/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 8; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 4 -*- * vim: set ts=8 sts=4 et sw=4 tw=99: * This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this * file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */ #ifndef js_RootingAPI_h #define js_RootingAPI_h #include "mozilla/Attributes.h" #include "mozilla/DebugOnly.h" #include "mozilla/GuardObjects.h" #include "mozilla/LinkedList.h" #include "mozilla/Move.h" #include "mozilla/TypeTraits.h" #include "jspubtd.h" #include "js/GCAnnotations.h" #include "js/GCAPI.h" #include "js/GCPolicyAPI.h" #include "js/HeapAPI.h" #include "js/TypeDecls.h" #include "js/Utility.h" /* * Moving GC Stack Rooting * * A moving GC may change the physical location of GC allocated things, even * when they are rooted, updating all pointers to the thing to refer to its new * location. The GC must therefore know about all live pointers to a thing, * not just one of them, in order to behave correctly. * * The |Rooted| and |Handle| classes below are used to root stack locations * whose value may be held live across a call that can trigger GC. For a * code fragment such as: * * JSObject* obj = NewObject(cx); * DoSomething(cx); * ... = obj->lastProperty(); * * If |DoSomething()| can trigger a GC, the stack location of |obj| must be * rooted to ensure that the GC does not move the JSObject referred to by * |obj| without updating |obj|'s location itself. This rooting must happen * regardless of whether there are other roots which ensure that the object * itself will not be collected. * * If |DoSomething()| cannot trigger a GC, and the same holds for all other * calls made between |obj|'s definitions and its last uses, then no rooting * is required. * * SpiderMonkey can trigger a GC at almost any time and in ways that are not * always clear. For example, the following innocuous-looking actions can * cause a GC: allocation of any new GC thing; JSObject::hasProperty; * JS_ReportError and friends; and ToNumber, among many others. The following * dangerous-looking actions cannot trigger a GC: js_malloc, cx->malloc_, * rt->malloc_, and friends and JS_ReportOutOfMemory. * * The following family of three classes will exactly root a stack location. * Incorrect usage of these classes will result in a compile error in almost * all cases. Therefore, it is very hard to be incorrectly rooted if you use * these classes exclusively. These classes are all templated on the type T of * the value being rooted. * * - Rooted declares a variable of type T, whose value is always rooted. * Rooted may be automatically coerced to a Handle, below. Rooted * should be used whenever a local variable's value may be held live across a * call which can trigger a GC. * * - Handle is a const reference to a Rooted. Functions which take GC * things or values as arguments and need to root those arguments should * generally use handles for those arguments and avoid any explicit rooting. * This has two benefits. First, when several such functions call each other * then redundant rooting of multiple copies of the GC thing can be avoided. * Second, if the caller does not pass a rooted value a compile error will be * generated, which is quicker and easier to fix than when relying on a * separate rooting analysis. * * - MutableHandle is a non-const reference to Rooted. It is used in the * same way as Handle and includes a |set(const T& v)| method to allow * updating the value of the referenced Rooted. A MutableHandle can be * created with an implicit cast from a Rooted*. * * In some cases the small performance overhead of exact rooting (measured to * be a few nanoseconds on desktop) is too much. In these cases, try the * following: * * - Move all Rooted above inner loops: this allows you to re-use the root * on each iteration of the loop. * * - Pass Handle through your hot call stack to avoid re-rooting costs at * every invocation. * * The following diagram explains the list of