Misc.h revision c32a3774e9c1eeb289d71e0e53199893b6951b1b
1/*
2 * Copyright (C) 2008 The Android Open Source Project
3 *
4 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
5 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
6 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
7 *
8 *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
9 *
10 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
11 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
12 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
13 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
14 * limitations under the License.
15 */
16
17/*
18 * Miscellaneous utility functions.
19 */
20#ifndef DALVIK_MISC_H_
21#define DALVIK_MISC_H_
22
23#include <string>
24
25#include <stdarg.h>
26#include <stdio.h>
27#include <sys/types.h>
28#include <sys/time.h>
29
30#include "Inlines.h"
31
32/*
33 * Used to shut up the compiler when a parameter isn't used.
34 */
35#define UNUSED_PARAMETER(p)     (void)(p)
36
37/*
38 * Floating point conversion functions.  These are necessary to avoid
39 * strict-aliasing problems ("dereferencing type-punned pointer will break
40 * strict-aliasing rules").  According to the gcc info page, this usage
41 * is allowed, even with "-fstrict-aliasing".
42 *
43 * The code generated by gcc-4.1.1 appears to be much better than a
44 * type cast dereference ("int foo = *(int*)&myfloat") when the conversion
45 * function is inlined.  It also allows us to take advantage of the
46 * optimizations that strict aliasing rules allow.
47 */
48INLINE float dvmU4ToFloat(u4 val) {
49    union { u4 in; float out; } conv;
50    conv.in = val;
51    return conv.out;
52}
53INLINE u4 dvmFloatToU4(float val) {
54    union { float in; u4 out; } conv;
55    conv.in = val;
56    return conv.out;
57}
58
59/*
60 * Print a hex dump to the log file.
61 *
62 * "local" mode prints a hex dump starting from offset 0 (roughly equivalent
63 * to "xxd -g1").
64 *
65 * "mem" mode shows the actual memory address, and will offset the start
66 * so that the low nibble of the address is always zero.
67 *
68 * If "tag" is NULL the default tag ("dalvikvm") will be used.
69 */
70enum HexDumpMode { kHexDumpLocal, kHexDumpMem };
71void dvmPrintHexDumpEx(int priority, const char* tag, const void* vaddr,
72    size_t length, HexDumpMode mode);
73
74/*
75 * Print a hex dump, at INFO level.
76 */
77INLINE void dvmPrintHexDump(const void* vaddr, size_t length) {
78    dvmPrintHexDumpEx(ANDROID_LOG_INFO, LOG_TAG,
79        vaddr, length, kHexDumpLocal);
80}
81
82/*
83 * Print a hex dump at VERBOSE level. This does nothing in non-debug builds.
84 */
85INLINE void dvmPrintHexDumpDbg(const void* vaddr, size_t length,const char* tag)
86{
87#if !LOG_NDEBUG
88    dvmPrintHexDumpEx(ANDROID_LOG_VERBOSE, (tag != NULL) ? tag : LOG_TAG,
89        vaddr, length, kHexDumpLocal);
90#endif
91}
92
93enum DebugTargetKind {
94    kDebugTargetUnknown = 0,
95    kDebugTargetLog,
96    kDebugTargetFile,
97};
98
99/*
100 * We pass one of these around when we want code to be able to write debug
101 * info to either the log or to a file (or stdout/stderr).
102 */
103struct DebugOutputTarget {
104    /* where to? */
105    DebugTargetKind which;
106
107    /* additional bits */
108    union {
109        struct {
110            int priority;
111            const char* tag;
112        } log;
113        struct {
114            FILE* fp;
115        } file;
116    } data;
117};
118
119/*
120 * Fill in a DebugOutputTarget struct.
121 */
122void dvmCreateLogOutputTarget(DebugOutputTarget* target, int priority,
123    const char* tag);
124void dvmCreateFileOutputTarget(DebugOutputTarget* target, FILE* fp);
125
126/*
127 * Print a debug message.
128 */
129void dvmPrintDebugMessage(const DebugOutputTarget* target, const char* format,
130    ...)
