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Adaptive Code Unloading for Resource-Constrained JVMs

Adaptive Code Unloading for Resource-Constrained JVMs. ACM SIGPLAN, 2004 Presented by Mithuna Soundararaj. Outline. Introduction Motivation and Contributions Compile-only and Interpreter-only JVM Code Unloading What to Unload? When to Unload? Results. Introduction.

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Adaptive Code Unloading for Resource-Constrained JVMs

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  1. Adaptive Code Unloading for Resource-Constrained JVMs ACM SIGPLAN, 2004 Presented by Mithuna Soundararaj University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  2. Outline • Introduction Motivation and Contributions Compile-only and Interpreter-only JVM • Code Unloading • What to Unload? • When to Unload? • Results University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  3. Introduction • Java Virtual machine extension for adaptive code unloading. • Reduces memory requirement imposed by compile-only JVMs. • The extension feature, an unloader uses execution behavior to adaptively determine *when* and *what* code to unload. • Unloading strategies used reduces the code size, in turn reducing the execution time and memory. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  4. Motivation • To reduce the overhead of memory consumed by compiled code which increases the cost of memory management. • To adaptively balance not storing any code and caching all generated code according to the dynamic memory availability. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  5. Compile-only Vs Interpreter JVM • Compile-only JVM -Uses device resources more efficiently. -Higher quality code. -Code reuse and optimization. • Interpreter-only JVM -Simple to interpret. -No memory overhead University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  6. Code Unloading opportunities • Large amount of executed code used only during program start up( initial 10% of execution time). • Code that remains in the system and is never invoked after start up.(shorter lifetimes). • Long-lived methods executed in-frequently during their lifetime. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  7. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  8. Code Unloading • To exploit the available code unloading opportunities and to relieve the memory pressure imposed by compile-only JVMs, they have developed an extensible framework for the implementation of strategies that decide -What to unload? -When to unload? -Balance between memory pressure and recompilation overhead. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  9. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  10. What to Unload? • Predicting methods which are unlikely to be invoked in the future. • Monitor the execution to identify the methods that have not been recently invoked by -Online eXhaustive profiling (OnX) -Online Sample-based profiling (OnS) -Offline exhaustive profiling (Off) -No profiling (NP). University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  11. What strategies • Online eXhaustive profiling(OnX) Compiler instruments methods setting a mark bit to one every time a method is invoked. • Online Sample-Based profiling(OnS) Sets the mark bits of the two methods on the top of the invocation stack. • Offline Exhaustive Profiling(Off) To analyze the behavior of the methods offline • No Profiling unload all methods that are not currently on the run time stack when unloading occurs. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  12. When to unload? • Timer Triggered Approach • Garbage Collection triggered Strategy. • Maximum Call Times Triggered(MCT). • Code Cache Size Triggered(CS). University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  13. When Strategies • Timer Triggered Approach. Unloads code at regular intervals Does not account for the dynamically changing memory availability. Approximates time using thread switch count which occurs every 10 ms. Increments count according to time spent in GC. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  14. When Strategies • Adaptive Garbage Collection Triggered Strategy -Unloading trigger of GC invocation count. -Frequency of code unloading dynamically adapts to resource behavior. -Unloading more frequently when memory is highly constrained but less frequent otherwise. -Memory Usage behavior is got from heap residency. -At the end of each GC cycle, resource monitor forwards the percentage of execution time that is spent in GC to the unloader so as to adjust the frequency of the unloading sessions. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  15. When Strategies • Maximum Call Times Triggered(MCT) -unloads a method after its final compilation. • Code Cache Size Triggered -Stores native code bodies in a fixed size code cache, when cache becomes full it is unloaded. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  16. Unloading Optimized Code • Recompiling an unloaded,previously optimized method affects the balance of re-compilation overhead and performance benefits. • Strategies to handle optimized code -RO(Reload Optimized methods using the optimization hint). -EO(Exclude unloading of optimized methods) -DO(Delay unloading of optimized methods) University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  17. RESULTS University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  18. Impact On Memory Footprint University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  19. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  20. Impact On Execution Performance University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  21. Conclusion • Opportunity for dynamically unloading compiled code in JIT-based JVMs for mobile and embedded devices. • Adaptively unload dead and infrequently used code to reduce memory consumed and improve performance. • When memory is highly constrained,reduction in code size by 61% and execution time of 23% on an average across benchmark programs and JVM configurations. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  22. Thank You University of Nebraska-Lincoln

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