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Feature #5494

closed

Proposal: Improved Finalizer Semantics

Added by kstephens (Kurt Stephens) about 13 years ago. Updated about 13 years ago.

Status:
Rejected
Assignee:
-
Target version:
[ruby-core:40474]

Description

Proposal: Improved Finalizer Semantics:

ObjectSpace.define_finalizer(object, proc):
** proc should have a single parameter, the object to be finalized, not its id.

When an object with a finalizer is no longer referenced (sweepable):

  • The object is reconsidered to be REFERENCED until next GC.
  • It's finalizer proc(s) are called, only once, with the object as the sole argument.
  • Subsequently, the finalizer procs are removed from the object.
  • The object's memory will NOT be reclaimed yet, nor will its C free_proc be called,
    since calling the finalizer proc effectively creates new (temporary) references to the object.
  • If the finalizer did NOT create any additonal, long-term references to the object,
    the object's memory and low-level C resources will be reclaimed in the next GC.

This is a simpler protocol:

  • It removes the need for _id2ref in the finalizer procs.
  • Prevents other complications: such as GC being reinvoked within a finalizer.
  • Finalizers are invoked with the same "urgency" as before.

The downside:

  • Objects with finalizers actually live for more than one GC cycle, if they are unreferenced.
  • This is probably acceptable since the resources the finalizers "clean-up"
    (eg.: file descriptors in a File object) are generally more scarce than the objects holding them.

Updated by matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) about 13 years ago

Hi,

In message "Re: [ruby-core:40474] [ruby-trunk - Feature #5494][Open] Proposal: Improved Finalizer Semantics"
on Fri, 28 Oct 2011 12:20:38 +0900, Kurt Stephens writes:

|This is a simpler protocol:
|
|* It removes the need for _id2ref in the finalizer procs.
|* Prevents other complications: such as GC being reinvoked within a finalizer.
|* Finalizers are invoked with the same "urgency" as before.

  • _id2ref does not work in finalizers, since their corresponding
    objects are already freed.
  • finalizers are called after GC.

Your proposal might be based on false assumption. If I were going to
make an incompatible change to the finalizer in the future, I'd remove
it altogether.

						matz.

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) about 13 years ago

  • Status changed from Open to Rejected

Even if the object has not been freed, other objects referred by the
object might be freed already. It has to sort topologically the
directed graph, even for simple cases. Not only this would be quite
expensive, cyclic references cannot sort.

Updated by kstephens (Kurt Stephens) about 13 years ago

Nobuyoshi Nakada wrote:

Even if the object has not been freed, other objects referred by the
object might be freed already. It has to sort topologically the
directed graph, even for simple cases. Not only this would be quite
expensive, cyclic references cannot sort.

Good point. It would have to re-MARK the object and its references, recursively, to be safe.

Updated by kstephens (Kurt Stephens) about 13 years ago

Kurt Stephens wrote:

Nobuyoshi Nakada wrote:

Even if the object has not been freed, other objects referred by the
object might be freed already. It has to sort topologically the
directed graph, even for simple cases. Not only this would be quite
expensive, cyclic references cannot sort.

Good point. It would have to re-MARK the object and its references, recursively, to be safe.

Clarifications:

  • The idea is to run finalizers (and re-MARK) after root marking, and before sweep. Thus, it would work with lazy sweep.
  • The MARK operation on the finalized object is the exact same recursive MARK operation that already exists in gc.c.
  • The semantics I described is exactly how (most) JVMs implement finalizations. It's also how I implemented finalizations in SMAL.
  • We can keep the proc.call(obj.id) API, until the proc.call(obj) API change is acceptable.
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