A new stackalloc operator for reference types with CoreCLR and Roslyn

Source code is now available on github Udpdated 9 Oct 2015: Added a section about the this and transient safe problem Udpdated 10 Oct 2015: Added a section about escape analysis

In the sequel of my previous post adding struct inheritance to C# with CoreCLR and Roslyn, I would like to share here a proposal and a prototype for a new stackalloc operator to allow the allocation of a reference type on the stack instead of the heap, all of this again integrated into CoreCLR and Roslyn!

Before going into the details about how it can be used and how it is actually implemented, I would like to explain a bit more why this is an important feature, as it may be obvious for some, It is often something that is not well enough considered by programmers using managed languages like .NET

Performance is almost all about memory

Performance of an application is related to how well algorithm and data are designed to efficiently work together or said differently How much your process/data is in harmony with your data/process?

No matter how much we optimize our code, if datas are not well organized and don’t match the “way of thinking” of the code, the program will experience stalls and cache misses all around. While this can be quite easily spotted with an advanced profiler like Intel VTune Amplifier, it is quite often not easy to fix it afterwards. It may also be quite difficult to balance the way datas are organized, because of orthogonality mismatch: While we may have a generic set of input datas, we may have to organize differently these datas for a particular process, and differently for a sub-sequent process working either on the original set, or the result of the previous set, or a mix of the two. This is often what makes the process of optimization an exponential workload.

This harmony between code and data is directly influenced by how the processor and memory are actually designed to process them efficiently:

How much the native generated code is optimized? (including things like pipelining, branch mis-prediction… etc.) How much memory access is optimized?

While the first point is obviously something that we tend to consider first, the second point has a much wider impact on everything. We often put lots of emphasis on the merit of “data-oriented” programming and this is absolutely what this is all about, even more if we are considering that code is always data for someone else (e.g machine instructions are data for processors)

So talking about memory, if we recall some famous figures that you have most likely already seen around like: “Latency Numbers Every Programmer Should Know” or from this gist:

Latency Comparison Numbers -------------------------- Register 0.1 ns Added this one L1 cache reference 0.5 ns Branch mispredict 5 ns L2 cache reference 7 ns 14x L1 cache, 70x register Mutex lock/unlock 25 ns Main memory reference 100 ns 20x L2 cache, 200x L1 cache, 1000x register

Considering that currently on a modern Intel Skylake processor:

L1 cache 64 KiB per core

L2 cache 256 KiB per core

L3 cache 8192 KiB shared

L4 cache from 64 to 128Mo eDRAM on certain SKUs

If we think more about it, these numbers give vertigo: We have computer with GBytes of main memory, storing code and data, and sometimes a large part of it at some point should go through the pipes of the L1/L2/L# caches to ultimately end-up running at full speed using 128 bytes on a chip! (16 x 64 bits CPU registers on x64), not even talking of the terabytes floating around on hard drives, ready to jump into the RAM.

Memory Size Comparison Numbers ------------------------------ - CPU registers: 128 bytes - CPU caches: 9,437,184 bytes 70,000x registers - RAM: 8,589,934,592 bytes 900x L# caches, 6,000,000x registers

If we take both memory latency and size into regard, we can see immediately that a program performance is in the end a problem of efficiently managing data locality.

So back to our subject when we talk about “Managed Language” we are effectively talking about a runtime/language that manages the memory for us, in the ultimate purpose of safety while we realize that it doesn’t necessarily imply the purpose of locality.

Note that JIT is for example not a pure criteria of efficiency of a “Managed Language”, as we have seen in recent years with the rise of native compilers for managed languages - starting with NGen, then .NETNative or the more recent and promising LLILC initiative.

Incidentally, when I went to the MVP summit last year, I remember during a Q&A session with the .NET runtime team someone asking about any major GC improvements coming to .NET. While he didn’t got any precise answers, because the GC in .NET is something already quite optimized… what I wanted to answer him - but didn’t get a chance to - is that:

We need to get back to more control on the way objects are allocated/layout/destroyed in memory in order to improve locality

lower the pressure on the GC.

