Hi Alan!

Thank you for your help.

TL;DR version:

Strictly speaking (going only by the specifications), this could give us false positives, but I believe this is VERY unlikely to actually happen in real life.

Long version:

Yes, I gave this some thought myself. For example, on JRockit, if the object were in old space and System.gc() only did a young collection (the default behavior for JRockit), this test would result in a false positive. In fact, as the JVM is allowed by the specification to completely ignore explicit GC calls, we could never guarantee that we would the WeakReference would always get nulled out.

That said, in pactice this works very well for both HotSpot and JRockit. Every scenario I have tried it out on (with both JVMs) has provided the expected result every single time (i.e. failing when expected; never resulting in false positive otherwise). It seems that both of Oracle's JVMs as currently implemented are very unlikely to run into any issues here. Marking the test cases as "othervm" also helps to remove most edge case scenarios where you could still somehow imagine this failing. (For example, on a JRockit-like JVM, other tests running concurrently could trigger a gc in the middle of this test resulting in the HashMap and its contents being promoted to old space and the null reference not being cleared during the call to System.gc() as expected.)

One option would be to mark this as a manually-run test if we wanted to be extra cautious. What do you think?

> Minor nit, should be WeakReference<Object> to avoid the raw type.

I will update the webrev once we have decided what (if anything) to do regarding the risk of false positives.

Cheers,
-Buck

On 2013/01/30 22:09, Alan Bateman wrote:
On 29/01/2013 23:36, David Buck wrote:
Hi!

This is a review request to add only the test case for the following
OracleJDK issue :

[ 7042126 : (alt-rt) HashMap.clone implementation should be re-examined ]
http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=7042126

* please note: I just marked the bug as "public" this morning, so
there will be a short delay before the above link is available.

The issue (root cause) is not in OpenJDK (i.e. the problem was
OracleJDK specific), but the test case is valid for any Java SE
implementation so it should go into OpenJDK so we can prevent a
similar issue from ever happening in both releases moving forward. The
test case simply helps ensure that the contents of a HashMap are not
leaked when we clone the HashMap.

webrev:
[ Code Review for jdk ]
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~dbuck/7042126/webrev.00/
How robust is this test? I'm concerned that it might fail intermittently
if the System.gc doesn't immediately GC the now un-references entries in
hm.

Minor nit, should be WeakReference<Object> to avoid the raw type.

-Alan.

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