From: Martin Jambon <martin.jambon@ens-lyon.org>
To: OCaml Mailing List <caml-list@yquem.inria.fr>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] understanding weak
Date: Fri, 31 Oct 2008 21:44:40 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <490B6E38.5060505@ens-lyon.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <490B58BA.6090307@metaprl.org>
Aleksey Nogin wrote:
> On 31.10.2008 07:57, Martin Jambon wrote:
>
>> let x = (1, 2);;
>> let wa = Weak.create 10;;
>> Weak.set wa 0 (Some x);;
>> ...
>> print_int (fst x);;
>>
>> (fst x) would certainly cause funny effects if x were GC'ed at an
>> arbitrary time after it has been added to the weak array.
>>
>> An object can be reclaimed by the GC only if there is no reference to
>> it. This remains true. Adding an object to a weak array just doesn't
>> count as a reference.
>>
> Martin,
>
> You are answering the wrong question - you are answering "could x be
> GCed too early?" - the answer is obviously "no". However, the initial
> question was "could (Some x) be removed from wa too early by GC - before
> x is orphaned?" The answer is "we'd hope not", but the documentation is
> somewhat ambiguous.
So I checked the implementation and it turns out that x is unboxed from
(Some x) before being added to the weak array.
x is really the value that matters and of course not keeping any
reference to (Some x) has no importance.
The weak pointer is x (or a null value), stored as a cell of the weak array.
Martin
--
http://mjambon.com/
prev parent reply other threads:[~2008-10-31 20:52 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 9+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2008-10-30 18:19 Warren Harris
2008-10-31 2:14 ` [Caml-list] " Martin Jambon
2008-10-31 8:37 ` Daniel Bünzli
2008-10-31 14:57 ` Martin Jambon
2008-10-31 15:27 ` Daniel Bünzli
2008-10-31 16:52 ` Martin Jambon
2008-10-31 19:12 ` Aleksey Nogin
2008-10-31 20:10 ` Martin Jambon
2008-10-31 20:44 ` Martin Jambon [this message]
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