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      1 // Copyright (c) 2011 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
      2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
      3 // found in the LICENSE file.
      4 
      5 #ifndef BASE_TRACKED_OBJECTS_H_
      6 #define BASE_TRACKED_OBJECTS_H_
      7 #pragma once
      8 
      9 #include <map>
     10 #include <string>
     11 #include <vector>
     12 
     13 #include "base/base_api.h"
     14 #include "base/synchronization/lock.h"
     15 #include "base/tracked.h"
     16 #include "base/threading/thread_local_storage.h"
     17 
     18 // TrackedObjects provides a database of stats about objects (generally Tasks)
     19 // that are tracked.  Tracking means their birth, death, duration, birth thread,
     20 // death thread, and birth place are recorded.  This data is carefully spread
     21 // across a series of objects so that the counts and times can be rapidly
     22 // updated without (usually) having to lock the data, and hence there is usually
     23 // very little contention caused by the tracking.  The data can be viewed via
     24 // the about:tasks URL, with a variety of sorting and filtering choices.
     25 //
     26 // These classes serve as the basis of a profiler of sorts for the Tasks system.
     27 // As a result, design decisions were made to maximize speed, by minimizing
     28 // recurring allocation/deallocation, lock contention and data copying.  In the
     29 // "stable" state, which is reached relatively quickly, there is no separate
     30 // marginal allocation cost associated with construction or destruction of
     31 // tracked objects, no locks are generally employed, and probably the largest
     32 // computational cost is associated with obtaining start and stop times for
     33 // instances as they are created and destroyed.  The introduction of worker
     34 // threads had a slight impact on this approach, and required use of some locks
     35 // when accessing data from the worker threads.
     36 //
     37 // The following describes the lifecycle of tracking an instance.
     38 //
     39 // First off, when the instance is created, the FROM_HERE macro is expanded
     40 // to specify the birth place (file, line, function) where the instance was
     41 // created.  That data is used to create a transient Location instance
     42 // encapsulating the above triple of information.  The strings (like __FILE__)
     43 // are passed around by reference, with the assumption that they are static, and
     44 // will never go away.  This ensures that the strings can be dealt with as atoms
     45 // with great efficiency (i.e., copying of strings is never needed, and
     46 // comparisons for equality can be based on pointer comparisons).
     47 //
     48 // Next, a Births instance is created for use ONLY on the thread where this
     49 // instance was created.  That Births instance records (in a base class
     50 // BirthOnThread) references to the static data provided in a Location instance,
     51 // as well as a pointer specifying the thread on which the birth takes place.
     52 // Hence there is at most one Births instance for each Location on each thread.
     53 // The derived Births class contains slots for recording statistics about all
     54 // instances born at the same location.  Statistics currently include only the
     55 // count of instances constructed.
     56 // Since the base class BirthOnThread contains only constant data, it can be
     57 // freely accessed by any thread at any time (i.e., only the statistic needs to
     58 // be handled carefully, and it is ONLY read or written by the birth thread).
     59 //
     60 // Having now either constructed or found the Births instance described above, a
     61 // pointer to the Births instance is then embedded in a base class of the
     62 // instance we're tracking (usually a Task). This fact alone is very useful in
     63 // debugging, when there is a question of where an instance came from.  In
     64 // addition, the birth time is also embedded in the base class Tracked (see
     65 // tracked.h), and used to later evaluate the lifetime duration.
     66 // As a result of the above embedding, we can (for any tracked instance) find
     67 // out its location of birth, and thread of birth, without using any locks, as
     68 // all that data is constant across the life of the process.
     69 //
     70 // The amount of memory used in the above data structures depends on how many
     71 // threads there are, and how many Locations of construction there are.
     72 // Fortunately, we don't use memory that is the product of those two counts, but
     73 // rather we only need one Births instance for each thread that constructs an
     74 // instance at a Location. In many cases, instances (such as Tasks) are only
     75 // created on one thread, so the memory utilization is actually fairly
     76 // restrained.
