1 | \chapter{Implementation}
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2 | \label{c:implement}
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3 |
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4 | % Local Helpers:
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5 | \newcommand\transformline[1][becomes...]{
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6 | \hrulefill#1\hrulefill
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7 | \medskip
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8 | }
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9 |
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10 | The implementation work for this thesis covers the two components: virtual
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11 | system and exceptions. Each component is discussed in detail.
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12 |
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13 | \section{Virtual System}
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14 | \label{s:VirtualSystem}
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15 | % Virtual table rules. Virtual tables, the pointer to them and the cast.
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16 | While the \CFA virtual system currently has only two public features, virtual
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17 | cast and virtual tables,
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18 | substantial structure is required to support them,
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19 | and provide features for exception handling and the standard library.
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20 |
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21 | \subsection{Virtual Type}
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22 | A virtual type~(see \autoref{s:virtuals}) has a pointer to a virtual table,
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23 | called the \emph{virtual-table pointer},
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24 | which binds each instance of a virtual type to a virtual table.
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25 | Internally, the field is called \snake{virtual_table}
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26 | and is fixed after construction.
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27 | This pointer is also the table's id and how the system accesses the
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28 | virtual table and the virtual members there.
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29 | It is always the first field in the
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30 | structure so that its location is always known.
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31 |
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32 | % We have no special rules for these constructors.
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33 | Virtual table pointers are passed to the constructors of virtual types
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34 | as part of field-by-field construction.
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35 |
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36 | \subsection{Type ID}
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37 | Every virtual type has a unique ID.
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38 | These are used in type equality, to check if the representation of two values
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39 | are the same, and to access the type's type information.
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40 | This uniqueness means across a program composed of multiple translation
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41 | units (TU), not uniqueness across all programs or even across multiple
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42 | processes on the same machine.
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43 |
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44 | Our approach for program uniqueness is using a static declaration for each
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45 | type ID, where the run-time storage address of that variable is guaranteed to
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46 | be unique during program execution.
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47 | The type ID storage can also be used for other purposes,
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48 | and is used for type information.
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49 |
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50 | The problem is that a type ID may appear in multiple TUs that compose a
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51 | program (see \autoref{ss:VirtualTable}), so the initial solution would seem
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52 | to be make it external in each translation unit. However, the type ID must
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53 | have a declaration in (exactly) one of the TUs to create the storage.
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54 | No other declaration related to the virtual type has this property, so doing
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55 | this through standard C declarations would require the user to do it manually.
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56 |
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57 | Instead, the linker is used to handle this problem.
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58 | % I did not base anything off of C++17; they are solving the same problem.
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59 | A new feature has been added to \CFA for this purpose, the special attribute
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60 | \snake{cfa_linkonce}, which uses the special section @.gnu.linkonce@.
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61 | When used as a prefix (\eg @.gnu.linkonce.example@), the linker does
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62 | not combine these sections, but instead discards all but one with the same
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63 | full name.
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64 |
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65 | So, each type ID must be given a unique section name with the \snake{linkonce}
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66 | prefix. Luckily, \CFA already has a way to get unique names, the name mangler.
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67 | For example, this could be written directly in \CFA:
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68 | \begin{cfa}
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69 | __attribute__((cfa_linkonce)) void f() {}
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70 | \end{cfa}
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71 | This is translated to:
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72 | \begin{cfa}
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73 | __attribute__((section(".gnu.linkonce._X1fFv___1"))) void _X1fFv___1() {}
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74 | \end{cfa}
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75 | This is done internally to access the name mangler.
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76 | This attribute is useful for other purposes, any other place a unique
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77 | instance required, and should eventually be made part of a public and
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78 | stable feature in \CFA.
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79 |
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80 | \subsection{Type Information}
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81 |
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82 | There is data stored at the type ID's declaration, the type information.
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83 | The type information currently is only the parent's type ID or, if the
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84 | type has no parent, the null pointer.
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85 | The ancestors of a virtual type are found by traversing type IDs through
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86 | the type information.
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87 | An example using helper macros looks like:
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88 | \begin{cfa}
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89 | struct INFO_TYPE(TYPE) {
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90 | INFO_TYPE(PARENT) const * parent;
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91 | };
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92 |
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93 | __attribute__((cfa_linkonce))
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94 | INFO_TYPE(TYPE) const INFO_NAME(TYPE) = {
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95 | &INFO_NAME(PARENT),
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96 | };
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97 | \end{cfa}
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98 |
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99 | Type information is constructed as follows:
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100 | \begin{enumerate}[nosep]
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101 | \item
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102 | Use the type's name to generate a name for the type information structure,
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103 | which is saved so it can be reused.
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104 | \item
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105 | Generate a new structure definition to store the type
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106 | information. The layout is the same in each case, just the parent's type ID,
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107 | but the types used change from instance to instance.
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108 | The generated name is used for both this structure and, if relevant, the
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109 | parent pointer.
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110 | If the virtual type is polymorphic then the type information structure is
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111 | polymorphic as well, with the same polymorphic arguments.
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112 | \item
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113 | A separate name for instances is generated from the type's name.
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114 | \item
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115 | The definition is generated and initialized.
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116 | The parent ID is set to the null pointer or to the address of the parent's
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117 | type information instance. Name resolution handles the rest.
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118 | \item
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119 | \CFA's name mangler does its regular name mangling encoding the type of
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120 | the declaration into the instance name.
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121 | This process gives a completely unique name
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122 | including different instances of the same polymorphic type.
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123 | \end{enumerate}
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124 |
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125 | Writing that code manually, with helper macros for the early name mangling,
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126 | would look like this:
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127 | \begin{cfa}
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128 | struct INFO_TYPE(TYPE) {
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129 | INFO_TYPE(PARENT) const * parent;
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130 | };
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131 |
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132 | __attribute__((cfa_linkonce))
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133 | INFO_TYPE(TYPE) const INFO_NAME(TYPE) = {
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134 | &INFO_NAME(PARENT),
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135 | };
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136 | \end{cfa}
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137 |
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138 | \begin{comment}
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139 | \subsubsection{\lstinline{cfa\_linkonce} Attribute}
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140 | % I just realized: This is an extension of the inline keyword.
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141 | % An extension of C's at least, it is very similar to C++'s.
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142 | Another feature added to \CFA is a new attribute: \texttt{cfa\_linkonce}.
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143 | This attribute is attached to an object or function definition
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144 | (any global declaration with a name and a type)
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145 | allowing it to be defined multiple times.
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146 | All matching definitions mush have the link-once attribute
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147 | and their implementations should be identical as well.
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148 |
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149 | A single definition with the attribute can be included in a header
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150 | file as if it was a forward declaration, except no definition is required.
