/* * Copyright (C) 2016 The Android Open Source Project * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package dalvik.annotation.optimization; import java.lang.annotation.ElementType; import java.lang.annotation.Retention; import java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy; import java.lang.annotation.Target; /** * An ART runtime built-in optimization for {@code native} methods to speed up JNI transitions: * Methods that are annotated with {@literal @}{@code CriticalNative} use the fastest * available JNI transitions from managed code to the native code and back. * This annotation can be applied only to native methods that do not use managed * objects (in parameters or return values, or as an implicit {@code this}). * *
* The {@literal @}{@code CriticalNative} annotation changes the JNI transition ABI. * The native implementation must exclude the {@code JNIEnv} and {@code jclass} parameters * from its function signature. *
* ** While executing a {@literal @}{@code CriticalNative} method, the garbage collection cannot * suspend the thread for essential work and may become blocked. Use with caution. Do not use * this annotation for long-running methods, including usually-fast, but generally unbounded, * methods. In particular, the code should not perform significant I/O operations or acquire * native locks that can be held for a long time. (Some logging or native allocations, which * internally acquire native locks for a short time, are generally OK. However, as the cost * of several such operations adds up, the {@literal @}{@code CriticalNative} performance gain * can become insignificant and overshadowed by potential GC delays.) *
* ** For performance critical methods that need this annotation, it is strongly recommended * to explicitly register the method(s) with JNI {@code RegisterNatives} instead of relying * on the built-in dynamic JNI linking. *
* ** The {@literal @}{@code CriticalNative} optimization was implemented for system use since * Android 8 and became CTS-tested public API in Android 14. Developers aiming for maximum * compatibility should avoid calling {@literal @}{@code CriticalNative} methods on Android 13-. * The optimization is likely to work also on Android 8-13 devices (after all, it was used * in the system, albeit without the strong CTS guarantees), especially those that use * unmodified versions of ART, such as Android 12+ devices with the official ART Module. * The built-in dynamic JNI linking is working only in Android 12+, the explicit registration * with JNI {@code RegisterNatives} is strictly required for running on Android versions 8-11. * The annotation is ignored on Android 7-, so the ABI mismatch would lead to wrong argument * marshalling and likely crashes. *
* ** A similar annotation, {@literal @}{@link FastNative}, exists for methods that need fast * transitions but absolutely need to use managed objects, whether as the implicit {@code this} * for non-static methods, or method arguments, return values or to otherwise call back to * managed code (say, static methods), or access managed heap objects (say, static fields). *
* ** Performance of JNI transitions: *
* Deadlock Warning: As a rule of thumb, any native locks acquired in a * {@literal @}{@link CriticalNative} call (despite the above warning that this is an unbounded * operation that can block GC for a long time) must be released before returning to managed code. *
* *
* Say some code does:
*
*
* critical_native_call_to_grab_a_lock();
* does_some_java_work();
* critical_native_call_to_release_a_lock();
*
*
*
* This code can lead to deadlocks. Say thread 1 just finishes * {@code critical_native_call_to_grab_a_lock()} and is in {@code does_some_java_work()}. * GC kicks in and suspends thread 1. Thread 2 now is in * {@code critical_native_call_to_grab_a_lock()} but is blocked on grabbing the * native lock since it's held by thread 1. Now thread suspension can't finish * since thread 2 can't be suspended since it's doing CriticalNative JNI. *
* ** Normal natives don't have the issue since once it's executing in native code, * it is considered suspended from the runtime's point of view. * CriticalNative natives however don't do the state transition done by the normal natives. *
* ** This annotation has no effect when used with non-native methods. *
* ** The runtime shall throw a {@link java.lang.VerifyError} during verification if this annotation * is present on a native method that is non-static, or contains object parameters, or returns an * object. *
*/ @Retention(RetentionPolicy.CLASS) // Save memory, don't instantiate as an object at runtime. @Target(ElementType.METHOD) public @interface CriticalNative {}