     77 //
     78 // Lastly, when an instance is deleted, the final tallies of statistics are
     79 // carefully accumulated.  That tallying wrties into slots (members) in a
     80 // collection of DeathData instances.  For each birth place Location that is
     81 // destroyed on a thread, there is a DeathData instance to record the additional
     82 // death count, as well as accumulate the lifetime duration of the instance as
     83 // it is destroyed (dies).  By maintaining a single place to aggregate this
     84 // addition *only* for the given thread, we avoid the need to lock such
     85 // DeathData instances.
     86 //
     87 // With the above lifecycle description complete, the major remaining detail is
     88 // explaining how each thread maintains a list of DeathData instances, and of
     89 // Births instances, and is able to avoid additional (redundant/unnecessary)
     90 // allocations.
     91 //
     92 // Each thread maintains a list of data items specific to that thread in a
     93 // ThreadData instance (for that specific thread only).  The two critical items
     94 // are lists of DeathData and Births instances.  These lists are maintained in
     95 // STL maps, which are indexed by Location. As noted earlier, we can compare
     96 // locations very efficiently as we consider the underlying data (file,
     97 // function, line) to be atoms, and hence pointer comparison is used rather than
     98 // (slow) string comparisons.
     99 //
    100 // To provide a mechanism for iterating over all "known threads," which means
    101 // threads that have recorded a birth or a death, we create a singly linked list
    102 // of ThreadData instances. Each such instance maintains a pointer to the next
    103 // one.  A static member of ThreadData provides a pointer to the first_ item on
    104 // this global list, and access to that first_ item requires the use of a lock_.
    105 // When new ThreadData instances is added to the global list, it is pre-pended,
    106 // which ensures that any prior acquisition of the list is valid (i.e., the
    107 // holder can iterate over it without fear of it changing, or the necessity of
    108 // using an additional lock.  Iterations are actually pretty rare (used
    109 // primarilly for cleanup, or snapshotting data for display), so this lock has
    110 // very little global performance impact.
    111 //
    112 // The above description tries to define the high performance (run time)
    113 // portions of these classes.  After gathering statistics, calls instigated
    114 // by visiting about:tasks will assemble and aggregate data for display. The
    115 // following data structures are used for producing such displays.  They are
    116 // not performance critical, and their only major constraint is that they should
    117 // be able to run concurrently with ongoing augmentation of the birth and death
    118 // data.
    119 //
    120 // For a given birth location, information about births are spread across data
    121 // structures that are asynchronously changing on various threads.  For display
    122 // purposes, we need to construct Snapshot instances for each combination of
    123 // birth thread, death thread, and location, along with the count of such
    124 // lifetimes.  We gather such data into a Snapshot instances, so that such
    125 // instances can be sorted and aggregated (and remain frozen during our
    126 // processing).  Snapshot instances use pointers to constant portions of the
    127 // birth and death datastructures, but have local (frozen) copies of the actual
    128 // statistics (birth count, durations, etc. etc.).
    129 //
    130 // A DataCollector is a container object that holds a set of Snapshots.  A
    131 // DataCollector can be passed from thread to thread, and each thread
    132 // contributes to it by adding or updating Snapshot instances.  DataCollector
    133 // instances are thread safe containers which are passed to various threads to
    134 // accumulate all Snapshot instances.
    135 //
    136 // After an array of Snapshots instances are colleted into a DataCollector, they
    137 // need to be sorted, and possibly aggregated (example: how many threads are in
    138 // a specific consecutive set of Snapshots?  What was the total birth count for
    139 // that set? etc.).  Aggregation instances collect running sums of any set of
    140 // snapshot instances, and are used to print sub-totals in an about:tasks page.
    141 //
    142 // TODO(jar): I need to store DataCollections, and provide facilities for taking
    143 // the difference between two gathered DataCollections.  For now, I'm just
    144 // adding a hack that Reset()'s to zero all counts and stats.  This is also
    145 // done in a slighly thread-unsafe fashion, as the reseting is done
    146 // asynchronously relative to ongoing updates, and worse yet, some data fields
    147 // are 64bit quantities, and are not atomicly accessed (reset or incremented
    148 // etc.).  For basic profiling, this will work "most of the time," and should be
    149 // sufficient... but storing away DataCollections is the "right way" to do this.
    150 //
    151 class MessageLoop;
    152 
    153 
    154 namespace tracked_objects {
    155 
    156 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    157 // For a specific thread, and a specific birth place, the collection of all
    158 // death info (with tallies for each death thread, to prevent access conflicts).
    159 class ThreadData;
    160 class BASE_API BirthOnThread {
    161  public:
    162   explicit BirthOnThread(const Location& location);
    163 
    164   const Location location() const { return location_; }
    165   const ThreadData* birth_thread() const { return birth_thread_; }
    166 
    167  private:
    168   // File/lineno of birth.  This defines the essence of the type, as the context
    169   // of the birth (construction) often tell what the item is for.  This field
    170   // is const, and hence safe to access from any thread.
    171   const Location location_;
    172 
    173   // The thread that records births into this object.  Only this thread is
    174   // allowed to access birth_count_ (which changes over time).
    175   const ThreadData* birth_thread_;  // The thread this birth took place on.
    176 
    177   DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(BirthOnThread);
    178 };
    179 
    180 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    181 // A class for accumulating counts of births (without bothering with a map<>).
    182 
    183 class BASE_API Births: public BirthOnThread {
    184  public:
    185   explicit Births(const Location& location);
    186 
    187   int birth_count() const { return birth_count_; }
    188 
    189   // When we have a birth we update the count for this BirhPLace.
    190   void RecordBirth() { ++birth_count_; }
    191 
    192   // When a birthplace is changed (updated), we need to decrement the counter
    193   // for the old instance.
    194   void ForgetBirth() { --birth_count_; }  // We corrected a birth place.
    195 
    196   // Hack to quickly reset all counts to zero.
    197   void Clear() { birth_count_ = 0; }
    198 
    199  private:
    200   // The number of births on this thread for our location_.
    201   int birth_count_;
    202 
    203   DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Births);
    204 };
    205 
    206 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    207 // Basic info summarizing multiple destructions of an object with a single
    208 // birthplace (fixed Location).  Used both on specific threads, and also used
    209 // in snapshots when integrating assembled data.
    210 
    211 class BASE_API DeathData {
    212  public:
    213   // Default initializer.
    214   DeathData() : count_(0), square_duration_(0) {}
    215 
    216   // When deaths have not yet taken place, and we gather data from all the
    217   // threads, we create DeathData stats that tally the number of births without
    218   // a corrosponding death.
    219   explicit DeathData(int count) : count_(count), square_duration_(0) {}
    220 
    221   void RecordDeath(const base::TimeDelta& duration);
    222 
    223   // Metrics accessors.
    224   int count() const { return count_; }
    225   base::TimeDelta life_duration() const { return life_duration_; }
    226   int64 square_duration() const { return square_duration_; }
    227   int AverageMsDuration() const;
    228   double StandardDeviation() const;
    229 
    230   // Accumulate metrics from other into this.
    231   void AddDeathData(const DeathData& other);
    232 
    233   // Simple print of internal state.
    234   void Write(std::string* output) const;
    235 
    236   // Reset all tallies to zero.
    237   void Clear();
    238 
    239  private:
    240   int count_;                // Number of destructions.
    241   base::TimeDelta life_duration_;    // Sum of all lifetime durations.
    242   int64 square_duration_;  // Sum of squares in milliseconds.
    243 };
    244 
    245 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    246 // A temporary collection of data that can be sorted and summarized.  It is
    247 // gathered (carefully) from many threads.  Instances are held in arrays and
    248 // processed, filtered, and rendered.
    249 // The source of this data was collected on many threads, and is asynchronously
    250 // changing.  The data in this instance is not asynchronously changing.
    251 
    252 class BASE_API Snapshot {
    253  public:
    254   // When snapshotting a full life cycle set (birth-to-death), use this:
    255   Snapshot(const BirthOnThread& birth_on_thread, const ThreadData& death_thread,
    256            const DeathData& death_data);
    257 
    258   // When snapshotting a birth, with no death yet, use this:
    259   Snapshot(const BirthOnThread& birth_on_thread, int count);
    260 
    261 
    262   const ThreadData* birth_thread() const { return birth_->birth_thread(); }
    263   const Location location() const { return birth_->location(); }
    264   const BirthOnThread& birth() const { return *birth_; }
    265   const ThreadData* death_thread() const {return death_thread_; }
    266   const DeathData& death_data() const { return death_data_; }
    267   const std::string DeathThreadName() const;
    268 
    269   int count() const { return death_data_.count(); }
    270   base::TimeDelta life_duration() const { return death_data_.life_duration(); }
    271   int64 square_duration() const { return death_data_.square_duration(); }
    272   int AverageMsDuration() const { return death_data_.AverageMsDuration(); }
    273 
    274   void Write(std::string* output) const;
    275 
    276   void Add(const Snapshot& other);
    277 
    278  private:
    279   const BirthOnThread* birth_;  // Includes Location and birth_thread.
    280   const ThreadData* death_thread_;
    281   DeathData death_data_;
    282 };
    283 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    284 // DataCollector is a container class for Snapshot and BirthOnThread count
    285 // items.  It protects the gathering under locks, so that it could be called via
    286 // Posttask on any threads, or passed to all the target threads in parallel.
    287 
    288 class BASE_API DataCollector {
    289  public:
    290   typedef std::vector<Snapshot> Collection;
    291 
    292   // Construct with a list of how many threads should contribute.  This helps us
    293   // determine (in the async case) when we are done with all contributions.
    294   DataCollector();
    295   ~DataCollector();
    296 
    297   // Add all stats from the indicated thread into our arrays.  This function is
    298   // mutex protected, and *could* be called from any threads (although current
    299   // implementation serialized calls to Append).
    300   void Append(const ThreadData& thread_data);
    301 
    302   // After the accumulation phase, the following accessor is used to process the
    303   // data.
    304   Collection* collection();
    305 
    306   // After collection of death data is complete, we can add entries for all the
    307   // remaining living objects.
    308   void AddListOfLivingObjects();
    309 
    310  private:
    311   typedef std::map<const BirthOnThread*, int> BirthCount;
    312 
    313   // This instance may be provided to several threads to contribute data.  The
    314   // following counter tracks how many more threads will contribute.  When it is
    315   // zero, then all asynchronous contributions are complete, and locked access
    316   // is no longer needed.
    317   int count_of_contributing_threads_;
    318 
    319   // The array that we collect data into.
    320   Collection collection_;
    321 
    322   // The total number of births recorded at each location for which we have not
    323   // seen a death count.
    324   BirthCount global_birth_count_;
    325 
    326   base::Lock accumulation_lock_;  // Protects access during accumulation phase.
    327 
    328   DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(DataCollector);
    329 };
    330 
    331 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    332 // Aggregation contains summaries (totals and subtotals) of groups of Snapshot
    333 // instances to provide printing of these collections on a single line.
    334 
    335 class BASE_API Aggregation: public DeathData {
    336  public:
    337   Aggregation();
    338   ~Aggregation();
    339 
    340   void AddDeathSnapshot(const Snapshot& snapshot);
    341   void AddBirths(const Births& births);
    342   void AddBirth(const BirthOnThread& birth);
    343   void AddBirthPlace(const Location& location);
    344   void Write(std::string* output) const;
    345   void Clear();
    346 
    347  private:
    348   int birth_count_;
    349   std::map<std::string, int> birth_files_;
    350   std::map<Location, int> locations_;
    351   std::map<const ThreadData*, int> birth_threads_;
    352   DeathData death_data_;
    353   std::map<const ThreadData*, int> death_threads_;
    354 
    355   DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Aggregation);
    356 };
    357 
    358 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    359 // Comparator is a class that supports the comparison of Snapshot instances.
    360 // An instance is actually a list of chained Comparitors, that can provide for
    361 // arbitrary ordering.  The path portion of an about:tasks URL is translated
    362 // into such a chain, which is then used to order Snapshot instances in a
    363 // vector.  It orders them into groups (for aggregation), and can also order
    364 // instances within the groups (for detailed rendering of the instances in an
    365 // aggregation).
    366 
    367 class BASE_API Comparator {
    368  public:
    369   // Selector enum is the token identifier for each parsed keyword, most of
    370   // which specify a sort order.
