BlanchetOOPSLA99

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Bruno Blanchet. Escape Analysis for Object Oriented Languages. Application to Java(TM). In Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages and Applications (OOPSLA'99), pages 20-34, Denver, Colorado, November 1999.

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Copyright © 1999 by the Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. Permission to make digital/hard copies of part or all of this material for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that the copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, to republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from Publications Dept, ACM Inc., fax +1(212)869-0481, or permissions@acm.org.

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ACM DL Author-ize serviceEscape analysis for object-oriented languages: application to Java
Bruno Blanchet
OOPSLA '99 Proceedings of the 14th ACM SIGPLAN conference on Object-oriented programming, systems, languages, and applications, 1999

Abstract

Escape analysis is a static analysis that determines whether the lifetime of data exceeds its static scope.

The main originality of our escape analysis is that it determines precisely the effect of assignments, which is necessary to apply it to object oriented languages with promising results, whereas previous work applied it to functional languages and were very imprecise on assignments. Our implementation analyses the full Java Language.

We have applied our analysis to stack allocation and synchronization elimination. We manage to stack allocate 13% to 95% of data, eliminate more than 20% of synchronizations on most programs (94% and 99% on two examples) and get up to 44% speedup (21% on average). Our detailed experimental study on large programs shows that the improvement comes more from the decrease of the garbage collection and allocation times than from improvements on data locality, contrary to what happened for ML.

Bibtex


@INPROCEEDINGS{BlanchetOOPSLA99,
  AUTHOR = {Bruno Blanchet},
  TITLE = {Escape {A}nalysis for {O}bject {O}riented {L}anguages. {A}pplication to {J}ava({TM})},
  BOOKTITLE = {Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages and Applications (OOPSLA'99)},
  PAGES = {20--34},
  YEAR = 1999,
  ADDRESS = {Denver, Colorado},
  MONTH = NOV
}


E-mail/Courrier électronique : Bruno.Blanchet@trap-inria.fr (remove trap-)