
 | |
|       /* Note: _endthreadex() is not currently marked as no-return in   */
 | |
|       /* VC++ and MinGW headers, so we don't mark it neither.           */
 | |
|       GC_API void GC_CALL GC_endthreadex(unsigned /* retval */);
 | |
| #   endif /* !_WIN32_WCE */
 | |
| 
 | |
| # endif /* !GC_NO_THREAD_DECLS */
 | |
| 
 | |
| # ifdef GC_WINMAIN_REDIRECT
 | |
|     /* win32_threads.c implements the real WinMain(), which will start  */
 | |
|     /* a new thread to call GC_WinMain() after initializing the garbage */
 | |
|     /* collector.                                                       */
 | |
| #   define WinMain GC_WinMain
 | |
| # endif
 | |
| 
 | |
|   /* For compatibility only. */
 | |
| # define GC_use_DllMain GC_use_threads_discovery
 | |
| 
 | |
| # ifndef GC_NO_THREAD_REDIRECTS
 | |
| #   define CreateThread GC_CreateThread
 | |
| #   define ExitThread GC_ExitThread
 | |
| #   undef _beginthreadex
 | |
| #   define _beginthreadex GC_beginthreadex
 | |
| #   undef _endthreadex
 | |
| #   define _endthreadex GC_endthreadex
 | |
| /* #define _beginthread { > "Please use _beginthreadex instead of _beginthread" < } */
 | |
| # endif /* !GC_NO_THREAD_REDIRECTS */
 | |
| 
 | |
| #endif /* GC_WIN32_THREADS */
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Public setter and getter for switching "unmap as much as possible"   */
 | |
| /* mode on(1) and off(0).  Has no effect unless unmapping is turned on. */
 | |
| /* Has no effect on implicitly-initiated garbage collections.  Initial  */
 | |
| /* value is controlled by GC_FORCE_UNMAP_ON_GCOLLECT.  The setter and   */
 | |
| /* getter are unsynchronized.                                           */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_set_force_unmap_on_gcollect(int);
 | |
| GC_API int GC_CALL GC_get_force_unmap_on_gcollect(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Fully portable code should call GC_INIT() from the main program      */
 | |
| /* before making any other GC_ calls.  On most platforms this is a      */
 | |
| /* no-op and the collector self-initializes.  But a number of           */
 | |
| /* platforms make that too hard.                                        */
 | |
| /* A GC_INIT call is required if the collector is built with            */
 | |
| /* THREAD_LOCAL_ALLOC defined and the initial allocation call is not    */
 | |
| /* to GC_malloc() or GC_malloc_atomic().                                */
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(__CYGWIN32__) || defined(__CYGWIN__)
 | |
|   /* Similarly gnu-win32 DLLs need explicit initialization from the     */
 | |
|   /* main program, as does AIX.                                         */
 | |
| # ifdef __x86_64__
 | |
|     /* Cygwin/x64 does not add leading underscore to symbols anymore.   */
 | |
|     extern int __data_start__[], __data_end__[];
 | |
|     extern int __bss_start__[], __bss_end__[];
 | |
| #   define GC_DATASTART ((GC_word)__data_start__ < (GC_word)__bss_start__ \
 | |
|                          ? (void *)__data_start__ : (void *)__bss_start__)
 | |
| #   define GC_DATAEND ((GC_word)__data_end__ > (GC_word)__bss_end__ \
 | |
|                        ? (void *)__data_end__ : (void *)__bss_end__)
 | |
| # else
 | |
|     extern int _data_start__[], _data_end__[], _bss_start__[], _bss_end__[];
 | |
| #   define GC_DATASTART ((GC_word)_data_start__ < (GC_word)_bss_start__ \
 | |
|                          ? (void *)_data_start__ : (void *)_bss_start__)
 | |
| #   define GC_DATAEND ((GC_word)_data_end__ > (GC_word)_bss_end__ \
 | |
|                       ? (void *)_data_end__ : (void *)_bss_end__)
 | |
| # endif /* !__x86_64__ */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_ROOTS GC_add_roots(GC_DATASTART, GC_DATAEND); \
 | |
|                                  GC_gcollect() /* For blacklisting. */
 | |
|         /* Required at least if GC is in a DLL.  And doesn't hurt. */
 | |
| #elif defined(_AIX)
 | |
|   extern int _data[], _end[];
 | |
| # define GC_DATASTART ((void *)_data)
 | |
| # define GC_DATAEND ((void *)_end)
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_ROOTS GC_add_roots(GC_DATASTART, GC_DATAEND)
 | |
| #elif (defined(HOST_ANDROID) || defined(__ANDROID__)) \
 | |
|       && defined(IGNORE_DYNAMIC_LOADING)
 | |
|   /* This is ugly but seems the only way to register data roots of the  */
 | |
|   /* client shared library if the GC dynamic loading support is off.    */
