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9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Elias Naur
5b452fe89a bind: split out Seq.getRef calls with Go references
Today, the Seq.Ref class has two purposes. For Java references,
Ref contains the refnum, a reference to the Java object and a
reference count. For Go references, Ref contains the refnum and
its finalizer makes sure to decrement the reference count on the Go
side.

The next CL will replace the use of finalizers with an explicit
ReferenceQueue of Go references, and the Ref class will no longer
be used for Go refences. To prepare for that, this CL pulls up the
construction of Go referencing Ref instances into the Seq.trackGoRef
function.

Change-Id: I9eefe238cd3fd1b661b2af11d331a2f61e31303b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/106875
Reviewed-by: Hyang-Ah Hana Kim <hyangah@gmail.com>
2018-04-17 14:58:00 +00:00
Elias Naur
c90c4f7c8a bind,internal: change the default Java package to the empty string
The Objective-C bindings was recently changed to support the empty
name prefix and to use that as the default. This CLs changed the Java
generators in the same way, supporting the empty Java package and using
it as the default.

Change-Id: I857affce686c67638a2b6c4e1da5d6a88d7ba560
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/34778
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2017-01-11 19:15:09 +00:00
Elias Naur
3f7b83ffd4 bind: generate Java constructors for every exported struct
A recent CL added Java constructors to generated classes that extends
or implements other Java classes and interfaces. Constructors for a
struct S are Go functions on the form

func NewS...(...) *S

If no such constructors exists, a default empty constructor is
generated.

Expand that to cover every exported Go struct.

Fixes golang/go#17086

Change-Id: I910aba13d5884c3f67c946c62a8ac4a3db8e2ea7
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/29710
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2016-10-05 07:47:24 +00:00
Péter Szilágyi
2f75be449f bind: use lowercase method names for Java binds
There was a discussion a year ago about making methods and types
lowercase in ObjC (https://github.com/golang/go/issues/12889),
which was done (https://go-review.googlesource.com/#/c/15780/),
alas the suggested Java lower casing was never addressed.

This CL converts all generated Java methods to lower case.

Change-Id: Ia2f28519bc59362877881636109ddfc651b24960
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/28494
Reviewed-by: Elias Naur <elias.naur@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2016-09-07 12:52:06 +00:00
Elias Naur
80e11ad074 mobile/bind: move generated Java classes to package level
Before this CL, generated Java classes or interfaces were inner
classes to the top package class. That is both unnecessary and creates
ugly class names. Instead, move every generated class and interface to its
own package level class.

NOTE: This is a backwards incompatible change and requires every client
of gomobile APIs to be updated to leave out the package class in the
type names. For example, the Go type

package pkg

type S struct {
}

now generates (with the default java package name go) a Java class named
go.pkg.S. The name before this CL was go.pkg.Pkg.S.

Also, change the custom java package to specify the package prefix and
not the full package as before. This is an unfortunate change needed
to avoid name clashes between two bound packages. On the plus side,
the change brings the custom package case closer to the default behaviour,
which is a commen prefix, "go.", and a distinct java package for every
Go package bound.

Change-Id: Iadfaad56e101d1caf7e2a05006f4d384859a20fe
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/27436
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2016-08-22 07:41:35 +00:00
Elias Naur
e1840f9c11 mobile/bind: make Java proxy classes private
Proxies are an implementation detail, so make them private to hide
them from the public API.

Also, move the proxy classes out of its interface scope; classes
declared inside Java interfaces are always public and cannot be
declared otherwise. Use the lowercase "proxy" class prefix to
avoid name clashes with exported Go interfaces and structs.

Change-Id: Iae6a53ed4885b7899f2fa770b73c135f54ffb263
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/21370
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2016-04-02 13:41:50 +00:00
Elias Naur
7df33f4a5c mobile/bind: allow bound packages to refer to imported bound packages
Multiple packages are already supported, but only as if each packages
were bound in isolation. This CL lets a bound package refer to other
bound packages in its exported functions, types and fields.

In Java, the JNI class jclass and constructor jmethodID are exported
so other packages can construct proxies of other packages' interfaces.

In ObjC, the class @interface declarations are moved from the package
.m file to its .h file to allow other packages to constructs its
interface proxies.

Add a supporting test package, secondpkg, and add Java and ObjC tests
for the new cross package functionality. Also add simplepkg for
testing corner cases where the generated Go file must not include its
bound package.

While we're here, stop generating Go proxy types for struct types;
only Go interfaces can be implemented in the foreign language.

