ozone: dri: Fix crash during DriConsoleBuffer destruction
[chromium-blink-merge.git] / base / tracked_objects.h
blob511a289066184074110405bb254d568473d8423a
1 // Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
3 // found in the LICENSE file.
5 #ifndef BASE_TRACKED_OBJECTS_H_
6 #define BASE_TRACKED_OBJECTS_H_
8 #include <map>
9 #include <set>
10 #include <stack>
11 #include <string>
12 #include <utility>
13 #include <vector>
15 #include "base/base_export.h"
16 #include "base/basictypes.h"
17 #include "base/gtest_prod_util.h"
18 #include "base/lazy_instance.h"
19 #include "base/location.h"
20 #include "base/profiler/alternate_timer.h"
21 #include "base/profiler/tracked_time.h"
22 #include "base/synchronization/lock.h"
23 #include "base/threading/thread_local_storage.h"
25 namespace base {
26 struct TrackingInfo;
29 // TrackedObjects provides a database of stats about objects (generally Tasks)
30 // that are tracked. Tracking means their birth, death, duration, birth thread,
31 // death thread, and birth place are recorded. This data is carefully spread
32 // across a series of objects so that the counts and times can be rapidly
33 // updated without (usually) having to lock the data, and hence there is usually
34 // very little contention caused by the tracking. The data can be viewed via
35 // the about:profiler URL, with a variety of sorting and filtering choices.
37 // These classes serve as the basis of a profiler of sorts for the Tasks system.
38 // As a result, design decisions were made to maximize speed, by minimizing
39 // recurring allocation/deallocation, lock contention and data copying. In the
40 // "stable" state, which is reached relatively quickly, there is no separate
41 // marginal allocation cost associated with construction or destruction of
42 // tracked objects, no locks are generally employed, and probably the largest
43 // computational cost is associated with obtaining start and stop times for
44 // instances as they are created and destroyed.
46 // The following describes the lifecycle of tracking an instance.
48 // First off, when the instance is created, the FROM_HERE macro is expanded
49 // to specify the birth place (file, line, function) where the instance was
50 // created. That data is used to create a transient Location instance
51 // encapsulating the above triple of information. The strings (like __FILE__)
52 // are passed around by reference, with the assumption that they are static, and
53 // will never go away. This ensures that the strings can be dealt with as atoms
54 // with great efficiency (i.e., copying of strings is never needed, and
55 // comparisons for equality can be based on pointer comparisons).
57 // Next, a Births instance is created for use ONLY on the thread where this
58 // instance was created. That Births instance records (in a base class
59 // BirthOnThread) references to the static data provided in a Location instance,
60 // as well as a pointer specifying the thread on which the birth takes place.
61 // Hence there is at most one Births instance for each Location on each thread.
62 // The derived Births class contains slots for recording statistics about all
63 // instances born at the same location. Statistics currently include only the
64 // count of instances constructed.
66 // Since the base class BirthOnThread contains only constant data, it can be
67 // freely accessed by any thread at any time (i.e., only the statistic needs to
68 // be handled carefully, and stats are updated exclusively on the birth thread).
70 // For Tasks, having now either constructed or found the Births instance
71 // described above, a pointer to the Births instance is then recorded into the
72 // PendingTask structure in MessageLoop. This fact alone is very useful in
73 // debugging, when there is a question of where an instance came from. In
74 // addition, the birth time is also recorded and used to later evaluate the
75 // lifetime duration of the whole Task. As a result of the above embedding, we
76 // can find out a Task's location of birth, and thread of birth, without using
77 // any locks, as all that data is constant across the life of the process.
79 // The above work *could* also be done for any other object as well by calling
80 // TallyABirthIfActive() and TallyRunOnNamedThreadIfTracking() as appropriate.
82 // The amount of memory used in the above data structures depends on how many
83 // threads there are, and how many Locations of construction there are.
84 // Fortunately, we don't use memory that is the product of those two counts, but
85 // rather we only need one Births instance for each thread that constructs an
86 // instance at a Location. In many cases, instances are only created on one
87 // thread, so the memory utilization is actually fairly restrained.
89 // Lastly, when an instance is deleted, the final tallies of statistics are
90 // carefully accumulated. That tallying writes into slots (members) in a
91 // collection of DeathData instances. For each birth place Location that is
92 // destroyed on a thread, there is a DeathData instance to record the additional
93 // death count, as well as accumulate the run-time and queue-time durations for
94 // the instance as it is destroyed (dies). By maintaining a single place to
95 // aggregate this running sum *only* for the given thread, we avoid the need to
96 // lock such DeathData instances. (i.e., these accumulated stats in a DeathData
97 // instance are exclusively updated by the singular owning thread).
99 // With the above lifecycle description complete, the major remaining detail is
100 // explaining how each thread maintains a list of DeathData instances, and of
101 // Births instances, and is able to avoid additional (redundant/unnecessary)
102 // allocations.
104 // Each thread maintains a list of data items specific to that thread in a
105 // ThreadData instance (for that specific thread only). The two critical items
106 // are lists of DeathData and Births instances. These lists are maintained in
107 // STL maps, which are indexed by Location. As noted earlier, we can compare
108 // locations very efficiently as we consider the underlying data (file,
109 // function, line) to be atoms, and hence pointer comparison is used rather than
110 // (slow) string comparisons.
112 // To provide a mechanism for iterating over all "known threads," which means
113 // threads that have recorded a birth or a death, we create a singly linked list
114 // of ThreadData instances. Each such instance maintains a pointer to the next
115 // one. A static member of ThreadData provides a pointer to the first item on
116 // this global list, and access via that all_thread_data_list_head_ item
117 // requires the use of the list_lock_.
118 // When new ThreadData instances is added to the global list, it is pre-pended,
119 // which ensures that any prior acquisition of the list is valid (i.e., the
120 // holder can iterate over it without fear of it changing, or the necessity of
121 // using an additional lock. Iterations are actually pretty rare (used
122 // primarilly for cleanup, or snapshotting data for display), so this lock has
123 // very little global performance impact.
125 // The above description tries to define the high performance (run time)
126 // portions of these classes. After gathering statistics, calls instigated
127 // by visiting about:profiler will assemble and aggregate data for display. The
128 // following data structures are used for producing such displays. They are
129 // not performance critical, and their only major constraint is that they should
130 // be able to run concurrently with ongoing augmentation of the birth and death
131 // data.
133 // This header also exports collection of classes that provide "snapshotted"
134 // representations of the core tracked_objects:: classes. These snapshotted
135 // representations are designed for safe transmission of the tracked_objects::
136 // data across process boundaries. Each consists of:
137 // (1) a default constructor, to support the IPC serialization macros,
138 // (2) a constructor that extracts data from the type being snapshotted, and
139 // (3) the snapshotted data.
141 // For a given birth location, information about births is spread across data
142 // structures that are asynchronously changing on various threads. For
143 // serialization and display purposes, we need to construct TaskSnapshot
144 // instances for each combination of birth thread, death thread, and location,
145 // along with the count of such lifetimes. We gather such data into a
146 // TaskSnapshot instances, so that such instances can be sorted and
147 // aggregated (and remain frozen during our processing).
149 // The ProcessDataSnapshot struct is a serialized representation of the list
150 // of ThreadData objects for a process. It holds a set of TaskSnapshots
151 // and tracks parent/child relationships for the executed tasks. The statistics
152 // in a snapshot are gathered asynhcronously relative to their ongoing updates.
