summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/tools/musl-gcc.specs.sh
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRich Felker <dalias@aerifal.cx>2013-02-01 22:10:40 -0500
committerRich Felker <dalias@aerifal.cx>2013-02-01 22:10:40 -0500
commitd5142642b8e6c45449158efdb8f8e87af4dafde8 (patch)
tree288ceacdb8f672069c54d560dc5499b76543484d /tools/musl-gcc.specs.sh
parentc50925071cce9c6342597f5671e30d2970c6ff4a (diff)
downloadmusl-d5142642b8e6c45449158efdb8f8e87af4dafde8.tar.gz
pthread stack treatment overhaul for application-provided stacks, etc.
the main goal of these changes is to address the case where an application provides a stack of size N, but TLS has size M that's a significant portion of the size N (or even larger than N), thus giving the application less stack space than it expected or no stack at all! the new strategy pthread_create now uses is to only put TLS on the application-provided stack if TLS is smaller than 1/8 of the stack size or 2k, whichever is smaller. this ensures that the application always has "close enough" to what it requested, and the threshold is chosen heuristically to make sure "sane" amounts of TLS still end up in the application-provided stack. if TLS does not fit the above criteria, pthread_create uses mmap to obtain space for TLS, but still uses the application-provided stack for actual call frame stack. this is to avoid wasting memory, and for the sake of supporting ugly hacks like garbage collection based on assumptions that the implementation will use the provided stack range. in order for the above heuristics to ever succeed, the amount of TLS space wasted on POSIX TSD (pthread_key_create based) needed to be reduced. otherwise, these changes would preclude any use of pthread_create without mmap, which would have serious memory usage and performance costs for applications trying to create huge numbers of threads using pre-allocated stack space. the new value of PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX is the minimum allowed by POSIX, 128. this should still be plenty more than real-world applications need, especially now that C11/gcc-style TLS is now supported in musl, and most apps and libraries choose to use that instead of POSIX TSD when available. at the same time, PTHREAD_STACK_MIN has been decreased. it was originally set to PAGE_SIZE back when there was no support for TLS or application-provided stacks, and requests smaller than a whole page did not make sense. now, there are two good reasons to support requests smaller than a page: (1) applications could provide pre-allocated stacks smaller than a page, and (2) with smaller stack sizes, stack+TLS+TSD can all fit in one page, making it possible for applications which need huge numbers of threads with minimal stack needs to allocate exactly one page per thread. the new value of PTHREAD_STACK_MIN, 2k, is aligned with the minimum size for sigaltstack.
Diffstat (limited to 'tools/musl-gcc.specs.sh')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions