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682e805a 1/* GNU Objective C Runtime accessors functions
a945c346 2 Copyright (C) 2010-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
682e805a
NP
3 Contributed by Nicola Pero
4
5This file is part of GCC.
6
7GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
8terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
9Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later version.
10
11GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
12WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
13FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more
14details.
15
16Under Section 7 of GPL version 3, you are granted additional
17permissions described in the GCC Runtime Library Exception, version
183.1, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
19
20You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License and
21a copy of the GCC Runtime Library Exception along with this program;
22see the files COPYING3 and COPYING.RUNTIME respectively. If not, see
23<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
24
25#include "objc-private/common.h"
26#include "objc/objc.h"
27#include "objc/thr.h"
28#include <string.h> /* For memcpy */
29
30/* This file contains functions that the compiler uses when
31 synthesizing accessors (getters/setters) for properties. The
32 functions are part of the ABI, but are meant to be used by the
33 compiler and not by users; for this reason, they are not declared
34 in public header files. The compiler automatically generates
35 declarations for these functions. */
36
37/* Properties can be "atomic", which requires protecting them from
38 concurrency issues using a lock. Unfortunately, we can't have a
39 lock for each property, so we'll go with a small pool of locks.
40 Any time a property is accessed in an "atomic" way, we pick a
41 random lock from the pool (random, but always the same one for the
42 same property of the same object) and use it to protect access to
43 the property.
44
45 The size of the pool is currently 16. A bigger pool can help
46 reduce contention, ie, reduce the chances that two threads,
47 operating on unrelated properties, will have to wait for each other
48 because the properties use the same lock. 16 seems big enough at
49 the moment. */
50#define ACCESSORS_NUMBER_OF_LOCKS 16
51
52#define ACCESSORS_HASH(POINTER) ((((size_t)POINTER >> 8) ^ (size_t)POINTER) & (ACCESSORS_NUMBER_OF_LOCKS - 1))
53
54static objc_mutex_t accessors_locks[ACCESSORS_NUMBER_OF_LOCKS];
55
56/* This is called at startup to setup the locks. */
57void
58__objc_accessors_init (void)
59{
60 int i;
61
62 for (i = 0; i < ACCESSORS_NUMBER_OF_LOCKS; i++)
63 accessors_locks[i] = objc_mutex_allocate ();
64}
65
66/* The property accessors automatically call various methods from the
67 Foundation library (eg, GNUstep-base). These methods are not
68 implemented here, but we need to declare them so we can compile the
69 runtime. The Foundation library will need to provide
70 implementations of these methods (most likely in the root class,
71 eg, NSObject) as the accessors only work with objects of classes
72 that implement these methods. */
73@interface _libobjcNSObject
74- (id) copyWithZone: (void *)zone;
75- (id) mutableCopyWithZone: (void *)zone;
76@end
77#define COPY(X) [((_libobjcNSObject *)(X)) copyWithZone: NULL]
78#define MUTABLE_COPY(X) [((_libobjcNSObject *)(X)) mutableCopyWithZone: NULL]
79
80
81#if OBJC_WITH_GC
82
83# define AUTORELEASE(X) (X)
84# define RELEASE(X)
85# define RETAIN(X) (X)
86
87#else
88
89@interface _libobjcNSObject (RetainReleaseMethods)
90- (id) autorelease;
91- (oneway void) release;
92- (id) retain;
93@end
94# define AUTORELEASE(X) [((_libobjcNSObject *)(X)) autorelease]
95# define RELEASE(X) [((_libobjcNSObject *)(X)) release]
96# define RETAIN(X) [((_libobjcNSObject *)(X)) retain]
97
98#endif
99
100/* The compiler uses this function when implementing some synthesized
101 getters for properties of type 'id'. */
102id
103objc_getProperty (id self, SEL __attribute__((unused)) _cmd, ptrdiff_t offset, BOOL is_atomic)
104{
105 if (self != nil)
106 {
107 id *pointer_to_ivar = (id *)((char *)self + offset);
108
ef7ed5df 109
682e805a 110 if (is_atomic == NO)
ef7ed5df
NP
111 {
112 /* Note that in this case, we do not RETAIN/AUTORELEASE the
113 returned value. The programmer should do it if it is
114 needed. Since access is non-atomic, other threads can be
115 ignored and the caller has full control of what happens
116 to the object and whether it needs to be RETAINed or not,
117 so it makes sense to leave the decision to him/her. This
118 is also what the Apple/NeXT runtime does. */
119 return *pointer_to_ivar;
120 }
682e805a
NP
121 else
122 {
123 objc_mutex_t lock = accessors_locks[ACCESSORS_HASH (pointer_to_ivar)];
124 id result;
125
126 objc_mutex_lock (lock);
127 result = RETAIN (*(pointer_to_ivar));
128 objc_mutex_unlock (lock);
129
130 return AUTORELEASE (result);
131 }
132 }
133
134 return nil;
135}
136
137/* The compiler uses this function when implementing some synthesized
138 setters for properties of type 'id'.