153 // It is possible, though highly unlikely, that stats could be incorrectly
154 // recorded by this process (all data is held in 32 bit ints, but we are not
155 // atomically collecting all data, so we could have count that does not, for
156 // example, match with the number of durations we accumulated). The advantage
157 // to having fast (non-atomic) updates of the data outweighs the minimal risk of
158 // a singular corrupt statistic snapshot (only the snapshot could be corrupt,
159 // not the underlying and ongoing statistic). In constrast, pointer data that
160 // is accessed during snapshotting is completely invariant, and hence is
161 // perfectly acquired (i.e., no potential corruption, and no risk of a bad
162 // memory reference).
164 // TODO(jar): We can implement a Snapshot system that *tries* to grab the
165 // snapshots on the source threads *when* they have MessageLoops available
166 // (worker threads don't have message loops generally, and hence gathering from
167 // them will continue to be asynchronous). We had an implementation of this in
168 // the past, but the difficulty is dealing with message loops being terminated.
169 // We can *try* to spam the available threads via some message loop proxy to
170 // achieve this feat, and it *might* be valuable when we are colecting data for
171 // upload via UMA (where correctness of data may be more significant than for a
172 // single screen of about:profiler).
174 // TODO(jar): We should support (optionally) the recording of parent-child
175 // relationships for tasks. This should be done by detecting what tasks are
176 // Born during the running of a parent task. The resulting data can be used by
177 // a smarter profiler to aggregate the cost of a series of child tasks into
178 // the ancestor task. It can also be used to illuminate what child or parent is
179 // related to each task.
181 // TODO(jar): We need to store DataCollections, and provide facilities for
182 // taking the difference between two gathered DataCollections. For now, we're
183 // just adding a hack that Reset()s to zero all counts and stats. This is also
184 // done in a slighly thread-unsafe fashion, as the resetting is done
185 // asynchronously relative to ongoing updates (but all data is 32 bit in size).
186 // For basic profiling, this will work "most of the time," and should be
187 // sufficient... but storing away DataCollections is the "right way" to do this.
188 // We'll accomplish this via JavaScript storage of snapshots, and then we'll
189 // remove the Reset() methods. We may also need a short-term-max value in
190 // DeathData that is reset (as synchronously as possible) during each snapshot.
191 // This will facilitate displaying a max value for each snapshot period.
193 namespace tracked_objects {
195 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
196 // For a specific thread, and a specific birth place, the collection of all
197 // death info (with tallies for each death thread, to prevent access conflicts).
198 class ThreadData;
199 class BASE_EXPORT BirthOnThread {
200 public:
201 BirthOnThread(const Location& location, const ThreadData& current);
203 const Location location() const { return location_; }
204 const ThreadData* birth_thread() const { return birth_thread_; }
206 private:
207 // File/lineno of birth. This defines the essence of the task, as the context
208 // of the birth (construction) often tell what the item is for. This field
209 // is const, and hence safe to access from any thread.
210 const Location location_;
212 // The thread that records births into this object. Only this thread is
213 // allowed to update birth_count_ (which changes over time).
214 const ThreadData* const birth_thread_;
216 DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(BirthOnThread);
219 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
220 // A "snapshotted" representation of the BirthOnThread class.
222 struct BASE_EXPORT BirthOnThreadSnapshot {
223 BirthOnThreadSnapshot();
224 explicit BirthOnThreadSnapshot(const BirthOnThread& birth);
225 ~BirthOnThreadSnapshot();
227 LocationSnapshot location;
228 std::string thread_name;
231 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
232 // A class for accumulating counts of births (without bothering with a map<>).
234 class BASE_EXPORT Births: public BirthOnThread {
235 public:
236 Births(const Location& location, const ThreadData& current);
238 int birth_count() const;
240 // When we have a birth we update the count for this birthplace.
241 void RecordBirth();
243 // When a birthplace is changed (updated), we need to decrement the counter
244 // for the old instance.
245 void ForgetBirth();
247 // Hack to quickly reset all counts to zero.
248 void Clear();
250 private:
251 // The number of births on this thread for our location_.
252 int birth_count_;
254 DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Births);
257 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
258 // Basic info summarizing multiple destructions of a tracked object with a
259 // single birthplace (fixed Location). Used both on specific threads, and also
260 // in snapshots when integrating assembled data.
