NAME
docs/dev/pmc_freeze.pod - Freeze/Thaw Design Notes
VERSION
This document describes freeze/thaw internals version 0.1. This is not the final implementation.
Overview
Freezing or serializing arbitrary PMCs is an interesting problem. Aggregates can hold other aggregates and can be deeply nested, so so a recursive approach could easily blow the stack, especially on embedded systems. Also, aggregates can be self-referential -- they can hold pointers to themselves -- so that working on such structures could create infinite loops.
Coverage
Although the file is named pmc_freeze.c it ultimately will deal with every kind of operation that deeply traverses an arbitrary data structures. For example:
- freeze Called from user code to serialize the state of a PMC into some (possibly binary) representation held in a STRING.
- freeze_at_destruct A variant of
- thaw The opposite of
- dclone Deeply clone an aggregate.
- dump, pretty_print Create a visual representation of an aggregate.
- destruction ordering Find the logical dependencies of a collection of PMCs, so that they can be destroyed in an appropriate order. This is also called on interpreter shutdown.
- mark Mark all objects as being live by calling Parrot_gc_mark_PObj_alive called from GC. While the functionality is the same, it will not be implemented on top of this general scheme for performance reasons. This leads to some code duplication, but GC is run permanently and deserves all the speed it can get.
freeze
,
possibly called from an exception handler or on resource shortage before interpreter shutdown,
to save some data before dying.
It must not consume any additional resources.
freeze
: reconstruct all PMCs to generate an identical copy of the original frozen PMC.
As with freeze
,
can be called from user code.
dclone(p)
is basically the same as thaw(freeze(p))
.
Description
The basic scheme of operation looks like this:
info = init() push todo_list, pmc while (todo_list) current = shift todo_list current->visit(info) done.
The visit_info structure
This structure holds all necessary information and function pointers specific to the desired functionality. It gets passed on to all vtable functions and callback functions.
Working loop
- todo list A List called todo holds items still to be worked on. This method is slower and consumes more resources, but doesn't interfere with GC runs and is thread-safe.
Putting items on the todo list
This is done by a callback function inside the visit_info structure called visit_pmc_now. It gets called initially to put the first item on the list and is called thereafter from all PMCs for contained PMCs inside the visit vtable function.
The visit() vtable
The general scheme above shows that this method is called for all items on the todo_list. visit has to call visit_pmc_now for all contained PMCs, which then get visited until all is done.
The visit_pmc_now() callback
The basic operation is:
(seen, id) = was_already_seen(pmc) do_specific_action(pmc, seen, id) if (!seen) pmc->visit_action()
Avoiding duplicates
As stated in the introduction structures can be self-referential, they can contain (at an arbitrary depth) PMCs, that were already processed. Just following these PMCs would lead to endless loops. So already seen PMCs have to be remembered.
- The seen hash Using a Hash is one method to avoid duplicates. The seen hash holds keys being the address of the PMC and values being a PMC id, which is unique for this PMC. While this is straight forward, it consumes 16 bytes per PMC (plus overhead, 32-bit system assumed). Hash lookups also take a considerable amount of time.
The actual action
So after all we finally arrived at the point to actually perform the desired functionality. First the PMC-specific part is done inside pmc_freeze.c then the specific vtable function freeze, thaw, whatever, is called, again via a function pointer called visit_action.
Freeze and thaw
As stated PMCs are currently processed inside the core, PMC-specific parts are done by calling the PMCs vtable function. This parts could of course be moved to default.pmc too, so that it's simpler to override the functionality.
Serializer interface
During initialization the visit_infos image_io data pointer is filled with an object having vtable functions that remarkably look like a PMCs vtable. So io->vtable->push_integer spits out an INTVAL to the frozen image, while shift_integer gets an INTVAL from the frozen stream.
This simplifies final changes when image_io becomes just a PMC of some serializer class. There are currently two serializers:
- Plain text This serializer is mainly intended for testing. Having a readable representation of the image simplifies debugging a lot.
- Parrot Byte Code We already have a platform-independent way of reading and writing opcodes, string, and number-constants. So this serializer uses functionality of the pack-file routines. The produced image isn't as dense as it could be though, because all data are aligned at opcode_t boundaries.
Image data format
PMC ids ranging from 1 to N-PMCs are shifted left by two, so that the 2 lo bits can serve as flags:
id + 0x1 ... PMC was seen id + 0x2 ... PMC has same type as previous PMC id + 0x3 ... escape flag
A PMCs image generally looks like:
<id><type><pmc-specific-data>
The text representation of the array
P0 = [P1=666, P2=777, P0]
may look like:
0xdf4 30 3 0xdf8 33 666 0xdf2 777 0xdf5 0xdf4 ... PMC id (with "0x" in front for clarity) 30 ... enum_class_ResizablePMCArray 3 ... elements count 0xdf8 ... id of first element 33 ... enum_class_Integer 666 ... value 0xdf2 ... id of second element, same type as prev element 777 ... value 0xdf5 ... id of array itself with lo bit set
The escape flag marks places in the image, where additional data will follow. After the escape flag is an int defining the kind of the following data, passed on in extra_flags. During thaw the PMCs vtable is called again, to restore these data. So a PMCs thaw vtable has to check extra_flags if normal or extra data have to be shifted from the image.
This is e.g. needed for PMC properties or arrays containing sparse holes, to set the array index of the following data.
A Integer(666) with a property hash ("answer"=>42) thus looks like:
0xdfc 33 666 0xdff 2 0xdf4 32 1 answer 0xdf8 33 42
0xdff is the escape mark for the PMC 0xdfc followed by the constant EXTRA_IS_PROP_HASH.
[ To be continued ]
FILES
src/pmc_freeze.c, pf/pf_items.c
Author
Leopold Toetsch lt@toetsch.at