139
140 PS: Note how 'should_copy' is declared 'BOOL' but then actually
141 takes values from 0 to 2. This hack was introduced by Apple; we
142 do the same for compatibility reasons. */
143void
144objc_setProperty (id self, SEL __attribute__((unused)) _cmd, ptrdiff_t offset, id new_value, BOOL is_atomic, BOOL should_copy)
145{
146 if (self != nil)
147 {
148 id *pointer_to_ivar = (id *)((char *)self + offset);
149 id retained_value;
150#if !OBJC_WITH_GC
151 id old_value;
152#endif
153
154 switch (should_copy)
155 {
156 case 0: /* retain */
157 {
158 if (*pointer_to_ivar == new_value)
159 return;
160 retained_value = RETAIN (new_value);
161 break;
162 }
163 case 2: /* mutable copy */
164 {
165 retained_value = MUTABLE_COPY (new_value);
166 break;
167 }
168 case 1: /* copy */
169 default:
170 {
171 retained_value = COPY (new_value);
172 break;
173 }
174 }
175
176 if (is_atomic == NO)
177 {
178#if !OBJC_WITH_GC
179 old_value = *pointer_to_ivar;
180#endif
181 *pointer_to_ivar = retained_value;
182 }
183 else
184 {
185 objc_mutex_t lock = accessors_locks[ACCESSORS_HASH (pointer_to_ivar)];
186
187 objc_mutex_lock (lock);
188#if !OBJC_WITH_GC
189 old_value = *pointer_to_ivar;
190#endif
191 *pointer_to_ivar = retained_value;
192 objc_mutex_unlock (lock);
193 }
194#if !OBJC_WITH_GC
195 RELEASE (old_value);
196#endif
197 }
198}
199
200/* The compiler uses this function when implementing some synthesized
201 getters for properties of arbitrary C types. The data is just
202 copied. Compatibility Note: this function does not exist in the
203 Apple/NeXT runtime. */
204void
205objc_getPropertyStruct (void *destination, const void *source, ptrdiff_t size, BOOL is_atomic, BOOL __attribute__((unused)) has_strong)
206{
207 if (is_atomic == NO)
208 memcpy (destination, source, size);
209 else
210 {
211 objc_mutex_t lock = accessors_locks[ACCESSORS_HASH (source)];
212
213 objc_mutex_lock (lock);
214 memcpy (destination, source, size);
215 objc_mutex_unlock (lock);
216 }
217}
218
219/* The compiler uses this function when implementing some synthesized
220 setters for properties of arbitrary C types. The data is just
221 copied. Compatibility Note: this function does not exist in the
222 Apple/NeXT runtime. */
223void
224objc_setPropertyStruct (void *destination, const void *source, ptrdiff_t size, BOOL is_atomic, BOOL __attribute__((unused)) has_strong)
225{
226 if (is_atomic == NO)
227 memcpy (destination, source, size);
228 else
229 {
230 objc_mutex_t lock = accessors_locks[ACCESSORS_HASH (destination)];
231
232 objc_mutex_lock (lock);
233 memcpy (destination, source, size);
234 objc_mutex_unlock (lock);
235 }
236}
237
238/* This is the function that the Apple/NeXT runtime has instead of
239 objc_getPropertyStruct and objc_setPropertyStruct. We include it
240 for API compatibility (just for people who may have used
241 objc_copyStruct on the NeXT runtime thinking it was a public API);
242 the compiler never generates calls to it with the GNU runtime.
243 This function is clumsy because it requires two locks instead of
244 one. */
245void
246objc_copyStruct (void *destination, const void *source, ptrdiff_t size, BOOL is_atomic, BOOL __attribute__((unused)) has_strong)
247{
248 if (is_atomic == NO)
249 memcpy (destination, source, size);
250 else
251 {
252 /* We don't know which one is the property, so we have to lock
253 both. One of them is most likely a temporary buffer in the
254 local stack and we really wouldn't want to lock it (our
255 objc_getPropertyStruct and objc_setPropertyStruct functions
256 don't lock it). Note that if we're locking more than one
257 accessor lock at once, we need to always lock them in the
258 same order to avoid deadlocks. */
259 objc_mutex_t first_lock;
260 objc_mutex_t second_lock;
261
262 if (ACCESSORS_HASH (source) == ACCESSORS_HASH (destination))
263 {
264 /* A lucky collision. */
265 first_lock = accessors_locks[ACCESSORS_HASH (source)];
266 objc_mutex_lock (first_lock);
267 memcpy (destination, source, size);
268 objc_mutex_unlock (first_lock);
269 return;
270 }
271
272 if (ACCESSORS_HASH (source) > ACCESSORS_HASH (destination))
273 {
274 first_lock = accessors_locks[ACCESSORS_HASH (source)];
275 second_lock = accessors_locks[ACCESSORS_HASH (destination)];
276 }
277 else
278 {
279 first_lock = accessors_locks[ACCESSORS_HASH (destination)];
280 second_lock = accessors_locks[ACCESSORS_HASH (source)];
281 }
282
283 objc_mutex_lock (first_lock);
284 objc_mutex_lock (second_lock);
285 memcpy (destination, source, size);
286 objc_mutex_unlock (second_lock);
287 objc_mutex_unlock (first_lock);
288 }
289}