supported, implicit type * conversions between classes of this family: * * Rooted ----> Handle * | ^ * | | * | | * +---> MutableHandle * (via &) * * All of these types have an implicit conversion to raw pointers. */ namespace js { template struct BarrierMethods { }; template class RootedBase {}; template class HandleBase {}; template class MutableHandleBase {}; template class HeapBase {}; template class PersistentRootedBase {}; static void* const ConstNullValue = nullptr; namespace gc { struct Cell; template struct PersistentRootedMarker; } /* namespace gc */ #define DECLARE_POINTER_COMPARISON_OPS(T) \ bool operator==(const T& other) const { return get() == other; } \ bool operator!=(const T& other) const { return get() != other; } // Important: Return a reference so passing a Rooted, etc. to // something that takes a |const T&| is not a GC hazard. #define DECLARE_POINTER_CONSTREF_OPS(T) \ operator const T&() const { return get(); } \ const T& operator->() const { return get(); } // Assignment operators on a base class are hidden by the implicitly defined // operator= on the derived class. Thus, define the operator= directly on the // class as we would need to manually pass it through anyway. #define DECLARE_POINTER_ASSIGN_OPS(Wrapper, T) \ Wrapper& operator=(const T& p) { \ set(p); \ return *this; \ } \ Wrapper& operator=(const Wrapper& other) { \ set(other.get()); \ return *this; \ } \ #define DELETE_ASSIGNMENT_OPS(Wrapper, T) \ template Wrapper& operator=(S) = delete; \ Wrapper& operator=(const Wrapper&) = delete; #define DECLARE_NONPOINTER_ACCESSOR_METHODS(ptr) \ const T* address() const { return &(ptr); } \ const T& get() const { return (ptr); } \ #define DECLARE_NONPOINTER_MUTABLE_ACCESSOR_METHODS(ptr) \ T* address() { return &(ptr); } \ T& get() { return (ptr); } \ } /* namespace js */ namespace JS { template class Rooted; template class PersistentRooted; /* This is exposing internal state of the GC for inlining purposes. */ JS_FRIEND_API(bool) isGCEnabled(); JS_FRIEND_API(void) HeapObjectPostBarrier(JSObject** objp, JSObject* prev, JSObject* next); #ifdef JS_DEBUG /** * For generational GC, assert that an object is in the tenured generation as * opposed to being in the nursery. */ extern JS_FRIEND_API(void) AssertGCThingMustBeTenured(JSObject* obj); extern JS_FRIEND_API(void) AssertGCThingIsNotAnObjectSubclass(js::gc::Cell* cell); #else inline void AssertGCThingMustBeTenured(JSObject* obj) {} inline void AssertGCThingIsNotAnObjectSubclass(js::gc::Cell* cell) {} #endif /** * The Heap class is a heap-stored reference to a JS GC thing. All members of * heap classes that refer to GC things should use Heap (or possibly * TenuredHeap, described below). * * Heap is an abstraction that hides some of the complexity required to * maintain GC invariants for the contained reference. It uses operator * overloading to provide a normal pointer interface, but notifies the GC every * time the value it contains is updated. This is necessary for generational GC, * which keeps track of all pointers into the nursery. * * Heap instances must be traced when their containing object is traced to * keep the pointed-to GC thing alive. * * Heap objects should only be used on the heap. GC references stored on the * C/C++ stack must use Rooted/Handle/MutableHandle instead. * * Type T must be one of: JS::Value, jsid, JSObject*, JSString*, JSScript* */ template class Heap : public js::HeapBase { public: Heap() { static_assert(sizeof(T) == sizeof(Heap), "Heap must be binary compatible with T."); init(GCPolicy::initial()); } explicit Heap(T p) { init(p); } /* * For Heap, move semantics are equivalent to copy semantics. In C++, a * copy constructor taking const-ref is the way to get a single function * that will be used for both lvalue and rvalue copies, so we can simply * omit the rvalue variant. */ explicit Heap(const Heap& p) { init(p.ptr); } ~Heap() { post(ptr, GCPolicy::initial()); } DECLARE_POINTER_CONSTREF_OPS(T); DECLARE_POINTER_ASSIGN_OPS(Heap, T); DECLARE_NONPOINTER_ACCESSOR_METHODS(ptr); T* unsafeGet() { return &ptr; } /* * Set the pointer to a value which will cause a crash if it is * dereferenced. */ void setToCrashOnTouch() { ptr = reinterpret_cast(crashOnTouchPointer); } bool isSetToCrashOnTouch() { return ptr == crashOnTouchPointer; } private: void init(T newPtr) { ptr = newPtr; post(GCPolicy::initial(), ptr); } void set(T newPtr) { T tmp = ptr; ptr = newPtr; post(tmp, ptr); } void post(const T& prev, const T& next) { js::BarrierMethods::postBarrier(&ptr, prev, next); } enum { crashOnTouchPointer = 1 }; T ptr; }; /** * The TenuredHeap class is similar to the Heap class above in that it * encapsulates the GC concerns of an on-heap reference to a JS object. However, * it has two important differences: * * 1) Pointers which are statically known to only reference "tenured" objects * can avoid the extra overhead of SpiderMonkey's write barriers. * * 2) Objects in the "tenured" heap have stronger alignment restrictions than * those in the "nursery", so it is possible to store flags in the lower * bits of pointers known to be tenured. TenuredHeap wraps a normal tagged * pointer with a nice API for accessing the flag bits and adds various * assertions to ensure that it is not mis-used. * * GC things are said to be "tenured" when they are located in the long-lived * heap: e.g. they have gained tenure as an object by surviving past at least * one GC. For performance, SpiderMonkey allocates some things which are known * to normally be long lived directly into the tenured generation; for example, * global objects. Additionally, SpiderMonkey does not visit individual objects * when deleting non-tenured objects, so object with finalizers are also always * tenured; for instance, this includes most DOM objects. * * The considerations to keep in mind when using a TenuredHeap vs a normal * Heap are: * * - It is invalid for a TenuredHeap to refer to a non-tenured thing. * - It is however valid for a Heap to refer to a tenured thing. * - It is not possible to store flag bits in a Heap. */ template class TenuredHeap : public js::HeapBase { public: TenuredHeap() : bits(0) { static_assert(sizeof(T) == sizeof(TenuredHeap), "TenuredHeap must be binary compatible with T."); } explicit TenuredHeap(T p) : bits(0) { setPtr(p); } explicit TenuredHeap(const TenuredHeap& p) : bits(0) { setPtr(p.getPtr()); } bool operator==(const TenuredHeap& other) { return bits == other.bits; } bool operator!=(const TenuredHeap& other) { return bits != other.bits; } void setPtr(T newPtr) { MOZ_ASSERT((reinterpret_cast(newPtr) & flagsMask) == 0); if (newPtr) AssertGCThingMustBeTenured(newPtr); bits = (bits & flagsMask) | reinterpret_cast(newPtr); } void setFlags(uintptr_t flagsToSet) { MOZ_ASSERT((flagsToSet & ~flagsMask) == 0); bits |= flagsToSet; } void unsetFlags(uintptr_t flagsToUnset) { MOZ_ASSERT((flagsToUnset & ~flagsMask) == 0); bits &= ~flagsToUnset; } bool hasFlag(uintptr_t flag) const { MOZ_ASSERT((flag & ~flagsMask) == 0); return (bits & flag) != 0; } T getPtr() const { return reinterpret_cast(bits & ~flagsMask); } uintptr_t getFlags() const { return bits & flagsMask; } operator T() const { return getPtr(); } T operator->() const { return getPtr(); } TenuredHeap& operator=(T p) { setPtr(p); return *this; } TenuredHeap& operator=(const TenuredHeap& other) { bits = other.bits; return *this; } private: enum { maskBits = 3, flagsMask = (1 << maskBits) - 1, }; uintptr_t bits; }; /** * Reference to a T that has been rooted elsewhere. This is most useful * as a parameter type, which guarantees that the T lvalue is properly * rooted. See "Move GC Stack Rooting" above. * * If you want to add additional methods to Handle for a specific * specialization, define a HandleBase specialization containing them. */ template class MOZ_NONHEAP_CLASS Handle : public js::HandleBase { friend class JS::MutableHandle; public: /* Creates a handle from a handle of a type convertible to T. */ template MOZ_IMPLICIT Handle(Handle