262 class BASE_EXPORT DeathData {
263 public:
264 // Default initializer.
265 DeathData();
267 // When deaths have not yet taken place, and we gather data from all the
268 // threads, we create DeathData stats that tally the number of births without
269 // a corresponding death.
270 explicit DeathData(int count);
272 // Update stats for a task destruction (death) that had a Run() time of
273 // |duration|, and has had a queueing delay of |queue_duration|.
274 void RecordDeath(const int32 queue_duration,
275 const int32 run_duration,
276 int random_number);
278 // Metrics accessors, used only for serialization and in tests.
279 int count() const;
280 int32 run_duration_sum() const;
281 int32 run_duration_max() const;
282 int32 run_duration_sample() const;
283 int32 queue_duration_sum() const;
284 int32 queue_duration_max() const;
285 int32 queue_duration_sample() const;
287 // Reset the max values to zero.
288 void ResetMax();
290 // Reset all tallies to zero. This is used as a hack on realtime data.
291 void Clear();
293 private:
294 // Members are ordered from most regularly read and updated, to least
295 // frequently used. This might help a bit with cache lines.
296 // Number of runs seen (divisor for calculating averages).
297 int count_;
298 // Basic tallies, used to compute averages.
299 int32 run_duration_sum_;
300 int32 queue_duration_sum_;
301 // Max values, used by local visualization routines. These are often read,
302 // but rarely updated.
303 int32 run_duration_max_;
304 int32 queue_duration_max_;
305 // Samples, used by crowd sourcing gatherers. These are almost never read,
306 // and rarely updated.
307 int32 run_duration_sample_;
308 int32 queue_duration_sample_;
311 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
312 // A "snapshotted" representation of the DeathData class.
314 struct BASE_EXPORT DeathDataSnapshot {
315 DeathDataSnapshot();
316 explicit DeathDataSnapshot(const DeathData& death_data);
317 ~DeathDataSnapshot();
319 int count;
320 int32 run_duration_sum;
321 int32 run_duration_max;
322 int32 run_duration_sample;
323 int32 queue_duration_sum;
324 int32 queue_duration_max;
325 int32 queue_duration_sample;
328 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
329 // A temporary collection of data that can be sorted and summarized. It is
330 // gathered (carefully) from many threads. Instances are held in arrays and
331 // processed, filtered, and rendered.
332 // The source of this data was collected on many threads, and is asynchronously
333 // changing. The data in this instance is not asynchronously changing.
335 struct BASE_EXPORT TaskSnapshot {
336 TaskSnapshot();
337 TaskSnapshot(const BirthOnThread& birth,
338 const DeathData& death_data,
339 const std::string& death_thread_name);
340 ~TaskSnapshot();
342 BirthOnThreadSnapshot birth;
343 DeathDataSnapshot death_data;
344 std::string death_thread_name;
347 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
348 // For each thread, we have a ThreadData that stores all tracking info generated
349 // on this thread. This prevents the need for locking as data accumulates.
350 // We use ThreadLocalStorage to quickly identfy the current ThreadData context.
351 // We also have a linked list of ThreadData instances, and that list is used to
352 // harvest data from all existing instances.
354 struct ProcessDataSnapshot;
355 class BASE_EXPORT ThreadData {
356 public:
357 // Current allowable states of the tracking system. The states can vary
358 // between ACTIVE and DEACTIVATED, but can never go back to UNINITIALIZED.
359 enum Status {
360 UNINITIALIZED, // PRistine, link-time state before running.
361 DORMANT_DURING_TESTS, // Only used during testing.
362 DEACTIVATED, // No longer recording profling.
363 PROFILING_ACTIVE, // Recording profiles (no parent-child links).
364 PROFILING_CHILDREN_ACTIVE, // Fully active, recording parent-child links.
365 STATUS_LAST = PROFILING_CHILDREN_ACTIVE
368 typedef std::map<Location, Births*> BirthMap;
369 typedef std::map<const Births*, DeathData> DeathMap;
370 typedef std::pair<const Births*, const Births*> ParentChildPair;
371 typedef std::set<ParentChildPair> ParentChildSet;
372 typedef std::stack<const Births*> ParentStack;
374 // Initialize the current thread context with a new instance of ThreadData.
