What does objc_autoreleaseReturnValue mean?

我的梦境 提交于 2019-12-04 12:53:07

Thanks to @Darren first, thanks for your link.

I reference some paragraph in the link.

ARC has a trick that keeps returned objects out of autorelease pools if both the caller and callee are ARC.

But how does that work? One of the features of ARC is that old compiled-before-ARC code (MRC code) can call ARC code and vice-versa. But if ARC code doesn’t put a returned object in an autorelease pool that MRC code is expecting, then the object would just leak.

So ARC-ified clang code emits this function call when returning an object: objc_autoreleaseReturnValue(id).

If you look at objc_autoreleaseReturnValue's implementation, it calls callerAcceptsFastAutorelease(). Even if you don’t read x86_64 or ARM assembly, the code’s comment is straight-forward:

/*
  Fast handling of returned autoreleased values.
  The caller and callee cooperate to keep the returned object 
  out of the autorelease pool.

  Caller:
    ret = callee();
    objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue(ret);
    // use ret here

  Callee:
    // compute ret
    [ret retain];
    return objc_autoreleaseReturnValue(ret);

  objc_autoreleaseReturnValue() examines the caller's instructions following
  the return. If the caller's instructions immediately call
  objc_autoreleaseReturnValue, then the callee omits the -autorelease and saves
  the result in thread-local storage. If the caller does not look like it
  cooperates, then the callee calls -autorelease as usual.

  objc_autoreleaseReturnValue checks if the returned value is the same as the
  one in thread-local storage. If it is, the value is used directly. If not,
  the value is assumed to be truly autoreleased and is retained again.  In
  either case, the caller now has a retained reference to the value.

  Tagged pointer objects do participate in the fast autorelease scheme, 
  because it saves message sends. They are not entered in the autorelease 
  pool in the slow case.
*/

Something From me

Let's see the source code of objc_autoreleaseReturnValue.

id 
objc_autoreleaseReturnValue(id obj)
{
#if SUPPORT_RETURN_AUTORELEASE
    assert(tls_get_direct(AUTORELEASE_POOL_RECLAIM_KEY) == NULL);

    if (callerAcceptsFastAutorelease(__builtin_return_address(0))) {
        tls_set_direct(AUTORELEASE_POOL_RECLAIM_KEY, obj);
        return obj;
    }
#endif

    return objc_autorelease(obj);
}

__builtin_return_address(0) returns the return address of current function, then let's look at the callerAcceptsFastAutorelease's implementation for arm version:

static bool callerAcceptsFastAutorelease(const void *ra)
{
    // if the low bit is set, we're returning to thumb mode
    if ((uintptr_t)ra & 1) {
        // 3f 46          mov r7, r7
        // we mask off the low bit via subtraction
        if (*(uint16_t *)((uint8_t *)ra - 1) == 0x463f) {
            return true;
        }
    } else {
        // 07 70 a0 e1    mov r7, r7
        if (*(uint32_t *)ra == 0xe1a07007) {
            return true;
        }
    }
    return false;
}

In the method, it looks for the instruction mov r7, r7 which is a marker for objc_retainAutoreleaseReturnValue, if it find that, then the method return true, so callee will omit the autorelease.

You can see the assembly code of caller which is testFun1 in my case.

- (void)testFun1:(ViewController *)vc
{
    [vc createATestObj] ;
}

Below is the assembly code, you can find the line "mov r7, r7 @ marker for objc_retainAutoreleaseReturnValue"

    .cfi_startproc
@ BB#0:
    push    {r7, lr}
    mov r7, sp
    sub sp, #16
    add r3, sp, #4
    movw    r9, #0
    movt    r9, #0
    str r0, [sp, #12]
    str r1, [sp, #8]
    str.w   r9, [sp, #4]
    mov r0, r3
    mov r1, r2
    bl  _objc_storeStrong
    movw    r0, :lower16:(L_objc_msgSend$non_lazy_ptr-(LPC5_0+4))
    movt    r0, :upper16:(L_objc_msgSend$non_lazy_ptr-(LPC5_0+4))
LPC5_0:
    add r0, pc
    ldr r0, [r0]
    movw    r1, :lower16:(L_OBJC_SELECTOR_REFERENCES_12-(LPC5_1+4))
    movt    r1, :upper16:(L_OBJC_SELECTOR_REFERENCES_12-(LPC5_1+4))
LPC5_1:
    add r1, pc
Ltmp14:
    ldr r2, [sp, #4]
    ldr r1, [r1]
    str r0, [sp]                @ 4-byte Spill
    mov r0, r2
    ldr r2, [sp]                @ 4-byte Reload
    blx r2
    @ InlineAsm Start
    mov r7, r7      @ marker for objc_retainAutoreleaseReturnValue
    .code   16
    @ InlineAsm End
    bl  _objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue
    bl  _objc_release
    movs    r1, #0
    movt    r1, #0
    add r0, sp, #4
    bl  _objc_storeStrong
    add sp, #16
    pop {r7, pc}
Ltmp15:
Lfunc_end5:
    .cfi_endproc

Update:

I think there are some mistakes in comments of apple's implementation.

The correct comment should be like this:

/*
  Fast handling of returned autoreleased values.
  The caller and callee cooperate to keep the returned object 
  out of the autorelease pool.

  Caller:
    ret = callee();
    objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue(ret);
    // use ret here

  Callee:
    // compute ret
    [ret retain];
    return objc_autoreleaseReturnValue(ret);

  objc_autoreleaseReturnValue() examines the caller's instructions following
  the return. If the caller's instructions immediately call
  objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue, then the callee omits the -autorelease and saves
  the result in thread-local storage. If the caller does not look like it
  cooperates, then the callee calls -autorelease as usual.

  objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue checks if the returned value is the same as the
  one in thread-local storage. If it is, the value is used directly. If not,
  the value is assumed to be truly autoreleased and is retained again.  In
  either case, the caller now has a retained reference to the value.

  Tagged pointer objects do participate in the fast autorelease scheme, 
  because it saves message sends. They are not entered in the autorelease 
  pool in the slow case.
*/

Leave me a comment if you don't agree with me. Thank you!

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