handle, typename mozilla::EnableIf::value, int>::Type dummy = 0) { static_assert(sizeof(Handle) == sizeof(T*), "Handle must be binary compatible with T*."); ptr = reinterpret_cast(handle.address()); } MOZ_IMPLICIT Handle(decltype(nullptr)) { static_assert(mozilla::IsPointer::value, "nullptr_t overload not valid for non-pointer types"); ptr = reinterpret_cast(&js::ConstNullValue); } MOZ_IMPLICIT Handle(MutableHandle handle) { ptr = handle.address(); } /* * Take care when calling this method! * * This creates a Handle from the raw location of a T. * * It should be called only if the following conditions hold: * * 1) the location of the T is guaranteed to be marked (for some reason * other than being a Rooted), e.g., if it is guaranteed to be reachable * from an implicit root. * * 2) the contents of the location are immutable, or at least cannot change * for the lifetime of the handle, as its users may not expect its value * to change underneath them. */ static constexpr Handle fromMarkedLocation(const T* p) { return Handle(p, DeliberatelyChoosingThisOverload, ImUsingThisOnlyInFromFromMarkedLocation); } /* * Construct a handle from an explicitly rooted location. This is the * normal way to create a handle, and normally happens implicitly. */ template inline MOZ_IMPLICIT Handle(const Rooted& root, typename mozilla::EnableIf::value, int>::Type dummy = 0); template inline MOZ_IMPLICIT Handle(const PersistentRooted& root, typename mozilla::EnableIf::value, int>::Type dummy = 0); /* Construct a read only handle from a mutable handle. */ template inline MOZ_IMPLICIT Handle(MutableHandle& root, typename mozilla::EnableIf::value, int>::Type dummy = 0); DECLARE_POINTER_COMPARISON_OPS(T); DECLARE_POINTER_CONSTREF_OPS(T); DECLARE_NONPOINTER_ACCESSOR_METHODS(*ptr); private: Handle() {} DELETE_ASSIGNMENT_OPS(Handle, T); enum Disambiguator { DeliberatelyChoosingThisOverload = 42 }; enum CallerIdentity { ImUsingThisOnlyInFromFromMarkedLocation = 17 }; constexpr Handle(const T* p, Disambiguator, CallerIdentity) : ptr(p) {} const T* ptr; }; /** * Similar to a handle, but the underlying storage can be changed. This is * useful for outparams. * * If you want to add additional methods to MutableHandle for a specific * specialization, define a MutableHandleBase specialization containing * them. */ template class MOZ_STACK_CLASS MutableHandle : public js::MutableHandleBase { public: inline MOZ_IMPLICIT MutableHandle(Rooted* root); inline MOZ_IMPLICIT MutableHandle(PersistentRooted* root); private: // Disallow nullptr for overloading purposes. MutableHandle(decltype(nullptr)) = delete; public: void set(T v) { *ptr = v; } /* * This may be called only if the location of the T is guaranteed * to be marked (for some reason other than being a Rooted), * e.g., if it is guaranteed to be reachable from an implicit root. * * Create a MutableHandle from a raw location of a T. */ static MutableHandle fromMarkedLocation(T* p) { MutableHandle h; h.ptr = p; return h; } DECLARE_POINTER_CONSTREF_OPS(T); DECLARE_NONPOINTER_ACCESSOR_METHODS(*ptr); DECLARE_NONPOINTER_MUTABLE_ACCESSOR_METHODS(*ptr); private: MutableHandle() {} DELETE_ASSIGNMENT_OPS(MutableHandle, T); T* ptr; }; } /* namespace JS */ namespace js { template struct BarrierMethods { static T* initial() { return nullptr; } static void postBarrier(T** vp, T* prev, T* next) { if (next) JS::AssertGCThingIsNotAnObjectSubclass(reinterpret_cast(next)); } static void relocate(T** vp) {} }; template <> struct BarrierMethods { static JSObject* initial() { return nullptr; } static gc::Cell* asGCThingOrNull(JSObject* v) { if (!v) return nullptr; MOZ_ASSERT(uintptr_t(v) > 32); return reinterpret_cast(v); } static void postBarrier(JSObject** vp, JSObject* prev, JSObject* next) { JS::HeapObjectPostBarrier(vp, prev, next); } }; template <> struct BarrierMethods { static JSFunction* initial() { return nullptr; } static void postBarrier(JSFunction** vp, JSFunction* prev, JSFunction* next) { JS::HeapObjectPostBarrier(reinterpret_cast(vp), reinterpret_cast(prev), reinterpret_cast(next)); } }; // Provide