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151 |
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152 | This technique is used for type ID instances. A link-once definition is
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153 | generated each time the structure is seen. This will result in multiple
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154 | copies but the link-once attribute ensures all but one are removed for a
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155 | unique instance.
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156 |
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157 | Internally, @cfa_linkonce@ is replaced with
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158 | @section(".gnu.linkonce.NAME")@ where \texttt{NAME} is replaced by the
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159 | mangled name of the object.
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160 | Any other @section@ attributes are removed from the declaration.
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161 | The prefix \texttt{.gnu.linkonce} in section names is recognized by the
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162 | linker. If two of these sections appear with the same name, including
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163 | everything that comes after the special prefix, then only one is used
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164 | and the other is discarded.
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165 | \end{comment}
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166 |
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167 | \subsection{Virtual Table}
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168 | \label{ss:VirtualTable}
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169 | Each virtual type has a virtual table type that stores its type ID and
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170 | virtual members.
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171 | An instance of a virtual type is bound to a virtual table instance,
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172 | which have the values of the virtual members.
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173 | Both the layout of the fields (in the virtual table type)
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174 | and their value (in the virtual table instance) are decided by the rules given
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175 | below.
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176 |
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177 | The layout always comes in three parts (see \autoref{f:VirtualTableLayout}).
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178 | The first section is just the type ID at the head of the table. It is always
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179 | there to ensure that it can be found even when the accessing code does not
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180 | know which virtual type it has.
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181 | The second section is all the virtual members of the parent, in the same
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182 | order as they appear in the parent's virtual table. Note that the type may
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183 | change slightly as references to the ``this" change. This is limited to
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184 | inside pointers/references and via function pointers so that the size (and
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185 | hence the offsets) are the same.
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186 | The third section is similar to the second except that it is the new virtual
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187 | members introduced at this level in the hierarchy.
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188 |
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189 | \begin{figure}
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190 | \begin{center}
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191 | \input{vtable-layout}
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192 | \end{center}
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193 | \caption{Virtual Table Layout}
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194 | \label{f:VirtualTableLayout}
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195 | \end{figure}
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196 |
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197 | The first and second sections together mean that every virtual table has a
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198 | prefix that has the same layout and types as its parent virtual table.
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199 | This, combined with the fixed offset to the virtual table pointer, means that
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200 | for any virtual type, it is always safe to access its virtual table and,
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201 | from there, it is safe to check the type ID to identify the exact type of the
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202 | underlying object, access any of the virtual members and pass the object to
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203 | any of the method-like virtual members.
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204 |
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205 | When a virtual table is declared, the user decides where to declare it and its
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206 | name. The initialization of the virtual table is entirely automatic based on
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207 | the context of the declaration.
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208 |
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209 | The type ID is always fixed, with each virtual table type having
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210 | exactly one possible type ID.
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211 | The virtual members are usually filled in by type resolution.
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212 | The best match for a given name and type at the declaration site is used.
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213 | There are two exceptions to that rule: the @size@ field, the type's size,
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214 | is set using a @sizeof@ expression, and the @align@ field, the
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215 | type's alignment, is set using an @alignof@ expression.
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216 |
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217 | Most of these tools are already inside the compiler. Using simple
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218 | code transformations early on in compilation allows most of that work to be
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219 | handed off to the existing tools. \autoref{f:VirtualTableTransformation}
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220 | shows an example transformation; this example shows an exception virtual table.
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221 | It also shows the transformation on the full declaration.
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222 | For a forward declaration, the @extern@ keyword is preserved and the
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223 | initializer is not added.
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224 |
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225 | \begin{figure}[htb]
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226 | \begin{cfa}
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227 | vtable(example_type) example_name;
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228 | \end{cfa}
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229 | \transformline
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230 | % Check mangling.
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231 | \begin{cfa}
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232 | const struct example_type_vtable example_name = {
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233 | .__cfavir_typeid : &__cfatid_example_type,
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234 | .size : sizeof(example_type),
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235 | .copy : copy,
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236 | .^?{} : ^?{},
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237 | .msg : msg,
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238 | };
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239 | \end{cfa}
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240 | \caption{Virtual Table Transformation}
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241 | \label{f:VirtualTableTransformation}
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242 | \end{figure}
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243 |
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244 | \subsection{Concurrency Integration}
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245 | Coroutines and threads need instances of @CoroutineCancelled@ and
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246 | @ThreadCancelled@ respectively to use all of their functionality. When a new
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247 | data type is declared with @coroutine@ or @thread@, a forward declaration for
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248 | the instance is created as well. The definition of the virtual table is created
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249 | at the definition of the main function.
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250 |
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251 | These transformations are shown through code re-writing in
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252 | \autoref{f:CoroutineTypeTransformation} and
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253 | \autoref{f:CoroutineMainTransformation}.
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254 | Threads use the same pattern, with some names and types changed.
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255 | In both cases, the original declaration is not modified,
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256 | only new ones are added.
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257 |
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258 | \begin{figure}[htb]
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259 | \begin{cfa}
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260 | coroutine Example {
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261 | // fields
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262 | };
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263 | \end{cfa}
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264 |
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265 | \transformline[appends...]
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266 |
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267 | \begin{cfa}
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268 | __attribute__((cfa_linkonce))
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269 | struct __cfatid_struct_CoroutineCancelled(Example)
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270 | __cfatid_CoroutineCancelled = {
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271 | &EXCEPTION_TYPE_ID,
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272 | };
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273 | extern CoroutineCancelled_vtable _default_vtable_object_declaration;
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274 | extern CoroutineCancelled_vtable & _default_vtable;
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275 | \end{cfa}
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276 | \caption{Coroutine Type Transformation}
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277 | \label{f:CoroutineTypeTransformation}
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278 | \end{figure}
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279 |
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280 | \begin{figure}[htb]
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281 | \begin{cfa}
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282 | void main(Example & this) {
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283 | // body
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284 | }
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285 | \end{cfa}
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286 |
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287 | \transformline[appends...]
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288 |
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289 | \begin{cfa}
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290 | CoroutineCancelled_vtable _default_vtable_object_declaration = {
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291 | __cfatid_CoroutineCancelled,
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292 | // Virtual member initialization.
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293 | };
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294 |
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295 | CoroutineCancelled_vtable & _default_vtable =
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296 | &_default_vtable_object_declaration;
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297 | \end{cfa}
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298 | \caption{Coroutine Main Transformation}
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299 | \label{f:CoroutineMainTransformation}
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300 | \end{figure}
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301 |
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302 | \subsection{Virtual Cast}
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303 | Virtual casts are implemented as a function call that does the subtype check
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304 | and a C coercion-cast to do the type conversion.
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305 | % The C-cast is just to make sure the generated code is correct so the rest of
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306 | % the section is about that function.