 | |
| # pragma weak __dso_handle
 | |
|   extern int __dso_handle[];
 | |
|   GC_API void * GC_CALL GC_find_limit(void * /* start */, int /* up */);
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_ROOTS (void)(__dso_handle != 0 \
 | |
|                                    ? (GC_add_roots(__dso_handle, \
 | |
|                                             GC_find_limit(__dso_handle, \
 | |
|                                                           1 /*up*/)), 0) : 0)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_ROOTS /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef GC_DONT_EXPAND
 | |
|   /* Set GC_dont_expand to TRUE at start-up */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_DONT_EXPAND GC_set_dont_expand(1)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_DONT_EXPAND /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef GC_FORCE_UNMAP_ON_GCOLLECT
 | |
|   /* Turn on "unmap as much as possible on explicit GC" mode at start-up */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_FORCE_UNMAP_ON_GCOLLECT \
 | |
|                 GC_set_force_unmap_on_gcollect(1)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_FORCE_UNMAP_ON_GCOLLECT /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef GC_DONT_GC
 | |
|   /* This is for debugging only (useful if environment variables are    */
 | |
|   /* unsupported); cannot call GC_disable as goes before GC_init.       */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_MAX_RETRIES (void)(GC_dont_gc = 1)
 | |
| #elif defined(GC_MAX_RETRIES) && !defined(CPPCHECK)
 | |
|   /* Set GC_max_retries to the desired value at start-up */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_MAX_RETRIES GC_set_max_retries(GC_MAX_RETRIES)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_MAX_RETRIES /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_ALLOCD_BYTES_PER_FINALIZER) && !defined(CPPCHECK)
 | |
|   /* Set GC_allocd_bytes_per_finalizer to the desired value at start-up. */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_ALLOCD_BYTES_PER_FINALIZER \
 | |
|         GC_set_allocd_bytes_per_finalizer(GC_ALLOCD_BYTES_PER_FINALIZER)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_ALLOCD_BYTES_PER_FINALIZER /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_FREE_SPACE_DIVISOR) && !defined(CPPCHECK)
 | |
|   /* Set GC_free_space_divisor to the desired value at start-up */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_FREE_SPACE_DIVISOR \
 | |
|                 GC_set_free_space_divisor(GC_FREE_SPACE_DIVISOR)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_FREE_SPACE_DIVISOR /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_FULL_FREQ) && !defined(CPPCHECK)
 | |
|   /* Set GC_full_freq to the desired value at start-up */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_FULL_FREQ GC_set_full_freq(GC_FULL_FREQ)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_FULL_FREQ /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_TIME_LIMIT) && !defined(CPPCHECK)
 | |
|   /* Set GC_time_limit (in ms) to the desired value at start-up. */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_TIME_LIMIT GC_set_time_limit(GC_TIME_LIMIT)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_TIME_LIMIT /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_MARKERS) && defined(GC_THREADS) && !defined(CPPCHECK)
 | |
|   /* Set the number of marker threads (including the initiating */
 | |
|   /* one) to the desired value at start-up.                     */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_MARKERS GC_set_markers_count(GC_MARKERS)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_MARKERS /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_SIG_SUSPEND) && defined(GC_THREADS) && !defined(CPPCHECK)
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_SUSPEND_SIGNAL GC_set_suspend_signal(GC_SIG_SUSPEND)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_SUSPEND_SIGNAL /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_SIG_THR_RESTART) && defined(GC_THREADS) && !defined(CPPCHECK)
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_THR_RESTART_SIGNAL \
 | |
|                 GC_set_thr_restart_signal(GC_SIG_THR_RESTART)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_THR_RESTART_SIGNAL /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_MAXIMUM_HEAP_SIZE) && !defined(CPPCHECK)
 | |
|   /* Limit the heap size to the desired value (useful for debugging).   */
