[swift-dev] Questions about ARC

Roman Levenstein rlevenstein at apple.com
Wed Nov 30 20:50:57 CST 2016


> On Nov 30, 2016, at 6:25 PM, Jiho Choi via swift-dev <swift-dev at swift.org> wrote:
> 
> Thanks for clarifications.  I have a couple of follow-up questions.
> 
> 1. Could you please provide more information (e.g. source code location) about the optimization applying non-atomic reference counting?  What's the scope of the optimization?  Is it method-based?

The optimization itself is not merged yet. But all the required machinery, e.g. non-atomic versions of the ARC operations, special non-atomic flag on SIL instructions, etc is in place already.

As for the prototype implementation, you can find it here, on my local branch:
https://github.com/swiftix/swift/blob/30409865ff49a4268363cd359f82f29c9a90cce8/lib/SILOptimizer/Transforms/NonAtomicRC.cpp

> 
> 2. Looking at the source code, I assume Swift implements immediate reference counting (i.e. immediate reclamation of dead objects)  without requiring explicit garbage collection phase for techniques, such as deferred reference counting or coalescing multiple updates.  Is it right?  If so, is there any plan to implement such techniques?

Yes. It is a correct understanding. 
Different extensions like deferred reference counting were discussed, but there are no short-term plans to implement it anytime soon.

-Roman

> 
> On Wed, Nov 30, 2016 at 11:41 AM John McCall <rjmccall at apple.com <mailto:rjmccall at apple.com>> wrote:
>> On Nov 30, 2016, at 8:33 AM, Jiho Choi via swift-dev <swift-dev at swift.org <mailto:swift-dev at swift.org>> wrote:
>> Hi,
>> 
>> I am new to Swift, and I have several questions about how ARC works in Swift.
>> 
>> 1. I read from one of the previous discussions in the swift-evolution list (https://lists.swift.org/pipermail/swift-evolution/Week-of-Mon-20160208/009422.html <https://lists.swift.org/pipermail/swift-evolution/Week-of-Mon-20160208/009422.html>) that ARC operations are currently not atomic as Swift has no memory model and concurrency model.  Does it mean that the compiler generates non-atomic instructions for updating reference counts (e.g. using incrementNonAtomic() instead of increment() in RefCount.h)?
> 
> No.  We have the ability to do non-atomic reference counting as an optimization, but we only trigger it when we can prove that an object hasn't escaped yet.  Therefore, at the user level, retain counts are atomic.
> 
> Swift ARC is non-atomic in the sense that a read/write or write/write race on an individual property/variable/whatever has undefined behavior and can lead to crashes or leaks.  This differs from Objective-C ARC only in that a (synthesized) atomic strong or weak property in Objective-C does promise correctness even in the face of race conditions.  But this guarantee is not worth much in practice because a failure to adequately synchronize accesses to a class's instance variables is likely to have all sorts of other unpleasant effects, and it is quite expensive, so we decided not to make it in Swift.
> 
>> 2. If not, when does it use non-atomic ARC operations? Is there an optimization pass to recognize local objects?
>> 
>> 3. Without the concurrency model in the language, if not using GCD (e.g. all Swift benchmark applications), I assume Swift applications are single-threaded.  Then, I think we can safely use non-atomic ARC operations.  Am I right?
> 
> When we say that we don't have a concurrency model, we mean that (1) we aren't providing a more complete language solution than the options available to C programmers and (2) like C pre-C11/C++11, we have not yet formalized a memory model for concurrency that provides formal guarantees about what accesses are guaranteed to not conflict if they do race.  (For example, we are unlikely to guarantee that accesses to different properties of a struct can occur in parallel, but we may choose to make that guarantee for different properties of a class.)
> 
>> 4. Lastly, is there a way to measure the overhead of ARC (e.g. a compiler flag to disable ARC)?
> 
> No, because ARC is generally necessary for correctness.
> 
> John.
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