    371   // Since it is not meaningful to sort more than once on a specific key, we
    372   // use bitfields to accumulate what we have sorted on so far.
    373   enum Selector {
    374     // Sort orders.
    375     NIL = 0,
    376     BIRTH_THREAD = 1,
    377     DEATH_THREAD = 2,
    378     BIRTH_FILE = 4,
    379     BIRTH_FUNCTION = 8,
    380     BIRTH_LINE = 16,
    381     COUNT = 32,
    382     AVERAGE_DURATION = 64,
    383     TOTAL_DURATION = 128,
    384 
    385     // Imediate action keywords.
    386     RESET_ALL_DATA = -1,
    387   };
    388 
    389   explicit Comparator();
    390 
    391   // Reset the comparator to a NIL selector.  Clear() and recursively delete any
    392   // tiebreaker_ entries.  NOTE: We can't use a standard destructor, because
    393   // the sort algorithm makes copies of this object, and then deletes them,
    394   // which would cause problems (either we'd make expensive deep copies, or we'd
    395   // do more thna one delete on a tiebreaker_.
    396   void Clear();
    397 
    398   // The less() operator for sorting the array via std::sort().
    399   bool operator()(const Snapshot& left, const Snapshot& right) const;
    400 
    401   void Sort(DataCollector::Collection* collection) const;
    402 
    403   // Check to see if the items are sort equivalents (should be aggregated).
    404   bool Equivalent(const Snapshot& left, const Snapshot& right) const;
    405 
    406   // Check to see if all required fields are present in the given sample.
    407   bool Acceptable(const Snapshot& sample) const;
    408 
    409   // A comparator can be refined by specifying what to do if the selected basis
    410   // for comparison is insufficient to establish an ordering.  This call adds
    411   // the indicated attribute as the new "least significant" basis of comparison.
    412   void SetTiebreaker(Selector selector, const std::string& required);
    413 
    414   // Indicate if this instance is set up to sort by the given Selector, thereby
    415   // putting that information in the SortGrouping, so it is not needed in each
    416   // printed line.
    417   bool IsGroupedBy(Selector selector) const;
    418 
    419   // Using the tiebreakers as set above, we mostly get an ordering, which
    420   // equivalent groups.  If those groups are displayed (rather than just being
    421   // aggregated, then the following is used to order them (within the group).
    422   void SetSubgroupTiebreaker(Selector selector);
    423 
    424   // Translate a keyword and restriction in URL path to a selector for sorting.
    425   void ParseKeyphrase(const std::string& key_phrase);
    426 
    427   // Parse a query in an about:tasks URL to decide on sort ordering.
    428   bool ParseQuery(const std::string& query);
    429 
    430   // Output a header line that can be used to indicated what items will be
    431   // collected in the group.  It lists all (potentially) tested attributes and
    432   // their values (in the sample item).
    433   bool WriteSortGrouping(const Snapshot& sample, std::string* output) const;
    434 
    435   // Output a sample, with SortGroup details not displayed.
    436   void WriteSnapshot(const Snapshot& sample, std::string* output) const;
    437 
    438  private:
    439   // The selector directs this instance to compare based on the specified
    440   // members of the tested elements.
    441   enum Selector selector_;
    442 
    443   // For filtering into acceptable and unacceptable snapshot instance, the
    444   // following is required to be a substring of the selector_ field.
    445   std::string required_;
    446 
    447   // If this instance can't decide on an ordering, we can consult a tie-breaker
    448   // which may have a different basis of comparison.
    449   Comparator* tiebreaker_;
    450 
    451   // We or together all the selectors we sort on (not counting sub-group
    452   // selectors), so that we can tell if we've decided to group on any given
    453   // criteria.
    454   int combined_selectors_;
    455 
    456   // Some tiebreakrs are for subgroup ordering, and not for basic ordering (in
    457   // preparation for aggregation).  The subgroup tiebreakers are not consulted
    458   // when deciding if two items are in equivalent groups.  This flag tells us
    459   // to ignore the tiebreaker when doing Equivalent() testing.
    460   bool use_tiebreaker_for_sort_only_;
    461 };
    462 
    463 
    464 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    465 // For each thread, we have a ThreadData that stores all tracking info generated
    466 // on this thread.  This prevents the need for locking as data accumulates.