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307 | The function is implemented in the standard library and has the following
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308 | signature:
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309 | \begin{cfa}
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310 | void * __cfa__virtual_cast(
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311 | struct __cfavir_type_id * parent,
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312 | struct __cfavir_type_id * const * child );
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313 | \end{cfa}
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314 | The type ID for the target type of the virtual cast is passed in as
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315 | @parent@ and
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316 | the cast target is passed in as @child@.
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317 | The generated C code wraps both arguments and the result with type casts.
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318 | There is also an internal check inside the compiler to make sure that the
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319 | target type is a virtual type.
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320 | % It also checks for conflicting definitions.
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321 |
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322 | The virtual cast either returns the original pointer or the null pointer
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323 | as the new type.
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324 | The function does the parent check and returns the appropriate value.
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325 | The parent check is a simple linear search of the child's ancestors using the
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326 | type information.
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327 |
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328 | \section{Exceptions}
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329 | % The implementation of exception types.
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330 |
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331 | Creating exceptions can be roughly divided into two parts:
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332 | the exceptions themselves and the virtual system interactions.
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333 |
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334 | Creating an exception type is just a matter of prepending the field
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335 | with the virtual table pointer to the list of the fields
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336 | (see \autoref{f:ExceptionTypeTransformation}).
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337 |
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338 | \begin{figure}[htb]
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339 | \begin{cfa}
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340 | exception new_exception {
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341 | // EXISTING FIELDS
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342 | };
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343 | \end{cfa}
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344 | \transformline
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345 | \begin{cfa}
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346 | struct new_exception {
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347 | struct new_exception_vtable const * virtual_table;
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348 | // EXISTING FIELDS
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349 | };
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350 | \end{cfa}
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351 | \caption{Exception Type Transformation}
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352 | \label{f:ExceptionTypeTransformation}
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353 | \end{figure}
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354 |
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355 | The integration between exceptions and the virtual system is a bit more
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356 | complex simply because of the nature of the virtual system prototype.
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357 | The primary issue is that the virtual system has no way to detect when it
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358 | should generate any of its internal types and data. This is handled by
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359 | the exception code, which tells the virtual system when to generate
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360 | its components.
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361 |
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362 | All types associated with a virtual type,
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363 | the types of the virtual table and the type ID,
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364 | are generated when the virtual type (the exception) is first found.
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365 | The type ID (the instance) is generated with the exception, if it is
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366 | a monomorphic type.
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367 | However, if the exception is polymorphic, then a different type ID has to
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368 | be generated for every instance. In this case, generation is delayed
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369 | until a virtual table is created.
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370 | % There are actually some problems with this, which is why it is not used
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371 | % for monomorphic types.
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372 | When a virtual table is created and initialized, two functions are created
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373 | to fill in the list of virtual members.
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374 | The first is the @copy@ function that adapts the exception's copy constructor
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375 | to work with pointers, avoiding some issues with the current copy constructor
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376 | interface.
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377 | Second is the @msg@ function that returns a C-string with the type's name,
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378 | including any polymorphic parameters.
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379 |
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380 | \section{Unwinding}
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381 | % Adapt the unwind chapter, just describe the sections of libunwind used.
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382 | % Mention that termination and cancellation use it. Maybe go into why
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383 | % resumption doesn't as well.
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384 |
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385 | % Many modern languages work with an internal stack that function push and pop
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386 | % their local data to. Stack unwinding removes large sections of the stack,
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387 | % often across functions.
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388 |
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389 | Stack unwinding is the process of removing stack frames (activations) from the
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390 | stack. On function entry and return, unwinding is handled directly by the
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391 | call/return code embedded in the function.
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392 |
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393 | % Discussing normal stack unwinding:
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394 | Usually, the stack-frame size is known statically based on parameter and
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395 | local variable declarations. Even for a dynamic stack-size, the information
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396 | to determine how much of the stack has to be removed is still contained
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397 | within the function.
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398 | Allocating/deallocating stack space is usually an $O(1)$ operation achieved by
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399 | bumping the hardware stack-pointer up or down as needed.
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400 | Constructing/destructing values within a stack frame has
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401 | a similar complexity but larger constants.
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402 |
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403 | % Discussing multiple frame stack unwinding:
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404 | Unwinding across multiple stack frames is more complex, because that
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405 | information is no longer contained within the current function.
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406 | With separate compilation,
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407 | a function does not know its callers nor their frame layout.
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408 | Even using the return address, that information is encoded in terms of
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409 | actions in code, intermixed with the actions required to finish the function.
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410 | Without changing the main code path it is impossible to select one of those
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411 | two groups of actions at the return site.
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412 |
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413 | The traditional unwinding mechanism for C is implemented by saving a snapshot
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414 | of a function's state with @setjmp@ and restoring that snapshot with
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415 | @longjmp@. This approach bypasses the need to know stack details by simply
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416 | resetting to a snapshot of an arbitrary but existing function frame on the
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417 | stack. It is up to the programmer to ensure the snapshot is valid when it is
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418 | reset and that all required cleanup from the unwound stacks is performed.
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419 | Because it does not automate or check any of this cleanup,
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420 | it can be easy to make mistakes and always must be handled manually.
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421 |
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422 | With respect to the extra work in the surrounding code,
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423 | many languages define cleanup actions that must be taken when certain
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424 | sections of the stack are removed, such as when the storage for a variable
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425 | is removed from the stack, possibly requiring a destructor call,
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426 | or when a try statement with a finally clause is
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427 | (conceptually) popped from the stack.
|
---|
428 | None of these cases should be handled by the user -- that would contradict the
|
---|
429 | intention of these features -- so they need to be handled automatically.
|
---|
430 |
|
---|
431 | To safely remove sections of the stack, the language must be able to find and
|
---|
432 | run these cleanup actions even when removing multiple functions unknown at
|
---|
433 | the beginning of the unwinding.
|
---|
434 |
|
---|
435 | One of the most popular tools for stack management is libunwind, a low-level
|
---|
436 | library that provides tools for stack walking, handler execution, and
|
---|
437 | unwinding. What follows is an overview of all the relevant features of
|
---|
438 | libunwind needed for this work.
|
---|
439 | Following that is the description of the \CFA code that uses libunwind
|
---|
440 | to implement termination.
|
---|
441 |
|
---|
442 | \subsection{libunwind Usage}
|
---|
443 | Libunwind, accessed through @unwind.h@ on most platforms, is a C library that
|
---|
444 | provides \Cpp-style stack-unwinding. Its operation is divided into two phases:
|
---|
445 | search and cleanup. The dynamic target search -- phase 1 -- is used to scan the
|
---|
446 | stack and decide where unwinding should stop (but no unwinding occurs). The
|
---|
447 | cleanup -- phase 2 -- does the unwinding and also runs any cleanup code.
