Hi Ömer, The write barrier is the function `dirty_STACK()` here: https://phabricator.haskell.org/diffusion/GHC/browse/master/rts%2Fsm%2FStorage.c$1133-1140
If you grep for `dirty_STACK` you'll see it being called everywhere we mutate a STACK, in particular in the scheduler just before running a thread: https://phabricator.haskell.org/diffusion/GHC/browse/master/rts%2FSchedule.c$412 We don't call the write barrier in the code generator or from primops, because at that point the thread is already running and has already been marked dirty. If we GC and mark the stack clean, then it will be marked dirty again by the scheduler before we start running it. Cheers Simon On 17 July 2018 at 20:45, Ömer Sinan Ağacan <omeraga...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Simon, > > I'm a bit confused about stack updates in generated code and write > barriers. > Because stacks are mutable (we push new stuff or maybe even update existing > frames?) it seems to me that we need one these two, similar to other > mutable > objects: > > - Always keep all stacks in mut_lists > - Add write barriers before updates > > However looking at some of the primops like catch# and the code generator > that > generates code that pushes update frames I can't see any write barriers > and the > GC doesn't always add stacks to mut_lists (unlike e.g. MUT_ARR_PTRS). I > also > thought maybe we add a stack to a mut_list when we switch to the TSO that > owns > it or we park the TSO, but I don't see anything relevant in Schedule.c or > ThreadPaused.c. So I'm lost. Could you say a few words about how we deal > with > mutated stacks in the GC, so that if an old stack points to a young object > we > don't collect the young object in a minor GC? > > Thanks, > > Ömer >
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