Less Managed, More Control

If you are curious about how the GC in .NET is working, take a look at the fundamentals of Garbage Collection in .NET

So how can we improve our control over memory and locality? For example, .NET has structs that are already a language feature backed by a runtime that allows us to control a bit this locality… but this is far from enough and there are several others trails to explore like:

Allocation on the stack of reference types (the subject of this post) Embedded allocation of a reference type within another reference type (fat type) Single Owner/Borrowed reference Explicit management of GC regions instead of relying on a generic generational GC

In this post I will just focus on (1) but hopefully will give more details on other points in some next posts.

Allocation on the stack

The stack is, by its nature, data locality friendly: whenever we call a method and push method arguments, or work on some local variables, all these datas will most likely be stored in a memory location (not only registers, starting from the Program Counter return address to the callee). Also the memory is growing/shrinking along the life of entering/exiting methods into a continuous block of memory, so it is most of the time already in a cache line of the Lx caches. Nowadays, processors are also quite well equipped at prefetching main memory to cache lines when there is a predictable memory access pattern.

In .NET, there are many cases where this would help a lot. Typically for example, with Linq, which is an API that I usually forbid for any critical runtime, mainly because whenever you need to perform this simple match on a list:

var matchElement = list.FirstOrDefault(t => t.Name == name);

This harmless code above actually generates 2 allocations on the heap (!):

A first one because of the non-duck-typing-ability of Linq: Because all Linq extension methods are declared with this IEnumerable<T> collection , they are forcing the boxing of the struct returned by the duck-typing method GetEnumerator on the List<T> , which is used for example when you perform a foreach directly on the list.

, they are forcing the boxing of the struct returned by the duck-typing method GetEnumerator on the , which is used for example when you perform a directly on the list. A second because of the closure/lambda that is translated by the compiler to a class object capturing the parameter/variable/field name and instantiated on the heap

while the following code is more verbose, but would not generate any allocations:

foreach (var matchElement in list) { if (matchElement.Name == name) { return matchElement; } } return null;

I have seen for example a brilliant recursive descent parser that was using monads/generics in C#, unfortunately, performance wise, It was actually really bad, due to the allocations occurring at each methods just to feed the parser state.

Even if allocation on the gen 0 is quite fast (at least, way faster than a malloc ), and the allocated object is temporary (not store in a field/property), it is still slower than a local allocation on the stack (which is almost free, apart for a zeroing of the memory, that is part of the method prolog in .NET). Allocation on the heap will also force a GC.Collect() at some point, a “stop the world” that will have to scan references on the stack (also called stack-roots: if any objects allocated on the heap is referenced by a variable on the stack).

When we know for sure that an object is instantiated in a method for the sole purpose and use for the life of the current method, we should be able to instruct the compiler and runtime to generate an optimized path in this case.

Language specs

So in order to support this scenario, we need to define how this is going to work in the CLR and how this will be declared and used from the language (C#).

This is done first by introducing a new keyword transient to identify a variable that cannot be stored outside of the stack.

to identify a variable that cannot be stored outside of the stack. Then we can revisit the stackalloc operator to support the physical allocation on the stack.

The transient variable modifier

Lets start by defining the concept of a transient variable:

A transient variable can only be declared for a local method variable or parameter, and cannot be used on a ref/out parameter. A transient variable can only be assigned to another transient variable. A transient variable can receive a non transient variable as long as types matches

public void Runner(transient MyProcessor processor) { (...) var myProcessor = processor; // is equivalent to an explicit declaration of: transient MyProcessor myProcessor2 = processor; // We can access any method/property/field on this transient object processor.Run(...); // But we cannot store the transient variable into a non transient avariable MyProcessor test = processor; // won't compile // or cannot store it in a field/property myProcessorField = processor; // won't compile (...) }

When compiling the transient keyword, it would only be stored to a TransientAttribute for method parameters while all local variables would just be statically verified at compile time. The compiler should only ensure the rules defined above, nothing more.

