xref: /PHP-7.4/Zend/README.md (revision 256100a9)
1# Zend Engine
2
3## Zend memory manager
4
5### General
6
7The goal of the new memory manager (available since PHP 5.2) is to reduce memory
8allocation overhead and speedup memory management.
9
10### Debugging
11
12Normal:
13
14```bash
15sapi/cli/php -r 'leak();'
16```
17
18Zend MM disabled:
19
20```bash
21USE_ZEND_ALLOC=0 valgrind --leak-check=full sapi/cli/php -r 'leak();'
22```
23
24### Shared extensions
25
26Since PHP 5.3.11 it is possible to prevent shared extensions from unloading so
27that valgrind can correctly track the memory leaks in shared extensions. For
28this there is the `ZEND_DONT_UNLOAD_MODULES` environment variable. If set, then
29`DL_UNLOAD()` is skipped during the shutdown of shared extensions.
30
31## ZEND_VM
32
33`ZEND_VM` architecture allows specializing opcode handlers according to
34`op_type` fields and using different execution methods (call threading, switch
35threading and direct threading). As a result ZE2 got more than 20% speedup on
36raw PHP code execution (with specialized executor and direct threading execution
37method). As in most PHP applications raw execution speed isn't the limiting
38factor but system calls and database calls are, your mileage with this patch
39will vary.
40
41Most parts of the old zend_execute.c go into `zend_vm_def.h`. Here you can find
42opcode handlers and helpers. The typical opcode handler template looks like
43this:
44
45```c
46ZEND_VM_HANDLER(<OPCODE-NUMBER>, <OPCODE>, <OP1_TYPES>, <OP2_TYPES>)
47{
48    <HANDLER'S CODE>
49}
50```
51
52`<OPCODE-NUMBER>` is a opcode number (0, 1, ...)
53`<OPCODE>` is an opcode name (ZEN_NOP, ZEND_ADD, :)
54`<OP1_TYPES>` and `<OP2_TYPES>` are masks for allowed operand op_types.
55Specializer will generate code only for defined combination of types. You can
56use any combination of the following op_types UNUSED, CONST, VAR, TMP and CV
57also you can use ANY mask to disable specialization according operand's op_type.
58`<HANDLER'S CODE>` is a handler's code itself. For most handlers it stills the
59same as in old `zend_execute.c`, but now it uses macros to access opcode
60operands and some internal executor data.
61
62You can see the conformity of new macros to old code in the following list:
63
64```c
65EXECUTE_DATA
66    execute_data
67ZEND_VM_DISPATCH_TO_HANDLER(<OP>)
68    return <OP>_helper(ZEND_OPCODE_HANDLER_ARGS_PASSTHRU)
69ZEND_VM_DISPATCH_TO_HELPER(<NAME>)
70    return <NAME>(ZEND_OPCODE_HANDLER_ARGS_PASSTHRU)
71ZEND_VM_DISPATCH_TO_HELPER_EX(<NAME>,<PARAM>,<VAL>)
72    return <NAME>(<VAL>, ZEND_OPCODE_HANDLER_ARGS_PASSTHRU)
73ZEND_VM_CONTINUE()
74    return 0
75ZEND_VM_NEXT_OPCODE()
76    NEXT_OPCODE()
77ZEND_VM_SET_OPCODE(<TARGET>
78    SET_OPCODE(<TARGET>
79ZEND_VM_INC_OPCODE()
80    INC_OPCOD()
81ZEND_VM_RETURN_FROM_EXECUTE_LOOP()
82    RETURN_FROM_EXECUTE_LOOP()
83ZEND_VM_C_LABEL(<LABEL>):
84    <LABEL>:
85ZEND_VM_C_GOTO(<LABEL>)
86    goto <LABEL>
87OP<X>_TYPE
88    opline->op<X>.op_type
89GET_OP<X>_ZVAL_PTR(<TYPE>)
90    get_zval_ptr(&opline->op<X>, EX(Ts), &free_op<X>, <TYPE>)
91GET_OP<X>_ZVAL_PTR_PTR(<TYPE>)
92    get_zval_ptr_ptr(&opline->op<X>, EX(Ts), &free_op<X>, <TYPE>)
93GET_OP<X>_OBJ_ZVAL_PTR(<TYPE>)
94    get_obj_zval_ptr(&opline->op<X>, EX(Ts), &free_op<X>, <TYPE>)
95GET_OP<X>_OBJ_ZVAL_PTR_PTR(<TYPE>)
96    get_obj_zval_ptr_ptr(&opline->op<X>, EX(Ts), &free_op<X>, <TYPE>)
97IS_OP<X>_TMP_FREE()
98    IS_TMP_FREE(free_op<X>)
99FREE_OP<X>()
100    FREE_OP(free_op<X>)
101FREE_OP<X>_IF_VAR()
102    FREE_VAR(free_op<X>)
103FREE_OP<X>_VAR_PTR()
104    FREE_VAR_PTR(free_op<X>)
105```
106
107Executor's helpers can be defined without parameters or with one parameter. This
108is done with the following constructs:
109
110```c
111ZEND_VM_HELPER(<HELPER-NAME>, <OP1_TYPES>, <OP2_TYPES>)
112{
113    <HELPER'S CODE>
114}
115
116ZEND_VM_HELPER_EX(<HELPER-NAME>, <OP1_TYPES>, <OP2_TYPES>, <PARAM_SPEC>)
117{
118    <HELPER'S CODE>
119}
120```
121
122Executor's code is generated by PHP script zend_vm_gen.php it uses
123`zend_vm_def.h` and `zend_vm_execute.skl` as input and produces
124`zend_vm_opcodes.h` and `zend_vm_execute.h`. The first file is a list of opcode
125definitions. It is included from `zend_compile.h`. The second one is an executor
126code itself. It is included from `zend_execute.c`.
127
128`zend_vm_gen.php` can produce different kind of executors. You can select
129different opcode threading model using `--with-vm-kind=CALL|SWITCH|GOTO`. You
130can disable opcode specialization using `--without-specializer`. You can include
131or exclude old executor together with specialized one using
132`--without-old-executor`. At last you can debug executor using original
133`zend_vm_def.h` or generated file `zend_vm_execute.h`. Debugging with original
134file requires `--with-lines` option. By default ZE2 uses the following command
135to generate executor:
136
137```bash
138php zend_vm_gen.php --with-vm-kind=CALL
139```
140