On 11/05/2019 2:14 pm, Jean Christophe Beyler wrote:
Isn't that the point? The list returned could have unloaded classes  and we can catch it via this exception (from the comment above the ReferenceType interface):

 * Any method on <code>ReferenceType</code> or which directly or indirectly takes
  * <code>ReferenceType</code> as parameter may throw
  * {@link ObjectCollectedException} if the mirrored type has been unloaded.

Turns out that even in the definedClasses, we can get that exception so we should check for it while walking the reference types as well?

I understand that the list returned to the "debugger" process may contain ReferenceTypes for types that have actually been unloaded by the time it queries them (unless the debuggee is suspended of course). But I don't see how we can encounter those types while compiling the list in the debuggee in the first place.

Something seems amiss here ... possibly just my understanding ...

David

Jc

*From: *Chris Plummer <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
*Date: *Fri, May 10, 2019 at 9:09 PM
*To: *David Holmes, Daniil Titov, OpenJDK Serviceability

    On 5/10/19 9:03 PM, Chris Plummer wrote:
     > On 5/10/19 8:59 PM, David Holmes wrote:
     >> Hi Daniil,
     >>
     >> On 11/05/2019 12:10 pm, Daniil Titov wrote:
     >>> Please review the change that fixes an intermittent failure of the
     >>> test.
     >>>
     >>> The tests checks the implementation of  the
     >>> com.sun.tools.jdi.ClassLoaderReference class. The problem here is
     >>> that while
     >>> com.sun.tools.jdi.ClassLoaderReferenceImpl.definedClasses()
    iterates
     >>> over all loaded classes to retrieve a classloader and compares
    it to
     >>> the current one, some of the classes might become unloaded and
     >>> garbage collected (e.g.
     >>> org.graalvm.compiler.nodes.InliningLog$$Lambda$41.899832640 or
     >>> jdk.internal.reflect.GeneratedConstructorAccessor1, etc.). If this
     >>> happens then the attempt to retrieve a classloader for the
    collected
     >>> class results in com.sun.jdi.ObjectCollectedException being thrown.
     >>
     >> That seems odd to me. If you have a reference to the Class then it
     >> can't be unloaded. I would not expect allClasses() to have
     >> weak-references, so a class should not be unloadable while you are
     >> examining it. Unless it is finding VM anonymous classes (which it
     >> should not!).
     >>
     > I was just typing up something similar. Shouldn't the test do a
     > vm.suspend() and then call disableCollection() on each class
    returned
     > by vm.allClasses()?
    Oh wait, this isn't a test. It's part of JDI. I guess it would be up to
    the user of ClassLoaderReference.definedClasses() to do the suspend. In
    fact I'm not sure there's much purpose in calling
    ClassLoaderReference.definedClasses() without suspending first. Even
    with your changes, the list returned can end up with references to
    unloaded classes.

    Chris
     >
     > Chris
     >> David
     >> -----
     >>
     >>> The fix catches this com.sun.jdi.ObjectCollectedException and
     >>> continues iterating over the rest of the classes.
     >>>
     >>> Webrev: http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~dtitov/8222422/webrev.01
     >>> Bug: https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8222422
     >>>
     >>> Thanks!
     >>> --Daniil
     >>>
     >>>
     >
     >




--

Thanks,
Jc

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