This is introducing a new keyword, something that the language team is not going to take easily for granted!

New stackalloc operator

If you have never used the stackalloc operator, it allows to instantiate an array of blittable valuetypes on the stack:

unsafe { // Allocate an array of int int* pInts = stackalloc int[5]; // Allocate an array of Vector3 struct (which cannot contain any reference type) Vector3* stackalloc Vector3[4] }

But we notice that:

it requires an unsafe context

context it doesn’t allocate a .NET array but actually return only a pointer to the first element of the allocated array. You don’t have access to a Length property nor you could use this return value with code expecting regular managed arrays.

In I ideal world, I would replace completely this old operator by a new behaviour that would allow both allocation on class/reference type on the stack, as well as array of class/structs (and not only blittable structs, as it is today). This is what I have chosen for in this prototype as I found it much cleaner and I don’t have to introduce a new keyword.

Basically, the new stackalloc operation should allow exactly the same calling constructors conventions then the new operation.

In order to use the stackalloc operator, you can only assign it to a transient variable, like this:

// Create a new instance of MyProcessor on the stack transient MyProcessor processor = stackalloc MyProcessor(...); processor.Run(...);

In the case of the lambda above, I haven’t work out how the syntax would be used. The compiler could allow an implicit stackalloc operator when the parameter of the method receiving the argument is transient. But we still need a way to define how a lambda is declared transient, like prefixing by transient may be fine (but haven’t checked in terms of parsing coherency):

// Assume that the lambda is allocated on the stack excplitely when // it is marked as `transient` or prefixed by `stackalloc`? var matchElement = list.FirstOrDefault(transient t => t.Name == name);

Safe transient class for this access

This part is an addition to the issue mentioned by @jaredpar in the comments at the bottom of this post.

There is a case where a class is allocated on the stack and used through a transient variable. But if we call a method on this variable, within the method, we can’t ensure statically that we are in the context of a transient call and we may be able to store the this pseudo variable to a location that is not declared as transient , which would violate one of the rule defined above.

Here is a example of the problem:

public class MyProcessor { public MyProcessor Bis; public void Run() { // this can be used in the context of a transient callsite but here, we cannot // verify this. It would mean that the `store` variable could live more than // the callsite (and will just result in a program crash) Bis = this; (...) } } var processor = stackalloc MyProcessor(); processor.Run(); // Bam! The processorBis variable is no longer a transient variable var processorBis = processor.Bis;

So It seems (all this post needs lots of peer review!) that it is possible to solve this problem at the cost of making the CLR runtime and the Roslyn compilation to cooperate:

At compile time , when Roslyn compile a type, it should store the information whether a particular type is transient safe . It has basically to check if the this pointer is stored/pass anywhere to a non transient method/property/field. In the end, we could just store this information as a metadata Attributes on the class (but might be safer to store it in the PE metadatas directly). Tracking this at the compiler will not be easy, moreover if we want to track all assignments (and possibly raw casts) that are on the stack.

, when Roslyn compile a type, it should store the information whether a particular type is . It has basically to check if the this pointer is stored/pass anywhere to a non transient method/property/field. In the end, we could just store this information as a metadata Attributes on the class (but might be safer to store it in the PE metadatas directly). Tracking this at the compiler will not be easy, moreover if we want to track all assignments (and possibly raw casts) that are on the stack. At runtime time, when a type is loaded, we verify at classloader/import time that a type (and all its ancestors types) are actually transient safe (result stored in the methodtable/type). Then, at JIT time of a property/method, at every stackalloc callsite (basically, whenever there is a local variable valuetype referencing a class), we verify that the class that we want to allocated on the stack is transient safe

Note that this code has not been tested/implemented in the current prototype!

