v8/src/serialize.h

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// Copyright 2012 the V8 project authors. All rights reserved.
// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
// met:
//
// * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
// * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
// copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
// disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided
// with the distribution.
// * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its
// contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
// from this software without specific prior written permission.
//
// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
// "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
// A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
// OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
// DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
// THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
#ifndef V8_SERIALIZE_H_
#define V8_SERIALIZE_H_
#include "hashmap.h"
namespace v8 {
namespace internal {
// A TypeCode is used to distinguish different kinds of external reference.
// It is a single bit to make testing for types easy.
enum TypeCode {
UNCLASSIFIED, // One-of-a-kind references.
BUILTIN,
RUNTIME_FUNCTION,
IC_UTILITY,
DEBUG_ADDRESS,
STATS_COUNTER,
TOP_ADDRESS,
C_BUILTIN,
EXTENSION,
ACCESSOR,
RUNTIME_ENTRY,
STUB_CACHE_TABLE,
LAZY_DEOPTIMIZATION
};
const int kTypeCodeCount = LAZY_DEOPTIMIZATION + 1;
const int kFirstTypeCode = UNCLASSIFIED;
const int kReferenceIdBits = 16;
const int kReferenceIdMask = (1 << kReferenceIdBits) - 1;
const int kReferenceTypeShift = kReferenceIdBits;
const int kDebugRegisterBits = 4;
const int kDebugIdShift = kDebugRegisterBits;
const int kDeoptTableSerializeEntryCount = 8;
// ExternalReferenceTable is a helper class that defines the relationship
// between external references and their encodings. It is used to build
// hashmaps in ExternalReferenceEncoder and ExternalReferenceDecoder.
class ExternalReferenceTable {
public:
static ExternalReferenceTable* instance(Isolate* isolate);
~ExternalReferenceTable() { }
int size() const { return refs_.length(); }
Address address(int i) { return refs_[i].address; }
uint32_t code(int i) { return refs_[i].code; }
const char* name(int i) { return refs_[i].name; }
int max_id(int code) { return max_id_[code]; }
private:
explicit ExternalReferenceTable(Isolate* isolate) : refs_(64) {
PopulateTable(isolate);
}
struct ExternalReferenceEntry {
Address address;
uint32_t code;
const char* name;
};
void PopulateTable(Isolate* isolate);
// For a few types of references, we can get their address from their id.
void AddFromId(TypeCode type,
uint16_t id,
const char* name,
Isolate* isolate);
// For other types of references, the caller will figure out the address.
void Add(Address address, TypeCode type, uint16_t id, const char* name);
List<ExternalReferenceEntry> refs_;
int max_id_[kTypeCodeCount];
};
class ExternalReferenceEncoder {
public:
explicit ExternalReferenceEncoder(Isolate* isolate);
uint32_t Encode(Address key) const;
const char* NameOfAddress(Address key) const;
private:
HashMap encodings_;
static uint32_t Hash(Address key) {
return static_cast<uint32_t>(reinterpret_cast<uintptr_t>(key) >> 2);
}
int IndexOf(Address key) const;
static bool Match(void* key1, void* key2) { return key1 == key2; }
void Put(Address key, int index);
Isolate* isolate_;
};
class ExternalReferenceDecoder {
public:
explicit ExternalReferenceDecoder(Isolate* isolate);
~ExternalReferenceDecoder();
Address Decode(uint32_t key) const {
if (key == 0) return NULL;
return *Lookup(key);
}
private:
Address** encodings_;
Address* Lookup(uint32_t key) const {
int type = key >> kReferenceTypeShift;
ASSERT(kFirstTypeCode <= type && type < kTypeCodeCount);
int id = key & kReferenceIdMask;
return &encodings_[type][id];
}
void Put(uint32_t key, Address value) {
*Lookup(key) = value;
}
Isolate* isolate_;
};
class SnapshotByteSource {
public:
SnapshotByteSource(const byte* array, int length)
: data_(array), length_(length), position_(0) { }
bool HasMore() { return position_ < length_; }
int Get() {
ASSERT(position_ < length_);
return data_[position_++];
}
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
int32_t GetUnalignedInt() {
#if defined(V8_HOST_CAN_READ_UNALIGNED) && __BYTE_ORDER == __LITTLE_ENDIAN
int32_t answer;
ASSERT(position_ + sizeof(answer) <= length_ + 0u);
answer = *reinterpret_cast<const int32_t*>(data_ + position_);
#else
int32_t answer = data_[position_];
answer |= data_[position_ + 1] << 8;
answer |= data_[position_ + 2] << 16;
answer |= data_[position_ + 3] << 24;
#endif
return answer;
}
void Advance(int by) { position_ += by; }
inline void CopyRaw(byte* to, int number_of_bytes);
inline int GetInt();
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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bool AtEOF();
int position() { return position_; }
private:
const byte* data_;
int length_;
int position_;
};
// The Serializer/Deserializer class is a common superclass for Serializer and
// Deserializer which is used to store common constants and methods used by
// both.