|
---|
448 |
|
---|
449 | To use libunwind, each function must have a personality function and a Language
|
---|
450 | Specific Data Area (LSDA). The LSDA has the unique information for each
|
---|
451 | function to tell the personality function where a function is executing, its
|
---|
452 | current stack frame, and what handlers should be checked. Theoretically, the
|
---|
453 | LSDA can contain any information but conventionally it is a table with entries
|
---|
454 | representing regions of a function and what has to be done there during
|
---|
455 | unwinding. These regions are bracketed by instruction addresses. If the
|
---|
456 | instruction pointer is within a region's start/end, then execution is currently
|
---|
457 | executing in that region. Regions are used to mark out the scopes of objects
|
---|
458 | with destructors and try blocks.
|
---|
459 |
|
---|
460 | % Libunwind actually does very little, it simply moves down the stack from
|
---|
461 | % function to function. Most of the actions are implemented by the personality
|
---|
462 | % function which libunwind calls on every function. Since this is shared across
|
---|
463 | % many functions or even every function in a language it will need a bit more
|
---|
464 | % information.
|
---|
465 |
|
---|
466 | The GCC compilation flag @-fexceptions@ causes the generation of an LSDA and
|
---|
467 | attaches a personality function to each function.
|
---|
468 | In plain C (which \CFA currently compiles down to) this
|
---|
469 | flag only handles the cleanup attribute:
|
---|
470 | %\label{code:cleanup}
|
---|
471 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
472 | void clean_up( int * var ) { ... }
|
---|
473 | int avar __attribute__(( cleanup(clean_up) ));
|
---|
474 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
475 | The attribute is used on a variable and specifies a function,
|
---|
476 | in this case @clean_up@, run when the variable goes out of scope.
|
---|
477 | This feature is enough to mimic destructors,
|
---|
478 | but not try statements that affect
|
---|
479 | the unwinding.
|
---|
480 |
|
---|
481 | To get full unwinding support, all of these features must be handled directly
|
---|
482 | in assembly and assembler directives; particularly the cfi directives
|
---|
483 | \snake{.cfi_lsda} and \snake{.cfi_personality}.
|
---|
484 |
|
---|
485 | \subsection{Personality Functions}
|
---|
486 | Personality functions have a complex interface specified by libunwind. This
|
---|
487 | section covers some of the important parts of the interface.
|
---|
488 |
|
---|
489 | A personality function can perform different actions depending on how it is
|
---|
490 | called.
|
---|
491 | \begin{lstlisting}
|
---|
492 | typedef _Unwind_Reason_Code (*_Unwind_Personality_Fn) (
|
---|
493 | _Unwind_Action action,
|
---|
494 | _Unwind_Exception_Class exception_class,
|
---|
495 | _Unwind_Exception * exception,
|
---|
496 | struct _Unwind_Context * context);
|
---|
497 | \end{lstlisting}
|
---|
498 | The @action@ argument is a bitmask of possible actions:
|
---|
499 | \begin{enumerate}[topsep=5pt]
|
---|
500 | \item
|
---|
501 | @_UA_SEARCH_PHASE@ specifies a search phase and tells the personality function
|
---|
502 | to check for handlers. If there is a handler in a stack frame, as defined by
|
---|
503 | the language, the personality function returns @_URC_HANDLER_FOUND@; otherwise
|
---|
504 | it return @_URC_CONTINUE_UNWIND@.
|
---|
505 |
|
---|
506 | \item
|
---|
507 | @_UA_CLEANUP_PHASE@ specifies a cleanup phase, where the entire frame is
|
---|
508 | unwound and all cleanup code is run. The personality function does whatever
|
---|
509 | cleanup the language defines (such as running destructors/finalizers) and then
|
---|
510 | generally returns @_URC_CONTINUE_UNWIND@.
|
---|
511 |
|
---|
512 | \item
|
---|
513 | \begin{sloppypar}
|
---|
514 | @_UA_HANDLER_FRAME@ specifies a cleanup phase on a function frame that found a
|
---|
515 | handler. The personality function must prepare to return to normal code
|
---|
516 | execution and return @_URC_INSTALL_CONTEXT@.
|
---|
517 | \end{sloppypar}
|
---|
518 |
|
---|
519 | \item
|
---|
520 | @_UA_FORCE_UNWIND@ specifies a forced unwind call. Forced unwind only performs
|
---|
521 | the cleanup phase and uses a different means to decide when to stop
|
---|
522 | (see \autoref{s:ForcedUnwind}).
|
---|
523 | \end{enumerate}
|
---|
524 |
|
---|
525 | The @exception_class@ argument is a copy of the
|
---|
526 | \code{C}{exception}'s @exception_class@ field,
|
---|
527 | which is a number that identifies the EHM
|
---|
528 | that created the exception.
|
---|
529 |
|
---|
530 | The \code{C}{exception} argument is a pointer to a user
|
---|
531 | provided storage object. It has two public fields: the @exception_class@,
|
---|
532 | which is described above, and the @exception_cleanup@ function.
|
---|
533 | The cleanup function is used by the EHM to clean up the exception. If it
|
---|
534 | should need to be freed at an unusual time, it takes an argument that says
|
---|
535 | why it had to be cleaned up.
|
---|
536 |
|
---|
537 | The @context@ argument is a pointer to an opaque type passed to helper
|
---|
538 | functions called inside the personality function.
|
---|
539 |
|
---|
540 | The return value, @_Unwind_Reason_Code@, is an enumeration of possible messages
|
---|
541 | that can be passed several places in libunwind. It includes a number of
|
---|
542 | messages for special cases (some of which should never be used by the
|
---|
543 | personality function) and error codes. However, unless otherwise noted, the
|
---|
544 | personality function always returns @_URC_CONTINUE_UNWIND@.
|
---|
545 |
|
---|
546 | \subsection{Raise Exception}
|
---|
547 | Raising an exception is the central function of libunwind and it performs
|
---|
548 | two-staged unwinding.
|
---|
549 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
550 | _Unwind_Reason_Code _Unwind_RaiseException(_Unwind_Exception *);
|
---|
551 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
552 | First, the function begins the search phase, calling the personality function
|
---|
553 | of the most recent stack frame. It continues to call personality functions
|
---|
554 | traversing the stack from newest to oldest until a function finds a handler or
|
---|
555 | the end of the stack is reached. In the latter case,
|
---|
556 | @_Unwind_RaiseException@ returns @_URC_END_OF_STACK@.
|
---|
557 |
|
---|
558 | Second, when a handler is matched, @_Unwind_RaiseException@
|
---|
559 | moves to the cleanup phase and walks the stack a second time.