375 // This is used by all threads that have names, and should be explicitly
376 // set *before* any births on the threads have taken place. It is generally
377 // only used by the message loop, which has a well defined thread name.
378 static void InitializeThreadContext(const std::string& suggested_name);
380 // Using Thread Local Store, find the current instance for collecting data.
381 // If an instance does not exist, construct one (and remember it for use on
382 // this thread.
383 // This may return NULL if the system is disabled for any reason.
384 static ThreadData* Get();
386 // Fills |process_data| with all the recursive results in our process.
387 // During the scavenging, if |reset_max| is true, then the DeathData instances
388 // max-values are reset to zero during this scan.
389 static void Snapshot(bool reset_max, ProcessDataSnapshot* process_data);
391 // Finds (or creates) a place to count births from the given location in this
392 // thread, and increment that tally.
393 // TallyABirthIfActive will returns NULL if the birth cannot be tallied.
394 static Births* TallyABirthIfActive(const Location& location);
396 // Records the end of a timed run of an object. The |completed_task| contains
397 // a pointer to a Births, the time_posted, and a delayed_start_time if any.
398 // The |start_of_run| indicates when we started to perform the run of the
399 // task. The delayed_start_time is non-null for tasks that were posted as
400 // delayed tasks, and it indicates when the task should have run (i.e., when
401 // it should have posted out of the timer queue, and into the work queue.
402 // The |end_of_run| was just obtained by a call to Now() (just after the task
403 // finished). It is provided as an argument to help with testing.
404 static void TallyRunOnNamedThreadIfTracking(
405 const base::TrackingInfo& completed_task,
406 const TrackedTime& start_of_run,
407 const TrackedTime& end_of_run);
409 // Record the end of a timed run of an object. The |birth| is the record for
410 // the instance, the |time_posted| records that instant, which is presumed to
411 // be when the task was posted into a queue to run on a worker thread.
412 // The |start_of_run| is when the worker thread started to perform the run of
413 // the task.
414 // The |end_of_run| was just obtained by a call to Now() (just after the task
415 // finished).
416 static void TallyRunOnWorkerThreadIfTracking(
417 const Births* birth,
418 const TrackedTime& time_posted,
419 const TrackedTime& start_of_run,
420 const TrackedTime& end_of_run);
422 // Record the end of execution in region, generally corresponding to a scope
423 // being exited.
424 static void TallyRunInAScopedRegionIfTracking(
425 const Births* birth,
426 const TrackedTime& start_of_run,
427 const TrackedTime& end_of_run);
429 const std::string& thread_name() const { return thread_name_; }
431 // Hack: asynchronously clear all birth counts and death tallies data values
432 // in all ThreadData instances. The numerical (zeroing) part is done without
433 // use of a locks or atomics exchanges, and may (for int64 values) produce
434 // bogus counts VERY rarely.
435 static void ResetAllThreadData();
437 // Initializes all statics if needed (this initialization call should be made
438 // while we are single threaded). Returns false if unable to initialize.
439 static bool Initialize();
441 // Sets internal status_.
442 // If |status| is false, then status_ is set to DEACTIVATED.
443 // If |status| is true, then status_ is set to, PROFILING_ACTIVE, or
444 // PROFILING_CHILDREN_ACTIVE.
445 // If tracking is not compiled in, this function will return false.
446 // If parent-child tracking is not compiled in, then an attempt to set the
447 // status to PROFILING_CHILDREN_ACTIVE will only result in a status of
448 // PROFILING_ACTIVE (i.e., it can't be set to a higher level than what is
449 // compiled into the binary, and parent-child tracking at the
450 // PROFILING_CHILDREN_ACTIVE level might not be compiled in).
