X-Git-Url: https://git.llucax.com/personal/website.git/blobdiff_plain/82c67a166ee0d3d8893c3ae1e84f91f067045fd0..3ee8da73d904a64ada1719945e7b8467e6c0c60a:/source/blog/posts/2010/09/09-truly-concurrent-gc-using-eager-allocation.rst?ds=sidebyside diff --git a/source/blog/posts/2010/09/09-truly-concurrent-gc-using-eager-allocation.rst b/source/blog/posts/2010/09/09-truly-concurrent-gc-using-eager-allocation.rst index 3bab03a..aa58a03 100644 --- a/source/blog/posts/2010/09/09-truly-concurrent-gc-using-eager-allocation.rst +++ b/source/blog/posts/2010/09/09-truly-concurrent-gc-using-eager-allocation.rst @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ collection, in the sense that all the threads of the *mutator* (the program itself) can run in parallel with the collector (well, only the mark phase to be honest :). -__ http://llucax.com.ar/blog/blog/tag/cdgc?sort=+date +__ /blog/blog/tag/cdgc?sort=+date You might want to read a `previous post`__ about CDGC where I achieved some sort of concurrency by making only the *stop-the-world* time very short, but the @@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ allocation request (it was triggered because the memory was exhausted), while any other thread needing any GC service needed to acquire the global GC lock (damn global GC lock!). -__ http://llucax.com.ar/blog/blog/post/-4c9dd5b5 +__ /blog/blog/post/-4c9dd5b5 To avoid this issue, I took a simple approach that I call *eager allocation*, consisting on spawn the mark phase concurrently but allocating a new memory pool @@ -211,7 +211,7 @@ voronoi get a **30% speed boost**! That's not bad, not bad at all... If you want to try it, the repository__ has been updated with this last changes :). If you do, please let me know how it went. -__ http://git.llucax.com.ar/w/software/dgc/cdgc.git +__ https://git.llucax.com/w/software/dgc/cdgc.git .. vim: set et sw=3 sts=3 :