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Implementation and Evaluation of a Safe Runtime in Cyclone
Matthew Fluet Cornell University Daniel Wang Princeton University
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Introduction Web-based applications Application servers
Written in high-level, safe languages C#, Java, Perl, PHP, Python, Tcl Automatic memory management Application servers Written in unsafe languages Host applications via interpreters (written in C)
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Introduction Long-term goal: a complete web-application server written in a safe language Short-term goal: a complete interpreter written in a safe language Implementing the core of an interpreter is not in itself a significant challenge Implementing the runtime system is a challenge
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Outline A Scheme interpreter in Cyclone Performance Evaluation
Why Scheme Key Features of Cyclone Core Scheme Interpreter Garbage Collector Performance Evaluation Conclusion
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Why Scheme? Ease of implementation
Core interpreter loop is only ~500 lines Rely on an external Scheme front-end to expand the full Scheme language into a core Scheme subset Features desirable for web programming
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Key Features of Cyclone
Safe, C-like language Static type- and control-flow analysis Intended for systems programming Data representation Resource management Region-based memory management Static, lexical, dynamic, heap, unique, …
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Simple Copying Collector
From-space and To-space Forwarding pointers
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Simple Copying Collector
From-space and To-space Natural correspondence with regions LIFO discipline of lexical regions insufficient Dynamic regions appear to be sufficient Forwarding pointers
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Dynamic Regions Non-nested lifetimes Manual creation and deallocation
Represented by unique pointer (key) Unique pointer ≡ Capability Access the region
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Dynamic Regions Operations new: create a fresh dynamic region
Produces unique key open: open a dynamic region for allocation Temporarily consumes key free: deallocate a dynamic region Permanently consumes key
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GC and Dynamic Regions . . . // create the to-space’s key
let NewDynamicRegion {<`to> to_key} = new_ukey(); state_t<`to> = to_state; // open the from-space’s key { region from_r = open_ukey(from_key); // open the to-space’s key { region to_r = open_ukey(to_key); // copy the state and reachable data to_state = copy_state(to_r, from_state); } } // free the from-space free_ukey(from_key);
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GC and Dynamic Regions . . . // create the to-space’s key
let NewDynamicRegion {<`to> to_key} = new_ukey(); state_t<`to> = to_state; // open the from-space’s key { region from_r = open_ukey(from_key); // open the to-space’s key { region to_r = open_ukey(to_key); // copy the state and reachable data to_state = copy_state(to_r, from_state); } } // free the from-space free_ukey(from_key);
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GC and Dynamic Regions . . . // create the to-space’s key
let NewDynamicRegion {<`to> to_key} = new_ukey(); state_t<`to> = to_state; // open the from-space’s key { region from_r = open_ukey(from_key); // open the to-space’s key { region to_r = open_ukey(to_key); // copy the state and reachable data to_state = copy_state(to_r, from_state); } } // free the from-space free_ukey(from_key);
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GC and Dynamic Regions . . . // create the to-space’s key
let NewDynamicRegion {<`to> to_key} = new_ukey(); state_t<`to> = to_state; // open the from-space’s key { region from_r = open_ukey(from_key); // open the to-space’s key { region to_r = open_ukey(to_key); // copy the state and reachable data to_state = copy_state(to_r, from_state); } } // free the from-space free_ukey(from_key);
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GC and Dynamic Regions . . . // create the to-space’s key
let NewDynamicRegion {<`to> to_key} = new_ukey(); state_t<`to> = to_state; // open the from-space’s key { region from_r = open_ukey(from_key); // open the to-space’s key { region to_r = open_ukey(to_key); // copy the state and reachable data to_state = copy_state(to_r, from_state); } } // free the from-space free_ukey(from_key);
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Forwarding Pointers What is the type of a forwarding pointer?
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Forwarding Pointers What is the type of a forwarding pointer?
A pointer to a Value in To-space
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Forwarding Pointers What is the type of a forwarding pointer?
A pointer to a Value in To-space, whose forwarding pointer is a pointer to a Value in To-space’s To-space
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Forwarding Pointers What is the type of a forwarding pointer?