class SerializerDeserializer: public ObjectVisitor {
public:
static void Iterate(Isolate* isolate, ObjectVisitor* visitor);
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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static int nop() { return kNop; }
protected:
// Where the pointed-to object can be found:
enum Where {
kNewObject = 0, // Object is next in snapshot.
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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// 1-6 One per space.
kRootArray = 0x9, // Object is found in root array.
kPartialSnapshotCache = 0xa, // Object is in the cache.
kExternalReference = 0xb, // Pointer to an external reference.
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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kSkip = 0xc, // Skip n bytes.
kNop = 0xd, // Does nothing, used to pad.
// 0xe-0xf Free.
kBackref = 0x10, // Object is described relative to end.
// 0x11-0x16 One per space.
kBackrefWithSkip = 0x18, // Object is described relative to end.
// 0x19-0x1e One per space.
// 0x20-0x3f Used by misc. tags below.
kPointedToMask = 0x3f
};
// How to code the pointer to the object.
enum HowToCode {
kPlain = 0, // Straight pointer.
// What this means depends on the architecture:
kFromCode = 0x40, // A pointer inlined in code.
kHowToCodeMask = 0x40
};
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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// For kRootArrayConstants
enum WithSkip {
kNoSkipDistance = 0,
kHasSkipDistance = 0x40,
kWithSkipMask = 0x40
};
// Where to point within the object.
enum WhereToPoint {
kStartOfObject = 0,
kInnerPointer = 0x80, // First insn in code object or payload of cell.
kWhereToPointMask = 0x80
};
// Misc.
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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// Raw data to be copied from the snapshot. This byte code does not advance
// the current pointer, which is used for code objects, where we write the
// entire code in one memcpy, then fix up stuff with kSkip and other byte
// codes that overwrite data.
static const int kRawData = 0x20;
// Some common raw lengths: 0x21-0x3f. These autoadvance the current pointer.
// A tag emitted at strategic points in the snapshot to delineate sections.
// If the deserializer does not find these at the expected moments then it
// is an indication that the snapshot and the VM do not fit together.
// Examine the build process for architecture, version or configuration
// mismatches.
static const int kSynchronize = 0x70;
// Used for the source code of the natives, which is in the executable, but
// is referred to from external strings in the snapshot.
static const int kNativesStringResource = 0x71;
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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static const int kRepeat = 0x72;
static const int kConstantRepeat = 0x73;
// 0x73-0x7f Repeat last word (subtract 0x72 to get the count).
static const int kMaxRepeats = 0x7f - 0x72;
static int CodeForRepeats(int repeats) {
ASSERT(repeats >= 1 && repeats <= kMaxRepeats);
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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return 0x72 + repeats;
}
static int RepeatsForCode(int byte_code) {
ASSERT(byte_code >= kConstantRepeat && byte_code <= 0x7f);
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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return byte_code - 0x72;
}
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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static const int kRootArrayConstants = 0xa0;
// 0xa0-0xbf Things from the first 32 elements of the root array.
static const int kRootArrayNumberOfConstantEncodings = 0x20;
static int RootArrayConstantFromByteCode(int byte_code) {
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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return byte_code & 0x1f;
}
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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static const int kNumberOfSpaces = LO_SPACE;
static const int kAnyOldSpace = -1;
// A bitmask for getting the space out of an instruction.
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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static const int kSpaceMask = 7;
};
int SnapshotByteSource::GetInt() {
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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// This way of variable-length encoding integers does not suffer from branch
// mispredictions.
uint32_t answer = GetUnalignedInt();
int bytes = answer & 3;
Advance(bytes);
uint32_t mask = 0xffffffffu;
mask >>= 32 - (bytes << 3);
answer &= mask;
answer >>= 2;
return answer;
}
void SnapshotByteSource::CopyRaw(byte* to, int number_of_bytes) {
OS::MemCopy(to, data_ + position_, number_of_bytes);
position_ += number_of_bytes;
}
// A Deserializer reads a snapshot and reconstructs the Object graph it defines.