    467 
    468 class BASE_API ThreadData {
    469  public:
    470   typedef std::map<Location, Births*> BirthMap;
    471   typedef std::map<const Births*, DeathData> DeathMap;
    472 
    473   ThreadData();
    474   ~ThreadData();
    475 
    476   // Using Thread Local Store, find the current instance for collecting data.
    477   // If an instance does not exist, construct one (and remember it for use on
    478   // this thread.
    479   // If shutdown has already started, and we don't yet have an instance, then
    480   // return null.
    481   static ThreadData* current();
    482 
    483   // For a given about:tasks URL, develop resulting HTML, and append to output.
    484   static void WriteHTML(const std::string& query, std::string* output);
    485 
    486   // For a given accumulated array of results, use the comparator to sort and
    487   // subtotal, writing the results to the output.
    488   static void WriteHTMLTotalAndSubtotals(
    489       const DataCollector::Collection& match_array,
    490       const Comparator& comparator, std::string* output);
    491 
    492   // In this thread's data, record a new birth.
    493   Births* TallyABirth(const Location& location);
    494 
    495   // Find a place to record a death on this thread.
    496   void TallyADeath(const Births& lifetimes, const base::TimeDelta& duration);
    497 
    498   // (Thread safe) Get start of list of instances.
    499   static ThreadData* first();
    500   // Iterate through the null terminated list of instances.
    501   ThreadData* next() const { return next_; }
    502 
    503   MessageLoop* message_loop() const { return message_loop_; }
    504   const std::string ThreadName() const;
    505 
    506   // Using our lock, make a copy of the specified maps.  These calls may arrive
    507   // from non-local threads, and are used to quickly scan data from all threads
    508   // in order to build an HTML page for about:tasks.
    509   void SnapshotBirthMap(BirthMap *output) const;
    510   void SnapshotDeathMap(DeathMap *output) const;
    511 
    512   // Hack: asynchronously clear all birth counts and death tallies data values
    513   // in all ThreadData instances.  The numerical (zeroing) part is done without
    514   // use of a locks or atomics exchanges, and may (for int64 values) produce
    515   // bogus counts VERY rarely.
    516   static void ResetAllThreadData();
    517 
    518   // Using our lock to protect the iteration, Clear all birth and death data.
    519   void Reset();
    520 
    521   // Using the "known list of threads" gathered during births and deaths, the
    522   // following attempts to run the given function once all all such threads.
    523   // Note that the function can only be run on threads which have a message
    524   // loop!
    525   static void RunOnAllThreads(void (*Func)());
    526 
    527   // Set internal status_ to either become ACTIVE, or later, to be SHUTDOWN,
    528   // based on argument being true or false respectively.
    529   // IF tracking is not compiled in, this function will return false.
    530   static bool StartTracking(bool status);
    531   static bool IsActive();
    532 
    533 #ifdef OS_WIN
    534   // WARNING: ONLY call this function when all MessageLoops are still intact for
    535   // all registered threads.  IF you call it later, you will crash.
    536   // Note: You don't need to call it at all, and you can wait till you are
    537   // single threaded (again) to do the cleanup via
    538   // ShutdownSingleThreadedCleanup().
    539   // Start the teardown (shutdown) process in a multi-thread mode by disabling
    540   // further additions to thread database on all threads.  First it makes a
    541   // local (locked) change to prevent any more threads from registering.  Then
    542   // it Posts a Task to all registered threads to be sure they are aware that no
    543   // more accumulation can take place.
    544   static void ShutdownMultiThreadTracking();
    545 #endif
    546 
    547   // WARNING: ONLY call this function when you are running single threaded
    548   // (again) and all message loops and threads have terminated.  Until that
    549   // point some threads may still attempt to write into our data structures.
    550   // Delete recursively all data structures, starting with the list of
    551   // ThreadData instances.
    552   static void ShutdownSingleThreadedCleanup();
    553 
    554  private:
    555   // Current allowable states of the tracking system.  The states always
    556   // proceed towards SHUTDOWN, and never go backwards.