hash codes for Cell kinds that may be relocated and, thus, not have // a stable address to use as the base for a hash code. Instead of the address, // this hasher uses Cell::getUniqueId to provide exact matches and as a base // for generating hash codes. // // Note: this hasher, like PointerHasher can "hash" a nullptr. While a nullptr // would not likely be a useful key, there are some cases where being able to // hash a nullptr is useful, either on purpose or because of bugs: // (1) existence checks where the key may happen to be null and (2) some // aggregate Lookup kinds embed a JSObject* that is frequently null and do not // null test before dispatching to the hasher. template struct JS_PUBLIC_API(MovableCellHasher) { using Key = T; using Lookup = T; static bool hasHash(const Lookup& l); static bool ensureHash(const Lookup& l); static HashNumber hash(const Lookup& l); static bool match(const Key& k, const Lookup& l); static void rekey(Key& k, const Key& newKey) { k = newKey; } }; template struct JS_PUBLIC_API(MovableCellHasher>) { using Key = JS::Heap; using Lookup = T; static bool hasHash(const Lookup& l) { return MovableCellHasher::hasHash(l); } static bool ensureHash(const Lookup& l) { return MovableCellHasher::ensureHash(l); } static HashNumber hash(const Lookup& l) { return MovableCellHasher::hash(l); } static bool match(const Key& k, const Lookup& l) { return MovableCellHasher::match(k, l); } static void rekey(Key& k, const Key& newKey) { k.unsafeSet(newKey); } }; template struct FallibleHashMethods> { template static bool hasHash(Lookup&& l) { return MovableCellHasher::hasHash(mozilla::Forward(l)); } template static bool ensureHash(Lookup&& l) { return MovableCellHasher::ensureHash(mozilla::Forward(l)); } }; } /* namespace js */ namespace js { // The alignment must be set because the Rooted and PersistentRooted ptr fields // may be accessed through reinterpret_cast*>, and // the compiler may choose a different alignment for the ptr field when it // knows the actual type stored in DispatchWrapper. // // It would make more sense to align only those specific fields of type // DispatchWrapper, rather than DispatchWrapper itself, but that causes MSVC to // fail when Rooted is used in an IsConvertible test. template class alignas(8) DispatchWrapper { static_assert(JS::MapTypeToRootKind::kind == JS::RootKind::Traceable, "DispatchWrapper is intended only for usage with a Traceable"); using TraceFn = void (*)(JSTracer*, T*, const char*); TraceFn tracer; alignas(gc::CellSize) T storage; public: template MOZ_IMPLICIT DispatchWrapper(U&& initial) : tracer(&JS::GCPolicy::trace), storage(mozilla::Forward(initial)) { } // Mimic a pointer type, so that we can drop into Rooted. T* operator &() { return &storage; } const T* operator &() const { return &storage; } operator T&() { return storage; } operator const T&() const { return storage; } // Trace the contained storage (of unknown type) using the trace function // we set aside when we did know the type. static void TraceWrapped(JSTracer* trc, T* thingp, const char* name) { auto wrapper = reinterpret_cast( uintptr_t(thingp) - offsetof(DispatchWrapper, storage)); wrapper->tracer(trc, &wrapper->storage, name); } }; } /* namespace js */ namespace JS { /** * Local variable of type T whose value is always rooted. This is typically * used for local variables, or for non-rooted values being passed to a * function that requires a handle, e.g. Foo(Root(cx, x)). * * If you want to add additional methods to Rooted for a specific * specialization, define a RootedBase specialization containing them. */ template class MOZ_RAII Rooted : public js::RootedBase { inline void registerWithRootLists(js::RootedListHeads& roots) { this->stack = &roots[JS::MapTypeToRootKind::kind]; this->prev = *stack; *stack = reinterpret_cast*>(this); } inline js::RootedListHeads& rootLists(JS::RootingContext* cx) { return rootLists(static_cast(cx)); } inline js::RootedListHeads& rootLists(js::ContextFriendFields* cx) { if (JS::Zone* zone = cx->zone_) return JS::shadow::Zone::asShadowZone(zone)->stackRoots_; MOZ_ASSERT(cx->isJSContext); return cx->roots.stackRoots_; } inline js::RootedListHeads& rootLists(JSContext* cx) { return rootLists(js::ContextFriendFields::get(cx)); } public: template explicit Rooted(const RootingContext& cx) : ptr(GCPolicy::initial()) { registerWithRootLists(rootLists(cx)); } template Rooted(const RootingContext& cx, S&& initial) : ptr(mozilla::Forward(initial)) { registerWithRootLists(rootLists(cx)); } ~Rooted() { MOZ_ASSERT(*stack == reinterpret_cast*>(this)); *stack = prev; } Rooted* previous() { return reinterpret_cast*>(prev); } /* * This method is public for Rooted so that Codegen.py can use a Rooted * interchangeably with a MutableHandleValue. */ void set(T value) { ptr = value; } DECLARE_POINTER_COMPARISON_OPS(T); DECLARE_POINTER_CONSTREF_OPS(T); DECLARE_POINTER_ASSIGN_OPS(Rooted, T); DECLARE_NONPOINTER_ACCESSOR_METHODS(ptr); DECLARE_NONPOINTER_MUTABLE_ACCESSOR_METHODS(ptr); private: /* * These need to be templated on void* to avoid aliasing issues between, for * example, Rooted and Rooted, which use the same * stack head pointer for different classes. */ Rooted** stack; Rooted* prev; /* * For pointer types, the TraceKind for tracing is based on the list it is * in (selected via MapTypeToRootKind), so no additional storage is * required here. Non-pointer types, however, share the same list, so the * function to call for tracing is stored adjacent to the struct. Since C++ * cannot templatize on storage class, this is implemented via the wrapper * class DispatchWrapper. */ using MaybeWrapped = typename mozilla::Conditional< MapTypeToRootKind::kind == JS::RootKind::Traceable, js::DispatchWrapper, T>::Type; MaybeWrapped ptr; Rooted(const Rooted&) = delete; } JS_HAZ_ROOTED; } /* namespace JS */ namespace js { /** * Augment the generic Rooted interface when T = JSObject* with * class-querying and downcasting operations. * * Given a Rooted obj, one can view * Handle h = obj.as(); * as an optimization of * Rooted rooted(cx, &obj->as()); * Handle h = rooted; */ template <> class RootedBase { public: template JS::Handle as() const; }; /** * Augment the generic Handle interface when T = JSObject* with * downcasting operations. * * Given a Handle obj, one can view * Handle h = obj.as(); * as an optimization of * Rooted rooted(cx, &obj->as()); * Handle h = rooted; */ template <> class HandleBase { public: template JS::Handle as() const; }; /** Interface substitute for Rooted which does not root the variable's memory. */ template class MOZ_RAII FakeRooted : public RootedBase { public: template explicit FakeRooted(CX* cx) : ptr(JS::GCPolicy::initial()) {} template FakeRooted(CX* cx, T initial) : ptr(initial) {} DECLARE_POINTER_COMPARISON_OPS(T); DECLARE_POINTER_CONSTREF_OPS(T); DECLARE_POINTER_ASSIGN_OPS(FakeRooted, T); DECLARE_NONPOINTER_ACCESSOR_METHODS(ptr); DECLARE_NONPOINTER_MUTABLE_ACCESSOR_METHODS(ptr); private: T ptr; void set(const T& value) { ptr = value; } FakeRooted(const FakeRooted&) = delete; }; /** Interface substitute for MutableHandle which is not required to point to rooted memory. */ template class FakeMutableHandle : public js::MutableHandleBase { public: MOZ_IMPLICIT FakeMutableHandle(T* t) { ptr = t; } MOZ_IMPLICIT FakeMutableHandle(FakeRooted* root) { ptr = root->address(); } void set(T v) { *ptr = v; } DECLARE_POINTER_CONSTREF_OPS(T); DECLARE_NONPOINTER_ACCESSOR_METHODS(*ptr); DECLARE_NONPOINTER_MUTABLE_ACCESSOR_METHODS(*ptr); private: FakeMutableHandle() {} DELETE_ASSIGNMENT_OPS(FakeMutableHandle, T); T* ptr; }; /** * Types for a variable that either should or shouldn't be rooted, depending on * the template parameter allowGC. Used for implementing functions that can * operate on either rooted or unrooted data. * * The toHandle() and toMutableHandle() functions are for calling functions * which require handle types and are only called in the CanGC case. These * allow the calling code to type check. */ enum AllowGC { NoGC = 0, CanGC = 1 }; template class MaybeRooted { }; template class MaybeRooted { public: typedef JS::Handle HandleType; typedef JS::Rooted RootType; typedef JS::MutableHandle MutableHandleType; static inline JS::Handle toHandle(HandleType v) { return v; } static inline JS::MutableHandle toMutableHandle(MutableHandleType v) { return v; } template static inline JS::Handle downcastHandle(HandleType v) { return v.template as(); } }; template class MaybeRooted { public: typedef T HandleType; typedef FakeRooted RootType; typedef FakeMutableHandle MutableHandleType; static JS::Handle toHandle(HandleType v) { MOZ_CRASH("Bad conversion"); } static JS::MutableHandle toMutableHandle(MutableHandleType v) { MOZ_CRASH("Bad conversion"); } template static inline T2* downcastHandle(HandleType v) { return &v->template as(); } }; } /* namespace js */ namespace JS { template template inline Handle::Handle(const Rooted& root, typename mozilla::EnableIf::value, int>::Type dummy) { ptr = reinterpret_cast(root.address()); } template template inline Handle::Handle(const PersistentRooted& root, typename mozilla::EnableIf::value, int>::Type dummy) { ptr = reinterpret_cast(root.address()); } template template inline Handle::Handle(MutableHandle& root, typename mozilla::EnableIf::value, int>::Type dummy) { ptr = reinterpret_cast(root.address()); } template inline MutableHandle::MutableHandle(Rooted* root) { static_assert(sizeof(MutableHandle) == sizeof(T*), "MutableHandle must be binary compatible with T*."); ptr = root->address(); } template inline MutableHandle::MutableHandle(PersistentRooted* root) { static_assert(sizeof(MutableHandle) == sizeof(T*), "MutableHandle must be binary compatible with T*."); ptr = root->address(); } /** * A copyable, assignable global GC root type with arbitrary lifetime, an * infallible constructor, and automatic unrooting on destruction. * * These roots can be used in heap-allocated data structures, so they are not * associated with any particular JSContext or stack. They are registered with * the JSRuntime itself, without locking, so they require a full JSContext to be * initialized, not one of its more restricted superclasses. Initialization may * take place on construction, or in two phases if the no-argument constructor * is called followed by init(). * * Note that you must not use an PersistentRooted in an object owned by a JS * object: * * Whenever one object whose lifetime is decided by the GC refers to another * such object, that edge must be traced only if the owning JS object is traced. * This applies not only to JS objects (which obviously are managed by the GC) * but also to C++ objects owned by JS objects. * * If you put a PersistentRooted in such a C++ object, that is almost certainly * a leak. When a GC begins, the referent of the PersistentRooted is treated as * live, unconditionally (because a PersistentRooted is a *root*), even if the * JS object that owns it is unreachable. If there is any path from that * referent back to the JS object, then the C++ object containing the * PersistentRooted will not be destructed, and the whole blob of objects will * not be freed, even if there are no references to them from the outside. * * In the context of Firefox, this is a severe restriction: almost everything in * Firefox is owned by some JS object or another, so using PersistentRooted in * such objects would introduce leaks. For these kinds of edges, Heap or * TenuredHeap would be better types. It's up to the implementor of the type * containing Heap or TenuredHeap members to make sure their referents get * marked when the object itself is marked. */ template class PersistentRooted : public js::PersistentRootedBase, private mozilla::LinkedListElement> { using ListBase = mozilla::LinkedListElement>; friend class mozilla::LinkedList; friend class mozilla::LinkedListElement; void registerWithRootLists(js::RootLists& roots) { MOZ_ASSERT(!initialized()); JS::RootKind kind = JS::MapTypeToRootKind::kind; roots.heapRoots_[kind].insertBack(reinterpret_cast*>(this)); } js::RootLists& rootLists(JSContext* cx) { return rootLists(JS::RootingContext::get(cx)); } js::RootLists& rootLists(JS::RootingContext* cx) { MOZ_ASSERT(cx->isJSContext); return cx->roots; } // Disallow ExclusiveContext*. js::RootLists& rootLists(js::ContextFriendFields* cx) = delete; public: PersistentRooted() : ptr(GCPolicy::initial()) {} template explicit PersistentRooted(const RootingContext& cx) : ptr(GCPolicy::initial()) { registerWithRootLists(rootLists(cx)); } template PersistentRooted(const RootingContext& cx, U&& initial) : ptr(mozilla::Forward(initial)) { registerWithRootLists(rootLists(cx)); } PersistentRooted(const PersistentRooted& rhs) : mozilla::LinkedListElement>(), ptr(rhs.ptr) { /* * Copy construction takes advantage of the fact that the original * is already inserted, and simply adds itself to whatever list the * original was on - no JSRuntime pointer needed. * * This requires mutating rhs's links, but those should be 'mutable' * anyway. C++ doesn't let us declare mutable base classes. */ const_cast(rhs).setNext(this); } bool initialized() { return ListBase::isInList(); } template void init(const RootingContext& cx) { init(cx, GCPolicy::initial()); } template void init(const RootingContext& cx, U&& initial) { ptr = mozilla::Forward(initial); registerWithRootLists(rootLists(cx)); } void reset() { if (initialized()) { set(GCPolicy::initial()); ListBase::remove(); } } DECLARE_POINTER_COMPARISON_OPS(T); DECLARE_POINTER_CONSTREF_OPS(T); DECLARE_POINTER_ASSIGN_OPS(PersistentRooted, T); DECLARE_NONPOINTER_ACCESSOR_METHODS(ptr); // These are the same as DECLARE_NONPOINTER_MUTABLE_ACCESSOR_METHODS, except // they check that |this| is initialized in case the caller later stores // something in |ptr|. T* address() { MOZ_ASSERT(initialized()); return &ptr; } T& get() { MOZ_ASSERT(initialized()); return ptr; } private: template void set(U&& value) { MOZ_ASSERT(initialized()); ptr = mozilla::Forward(value); } // See the comment above Rooted::ptr. using MaybeWrapped = typename mozilla::Conditional< MapTypeToRootKind::kind == JS::RootKind::Traceable, js::DispatchWrapper, T>::Type; MaybeWrapped ptr; } JS_HAZ_ROOTED; class JS_PUBLIC_API(ObjectPtr) { Heap value; public: ObjectPtr() : value(nullptr) {} explicit ObjectPtr(JSObject* obj) : value(obj) {} /* Always call finalize before the destructor. */ ~ObjectPtr() { MOZ_ASSERT(!value); } void finalize(JSRuntime* rt); void finalize(JSContext* cx); void init(JSObject* obj) { value = obj; } JSObject* get() const { return value; } void writeBarrierPre(JSContext* cx) { IncrementalObjectBarrier(value); } void updateWeakPointerAfterGC(); ObjectPtr& operator=(JSObject* obj) { IncrementalObjectBarrier(value); value = obj; return *this; } void trace(JSTracer* trc, const char* name); JSObject& operator*() const { return *value; } JSObject* operator->() const { return value; } operator JSObject*() const { return value; } }; } /* namespace JS */ namespace js { namespace gc { template void CallTraceCallbackOnNonHeap(T* v, const TraceCallbacks& aCallbacks, const char* aName, void* aClosure) { static_assert(sizeof(T) == sizeof(JS::Heap), "T and Heap must be compatible."); MOZ_ASSERT(v); mozilla::DebugOnly cell = BarrierMethods::asGCThingOrNull(*v); MOZ_ASSERT(cell); MOZ_ASSERT(!IsInsideNursery(cell)); JS::Heap* asHeapT = reinterpret_cast*>(v); aCallbacks.Trace(asHeapT, aName, aClosure); } } /* namespace gc */ } /* namespace js */ // mozilla::Swap uses a stack temporary, which prevents classes like Heap // from being declared MOZ_HEAP_CLASS. namespace mozilla { template inline void Swap(JS::Heap& aX, JS::Heap& aY) { T tmp = aX; aX = aY; aY = tmp; } template inline void Swap(JS::TenuredHeap& aX, JS::TenuredHeap& aY) { T tmp = aX; aX = aY; aY = tmp; } } /* namespace mozilla */ #undef DELETE_ASSIGNMENT_OPS #endif /* js_RootingAPI_h */