451 static bool InitializeAndSetTrackingStatus(Status status);
453 static Status status();
455 // Indicate if any sort of profiling is being done (i.e., we are more than
456 // DEACTIVATED).
457 static bool TrackingStatus();
459 // For testing only, indicate if the status of parent-child tracking is turned
460 // on. This is currently a compiled option, atop TrackingStatus().
461 static bool TrackingParentChildStatus();
463 // Special versions of Now() for getting times at start and end of a tracked
464 // run. They are super fast when tracking is disabled, and have some internal
465 // side effects when we are tracking, so that we can deduce the amount of time
466 // accumulated outside of execution of tracked runs.
467 // The task that will be tracked is passed in as |parent| so that parent-child
468 // relationships can be (optionally) calculated.
469 static TrackedTime NowForStartOfRun(const Births* parent);
470 static TrackedTime NowForEndOfRun();
472 // Provide a time function that does nothing (runs fast) when we don't have
473 // the profiler enabled. It will generally be optimized away when it is
474 // ifdef'ed to be small enough (allowing the profiler to be "compiled out" of
475 // the code).
476 static TrackedTime Now();
478 // Use the function |now| to provide current times, instead of calling the
479 // TrackedTime::Now() function. Since this alternate function is being used,
480 // the other time arguments (used for calculating queueing delay) will be
481 // ignored.
482 static void SetAlternateTimeSource(NowFunction* now);
484 // This function can be called at process termination to validate that thread
485 // cleanup routines have been called for at least some number of named
486 // threads.
487 static void EnsureCleanupWasCalled(int major_threads_shutdown_count);
489 private:
490 // Allow only tests to call ShutdownSingleThreadedCleanup. We NEVER call it
491 // in production code.
492 // TODO(jar): Make this a friend in DEBUG only, so that the optimizer has a
493 // better change of optimizing (inlining? etc.) private methods (knowing that
494 // there will be no need for an external entry point).
495 friend class TrackedObjectsTest;
496 FRIEND_TEST_ALL_PREFIXES(TrackedObjectsTest, MinimalStartupShutdown);
497 FRIEND_TEST_ALL_PREFIXES(TrackedObjectsTest, TinyStartupShutdown);
498 FRIEND_TEST_ALL_PREFIXES(TrackedObjectsTest, ParentChildTest);
500 typedef std::map<const BirthOnThread*, int> BirthCountMap;
502 // Worker thread construction creates a name since there is none.
503 explicit ThreadData(int thread_number);
505 // Message loop based construction should provide a name.
506 explicit ThreadData(const std::string& suggested_name);
508 ~ThreadData();
510 // Push this instance to the head of all_thread_data_list_head_, linking it to
511 // the previous head. This is performed after each construction, and leaves
512 // the instance permanently on that list.
513 void PushToHeadOfList();
515 // (Thread safe) Get start of list of all ThreadData instances using the lock.
516 static ThreadData* first();
518 // Iterate through the null terminated list of ThreadData instances.
519 ThreadData* next() const;
522 // In this thread's data, record a new birth.
523 Births* TallyABirth(const Location& location);
525 // Find a place to record a death on this thread.
526 void TallyADeath(const Births& birth, int32 queue_duration, int32 duration);
528 // Snapshot (under a lock) the profiled data for the tasks in each ThreadData
529 // instance. Also updates the |birth_counts| tally for each task to keep
530 // track of the number of living instances of the task. If |reset_max| is
531 // true, then the max values in each DeathData instance are reset during the
532 // scan.