|
---|
560 | Once again, it calls the personality functions of each stack frame from newest
|
---|
561 | to oldest. This pass stops at the stack frame containing the matching handler.
|
---|
562 | If that personality function has not installed a handler, it is an error.
|
---|
563 |
|
---|
564 | If an error is encountered, @_Unwind_RaiseException@ returns either
|
---|
565 | @_URC_FATAL_PHASE1_ERROR@ or @_URC_FATAL_PHASE2_ERROR@ depending on when the
|
---|
566 | error occurred.
|
---|
567 |
|
---|
568 | \subsection{Forced Unwind}
|
---|
569 | \label{s:ForcedUnwind}
|
---|
570 | Forced Unwind is the other central function in libunwind.
|
---|
571 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
572 | _Unwind_Reason_Code _Unwind_ForcedUnwind(_Unwind_Exception *,
|
---|
573 | _Unwind_Stop_Fn, void *);
|
---|
574 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
575 | It also unwinds the stack but it does not use the search phase. Instead,
|
---|
576 | another
|
---|
577 | function, the stop function, is used to stop searching. The exception is the
|
---|
578 | same as the one passed to @_Unwind_RaiseException@.
|
---|
579 | The extra arguments are the stop
|
---|
580 | function and the stop parameter. The stop function has a similar interface as a
|
---|
581 | personality function, except it is also passed the stop parameter.
|
---|
582 | \begin{lstlisting}
|
---|
583 | typedef _Unwind_Reason_Code (*_Unwind_Stop_Fn)(
|
---|
584 | _Unwind_Action action,
|
---|
585 | _Unwind_Exception_Class exception_class,
|
---|
586 | _Unwind_Exception * exception,
|
---|
587 | struct _Unwind_Context * context,
|
---|
588 | void * stop_parameter);
|
---|
589 | \end{lstlisting}
|
---|
590 |
|
---|
591 | The stop function is called at every stack frame before the personality
|
---|
592 | function is called and then once more after all frames of the stack are
|
---|
593 | unwound.
|
---|
594 |
|
---|
595 | Each time it is called, the stop function should return @_URC_NO_REASON@ or
|
---|
596 | transfer control directly to other code outside of libunwind. The framework
|
---|
597 | does not provide any assistance here.
|
---|
598 |
|
---|
599 | \begin{sloppypar}
|
---|
600 | Its arguments are the same as the paired personality function. The actions
|
---|
601 | \snake{_UA_CLEANUP_PHASE} and \snake{_UA_FORCE_UNWIND} are always set when it is
|
---|
602 | called. Beyond the libunwind standard, both GCC and Clang add an extra action
|
---|
603 | on the last call at the end of the stack: \snake{_UA_END_OF_STACK}.
|
---|
604 | \end{sloppypar}
|
---|
605 |
|
---|
606 | \section{Exception Context}
|
---|
607 | % Should I have another independent section?
|
---|
608 | % There are only two things in it, top_resume and current_exception. How it is
|
---|
609 | % stored changes depending on whether or not the thread-library is linked.
|
---|
610 |
|
---|
611 | The exception context is global storage used to maintain data across different
|
---|
612 | exception operations and to communicate among different components.
|
---|
613 |
|
---|
614 | Each stack must have its own exception context. In a sequential \CFA program,
|
---|
615 | there is only one stack with a single global exception-context. However, when
|
---|
616 | the library @libcfathread@ is linked, there are multiple stacks and each
|
---|
617 | needs its own exception context.
|
---|
618 |
|
---|
619 | The current exception context should be retrieved by calling the function
|
---|
620 | \snake{this_exception_context}.
|
---|
621 | For sequential execution, this function is defined as
|
---|
622 | a weak symbol in the \CFA system-library, @libcfa@. When a \CFA program is
|
---|
623 | concurrent, it links with @libcfathread@, where this function is defined with a
|
---|
624 | strong symbol replacing the sequential version.
|
---|
625 |
|
---|
626 | The sequential @this_exception_context@ returns a hard-coded pointer to the
|
---|
627 | global exception context.
|
---|
628 | The concurrent version adds the exception context to the data stored at the
|
---|
629 | base of each stack. When @this_exception_context@ is called, it retrieves the
|
---|
630 | active stack and returns the address of the context saved there.
|
---|
631 |
|
---|
632 | \section{Termination}
|
---|
633 | % Memory management & extra information, the custom function used to implement
|
---|
634 | % catches. Talk about GCC nested functions.
|
---|
635 |
|
---|
636 | \CFA termination exceptions use libunwind heavily because they match
|
---|
637 | \Cpp exceptions closely. The main complication for \CFA is that the
|
---|
638 | compiler generates C code, making it very difficult to generate the assembly to
|
---|
639 | form the LSDA for try blocks or destructors.
|
---|
640 |
|
---|
641 | \subsection{Memory Management}
|
---|
642 | The first step of a termination raise is to copy the exception into memory
|
---|
643 | managed by the exception system. Currently, the system uses @malloc@, rather
|
---|
644 | than reserved memory or the stack top. The EHM manages
|
---|
645 | memory for the exception as well as memory for libunwind and the system's own
|
---|
646 | per-exception storage.
|
---|
647 |
|
---|
648 | \begin{figure}
|
---|
649 | \centering
|
---|
650 | \input{exception-layout}
|
---|
651 | \caption{Exception Layout}
|
---|
652 | \label{f:ExceptionLayout}
|
---|
653 | \end{figure}
|
---|
654 |
|
---|
655 | Exceptions are stored in variable-sized blocks
|
---|
656 | (see \autoref{f:ExceptionLayout}).
|
---|
657 | The first component is a fixed-sized data structure that contains the
|
---|
658 | information for libunwind and the exception system. The second component is an
|
---|
659 | area of memory big enough to store the exception. Macros with pointer arthritic
|
---|
660 | and type cast are used to move between the components or go from the embedded
|
---|
661 | @_Unwind_Exception@ to the entire node.
|
---|
662 |
|
---|
663 | Multiple exceptions can exist at the same time because exceptions can be
|
---|
664 | raised inside handlers, destructors and finally blocks.
|
---|
665 | Figure~\vref{f:MultipleExceptions} shows a program that has multiple
|
---|
666 | exceptions active at one time.
|
---|
667 | Each time an exception is thrown and caught the stack unwinds and the finally
|
---|
668 | clause runs. This handler throws another exception (until @num_exceptions@ gets
|
---|
669 | high enough), which must be allocated. The previous exceptions may not be
|
---|
670 | freed because the handler/catch clause has not been run.
|
---|
671 | Therefore, the EHM must keep all unhandled exceptions alive
|
---|
672 | while it allocates exceptions for new throws.