Change-Id: Icbfa739c893703867d38a9100ed0928fbd7a660d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/20575
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2016-03-12 06:23:01 +00:00
Elias Naur
ba0a725146 mobile/bind: avoid intermediate []rune copy converting Java string to Go
Converting a Go string to a string suitable use a specialized function,
UTF16Encode, that can encode the string directly to a malloc'ed buffer. That
way, only two copies are made when strings are passed from Go to Java; once
for UTF-8 to UTF-16 encoding and once for the creation of the Java String.

This CL implements the same optimization in the other direction, with a
UTF-16 to UTF-8 decoder implemented in C. Unfortunately, while calling into a
Go decoder also saves the extra copy, the Cgo overhead makes the calls much
slower for short strings.

To alleviate the risk of introducing decoding bugs, I've added the tests from
the encoding/utf16 package to SeqTest.

As a sideeffect, both Java and ObjC now always copy strings, regardless of
the argument mode. The cpy argument can therefore be removed from the string
conversion functions. Furthermore, the modeRetained and modeReturned modes
can be collapsed into just one.

While we're here, delete a leftover function from seq/strings.go that
wasn't removed when the old seq buffers went away.

Benchmarks, as compared with benchstat over 5 runs:

name                          old time/op  new time/op  delta
JavaStringShort               11.4µs ±13%  11.6µs ± 4%     ~     (p=0.859 n=10+5)
JavaStringShortDirect         19.5µs ± 9%  20.3µs ± 2%   +3.68%   (p=0.019 n=9+5)
JavaStringLong                 103µs ± 8%    24µs ± 4%  -77.13%   (p=0.001 n=9+5)
JavaStringLongDirect           113µs ± 9%    32µs ± 7%  -71.63%   (p=0.001 n=9+5)
JavaStringShortUnicode        11.1µs ±16%  10.7µs ± 5%     ~      (p=0.190 n=9+5)
JavaStringShortUnicodeDirect  19.6µs ± 7%  20.2µs ± 1%   +2.78%   (p=0.029 n=9+5)
JavaStringLongUnicode         97.1µs ± 9%  28.0µs ± 5%  -71.17%   (p=0.001 n=9+5)
JavaStringLongUnicodeDirect    105µs ±10%    34µs ± 5%  -67.23%   (p=0.002 n=8+5)
JavaStringRetShort            14.2µs ± 2%  13.9µs ± 1%   -2.15%   (p=0.006 n=8+5)
JavaStringRetShortDirect      20.8µs ± 2%  20.4µs ± 2%     ~      (p=0.065 n=8+5)
JavaStringRetLong             42.2µs ± 9%  42.4µs ± 3%     ~      (p=0.190 n=9+5)
JavaStringRetLongDirect       51.2µs ±21%  50.8µs ± 8%     ~      (p=0.518 n=9+5)
GoStringShort                 23.4µs ± 7%  22.5µs ± 3%   -3.55%   (p=0.019 n=9+5)
GoStringLong                  51.9µs ± 9%  53.1µs ± 3%     ~      (p=0.240 n=9+5)
GoStringShortUnicode          24.2µs ± 6%  22.8µs ± 1%   -5.54%   (p=0.002 n=9+5)
GoStringLongUnicode           58.6µs ± 8%  57.6µs ± 3%     ~      (p=0.518 n=9+5)
GoStringRetShort              27.6µs ± 1%  23.2µs ± 2%  -15.87%   (p=0.003 n=7+5)
GoStringRetLong                129µs ±12%    33µs ± 2%  -74.03%  (p=0.001 n=10+5)

Change-Id: Icb9481981493ffca8defed9fb80a9433d6048937
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/20250
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2016-03-05 10:02:05 +00:00
Elias Naur
6fca37c69e mobile/bind: replace seq serialization with direct calls
The seq serialization machinery is a historic artifact from when Go
mobile code had to run in a separate process. Now that Go code is running
in-process, replace the explicit serialization with direct calls and pass
arguments on the stack.

The benefits are a much smaller bind runtime, much less garbage (and, in
Java, fewer objects with finalizers), less argument copying, and faster
cross-language calls.
The cost is a more complex generator, because some of the work from the
bind runtime is moved to generated code. Generated code now handles
conversion between Go and Java/ObjC types, multiple return values and memory
management of byte slice and string arguments.

To overcome the lack of calling C code between Go packages, all bound
packages now end up in the same (fake) package, "gomobile_bind", instead of
separate packages (go_<pkgname>). To avoid name clashes, the package name is
added as a prefix to generated functions and types.