131#if defined(__GNUC__)
132    __attribute__ ((format(printf, 2, 3)))
133#endif
134    ;
135
136/*
137 * Return a newly-allocated string in which all occurrences of '.' have
138 * been changed to '/'.  If we find a '/' in the original string, NULL
139 * is returned to avoid ambiguity.
140 */
141char* dvmDotToSlash(const char* str);
142
143/*
144 * Return a newly-allocated string containing a human-readable equivalent
145 * of 'descriptor'. So "I" would be "int", "[[I" would be "int[][]",
146 * "[Ljava/lang/String;" would be "java.lang.String[]", and so forth.
147 */
148std::string dvmHumanReadableDescriptor(const char* descriptor);
149
150/**
151 * Returns a human-readable string form of the name of the class of
152 * the given object. So given a java.lang.String, the output would
153 * be "java.lang.String". Given an array of int, the output would be "int[]".
154 * Given String.class, the output would be "java.lang.Class<java.lang.String>".
155 */
156std::string dvmHumanReadableType(const Object* obj);
157
158/**
159 * Returns a human-readable string of the form "package.Class.fieldName".
160 */
161struct Field;
162std::string dvmHumanReadableField(const Field* field);
163
164/**
165 * Returns a human-readable string of the form "package.Class.methodName"
166 * or "package.Class.methodName(Ljava/lang/String;I)V".
167 */
168struct Method;
169std::string dvmHumanReadableMethod(const Method* method, bool withSignature);
170
171/*
172 * Return a newly-allocated string for the "dot version" of the class
173 * name for the given type descriptor. That is, The initial "L" and
174 * final ";" (if any) have been removed and all occurrences of '/'
175 * have been changed to '.'.
176 *
177 * "Dot version" names are used in the class loading machinery.
178 * See also dvmHumanReadableDescriptor.
179 */
180char* dvmDescriptorToDot(const char* str);
181
182/*
183 * Return a newly-allocated string for the type descriptor
184 * corresponding to the "dot version" of the given class name. That
185 * is, non-array names are surrounded by "L" and ";", and all
186 * occurrences of '.' have been changed to '/'.
187 *
188 * "Dot version" names are used in the class loading machinery.
189 */
190char* dvmDotToDescriptor(const char* str);
191
192/*
193 * Return a newly-allocated string for the internal-form class name for
194 * the given type descriptor. That is, the initial "L" and final ";" (if
195 * any) have been removed.
196 */
197char* dvmDescriptorToName(const char* str);
198
199/*
200 * Return a newly-allocated string for the type descriptor for the given
201 * internal-form class name. That is, a non-array class name will get
202 * surrounded by "L" and ";", while array names are left as-is.
203 */
204char* dvmNameToDescriptor(const char* str);
205
206/*
207 * Get the current time, in nanoseconds.  This is "relative" time, meaning
208 * it could be wall-clock time or a monotonic counter, and is only suitable
209 * for computing time deltas.
210 */
211u8 dvmGetRelativeTimeNsec(void);
212
213/*
214 * Get the current time, in microseconds.  This is "relative" time, meaning
215 * it could be wall-clock time or a monotonic counter, and is only suitable
216 * for computing time deltas.
217 */
218INLINE u8 dvmGetRelativeTimeUsec(void) {
219    return dvmGetRelativeTimeNsec() / 1000;
220}
221
222/*
223 * Get the current time, in milliseconds.  This is "relative" time,
224 * meaning it could be wall-clock time or a monotonic counter, and is
225 * only suitable for computing time deltas.  The value returned from
226 * this function is a u4 and should only be used for debugging
227 * messages.  TODO: make this value relative to the start-up time of
228 * the VM.
229 */
230INLINE u4 dvmGetRelativeTimeMsec(void) {
231    return (u4)(dvmGetRelativeTimeUsec() / 1000);
232}
233
234/*
235 * Get the current per-thread CPU time.  This clock increases monotonically
236 * when the thread is running, but not when it's sleeping or blocked on a
237 * synchronization object.
238 *
239 * The absolute value of the clock may not be useful, so this should only
240 * be used for time deltas.
241 *
242 * If the thread CPU clock is not available, this always returns (u8)-1.
