mirror of
git://gcc.gnu.org/git/gcc.git
synced 2024-12-22 13:30:37 +08:00
6991c6c926
From-SVN: r69872
107 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
107 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
Darwin/MacOSX Support - July 22, 2003
|
|
====================================
|
|
|
|
Important Usage Notes
|
|
=====================
|
|
|
|
GC_init() MUST be called before calling any other GC functions. This
|
|
is necessary to properly register segments in dynamic libraries. This
|
|
call is required even if you code does not use dynamic libraries as the
|
|
dyld code handles registering all data segments.
|
|
|
|
When your use of the garbage collector is confined to dylibs and you
|
|
cannot call GC_init() before your libraries' static initializers have
|
|
run and perhaps called GC_malloc(), create an initialization routine
|
|
for each library to call GC_init():
|
|
|
|
#include <gc/gc.h>
|
|
void my_library_init() { GC_init(); }
|
|
|
|
Compile this code into a my_library_init.o, and link it into your
|
|
dylib. When you link the dylib, pass the -init argument with
|
|
_my_library_init (e.g. gcc -dynamiclib -o my_library.dylib a.o b.o c.o
|
|
my_library_init.o -init _my_library_init). This causes
|
|
my_library_init() to be called before any static initializers, and
|
|
will initialize the garbage collector properly.
|
|
|
|
Note: It doesn't hurt to call GC_init() more than once, so it's best,
|
|
if you have an application or set of libraries that all use the
|
|
garbage collector, to create an initialization routine for each of
|
|
them that calls GC_init(). Better safe than sorry.
|
|
|
|
The incremental collector is still a bit flaky on darwin. It seems to
|
|
work reliably with workarounds for a few possible bugs in place however
|
|
these workaround may not work correctly in all cases. There may also
|
|
be additional problems that I have not found.
|
|
|
|
Implementation Information
|
|
==========================
|
|
Darwin/MacOSX support is nearly complete. Thread support is reliable on
|
|
Darwin 6.x (MacOSX 10.2) and there have been reports of success on older
|
|
Darwin versions (MacOSX 10.1). Shared library support had also been
|
|
added and the gc can be run from a shared library. There is currently only
|
|
support for Darwin/PPC although adding x86 support should be trivial.
|
|
|
|
Thread support is implemented in terms of mach thread_suspend and
|
|
thread_resume calls. These provide a very clean interface to thread
|
|
suspension. This implementation doesn't rely on pthread_kill so the
|
|
code works on Darwin < 6.0 (MacOSX 10.1). All the code to stop the
|
|
world is located in darwin_stop_world.c.
|
|
|
|
The original incremental collector support unfortunatelly no longer works
|
|
on recent Darwin versions. It also relied on some undocumented kernel
|
|
structures. Mach, however, does have a very clean interface to exception
|
|
handing. The current implementation uses Mach's exception handling.
|
|
|
|
Much thanks goes to Andrew Stone, Dietmar Planitzer, Andrew Begel,
|
|
Jeff Sturm, and Jesse Rosenstock for all their work on the
|
|
Darwin/OS X port.
|
|
|
|
-Brian Alliet
|
|
brian@brianweb.net
|
|
|
|
|
|
Older Information (Most of this no longer applies to the current code)
|
|
======================================================================
|
|
|
|
While the GC should work on MacOS X Server, MacOS X and Darwin, I only tested
|
|
it on MacOS X Server.
|
|
I've added a PPC assembly version of GC_push_regs(), thus the setjmp() hack is
|
|
no longer necessary. Incremental collection is supported via mprotect/signal.
|
|
The current solution isn't really optimal because the signal handler must decode
|
|
the faulting PPC machine instruction in order to find the correct heap address.
|
|
Further, it must poke around in the register state which the kernel saved away
|
|
in some obscure register state structure before it calls the signal handler -
|
|
needless to say the layout of this structure is no where documented.
|
|
Threads and dynamic libraries are not yet supported (adding dynamic library
|
|
support via the low-level dyld API shouldn't be that hard).
|
|
|
|
The original MacOS X port was brought to you by Andrew Stone.
|
|
|
|
|
|
June, 1 2000
|
|
|
|
Dietmar Planitzer
|
|
dave.pl@ping.at
|
|
|
|
Note from Andrew Begel:
|
|
|
|
One more fix to enable gc.a to link successfully into a shared library for
|
|
MacOS X. You have to add -fno-common to the CFLAGS in the Makefile. MacOSX
|
|
disallows common symbols in anything that eventually finds its way into a
|
|
shared library. (I don't completely understand why, but -fno-common seems to
|
|
work and doesn't mess up the garbage collector's functionality).
|
|
|
|
Feb 26, 2003
|
|
|
|
Jeff Sturm and Jesse Rosenstock provided a patch that adds thread support.
|
|
GC_MACOSX_THREADS should be defined in the build and in clients. Real
|
|
dynamic library support is still missing, i.e. dynamic library data segments
|
|
are still not scanned. Code that stores pointers to the garbage collected
|
|
heap in statically allocated variables should not reside in a dynamic
|
|
library. This still doesn't appear to be 100% reliable.
|
|
|
|
Mar 10, 2003
|
|
Brian Alliet contributed dynamic library support for MacOSX. It could also
|
|
use more testing.
|