    557   enum Status {
    558     UNINITIALIZED,
    559     ACTIVE,
    560     SHUTDOWN,
    561   };
    562 
    563 #if defined(OS_WIN)
    564   class ThreadSafeDownCounter;
    565   class RunTheStatic;
    566 #endif
    567 
    568   // Each registered thread is called to set status_ to SHUTDOWN.
    569   // This is done redundantly on every registered thread because it is not
    570   // protected by a mutex.  Running on all threads guarantees we get the
    571   // notification into the memory cache of all possible threads.
    572   static void ShutdownDisablingFurtherTracking();
    573 
    574   // We use thread local store to identify which ThreadData to interact with.
    575   static base::ThreadLocalStorage::Slot tls_index_;
    576 
    577   // Link to the most recently created instance (starts a null terminated list).
    578   static ThreadData* first_;
    579   // Protection for access to first_.
    580   static base::Lock list_lock_;
    581 
    582   // We set status_ to SHUTDOWN when we shut down the tracking service. This
    583   // setting is redundantly established by all participating threads so that we
    584   // are *guaranteed* (without locking) that all threads can "see" the status
    585   // and avoid additional calls into the  service.
    586   static Status status_;
    587 
    588   // Link to next instance (null terminated list). Used to globally track all
    589   // registered instances (corresponds to all registered threads where we keep
    590   // data).
    591   ThreadData* next_;
    592 
    593   // The message loop where tasks needing to access this instance's private data
    594   // should be directed.  Since some threads have no message loop, some
    595   // instances have data that can't be (safely) modified externally.
    596   MessageLoop* message_loop_;
    597 
    598   // A map used on each thread to keep track of Births on this thread.
    599   // This map should only be accessed on the thread it was constructed on.
    600   // When a snapshot is needed, this structure can be locked in place for the
    601   // duration of the snapshotting activity.
    602   BirthMap birth_map_;
    603 
    604   // Similar to birth_map_, this records informations about death of tracked
    605   // instances (i.e., when a tracked instance was destroyed on this thread).
    606   // It is locked before changing, and hence other threads may access it by
    607   // locking before reading it.
    608   DeathMap death_map_;
    609 
    610   // Lock to protect *some* access to BirthMap and DeathMap.  The maps are
    611   // regularly read and written on this thread, but may only be read from other
    612   // threads.  To support this, we acquire this lock if we are writing from this
    613   // thread, or reading from another thread.  For reading from this thread we
    614   // don't need a lock, as there is no potential for a conflict since the
    615   // writing is only done from this thread.
    616   mutable base::Lock lock_;
    617 
    618   DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(ThreadData);
    619 };
    620 
    621 
    622 //------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    623 // Provide simple way to to start global tracking, and to tear down tracking
    624 // when done.  Note that construction and destruction of this object must be
    625 // done when running in  threaded mode (before spawning a lot of threads
    626 // for construction, and after shutting down all the threads for destruction).
    627 
    628 // To prevent grabbing thread local store resources time and again if someone
    629 // chooses to try to re-run the browser many times, we maintain global state and
    630 // only allow the tracking system to be started up at most once, and shutdown
    631 // at most once.  See bug 31344 for an example.
    632 
    633 class AutoTracking {
    634  public:
    635   AutoTracking() {
    636     if (state_ != kNeverBeenRun)
    637       return;
    638     ThreadData::StartTracking(true);
    639     state_ = kRunning;
    640   }
    641 
    642   ~AutoTracking() {
    643 #ifndef NDEBUG
    644     if (state_ != kRunning)
    645       return;
    646     // We don't do cleanup of any sort in Release build because it is a
    647     // complete waste of time.  Since Chromium doesn't join all its thread and
    648     // guarantee we're in a single threaded mode, we don't even do cleanup in
    649     // debug mode, as it will generate race-checker warnings.
    650 #endif
    651   }
    652 
    653  private:
    654   enum State {
    655     kNeverBeenRun,
    656     kRunning,
    657     kTornDownAndStopped,
    658   };
    659   static State state_;
    660 
    661   DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(AutoTracking);
    662 };
    663 
    664 
    665 }  // namespace tracked_objects
    666 
    667 #endif  // BASE_TRACKED_OBJECTS_H_
    668