243 */
244u8 dvmGetThreadCpuTimeNsec(void);
245
246/*
247 * Per-thread CPU time, in micros.
248 */
249INLINE u8 dvmGetThreadCpuTimeUsec(void) {
250    return dvmGetThreadCpuTimeNsec() / 1000;
251}
252
253/*
254 * Like dvmGetThreadCpuTimeNsec, but for a different thread.
255 */
256u8 dvmGetOtherThreadCpuTimeNsec(pthread_t thread);
257INLINE u8 dvmGetOtherThreadCpuTimeUsec(pthread_t thread) {
258    return dvmGetOtherThreadCpuTimeNsec(thread) / 1000;
259}
260
261/*
262 * Sleep for increasingly longer periods, until "maxTotalSleep" microseconds
263 * have elapsed.  Pass in the start time, which must be a value returned by
264 * dvmGetRelativeTimeUsec().
265 *
266 * Returns "false" if we were unable to sleep because our time is up.
267 */
268bool dvmIterativeSleep(int iteration, int maxTotalSleep, u8 relStartTime);
269
270/*
271 * Set the "close on exec" flag on a file descriptor.
272 */
273bool dvmSetCloseOnExec(int fd);
274
275/*
276 * Unconditionally abort the entire VM.  Try not to use this.
277 *
278 * NOTE: if this is marked ((noreturn)), gcc will merge multiple dvmAbort()
279 * calls in a single function together.  This is good, in that it reduces
280 * code size slightly, but also bad, because the native stack trace we
281 * get from the abort may point at the wrong call site.  Best to leave
282 * it undecorated.
283 */
284extern "C" void dvmAbort(void);
285void dvmPrintNativeBackTrace(void);
286
287#if (!HAVE_STRLCPY)
288/* Implementation of strlcpy() for platforms that don't already have it. */
289extern "C" size_t strlcpy(char *dst, const char *src, size_t size);
290#endif
291
292/*
293 *  Allocates a memory region using ashmem and mmap, initialized to
294 *  zero.  Actual allocation rounded up to page multiple.  Returns
295 *  NULL on failure.
296 */
297void *dvmAllocRegion(size_t size, int prot, const char *name);
298
299/*
300 * Get some per-thread stats from /proc/self/task/N/stat.
301 */
302struct ProcStatData {
303    char state;             /* process state, e.g. 'R', 'S', 'D' */
304    unsigned long utime;    /* number of jiffies scheduled in user mode */
305    unsigned long stime;    /* number of jiffies scheduled in kernel mode */
306    int processor;          /* number of CPU that last executed thread */
307};
308bool dvmGetThreadStats(ProcStatData* pData, pid_t tid);
309
310/*
311 * Returns the pointer to the "absolute path" part of the given path
312 * string, treating first (if any) instance of "/./" as a sentinel
313 * indicating the start of the absolute path. If the path isn't absolute
314 * in the usual way (i.e., starts with "/") and doesn't have the sentinel,
315 * then this returns NULL.
316 *
317 * For example:
318 *     "/foo/bar/baz" returns "/foo/bar/baz"
319 *     "foo/./bar/baz" returns "/bar/baz"
320 *     "foo/bar/baz" returns NULL
321 *
322 * The sentinel is used specifically to aid in cross-optimization, where
323 * a host is processing dex files in a build tree, and where we don't want
324 * the build tree's directory structure to be baked into the output (such
325 * as, for example, in the dependency paths of optimized dex files).
326 */
327const char* dvmPathToAbsolutePortion(const char* path);
328
329/**
330 * Returns a string corresponding to printf-like formatting of the arguments.
331 */
332std::string StringPrintf(const char* fmt, ...)
333        __attribute__((__format__ (__printf__, 1, 2)));
334
335/**
336 * Appends a printf-like formatting of the arguments to 'dst'.
337 */
338void StringAppendF(std::string* dst, const char* fmt, ...)
339        __attribute__((__format__ (__printf__, 2, 3)));
340
341/**
342 * Appends a printf-like formatting of the arguments to 'dst'.
343 */
344void StringAppendV(std::string* dst, const char* format, va_list ap);
345
346#endif  // DALVIK_MISC_H_
347