533 static void SnapshotAllExecutedTasks(bool reset_max,
534 ProcessDataSnapshot* process_data,
535 BirthCountMap* birth_counts);
537 // Snapshots (under a lock) the profiled data for the tasks for this thread
538 // and writes all of the executed tasks' data -- i.e. the data for the tasks
539 // with with entries in the death_map_ -- into |process_data|. Also updates
540 // the |birth_counts| tally for each task to keep track of the number of
541 // living instances of the task -- that is, each task maps to the number of
542 // births for the task that have not yet been balanced by a death. If
543 // |reset_max| is true, then the max values in each DeathData instance are
544 // reset during the scan.
545 void SnapshotExecutedTasks(bool reset_max,
546 ProcessDataSnapshot* process_data,
547 BirthCountMap* birth_counts);
549 // Using our lock, make a copy of the specified maps. This call may be made
550 // on non-local threads, which necessitate the use of the lock to prevent
551 // the map(s) from being reallocaed while they are copied. If |reset_max| is
552 // true, then, just after we copy the DeathMap, we will set the max values to
553 // zero in the active DeathMap (not the snapshot).
554 void SnapshotMaps(bool reset_max,
555 BirthMap* birth_map,
556 DeathMap* death_map,
557 ParentChildSet* parent_child_set);
559 // Using our lock to protect the iteration, Clear all birth and death data.
560 void Reset();
562 // This method is called by the TLS system when a thread terminates.
563 // The argument may be NULL if this thread has never tracked a birth or death.
564 static void OnThreadTermination(void* thread_data);
566 // This method should be called when a worker thread terminates, so that we
567 // can save all the thread data into a cache of reusable ThreadData instances.
568 void OnThreadTerminationCleanup();
570 // Cleans up data structures, and returns statics to near pristine (mostly
571 // uninitialized) state. If there is any chance that other threads are still
572 // using the data structures, then the |leak| argument should be passed in as
573 // true, and the data structures (birth maps, death maps, ThreadData
574 // insntances, etc.) will be leaked and not deleted. If you have joined all
575 // threads since the time that InitializeAndSetTrackingStatus() was called,
576 // then you can pass in a |leak| value of false, and this function will
577 // delete recursively all data structures, starting with the list of
578 // ThreadData instances.
579 static void ShutdownSingleThreadedCleanup(bool leak);
581 // When non-null, this specifies an external function that supplies monotone
582 // increasing time functcion.
583 static NowFunction* now_function_;
585 // We use thread local store to identify which ThreadData to interact with.
586 static base::ThreadLocalStorage::StaticSlot tls_index_;
588 // List of ThreadData instances for use with worker threads. When a worker
589 // thread is done (terminated), we push it onto this llist. When a new worker
590 // thread is created, we first try to re-use a ThreadData instance from the
591 // list, and if none are available, construct a new one.
592 // This is only accessed while list_lock_ is held.
593 static ThreadData* first_retired_worker_;
595 // Link to the most recently created instance (starts a null terminated list).
596 // The list is traversed by about:profiler when it needs to snapshot data.
597 // This is only accessed while list_lock_ is held.
598 static ThreadData* all_thread_data_list_head_;
600 // The next available worker thread number. This should only be accessed when
601 // the list_lock_ is held.
602 static int worker_thread_data_creation_count_;
604 // The number of times TLS has called us back to cleanup a ThreadData
605 // instance. This is only accessed while list_lock_ is held.
606 static int cleanup_count_;
608 // Incarnation sequence number, indicating how many times (during unittests)
609 // we've either transitioned out of UNINITIALIZED, or into that state. This
610 // value is only accessed while the list_lock_ is held.
611 static int incarnation_counter_;
613 // Protection for access to all_thread_data_list_head_, and to
614 // unregistered_thread_data_pool_. This lock is leaked at shutdown.
615 // The lock is very infrequently used, so we can afford to just make a lazy
616 // instance and be safe.
617 static base::LazyInstance<base::Lock>::Leaky list_lock_;
619 // We set status_ to SHUTDOWN when we shut down the tracking service.
620 static Status status_;
622 // Link to next instance (null terminated list). Used to globally track all
623 // registered instances (corresponds to all registered threads where we keep
624 // data).