|
---|
673 |
|
---|
674 | \begin{figure}
|
---|
675 | \centering
|
---|
676 | \newsavebox{\codeBox}
|
---|
677 | \newsavebox{\stackBox}
|
---|
678 | \begin{lrbox}{\codeBox}
|
---|
679 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
680 | unsigned num_exceptions = 0;
|
---|
681 | void throws() {
|
---|
682 | try {
|
---|
683 | try {
|
---|
684 | ++num_exceptions;
|
---|
685 | throw (Example){table};
|
---|
686 | } finally {
|
---|
687 | if (num_exceptions < 3) {
|
---|
688 | throws();
|
---|
689 | }
|
---|
690 | }
|
---|
691 | } catch (exception_t *) {
|
---|
692 | --num_exceptions;
|
---|
693 | }
|
---|
694 | }
|
---|
695 | int main() {
|
---|
696 | throws();
|
---|
697 | }
|
---|
698 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
699 | \end{lrbox}
|
---|
700 |
|
---|
701 | \begin{lrbox}{\stackBox}
|
---|
702 | \begin{lstlisting}
|
---|
703 | | finally block (Example)
|
---|
704 | | try block
|
---|
705 | throws()
|
---|
706 | | finally block (Example)
|
---|
707 | | try block
|
---|
708 | throws()
|
---|
709 | | finally block (Example)
|
---|
710 | | try block
|
---|
711 | throws()
|
---|
712 | main()
|
---|
713 | \end{lstlisting}
|
---|
714 | \end{lrbox}
|
---|
715 |
|
---|
716 | {\usebox\codeBox}
|
---|
717 | \hspace{25pt}
|
---|
718 | {\usebox\stackBox}
|
---|
719 |
|
---|
720 | \caption{Multiple Exceptions}
|
---|
721 | \label{f:MultipleExceptions}
|
---|
722 | \end{figure}
|
---|
723 |
|
---|
724 | All exceptions are stored in nodes, which are then linked together in lists
|
---|
725 | one list per stack, with the
|
---|
726 | list head stored in the exception context. Within each linked list, the most
|
---|
727 | recently thrown exception is at the head, followed by older thrown
|
---|
728 | exceptions. This format allows exceptions to be thrown, while a different
|
---|
729 | exception is being handled. The exception at the head of the list is currently
|
---|
730 | being handled, while other exceptions wait for the exceptions before them to be
|
---|
731 | handled and removed.
|
---|
732 |
|
---|
733 | The virtual members in the exception's virtual table provide the size of the
|
---|
734 | exception, the copy function, and the free function, so they are specific to an
|
---|
735 | exception type. The size and copy function are used immediately to copy an
|
---|
736 | exception into managed memory. After the exception is handled, the free
|
---|
737 | function is used to clean up the exception and then the entire node is
|
---|
738 | passed to @free@, returning the memory back to the heap.
|
---|
739 |
|
---|
740 | \subsection{Try Statements and Catch Clauses}
|
---|
741 | The try statement with termination handlers is complex because it must
|
---|
742 | compensate for the C code-generation versus proper
|
---|
743 | assembly-code generated from \CFA. Libunwind
|
---|
744 | requires an LSDA and personality function for control to unwind across a
|
---|
745 | function. The LSDA in particular is hard to mimic in generated C code.
|
---|
746 |
|
---|
747 | The workaround is a function called \snake{__cfaehm_try_terminate} in the
|
---|
748 | standard \CFA library. The contents of a try block and the termination
|
---|
749 | handlers are converted into nested functions. These are then passed to the
|
---|
750 | try terminate function and it calls them, appropriately.
|
---|
751 | Because this function is known and fixed (and not an arbitrary function that
|
---|
752 | happens to contain a try statement), its LSDA can be generated ahead
|
---|
753 | of time.
|
---|
754 |
|
---|
755 | Both the LSDA and the personality function for \snake{__cfaehm_try_terminate}
|
---|
756 | are set ahead of time using
|
---|
757 | embedded assembly. This assembly code is handcrafted using C @asm@ statements
|
---|
758 | and contains
|
---|
759 | enough information for the single try statement the function represents.
|
---|
760 |
|
---|
761 | The three functions passed to try terminate are:
|
---|
762 | \begin{description}
|
---|
763 | \item[try function:] This function is the try block. It is where all the code
|
---|
764 | from inside the try block is placed. It takes no parameters and has no
|
---|
765 | return value. This function is called during regular execution to run the try
|
---|
766 | block.
|
---|
767 |
|
---|
768 | \item[match function:] This function is called during the search phase and
|
---|
769 | decides if a catch clause matches the termination exception. It is constructed
|
---|
770 | from the conditional part of each handler and runs each check, top to bottom,
|
---|
771 | in turn, to see if the exception matches this handler.
|
---|
772 | The match is performed in two steps: first, a virtual cast is used to check
|
---|
773 | if the raised exception is an instance of the declared exception type or
|
---|
774 | one of its descendant types, and then the condition is evaluated, if
|
---|
775 | present.
|
---|
776 | The match function takes a pointer to the exception and returns 0 if the
|
---|
777 | exception is not handled here. Otherwise, the return value is the ID of the
|
---|
778 | handler that matches the exception.
|
---|
779 |
|
---|
780 | \item[handler function:] This function handles the exception, and contains
|
---|
781 | all the code from the handlers in the try statement, joined with a switch
|
---|
782 | statement on the handler's id.
|
---|
783 | It takes a
|
---|
784 | pointer to the exception and the handler's id and returns nothing. It is called
|
---|
785 | after the cleanup phase.
|
---|
786 | \end{description}
|
---|
787 | All three functions are created with GCC nested functions. GCC nested functions
|
---|
788 | can be used to create closures;
|
---|
789 | in other words,
|
---|
790 | functions that can refer to variables in their lexical scope even though
|
---|
791 | those variables are part of a different function.
|
---|
792 | This approach allows the functions to refer to all the
|
---|
793 | variables in scope for the function containing the @try@ statement. These
|
---|
794 | nested functions and all other functions besides @__cfaehm_try_terminate@ in
|
---|
795 | \CFA use the GCC personality function and the @-fexceptions@ flag to generate
|
---|
796 | the LSDA.
|
---|
797 | Using this pattern, \CFA implements destructors with the cleanup attribute.
|
---|
798 |
|
---|
799 | \autoref{f:TerminationTransformation} shows the pattern used to transform
|
---|
800 | a \CFA try statement with catch clauses into the appropriate C functions.