class Deserializer: public SerializerDeserializer {
public:
// Create a deserializer from a snapshot byte source.
explicit Deserializer(SnapshotByteSource* source);
virtual ~Deserializer();
// Deserialize the snapshot into an empty heap.
void Deserialize(Isolate* isolate);
// Deserialize a single object and the objects reachable from it.
void DeserializePartial(Isolate* isolate, Object** root);
void set_reservation(int space_number, int reservation) {
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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ASSERT(space_number >= 0);
ASSERT(space_number <= LAST_SPACE);
reservations_[space_number] = reservation;
}
private:
virtual void VisitPointers(Object** start, Object** end);
virtual void VisitRuntimeEntry(RelocInfo* rinfo) {
UNREACHABLE();
}
// Allocation sites are present in the snapshot, and must be linked into
// a list at deserialization time.
void RelinkAllocationSite(AllocationSite* site);
// Fills in some heap data in an area from start to end (non-inclusive). The
// space id is used for the write barrier. The object_address is the address
// of the object we are writing into, or NULL if we are not writing into an
// object, i.e. if we are writing a series of tagged values that are not on
// the heap.
void ReadChunk(
Object** start, Object** end, int space, Address object_address);
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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void ReadObject(int space_number, Object** write_back);
// This routine both allocates a new object, and also keeps
// track of where objects have been allocated so that we can
// fix back references when deserializing.
Address Allocate(int space_index, int size) {
Address address = high_water_[space_index];
high_water_[space_index] = address + size;
HeapProfiler* profiler = isolate_->heap_profiler();
if (profiler->is_tracking_allocations()) {
profiler->AllocationEvent(address, size);
}
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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return address;
}
// This returns the address of an object that has been described in the
// snapshot as being offset bytes back in a particular space.
HeapObject* GetAddressFromEnd(int space) {
int offset = source_->GetInt();
offset <<= kObjectAlignmentBits;
return HeapObject::FromAddress(high_water_[space] - offset);
}
// Cached current isolate.
Isolate* isolate_;
SnapshotByteSource* source_;
// This is the address of the next object that will be allocated in each
// space. It is used to calculate the addresses of back-references.
Address high_water_[LAST_SPACE + 1];
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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int reservations_[LAST_SPACE + 1];
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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static const intptr_t kUninitializedReservation = -1;
ExternalReferenceDecoder* external_reference_decoder_;
DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Deserializer);
};
class SnapshotByteSink {
public:
virtual ~SnapshotByteSink() { }
virtual void Put(int byte, const char* description) = 0;
virtual void PutSection(int byte, const char* description) {
Put(byte, description);
}
void PutInt(uintptr_t integer, const char* description);
virtual int Position() = 0;
};
// Mapping objects to their location after deserialization.
// This is used during building, but not at runtime by V8.
class SerializationAddressMapper {
public:
SerializationAddressMapper()
: no_allocation_(),
serialization_map_(new HashMap(&SerializationMatchFun)) { }
~SerializationAddressMapper() {
delete serialization_map_;
}
bool IsMapped(HeapObject* obj) {
return serialization_map_->Lookup(Key(obj), Hash(obj), false) != NULL;
}
int MappedTo(HeapObject* obj) {
ASSERT(IsMapped(obj));
return static_cast<int>(reinterpret_cast<intptr_t>(
serialization_map_->Lookup(Key(obj), Hash(obj), false)->value));
}
void AddMapping(HeapObject* obj, int to) {
ASSERT(!IsMapped(obj));
HashMap::Entry* entry =
serialization_map_->Lookup(Key(obj), Hash(obj), true);
entry->value = Value(to);
}
private:
static bool SerializationMatchFun(void* key1, void* key2) {
return key1 == key2;
}
static uint32_t Hash(HeapObject* obj) {
return static_cast<int32_t>(reinterpret_cast<intptr_t>(obj->address()));
}
static void* Key(HeapObject* obj) {
return reinterpret_cast<void*>(obj->address());
}
static void* Value(int v) {
return reinterpret_cast<void*>(v);
}
DisallowHeapAllocation no_allocation_;
HashMap* serialization_map_;
DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(SerializationAddressMapper);
};
class CodeAddressMap;
// There can be only one serializer per V8 process.
class Serializer : public SerializerDeserializer {
public:
Serializer(Isolate* isolate, SnapshotByteSink* sink);
~Serializer();
void VisitPointers(Object** start, Object** end);
// You can call this after serialization to find out how much space was used
// in each space.