Also, don't copy byte arrays passed to Go, saving call time and
allowing read([]byte)-style interfaces to foreign callers (#12113).

Finally, add support for nil interfaces and struct pointers to objc.

This is a large CL, but most of the changes stem from changing testdata.

The full benchcmp output on the CL/20095 benchmarks on my Nexus 5 is
reproduced below. Note that the savings for the JavaSlice* benchmarks are
skewed because byte slices are no longer copied before passing them to Go.

benchmark                                 old ns/op     new ns/op     delta
BenchmarkJavaEmpty                        26.0          19.0          -26.92%
BenchmarkJavaEmptyDirect                  23.0          22.0          -4.35%
BenchmarkJavaNoargs                       7685          2339          -69.56%
BenchmarkJavaNoargsDirect                 17405         8041          -53.80%
BenchmarkJavaOnearg                       26887         2366          -91.20%
BenchmarkJavaOneargDirect                 34266         7910          -76.92%
BenchmarkJavaOneret                       38325         2245          -94.14%
BenchmarkJavaOneretDirect                 46265         7708          -83.34%
BenchmarkJavaManyargs                     41720         2535          -93.92%
BenchmarkJavaManyargsDirect               51026         8373          -83.59%
BenchmarkJavaRefjava                      38139         21260         -44.26%
BenchmarkJavaRefjavaDirect                42706         28150         -34.08%
BenchmarkJavaRefgo                        34403         6843          -80.11%
BenchmarkJavaRefgoDirect                  40193         16582         -58.74%
BenchmarkJavaStringShort                  32366         9323          -71.20%
BenchmarkJavaStringShortDirect            41973         19118         -54.45%
BenchmarkJavaStringLong                   127879        94420         -26.16%
BenchmarkJavaStringLongDirect             133776        114760        -14.21%
BenchmarkJavaStringShortUnicode           32562         9221          -71.68%
BenchmarkJavaStringShortUnicodeDirect     41464         19094         -53.95%
BenchmarkJavaStringLongUnicode            131015        89401         -31.76%
BenchmarkJavaStringLongUnicodeDirect      134130        90786         -32.31%
BenchmarkJavaSliceShort                   42462         7538          -82.25%
BenchmarkJavaSliceShortDirect             52940         17017         -67.86%
BenchmarkJavaSliceLong                    138391        8466          -93.88%
BenchmarkJavaSliceLongDirect              205804        15666         -92.39%
BenchmarkGoEmpty                          3.00          3.00          +0.00%
BenchmarkGoEmptyDirect                    3.00          3.00          +0.00%
BenchmarkGoNoarg                          40342         13716         -66.00%
BenchmarkGoNoargDirect                    46691         13569         -70.94%
BenchmarkGoOnearg                         43529         13757         -68.40%
BenchmarkGoOneargDirect                   44867         14078         -68.62%
BenchmarkGoOneret                         45456         13559         -70.17%
BenchmarkGoOneretDirect                   44694         13442         -69.92%
BenchmarkGoRefjava                        55111         28071         -49.06%
BenchmarkGoRefjavaDirect                  60883         26872         -55.86%
BenchmarkGoRefgo                          57038         29223         -48.77%
BenchmarkGoRefgoDirect                    56153         27812         -50.47%
BenchmarkGoManyargs                       67967         17398         -74.40%
BenchmarkGoManyargsDirect                 60617         16998         -71.96%
BenchmarkGoStringShort                    57538         22600         -60.72%
BenchmarkGoStringShortDirect              52627         22704         -56.86%
BenchmarkGoStringLong                     128485        52530         -59.12%
BenchmarkGoStringLongDirect               138377        52079         -62.36%
BenchmarkGoStringShortUnicode             57062         22994         -59.70%
BenchmarkGoStringShortUnicodeDirect       62563         22938         -63.34%
BenchmarkGoStringLongUnicode              139913        55553         -60.29%
BenchmarkGoStringLongUnicodeDirect        150863        57791         -61.69%
BenchmarkGoSliceShort                     59279         20215         -65.90%
BenchmarkGoSliceShortDirect               60160         21136         -64.87%
BenchmarkGoSliceLong                      411225        301870        -26.59%
BenchmarkGoSliceLongDirect                399029        298915        -25.09%

Fixes golang/go#12619
Fixes golang/go#12113
Fixes golang/go#13033

Change-Id: I2b45e9e98a1248e3c23a5137f775f7364908bec7
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/19821
Reviewed-by: Hyang-Ah Hana Kim <hyangah@gmail.com>
2016-03-03 15:03:45 +00:00