On Thu, 21 May 2026 21:42:49 GMT, Vladimir Ivanov <[email protected]> wrote:

> On bytecode level booleans are represented as ints and HotSpot JVM normalizes 
> boolean values on memory accesses. It unconditionally applies normalization 
> on boolean stores, but trusts on-heap boolean locations to hold normalized 
> values. Normalization is applied on loads for off-heap and mismatched unsafe 
> accesses .  
> 
> There are 2 normalization procedures used: (1) cast int to byte and test it 
> against zero; and (2) truncation to least-significant bit.  Truncation is 
> preferred (due to performance considerations), but JNI mandates testing 
> against zero and, historically, `#1` was used for off-heap unsafe accesses as 
> well. It complicated the implementation (leading to subtle bugs) and 
> introduced divergence in behavior at runtime (depending on execution mode and 
> JIT-compilation peculiarities). 
> 
> The fix uses truncation uniformly across all execution modes. It simplifies 
> implementation and eliminates possible divergence in behavior between 
> execution modes. Also, it drastically simplifies future Unsafe API 
> refactorings.
> 
> There's one scenario left when it's possible to observe non-normalized 
> values: when mismatched access pollutes the Java heap with a bogus boolean 
> value, but then the value is read with a well-typed boolean access.
> 
> Testing: hs-tier1 - hs-tier6
>  
> - [x] I confirm that I make this contribution in accordance with the [OpenJDK 
> Interim AI Policy](https://openjdk.org/legal/ai).

Request:  Could you post FTR the output from the jtreg test, both before the 
other changes are applied, and after?  I want to see (a) what the tests detect 
when the old rule is used, and (b) what are those "interesting" mostly-positive 
results?

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PR Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/31249#issuecomment-4526710357

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