A pointer to a Value in To-space, whose forwarding pointer is a pointer to a Value in To-space’s To-space, whose forwarding pointer is a pointer to a Value in To-space’s To-space’s To-space, whose forwarding pointer is a pointer to a Value in To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space, whose forwarding pointer is a pointer to a Value in To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space, whose forwarding pointer is a pointer to a Value in To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space, whose forwarding pointer is a pointer to a Value in To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space, whose forwarding pointer is a pointer to a Value in To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space, whose forwarding pointer is a pointer to a Value in To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space, whose forwarding pointer is a pointer to a Value in To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space, whose forwarding pointer is a pointer to a Value in To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space’s To-space, …
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Dynamic Region Sequences
Introduce a new type constructor mapping region names to region names typedef _::R next_rgn<ρ::R> Although the region names ρ and next_rgn<ρ> are related, the lifetimes of their corresponding regions are not
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Dynamic Region Sequences
Operations new, open, free: as for dynamic regions next: create next_rgn<ρ> from ρ
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Dynamic Region Sequences
Operations next: create next_rgn<ρ> from ρ Have an infinite supply of region names next will create a fresh dynamic region key Need a linear supply of keys Use Cyclone’s unique pointers
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Dynamic Region Sequences
Operations next: create next_rgn<ρ> from ρ A dynamic region sequence is a pair key: a dynamic region key gen: a unique pointer Unique pointer ≡ Capability Produce the next_rgn<ρ> key and gen Consumed by next
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Dynamic Region Sequences
Operations new: create a fresh dynamic region sequence Produces unique key and gen next: creates next dynamic region sequence Permanently consumes gen
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GC and Dynamic Region Sequences
gcstate_t doGC(gcstate_t gcs) { // unpack the gc state let GCState{<`r> DRSeq {from_key, from_gen}, from_state} = gcs; // generate the to-space let DRSeq{to_key, to_gen} = next_drseq(from_gen); state_t<next_rgn<`r>> to_state; // open the from-space { region from_r = open_ukey(from_key); // open the to-space { region to_r = open_ukey(to_key); // copy the state and reachable data to_state = copy_state(to_r, from_state); } // pack the new gc state gcs = GCState{DRSeq{to_key, to_gen}, to_state}; } // free the from space free_ukey(from_key); return gcs; }
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GC and Dynamic Region Sequences
gcstate_t doGC(gcstate_t gcs) { // unpack the gc state let GCState{<`r> DRSeq {from_key, from_gen}, from_state} = gcs; // generate the to-space let DRSeq{to_key, to_gen} = next_drseq(from_gen); state_t<next_rgn<`r>> to_state; // open the from-space { region from_r = open_ukey(from_key); // open the to-space { region to_r = open_ukey(to_key); // copy the state and reachable data to_state = copy_state(to_r, from_state); } // pack the new gc state gcs = GCState{DRSeq{to_key, to_gen}, to_state}; } // free the from space free_ukey(from_key); return gcs; }
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GC and Dynamic Region Sequences
gcstate_t doGC(gcstate_t gcs) { // unpack the gc state let GCState{<`r> DRSeq {from_key, from_gen}, from_state} = gcs; // generate the to-space let DRSeq{to_key, to_gen} = next_drseq(from_gen); state_t<next_rgn<`r>> to_state; // open the from-space { region from_r = open_ukey(from_key); // open the to-space { region to_r = open_ukey(to_key); // copy the state and reachable data to_state = copy_state(to_r, from_state); } // pack the new gc state gcs = GCState{DRSeq{to_key, to_gen}, to_state}; } // free the from space free_ukey(from_key); return gcs; }
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GC and Dynamic Region Sequences
gcstate_t doGC(gcstate_t gcs) { // unpack the gc state let GCState{<`r> DRSeq {from_key, from_gen}, from_state} = gcs; // generate the to-space let DRSeq{to_key, to_gen} = next_drseq(from_gen); state_t<next_rgn<`r>> to_state; // open the from-space { region from_r = open_ukey(from_key); // open the to-space { region to_r = open_ukey(to_key); // copy the state and reachable data to_state = copy_state(to_r, from_state); } // pack the new gc state gcs = GCState{DRSeq{to_key, to_gen}, to_state}; } // free the from space free_ukey(from_key); return gcs; }
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GC and Dynamic Region Sequences
gcstate_t doGC(gcstate_t gcs) { // unpack the gc state let GCState{<`r> DRSeq {from_key, from_gen}, from_state} = gcs; // generate the to-space let DRSeq{to_key, to_gen} = next_drseq(from_gen); state_t<next_rgn<`r>> to_state; // open the from-space { region from_r = open_ukey(from_key); // open the to-space { region to_r = open_ukey(to_key); // copy the state and reachable data to_state = copy_state(to_r, from_state); } // pack the new gc state gcs = GCState{DRSeq{to_key, to_gen}, to_state}; } // free the from space free_ukey(from_key); return gcs; }
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GC and Dynamic Region Sequences
Comparison with type-preserving GCs Interpreter can be written in a trampoline style, rather than continuation passing style Intuitive typing of forwarding pointers
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Performance Evaluation
Interpreter Runtime Cyclone (Safe GC) Safe Cyclone (BDW GC) Unsafe SISC (Sun JVM) MzScheme (BDW GC)
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Performance Evaluation
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Performance Evaluation
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Size of Unsafe Code Interpreter (lines of code) Runtime System Cyclone
(Safe GC) 1800 (BDW GC) 9000 SISC (Sun JVM) 229,100 MzScheme 31,000
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Conclusion Significantly reduce amount of unsafe code needed to implement an interpreter May incur a performance penalty for extra degree of safety Future Work Reduce performance penalty Per thread regions providing customization
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