 | |
|   /* The limit could be overridden either at the program start-up by    */
 | |
|   /* the similar environment variable or anytime later by the           */
 | |
|   /* corresponding API function call.                                   */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_MAXIMUM_HEAP_SIZE \
 | |
|                 GC_set_max_heap_size(GC_MAXIMUM_HEAP_SIZE)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_MAXIMUM_HEAP_SIZE /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef GC_IGNORE_WARN
 | |
|   /* Turn off all warnings at start-up (after GC initialization) */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_IGNORE_WARN GC_set_warn_proc(GC_ignore_warn_proc)
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_IGNORE_WARN /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE) && !defined(CPPCHECK)
 | |
|   /* Set heap size to the desired value at start-up */
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE \
 | |
|                 { size_t heap_size = GC_get_heap_size(); \
 | |
|                   if (heap_size < (GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE)) \
 | |
|                     (void)GC_expand_hp((GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE) - heap_size); }
 | |
| #else
 | |
| # define GC_INIT_CONF_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE /* empty */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* Portable clients should call this at the program start-up.  More     */
 | |
| /* over, some platforms require this call to be done strictly from the  */
 | |
| /* primordial thread.  Multiple invocations are harmless.               */
 | |
| #define GC_INIT() { GC_INIT_CONF_DONT_EXPAND; /* pre-init */ \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_FORCE_UNMAP_ON_GCOLLECT; \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_MAX_RETRIES; \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_ALLOCD_BYTES_PER_FINALIZER; \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_FREE_SPACE_DIVISOR; \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_FULL_FREQ; \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_TIME_LIMIT; \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_MARKERS; \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_SUSPEND_SIGNAL; \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_THR_RESTART_SIGNAL; \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_MAXIMUM_HEAP_SIZE; \
 | |
|                     GC_init(); /* real GC initialization */ \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_ROOTS; /* post-init */ \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_IGNORE_WARN; \
 | |
|                     GC_INIT_CONF_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE; }
 | |
| 
 | |
| /* win32S may not free all resources on process exit.                   */
 | |
| /* This explicitly deallocates the heap.  Defined only for Windows.     */
 | |
| GC_API void GC_CALL GC_win32_free_heap(void);
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(__SYMBIAN32__)
 | |
|   void GC_init_global_static_roots(void);
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if defined(_AMIGA) && !defined(GC_AMIGA_MAKINGLIB)
 | |
|   /* Allocation really goes through GC_amiga_allocwrapper_do.   */
 | |
|   void *GC_amiga_realloc(void *, size_t);
 | |
| # define GC_realloc(a,b) GC_amiga_realloc(a,b)
 | |
|   void GC_amiga_set_toany(void (*)(void));
 | |
|   extern int GC_amiga_free_space_divisor_inc;
 | |
|   extern void *(*GC_amiga_allocwrapper_do)(size_t, void *(GC_CALL *)(size_t));
 | |
| # define GC_malloc(a) \
 | |
|         (*GC_amiga_allocwrapper_do)(a,GC_malloc)
 | |
| # define GC_malloc_atomic(a) \
 | |
|         (*GC_amiga_allocwrapper_do)(a,GC_malloc_atomic)
 | |
| # define GC_malloc_uncollectable(a) \
 | |
|         (*GC_amiga_allocwrapper_do)(a,GC_malloc_uncollectable)
 | |
| # define GC_malloc_atomic_uncollectable(a) \
 | |
|         (*GC_amiga_allocwrapper_do)(a,GC_malloc_atomic_uncollectable)
 | |
| # define GC_malloc_ignore_off_page(a) \
 | |
|         (*GC_amiga_allocwrapper_do)(a,GC_malloc_ignore_off_page)
 | |
| # define GC_malloc_atomic_ignore_off_page(a) \
 | |
|         (*GC_amiga_allocwrapper_do)(a,GC_malloc_atomic_ignore_off_page)
 | |
| #endif /* _AMIGA && !GC_AMIGA_MAKINGLIB */
 | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef __cplusplus
 | |
|   } /* extern "C" */
 | |
| #endif
 | |
| 
 | |
| #endif /* GC_H */
 |