[Rd] garbage collection, "preserved" variables, and different outcome depending on "--verbose" or not
Duncan Murdoch
murdoch at stats.uwo.ca
Sun Jul 20 16:39:33 CEST 2008
On 20/07/2008 10:02 AM, Laurent Gautier wrote:
> I tripped on that while crafting the example.
>
> The problem still exists when moving the "releases" in the middle,
> and removing the last "release".
I can't spot any problems in the new version of your code, but I can't
reproduce the problem, either. So it appears to be system specific -- I
was using the identical revision as you, but on Windows, not
"x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu". What exact Linux is that? Can others using
that system (or similar ones) reproduce it?
Duncan Murdoch
>
>
> #include <R.h>
> #include <Rdefines.h>
>
>
> SEXP createObject(void)
> {
> SEXP x_R;
> int len_x = 1000000;
> PROTECT(x_R = allocVector(REALSXP, len_x));
> Rprintf("Created 'x' at %p\n", x_R);
> Rprintf(" (mode is %i, length is %i)\n", TYPEOF(x_R), LENGTH(x_R));
> Rprintf(" (first element is %d)\n", REAL(x_R)[0]);
> R_PreserveObject(x_R);
> UNPROTECT(1);
> return x_R;
> }
>
> void printObject(SEXP sexp)
> {
> Rprintf("object at %p\n", sexp);
> Rprintf(" (mode is %i, length is %i, named is %i)\n",
> TYPEOF(sexp), LENGTH(sexp), NAMED(sexp));
> }
>
> SEXP lostobject(SEXP n_R)
> {
> /*
> * This function will:
> * 1- create a numerical vector "x" and "preserve it"
> * 2- make call "list(x)"
> * 3- return "x" to R
> */
>
>
> SEXP x_R;
> int i;
>
> int n = INTEGER(n_R)[0];
>
> /* Create a numerical vector "x_R" */
>
> for (i=0; i<n; i++) {
> x_R = createObject();
> printObject(x_R);
> R_ReleaseObject(x_R);
> R_gc();
> }
>
> x_R = createObject();
> printObject(x_R);
> R_gc();
>
> Rprintf("Returning 'x' at %p\n", x_R);
> Rprintf(" (first element is %d)\n", REAL(x_R)[0]);
> return x_R;
> }
>
>
> 2008/7/20 Duncan Murdoch <murdoch at stats.uwo.ca>:
>> On 20/07/2008 9:01 AM, Laurent Gautier wrote:
>>> Dear list,
>>>
>>> While trying to identify the root of a problem I am having with
>>> garbage collected variables,
>>> I have come across the following oddity: depending on whether --verbose is
>>> set
>>> or not, I obtain different results.
>> You are working with variables without protecting them, so you just get
>> lucky whenever the code works.
>>
>> More below...
>>
>>> I have made a small standalone example to demonstrate it.
>>> The example is very artificial, but I had a hard time reproducing
>>> reliably the problem.
>>>
>>> So when I do: (the content of test.R is at the end of this email)
>>>
>>> R --no-save < test.R
>>>
>>> [The two last lines of the output are:]
>>>> x[1:3]
>>> [1] 0 0 0
>>>
>>> while with
>>>
>>> R --verbose --no-save < test.R
>>>
>>> [The two last lines of the output are:]
>>>> x[1:3]
>>> [1] 3.733188e-317 3.137345e-317 3.137345e-317
>>>
>>>
>>> The C code is compiled with:
>>> R CMD SHLIB test_lostobject.c
>>>
>>>
>>>> sessionInfo()
>>> R version 2.7.1 Patched (2008-07-19 r46081)
>>> x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
>>>
>>> locale:
>>>
>>> LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8;LC_NUMERIC=C;LC_TIME=en_US.UTF-8;LC_COLLATE=en_US.UTF-8;LC_MONETARY=C;LC_MESSAGES=en_US.UTF-8;LC_PAPER=en_US.UTF-8;LC_NAME=C;LC_ADDRESS=C;LC_TELEPHONE=C;LC_MEASUREMENT=en_US.UTF-8;LC_IDENTIFICATION=C
>>>
>>> attached base packages:
>>> [1] stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods base
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ### -- file test.R
>>>
>>> dyn.load("test_lostobject.so")
>>>
>>> x = .Call("lostobject", as.integer(5))
>>>
>>> x[1:3]
>>>
>>>
>>> ### ---
>>>
>>> ###--- file lostobject.c
>>>
>>> #include <R.h>
>>> #include <Rdefines.h>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> SEXP createObject(void)
>>> {
>>> SEXP x_R;
>>> int len_x = 1000000;
>>> PROTECT(x_R = allocVector(REALSXP, len_x));
>>> Rprintf("Created 'x' at %p\n", x_R);
>>> Rprintf(" (mode is %i, length is %i)\n", TYPEOF(x_R), LENGTH(x_R));
>>> Rprintf(" (first element is %d)\n", REAL(x_R)[0]);
>>> R_PreserveObject(x_R);
>>> UNPROTECT(1);
>>> return x_R;
>>> }
>>>
>>> void printObject(SEXP sexp)
>>> {
>>> Rprintf("object at %p\n", sexp);
>>> Rprintf(" (mode is %i, length is %i, named is %i)\n",
>>> TYPEOF(sexp), LENGTH(sexp), NAMED(sexp));
>>> }
>>>
>>> SEXP lostobject(SEXP n_R)
>>> {
>>> /*
>>> * This function will:
>>> * 1- create a numerical vector "x" and "preserve it"
>>> * 2- make call "list(x)"
>>> * 3- return "x" to R
>>> */
>>>
>>>
>>> SEXP x_R;
>>> int i;
>>>
>>> int n = INTEGER(n_R)[0];
>>>
>>> /* Create a numerical vector "x_R" */
>>>
>>> for (i=0; i<n; i++) {
>>> x_R = createObject();
>>> R_ReleaseObject(x_R);
>> At this point, the variable is unprotected, i.e. you have declared that its
>> memory is free for the taking. You should not try to do anything with it.
>> printObject calls several functions, and one of those may have overwritten
>> the memory. It's not surprising that different flags (--verbose or not)
>> result in different behaviour.
>>
>>> printObject(x_R);
>>> R_gc();
>>> }
>>>
>>> x_R = createObject();
>>> printObject(x_R);
>>> R_gc();
>>> R_ReleaseObject(x_R);
>> Same thing here. x_R is unprotected now, so you shouldn't use it.
>>
>> Duncan Murdoch
>>
>>> Rprintf("Returning 'x' at %p\n", x_R);
>>> Rprintf(" (first element is %d)\n", REAL(x_R)[0]);
>>> return x_R;
>>> }
>>>
>>> ______________________________________________
>>> R-devel at r-project.org mailing list
>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
>>
>
> ______________________________________________
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> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
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