int CurrentAllocationAddress(int space) {
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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ASSERT(space < kNumberOfSpaces);
return fullness_[space];
}
Isolate* isolate() const { return isolate_; }
static void Enable(Isolate* isolate);
static void Disable();
// Call this when you have made use of the fact that there is no serialization
// going on.
static void TooLateToEnableNow() { too_late_to_enable_now_ = true; }
static bool enabled() { return serialization_enabled_; }
SerializationAddressMapper* address_mapper() { return &address_mapper_; }
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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void PutRoot(int index,
HeapObject* object,
HowToCode how,
WhereToPoint where,
int skip);
protected:
static const int kInvalidRootIndex = -1;
int RootIndex(HeapObject* heap_object, HowToCode from);
virtual bool ShouldBeInThePartialSnapshotCache(HeapObject* o) = 0;
intptr_t root_index_wave_front() { return root_index_wave_front_; }
void set_root_index_wave_front(intptr_t value) {
ASSERT(value >= root_index_wave_front_);
root_index_wave_front_ = value;
}
class ObjectSerializer : public ObjectVisitor {
public:
ObjectSerializer(Serializer* serializer,
Object* o,
SnapshotByteSink* sink,
HowToCode how_to_code,
WhereToPoint where_to_point)
: serializer_(serializer),
object_(HeapObject::cast(o)),
sink_(sink),
reference_representation_(how_to_code + where_to_point),
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
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bytes_processed_so_far_(0),
code_object_(o->IsCode()),
code_has_been_output_(false) { }
void Serialize();
void VisitPointers(Object** start, Object** end);
void VisitEmbeddedPointer(RelocInfo* target);
void VisitExternalReference(Address* p);
void VisitExternalReference(RelocInfo* rinfo);
void VisitCodeTarget(RelocInfo* target);
void VisitCodeEntry(Address entry_address);
void VisitCell(RelocInfo* rinfo);
void VisitRuntimeEntry(RelocInfo* reloc);
// Used for seralizing the external strings that hold the natives source.
void VisitExternalAsciiString(
v8::String::ExternalAsciiStringResource** resource);
// We can't serialize a heap with external two byte strings.
void VisitExternalTwoByteString(
v8::String::ExternalStringResource** resource) {
UNREACHABLE();
}
private:
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
enum ReturnSkip { kCanReturnSkipInsteadOfSkipping, kIgnoringReturn };
// This function outputs or skips the raw data between the last pointer and
// up to the current position. It optionally can just return the number of
// bytes to skip instead of performing a skip instruction, in case the skip
// can be merged into the next instruction.
int OutputRawData(Address up_to, ReturnSkip return_skip = kIgnoringReturn);
Serializer* serializer_;
HeapObject* object_;
SnapshotByteSink* sink_;
int reference_representation_;
int bytes_processed_so_far_;
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
bool code_object_;
bool code_has_been_output_;
};
virtual void SerializeObject(Object* o,
HowToCode how_to_code,
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
WhereToPoint where_to_point,
int skip) = 0;
void SerializeReferenceToPreviousObject(
int space,
int address,
HowToCode how_to_code,
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
WhereToPoint where_to_point,
int skip);
void InitializeAllocators();
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
// This will return the space for an object.
static int SpaceOfObject(HeapObject* object);
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
int Allocate(int space, int size);
int EncodeExternalReference(Address addr) {
return external_reference_encoder_->Encode(addr);
}
int SpaceAreaSize(int space);
// Some roots should not be serialized, because their actual value depends on
// absolute addresses and they are reset after deserialization, anyway.
bool ShouldBeSkipped(Object** current);
Isolate* isolate_;
// Keep track of the fullness of each space in order to generate
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
// relative addresses for back references.
int fullness_[LAST_SPACE + 1];
SnapshotByteSink* sink_;
int current_root_index_;
ExternalReferenceEncoder* external_reference_encoder_;
static bool serialization_enabled_;
// Did we already make use of the fact that serialization was not enabled?
static bool too_late_to_enable_now_;
SerializationAddressMapper address_mapper_;
intptr_t root_index_wave_front_;
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
void Pad();
friend class ObjectSerializer;
friend class Deserializer;
private:
static CodeAddressMap* code_address_map_;
DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Serializer);
};
class PartialSerializer : public Serializer {
public:
PartialSerializer(Isolate* isolate,
Serializer* startup_snapshot_serializer,
SnapshotByteSink* sink)
: Serializer(isolate, sink),
startup_serializer_(startup_snapshot_serializer) {
set_root_index_wave_front(Heap::kStrongRootListLength);
}
// Serialize the objects reachable from a single object pointer.
virtual void Serialize(Object** o);
virtual void SerializeObject(Object* o,
HowToCode how_to_code,
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
WhereToPoint where_to_point,
int skip);
protected:
virtual int PartialSnapshotCacheIndex(HeapObject* o);
virtual bool ShouldBeInThePartialSnapshotCache(HeapObject* o) {
// Scripts should be referred only through shared function infos. We can't
// allow them to be part of the partial snapshot because they contain a
// unique ID, and deserializing several partial snapshots containing script
// would cause dupes.
