Currently I am working on writing a C# script that can call functions written in Julia modules. Julia provides a C API that allows functions to be called in Julia. I have managed to get functions written in Julia modules to be called from C#, and get array data to be passed back and forth.
However, I am not entirely sure how to control the garbage collector correctly.
This code is the inline code provided by julia.h, that tells the Julia garbage collector that the variables pointed to by args are being used in another script and shouldn't be moved/deallocated. Each call (jl_gc_push()
or jl_gc_push_args()
pushes a thing to the stack that the garbage collector uses.
Code in julia.h:
#define jl_pgcstack (jl_get_ptls_states()->pgcstack)
#define JL_GC_PUSH1(arg1) \
void *__gc_stkf[] = {(void*)3, jl_pgcstack, arg1}; \
jl_pgcstack = (jl_gcframe_t*)__gc_stkf;
...(similar functions for 2, 3, 4)............
#define JL_GC_PUSH5(arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5) \
void *__gc_stkf[] = {(void*)11, jl_pgcstack, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5}; \
jl_pgcstack = (jl_gcframe_t*)__gc_stkf;
#define JL_GC_PUSHARGS(rts_var,n) \
rts_var = ((jl_value_t**)alloca(((n)+2)*sizeof(jl_value_t*)))+2; \
((void**)rts_var)[-2] = (void*)(((size_t)(n))<<1); \
((void**)rts_var)[-1] = jl_pgcstack; \
memset((void*)rts_var, 0, (n)*sizeof(jl_value_t*)); \
jl_pgcstack = (jl_gcframe_t*)&(((void**)rts_var)[-2])
#define JL_GC_POP() (jl_pgcstack = jl_pgcstack = jl_pgcstack->prev)
jl_get_ptls_states
returns a struct that has a pointer called pgcstack
. I believe that is the thing that the garbage collector uses. arg1
is supposed to be of type jl_value_t*
, and rts_var
is supposed to be of type jl_value_t**
.
Question 1:
I can't reconcile this particular difference between this line in JL_GC_PUSH1 (and the other JL_GC_PUSH# ones):
void *__gc_stkf[] = {(void*)3, ...
and this line in JL_GC_PUSHARGS:
((void**)rts_var)[-2] = (void*)(((size_t)(n))<<1);
If I used JL_GC_PUSH1 to tell the garbage collector I want a variable to be ignored, it would set the first variable in the array to be 3. However, if I were to use JL_GC_PUSHARGS, it would set it to 2. I thought bit shifting to the left filled in with zeroes? I understand how everything else works in these functions though.
Question 2:
I'm writing a C# function that does what JL_GC_PUSHARGS does, except it takes in params IntPtr
instead of jl_value_t**
. Is it safe if I allocate memory like this? Does anyone know if Julia will deallocate as necessary, or will I have to call Marshal.FreeHGlobal on the memory? If Julia does it anyways and I call Marshal.FreeHGlobal, will there be issues?
C# version:
public unsafe static void JL_GC_PUSHARGS(params IntPtr[] args) {
int l = args.Length;
IntPtr* pgcstacknew = (IntPtr*) Marshal.AllocHGlobal(Marshal.SizeOf<IntPtr>() * (l + 2)).ToPointer();
pgcstacknew[0] = (IntPtr)(2 * l + 1); //related to Question 1
pgcstacknew[1] = jl_pgcstack();
for(uint i = 2; i < l + 2; i++){
pgcstacknew[i] = args[i - 2];
}
jl_pgcstack() = pgcstacknew;
//I'm still having issues with this line ^^
}
For now just assume that jl_pgcstack()
is equivalent to the inline function written in C. I'm having issues with that, but that's a different problem.