625 ThreadData* next_;
627 // Pointer to another ThreadData instance for a Worker-Thread that has been
628 // retired (its thread was terminated). This value is non-NULL only for a
629 // retired ThreadData associated with a Worker-Thread.
630 ThreadData* next_retired_worker_;
632 // The name of the thread that is being recorded. If this thread has no
633 // message_loop, then this is a worker thread, with a sequence number postfix.
634 std::string thread_name_;
636 // Indicate if this is a worker thread, and the ThreadData contexts should be
637 // stored in the unregistered_thread_data_pool_ when not in use.
638 // Value is zero when it is not a worker thread. Value is a positive integer
639 // corresponding to the created thread name if it is a worker thread.
640 int worker_thread_number_;
642 // A map used on each thread to keep track of Births on this thread.
643 // This map should only be accessed on the thread it was constructed on.
644 // When a snapshot is needed, this structure can be locked in place for the
645 // duration of the snapshotting activity.
646 BirthMap birth_map_;
648 // Similar to birth_map_, this records informations about death of tracked
649 // instances (i.e., when a tracked instance was destroyed on this thread).
650 // It is locked before changing, and hence other threads may access it by
651 // locking before reading it.
652 DeathMap death_map_;
654 // A set of parents that created children tasks on this thread. Each pair
655 // corresponds to potentially non-local Births (location and thread), and a
656 // local Births (that took place on this thread).
657 ParentChildSet parent_child_set_;
659 // Lock to protect *some* access to BirthMap and DeathMap. The maps are
660 // regularly read and written on this thread, but may only be read from other
661 // threads. To support this, we acquire this lock if we are writing from this
662 // thread, or reading from another thread. For reading from this thread we
663 // don't need a lock, as there is no potential for a conflict since the
664 // writing is only done from this thread.
665 mutable base::Lock map_lock_;
667 // The stack of parents that are currently being profiled. This includes only
668 // tasks that have started a timer recently via NowForStartOfRun(), but not
669 // yet concluded with a NowForEndOfRun(). Usually this stack is one deep, but
670 // if a scoped region is profiled, or <sigh> a task runs a nested-message
671 // loop, then the stack can grow larger. Note that we don't try to deduct
672 // time in nested porfiles, as our current timer is based on wall-clock time,
673 // and not CPU time (and we're hopeful that nested timing won't be a
674 // significant additional cost).
675 ParentStack parent_stack_;
677 // A random number that we used to select decide which sample to keep as a
678 // representative sample in each DeathData instance. We can't start off with
679 // much randomness (because we can't call RandInt() on all our threads), so
680 // we stir in more and more as we go.
681 int32 random_number_;
683 // Record of what the incarnation_counter_ was when this instance was created.
684 // If the incarnation_counter_ has changed, then we avoid pushing into the
685 // pool (this is only critical in tests which go through multiple
686 // incarnations).
687 int incarnation_count_for_pool_;
689 DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(ThreadData);
692 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
693 // A snapshotted representation of a (parent, child) task pair, for tracking
694 // hierarchical profiles.
696 struct BASE_EXPORT ParentChildPairSnapshot {
697 public:
698 ParentChildPairSnapshot();
699 explicit ParentChildPairSnapshot(
700 const ThreadData::ParentChildPair& parent_child);
701 ~ParentChildPairSnapshot();
703 BirthOnThreadSnapshot parent;
704 BirthOnThreadSnapshot child;
707 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
708 // A snapshotted representation of the list of ThreadData objects for a process.
710 struct BASE_EXPORT ProcessDataSnapshot {
711 public:
712 ProcessDataSnapshot();
713 ~ProcessDataSnapshot();
715 std::vector<TaskSnapshot> tasks;
716 std::vector<ParentChildPairSnapshot> descendants;
717 int process_id;
720 } // namespace tracked_objects
722 #endif // BASE_TRACKED_OBJECTS_H_