ASSERT(!o->IsScript());
return o->IsName() || o->IsSharedFunctionInfo() ||
Copy-on-write arrays. Object model changes ---------------------------------------- New fixed_cow_array_map is used for the elements array of a JSObject to mark it as COW. The JSObject's map and other fields are not affected. The JSObject's map still has the "fast elements" bit set. It means we can do only the receiver map check in keyed loads and the receiver and the elements map checks in keyed stores. So introducing COW arrays doesn't hurt performance of these operations. But note that the elements map check is necessary in all mutating operations because the "has fast elements" bit now means "has fast elements for reading". EnsureWritableFastElements can be used in runtime functions to perform the necessary lazy copying. Generated code changes ---------------------------------------- Generic keyed load is updated to only do the receiver map check (this could have been done earlier). FastCloneShallowArrayStub now has two modes: clone elements and use COW elements. AssertFastElements macro is added to check the elements when necessary. The custom call IC generators for Array.prototype.{push,pop} are updated to avoid going to the slow case (and patching the IC) when calling the builtin should work. COW enablement ---------------------------------------- Currently we only put shallow and simple literal arrays in the COW mode. This is done by the parser. Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/3144002 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@5275 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2010-08-16 16:06:46 +00:00
o->IsHeapNumber() || o->IsCode() ||
o->IsScopeInfo() ||
o->map() ==
startup_serializer_->isolate()->heap()->fixed_cow_array_map();
}
private:
Serializer* startup_serializer_;
DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(PartialSerializer);
};
class StartupSerializer : public Serializer {
public:
StartupSerializer(Isolate* isolate, SnapshotByteSink* sink)
: Serializer(isolate, sink) {
// Clear the cache of objects used by the partial snapshot. After the
// strong roots have been serialized we can create a partial snapshot
// which will repopulate the cache with objects needed by that partial
// snapshot.
isolate->set_serialize_partial_snapshot_cache_length(0);
}
// Serialize the current state of the heap. The order is:
// 1) Strong references.
// 2) Partial snapshot cache.
// 3) Weak references (e.g. the string table).
virtual void SerializeStrongReferences();
virtual void SerializeObject(Object* o,
HowToCode how_to_code,
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
WhereToPoint where_to_point,
int skip);
void SerializeWeakReferences();
void Serialize() {
SerializeStrongReferences();
SerializeWeakReferences();
Refactoring of snapshots. This simplifies and improves the speed of deserializing code. The current startup time improvement for V8 is around 6%, but code deserialization is speeded up disproportionately, and we will soon have more code in the snapshot. * Removed support for deserializing into large object space. The regular pages are 1Mbyte now and that is plenty. This is a big simplification. * Instead of reserving space for the snapshot we actually allocate it now. This removes some special casing from the memory management and simplifies deserialization since we are just bumping a pointer rather than calling the normal allocation routines during deserialization. * Record in the snapshot how much we need to boot up and allocate it instead of just assuming that allocations in a new VM will always be linear. * In the snapshot we always address an object as a negative offset from the current allocation point. We used to sometimes address from the start of the deserialized data, but this is less useful now that we have good support for roots and repetitions in the deserialization data. * Code objects were previously deserialized (like other objects) by alternating raw data (deserialized with memcpy) and pointers (to external references, other objects, etc.). Now we deserialize code objects with a single memcpy, followed by a series of skips and pointers that partially overwrite the code we memcopied out of the snapshot. The skips are sometimes merged into the following instruction in the deserialization data to reduce dispatch time. * Integers in the snapshot were stored in a variable length format that gives a compact representation for small positive integers. This is still the case, but the new encoding can be decoded without branches or conditional instructions, which is faster on a modern CPU. Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10918067 git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@12505 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
2012-09-14 11:16:56 +00:00
Pad();
}
private:
virtual bool ShouldBeInThePartialSnapshotCache(HeapObject* o) {
return false;
}
};
} } // namespace v8::internal
#endif // V8_SERIALIZE_H_