On Wed, 11 Jan 2023 15:08:23 GMT, Stefan Karlsson <stef...@openjdk.org> wrote:
> > ArrayAllocator with ArrayAllocatorMallocLimit removed is effectively > > MallocArrayAllocator. Are you suggesting leaving MallocArrayAllocator and > > MmapArrayAllocator thus update references to ArrayAllocator to be > > MallocArrayAllocator? > > Yes, that was what I wanted. > > > As far as APIs, the majority of the codebase uses the macros. IMO > > consistency would be better and having two ways of doing things doesn't > > help. But if you feel strongly about it, we can punt and just surgically > > remove the bare minimum, assuming you clarify your expectation (see above). > > I agree about the argument about consistency, so I retract my objection. We > can deal with these macros as a separate RFE (if we ever get to it). > > I would like to retain the usage of mmapped memory for ZGC to minimize the > risk of any surprises for us. ZGC code also tend to initialize as much as > possible in the initialization list, so the extra memset that comes after > initialization lists sticks out a bit. Could you create a private > `ZGranuleMap::allocate_array` function that uses > os::reserve_memory/commmit_memory and change the code to be: > > ``` > inline ZGranuleMap<T>::ZGranuleMap(size_t max_offset) : > _size(max_offset >> ZGranuleSizeShift), > _map(allocate_array(_size)) { > ``` > > Or if you like, I can provide a patch on top of your branch to do that. The extra memset is due to `malloc` not handing out zero initialized memory, it looks like `zGranuleMap` is sensitive to that. Done. Restored mmap as suggested for zGranuleMap. ------------- PR: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/11931