Previously, YJIT assumed that basic blocks never consume more than
1 KiB of memory. This assumption does not hold for long Ruby methods
such as the one in the following:
```ruby
eval(<<RUBY)
def set_local_a_lot
#{'_=0;'*0x40000}
end
RUBY
set_local_a_lot
```
For low `--yjit-exec-mem-size` values, one basic block could exhaust the
entire buffer.
Introduce a new field `codeblock_t::dropped_bytes` that the assembler
sets whenever it runs out of space. Check this field in
gen_single_block() to respond to out of memory situations and other
error conditions. This design avoids making the control flow graph of
existing code generation functions more complex.
Use POSIX shell in misc/test_yjit_asm.sh since bash is expanding
`0%/*/*` differently.
Co-authored-by: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
Some platforms don't want memory to be marked as writeable and
executable at the same time. When we write to the code block, we
calculate the OS page that the buffer position maps to. Then we call
`mprotect` to allow writes on that particular page. As an optimization,
we cache the "last written" aligned page which allows us to amortize the
cost of the `mprotect` call. In other words, sequential writes to the
same page will only call `mprotect` on the page once.
When we're done writing, we call `mprotect` on the entire JIT buffer.
This means we don't need to keep track of which pages were marked as
writeable, we let the OS take care of that.
Co-authored-by: John Hawthorn <john@hawthorn.email>
* New code page allocation logic
* Fix leaked globals
* Fix leaked symbols, yjit asm tests
* Make COUNTED_EXIT take a jit argument, so we can eliminate global ocb
* Remove extra whitespace
* Change block start_pos/end_pos to be pointers instead of uint32_t
* Change branch end_pos and start_pos to end_addr, start_addr
For upstreaming, we want functions we export either prefixed with "rb_"
or made static. Historically we haven't been following this rule, so we
were "leaking" a lot of symbols as `make leak-globals` would tell us.
This change unifies everything YJIT into a single compilation unit,
yjit.o, and makes everything unprefixed static to pass `make leak-globals`.
This manual "unified build" setup is similar to that of vm.o.
Having everything in one compilation unit allows static functions to
be visible across YJIT files and removes the need for declarations in
headers in some cases. Unnecessary declarations were removed.
Other changes of note:
- switched to MJIT_SYMBOL_EXPORT_BEGIN which indicates stuff as being
off limits for native extensions
- the first include of each YJIT file is change to be "internal.h"
- undefined MAP_STACK before explicitly redefining it since it
collide's with a definition in system headers. Consider renaming?