|
---|
801 |
|
---|
802 | \begin{figure}
|
---|
803 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
804 | try {
|
---|
805 | // TRY BLOCK
|
---|
806 | } catch (Exception1 * name1 ; check(name1)) {
|
---|
807 | // CATCH BLOCK 1
|
---|
808 | } catch (Exception2 * name2) {
|
---|
809 | // CATCH BLOCK 2
|
---|
810 | }
|
---|
811 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
812 |
|
---|
813 | \transformline
|
---|
814 |
|
---|
815 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
816 | void try(void) {
|
---|
817 | // TRY BLOCK
|
---|
818 | }
|
---|
819 | int match(exception_t * __exception_inst) {
|
---|
820 | {
|
---|
821 | Exception1 * name1;
|
---|
822 | if (name1 = (virtual Exception1 *)__exception_inst
|
---|
823 | && check(name1)) {
|
---|
824 | return 1;
|
---|
825 | }
|
---|
826 | }
|
---|
827 | {
|
---|
828 | Exception2 * name2;
|
---|
829 | if (name2 = (virtual Exception2 *)__exception_inst) {
|
---|
830 | return 2;
|
---|
831 | }
|
---|
832 | }
|
---|
833 | return 0;
|
---|
834 | }
|
---|
835 | void catch(exception_t * __exception_inst, int __handler_index) {
|
---|
836 | switch (__handler_index) {
|
---|
837 | case 1:
|
---|
838 | {
|
---|
839 | Exception1 * name1 = (virtual Exception1 *)__exception_inst;
|
---|
840 | // CATCH BLOCK 1
|
---|
841 | }
|
---|
842 | return;
|
---|
843 | case 2:
|
---|
844 | {
|
---|
845 | Exception2 * name2 = (virtual Exception2 *)__exception_inst;
|
---|
846 | // CATCH BLOCK 2
|
---|
847 | }
|
---|
848 | return;
|
---|
849 | }
|
---|
850 | }
|
---|
851 | {
|
---|
852 | __cfaehm_try_terminate(try, catch, match);
|
---|
853 | }
|
---|
854 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
855 |
|
---|
856 | \caption{Termination Transformation}
|
---|
857 | \label{f:TerminationTransformation}
|
---|
858 | \end{figure}
|
---|
859 |
|
---|
860 | \section{Resumption}
|
---|
861 | % The stack-local data, the linked list of nodes.
|
---|
862 |
|
---|
863 | Resumption is simpler to implement than termination
|
---|
864 | because there is no stack unwinding.
|
---|
865 | Instead of storing the data in a special area using assembly,
|
---|
866 | there is just a linked list of possible handlers for each stack,
|
---|
867 | with each node on the list representing a try statement on the stack.
|
---|
868 |
|
---|
869 | The head of the list is stored in the exception context.
|
---|
870 | The nodes are stored in order, with the more recent try statements closer
|
---|
871 | to the head of the list.
|
---|
872 | Instead of traversing the stack, resumption handling traverses the list.
|
---|
873 | At each node, the EHM checks to see if the try statement the node represents
|
---|
874 | can handle the exception. If it can, then the exception is handled and
|
---|
875 | the operation finishes; otherwise, the search continues to the next node.
|
---|
876 | If the search reaches the end of the list without finding a try statement
|
---|
877 | with a handler clause
|
---|
878 | that can handle the exception, the default handler is executed.
|
---|
879 | If the default handler returns, control continues after the raise statement.
|
---|
880 |
|
---|
881 | Each node has a handler function that does most of the work.
|
---|
882 | The handler function is passed the raised exception and returns true
|
---|
883 | if the exception is handled and false otherwise.
|
---|
884 | The handler function checks each of its internal handlers in order,
|
---|
885 | top-to-bottom, until it finds a match. If a match is found that handler is
|
---|
886 | run, after which the function returns true, ignoring all remaining handlers.
|
---|
887 | If no match is found the function returns false.
|
---|
888 | The match is performed in two steps. First a virtual cast is used to see
|
---|
889 | if the raised exception is an instance of the declared exception type or one
|
---|
890 | of its descendant types, if so, then the second step is to see if the
|
---|
891 | exception passes the custom predicate
|
---|
892 | if one is defined.
|
---|
893 | % You need to make sure the type is correct before running the predicate
|
---|
894 | % because the predicate can depend on that.
|
---|
895 |
|
---|
896 | \autoref{f:ResumptionTransformation} shows the pattern used to transform
|
---|
897 | a \CFA try statement with catchResume clauses into the appropriate
|
---|
898 | C functions.
|
---|
899 |
|
---|
900 | \begin{figure}
|
---|
901 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
902 | try {
|
---|
903 | // TRY BLOCK
|
---|
904 | } catchResume (Exception1 * name1 ; check(name1)) {
|
---|
905 | // CATCH BLOCK 1
|
---|
906 | } catchResume (Exception2 * name2) {
|
---|
907 | // CATCH BLOCK 2
|
---|
908 | }
|
---|
909 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
910 |
|
---|
911 | \transformline
|
---|
912 |
|
---|
913 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
914 | bool handle(exception_t * __exception_inst) {
|
---|
915 | {
|
---|
916 | Exception1 * name1;
|
---|
917 | if (name1 = (virtual Exception1 *)__exception_inst
|
---|
918 | && check(name1)) {
|
---|
919 | // CATCH BLOCK 1
|
---|
920 | return 1;
|
---|
921 | }
|
---|
922 | }
|
---|
923 | {
|
---|
924 | Exception2 * name2;
|
---|
925 | if (name2 = (virtual Exception2 *)__exception_inst) {
|
---|
926 | // CATCH BLOCK 2
|
---|
927 | return 2;
|
---|
928 | }
|
---|
929 | }
|
---|
930 | return false;
|
---|
931 | }
|
---|
932 | struct __try_resume_node __resume_node
|
---|
933 | __attribute__((cleanup( __cfaehm_try_resume_cleanup )));
|
---|
934 | __cfaehm_try_resume_setup( &__resume_node, handler );
|
---|
935 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
936 |
|
---|
937 | \caption{Resumption Transformation}
|
---|
938 | \label{f:ResumptionTransformation}
|
---|
939 | \end{figure}
|
---|
940 |
|
---|
941 | % Recursive Resumption Stuff:
|
---|
942 | \autoref{f:ResumptionMarking} shows search skipping
|
---|
943 | (see \autoref{s:ResumptionMarking}), which ignores parts of
|
---|
944 | the stack
|
---|
945 | already examined, and is accomplished by updating the front of the list as
|
---|
946 | the search continues.
|
---|
947 | Before the handler is called at a matching node, the head of the list
|
---|
948 | is updated to the next node of the current node. After the search is complete,
|
---|
949 | successful or not, the head of the list is reset.
|
---|
950 | % No paragraph?
|
---|
951 | This mechanism means the current handler and every handler that has already
|
---|
952 | been checked are not on the list while a handler is run. If a resumption is
|
---|
953 | thrown during the handling of another resumption, the active handlers and all
|
---|
954 | the other handlers checked up to this point are not checked again.
|
---|
955 | % No paragraph?
|
---|
956 | This structure also supports new handlers added while the resumption is being
|
---|
957 | handled. These are added to the front of the list, pointing back along the
|
---|
958 | stack -- the first one points over all the checked handlers --
|
---|
959 | and the ordering is maintained.
|
---|
960 |
|
---|
961 | \begin{figure}
|
---|
962 | \centering
|
---|
963 | \input{resumption-marking}
|
---|
964 | \caption{Resumption Marking}
|
---|
965 | \label{f:ResumptionMarking}
|
---|
966 | \end{figure}
|
---|
967 |
|
---|
968 | \label{p:zero-cost}
|
---|
969 | Finally, the resumption implementation has a cost for entering/exiting a try
|
---|
970 | statement with @catchResume@ clauses, whereas a try statement with @catch@
|
---|
971 | clauses has zero-cost entry/exit. While resumption does not need the stack
|
---|
972 | unwinding and cleanup provided by libunwind, it could use the search phase to
|
---|
973 | providing zero-cost enter/exit using the LSDA. Unfortunately, there is no way
|
---|
974 | to return from a libunwind search without installing a handler or raising an
|
---|
975 | error. Although workarounds might be possible, they are beyond the scope of
|
---|
976 | this thesis. The current resumption implementation has simplicity in its
|
---|
977 | favour.
|
---|
978 | % Seriously, just compare the size of the two chapters and then consider
|
---|
979 | % that unwind is required knowledge for that chapter.
|
---|
980 |
|
---|
981 | \section{Finally}
|
---|
982 | % Uses destructors and GCC nested functions.
|
---|
983 |
|
---|
984 | %\autoref{code:cleanup}
|
---|
985 | A finally clause is handled by converting it into a once-off destructor.
|
---|
986 | The code inside the clause is placed into a GCC nested-function
|
---|
987 | with a unique name, and no arguments or return values.
|
---|
988 | This nested function is
|
---|
989 | then set as the cleanup function of an empty object that is declared at the
|
---|
990 | beginning of a block placed around the context of the associated try
|
---|
991 | statement, as shown in \autoref{f:FinallyTransformation}.
|
---|
992 |
|
---|
993 | \begin{figure}
|
---|
994 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
995 | try {
|
---|
996 | // TRY BLOCK
|
---|
997 | } finally {
|
---|
998 | // FINALLY BLOCK
|
---|
999 | }
|
---|
1000 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
1001 |
|
---|
1002 | \transformline
|
---|
1003 |
|
---|
1004 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
1005 | {
|
---|
1006 | void finally(void *__hook){
|
---|
1007 | // FINALLY BLOCK
|
---|
1008 | }
|
---|
1009 | __attribute__ ((cleanup(finally)))
|
---|
1010 | struct __cfaehm_cleanup_hook __finally_hook;
|
---|
1011 | {
|
---|
1012 | // TRY BLOCK
|
---|
1013 | }
|
---|
1014 | }
|
---|
1015 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
1016 |
|
---|
1017 | \caption{Finally Transformation}
|
---|
1018 | \label{f:FinallyTransformation}
|
---|
1019 | \end{figure}
|
---|
1020 |
|
---|
1021 | The rest is handled by GCC.
|
---|
1022 | The TRY BLOCK
|
---|
1023 | contains the try block itself as well as all code generated for handlers.
|
---|
1024 | Once that code has completed,
|
---|
1025 | control exits the block and the empty object is cleaned
|
---|
1026 | up, which runs the function that contains the finally code.
|
---|
1027 |
|
---|
1028 | \section{Cancellation}
|
---|
1029 | % Stack selections, the three internal unwind functions.
|
---|
1030 |
|
---|
1031 | Cancellation also uses libunwind to do its stack traversal and unwinding.
|
---|
1032 | However, it uses a different primary function: @_Unwind_ForcedUnwind@. Details
|
---|
1033 | of its interface can be found in Section~\vref{s:ForcedUnwind}.
|
---|
1034 |
|
---|
1035 | The first step of cancellation is to find the cancelled stack and its type:
|
---|
1036 | coroutine, thread or main thread.
|
---|
1037 | In \CFA, a thread (the construct the user works with) is a user-level thread
|
---|
1038 | (point of execution) paired with a coroutine, the thread's main coroutine.
|
---|
1039 | The thread library also stores pointers to the main thread and the current
|
---|
1040 | thread.
|
---|
1041 | If the current thread's main and current coroutines are the same then the
|
---|
1042 | current stack is a thread stack, otherwise it is a coroutine stack.
|
---|
1043 | If the current stack is a thread stack, it is also the main thread stack
|
---|
1044 | if and only if the main and current threads are the same.
|
---|
1045 |
|
---|
1046 | However, if the threading library is not linked, the sequential execution is on
|
---|
1047 | the main stack. Hence, the entire check is skipped because the weak-symbol
|
---|
1048 | function is loaded. Therefore, main thread cancellation is unconditionally
|
---|
1049 | performed.
|
---|
1050 |
|
---|
1051 | Regardless of how the stack is chosen, the stop function and parameter are
|
---|
1052 | passed to the forced-unwind function. The general pattern of all three stop
|
---|
1053 | functions is the same: continue unwinding until the end of stack and
|
---|
1054 | then perform the appropriate transfer.
|
---|
1055 |
|
---|
1056 | For main stack cancellation, the transfer is just a program abort.
|
---|
1057 |
|
---|
1058 | For coroutine cancellation, the exception is stored on the coroutine's stack,
|
---|
1059 | and the coroutine context switches to its last resumer. The rest is handled on
|
---|
1060 | the backside of the resume, which checks if the resumed coroutine is
|
---|
1061 | cancelled. If cancelled, the exception is retrieved from the resumed coroutine,
|
---|
1062 | and a @CoroutineCancelled@ exception is constructed and loaded with the
|
---|
1063 | cancelled exception. It is then resumed as a regular exception with the default
|
---|
1064 | handler coming from the context of the resumption call.
|
---|
1065 |
|
---|
1066 | For thread cancellation, the exception is stored on the thread's main stack and
|
---|
1067 | then context switched to the scheduler. The rest is handled by the thread
|
---|
1068 | joiner. When the join is complete, the joiner checks if the joined thread is
|
---|
1069 | cancelled. If cancelled, the exception is retrieved and the joined thread, and
|
---|
1070 | a @ThreadCancelled@ exception is constructed and loaded with the cancelled
|
---|
1071 | exception. The default handler is passed in as a function pointer. If it is
|
---|
1072 | null (as it is for the auto-generated joins on destructor call), the default is
|
---|
1073 | used, which is a program abort.
|
---|
1074 | %; which gives the required handling on implicate join.
|
---|