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Austin Clements authored
When we grow the heap, we create a temporary "in use" span for the memory acquired from the OS and then free that span to link it into the heap. Hence, we (1) increase pagesInUse when we make the temporary span so that (2) freeing the span will correctly decrease it. However, currently step (1) increases pagesInUse by the number of pages requested from the heap, while step (2) decreases it by the number of pages requested from the OS (the size of the temporary span). These aren't necessarily the same, since we round up the number of pages we request from the OS, so steps 1 and 2 don't necessarily cancel out like they're supposed to. Over time, this can add up and cause pagesInUse to underflow and wrap around to 2^64. The garbage collector computes the sweep ratio from this, so if this happens, the sweep ratio becomes effectively infinite, causing the first allocation on each P in a sweep cycle to sweep the entire heap. This makes sweeping effectively STW. Fix this by increasing pagesInUse in step 1 by the number of pages requested from the OS, so that the two steps correctly cancel out. We add a test that checks that the running total matches the actual state of the heap. Fixes #15022. For 1.6.x. Change-Id: Iefd9d6abe37d0d447cbdbdf9941662e4f18eeffc Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/21280 Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org> Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/21456Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org>
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