Hope that there is not too much other devils in the details! (Hey @jaredpar! ;)

About Escape Analysis

I have seen many comments suggesting that escape analysis would be ideal for this, to make it more transparent and less cumbersome. While escape analysis can be of course handy (should I say “candy”?), there are many reasons why I prefer to have an explicit declaration (a must) rather than an implicit one (a nice to have):

that would again make the developer not responsible of taking care of its data and the way they are processed. And one day, someone start to store a reference what should be a transient parameter in a field object, and your whole application is slowing down on a critical process.

escape analysis in many case is impossible to perform. Allocate a class and pass it to a virtual method (for which you know only the type at the callsite, unless allocated in the same method), and you won’t have any way to determine whether stackalloc is safe or not.

you may want to enforce in the contract of your API certifying that it doesn’t store any references passed. This post is not only about stackalloc but also about the concept of transient (for example, you don’t want that a process method keeps the context passed by argument)

Implementation in Roslyn

You will notice from the list of commits for this feature as implemented in the prototype that they are relatively small.

The reason is that I haven’t taken the time to implement the full syntax verification of the rules above (e.g a transient variable can only be assigned to another transient variable), but just wanted to support at least the transient keyword and generate proper IL bytecode for the stackalloc operator. It means that you need to be careful to respect the rules of a transient variable when trying this with this custom Roslyn version!

Also, in terms of IL code gen, I wanted the changes to be very limited and avoid completely any new IL opcodes. While I’m beginning this post with the changes done in Roslyn, in practice, I had to make changes first to the CLR, and once I was sure It could make it into the runtime, I implemented the convenient bits into Roslyn.

I will try to explain the changes with a simple program. Let’s compile this little code using the regular new operator:

public class Program { public void Run() {} public static void Main(string[] args) { var program = new Program(); program.Run(); } }

The main method will be translated to the following IL bytecode:

.method public hidebysig static void Main(string[] args) cil managed { .entrypoint // Code size 15 (0xf) .maxstack 1 .locals init ([0] class Program program) IL_0000: nop IL_0001: newobj instance void Program::.ctor() IL_0006: stloc.0 IL_0007: ldloc.0 IL_0008: callvirt instance void Program::Run() IL_000d: nop IL_000e: ret } // end of method Program::Main

If you are not familiar with IL, it is a set of very basic instructions using a stack-based IL (load variable, store variable, take address, push arguments, call virtual method… etc.). In the generated code above, you will see that the local variable program is declared as a class (on the slot 0).

IL code manipulation is something that I have abused a lot at the very beginning of SharpDX to allow, for example, to take the pointer to a generic parameter or transform a method call to a calli instruction in order to support COM mehod call. As someone asked on Twitter, I should one day write a little bit about it…

So, let’s go back to our little program. Now, if we replace the new operator by our new (doh!) stackalloc operator:

var program = stackalloc Program(); // NOTICE: stackalloc instead of new! program.Run();

It will generated the following IL bytecode:

.method public hidebysig static void Main(string[] args) cil managed { .entrypoint // Code size 26 (0x1a) .maxstack 2 .locals init ([0] class Program program, [1] valuetype Program V_1) IL_0000: nop IL_0001: ldloca.s V_1 IL_0003: initobj Program IL_0009: ldloca.s V_1 IL_000b: dup IL_000c: call instance void Program::.ctor() IL_0011: stloc.0 IL_0012: ldloc.0 IL_0013: callvirt instance void Program::Run() IL_0018: nop IL_0019: ret } // end of method Program::Main

First, the changes to the declaration of local variables:

.locals init ([0] class Program program, [1] valuetype Program V_1)

We are introducing a shadow variable [1] declared as a valuetype but using a token that is actually a class (!). If you try to run this assembly with a regular CLR, It will generate an invalid error with “unexpected valuetype”, but in CoreCLR, we will ensure that the IL code reader/importer will allow this syntax. The rule here is that there is one shadow variable allocated per stackalloc call site.

Then we are going to initialize the class on the stack, exactly the same way a struct would be initialized. Note that unlike the newobj IL opcode instruction, we are not passing constructor parameters. This bytecode ensure that the class allocated on the stack is actually zeroed at the callsite (suppose the stackalloc is used within a loop, we want a fresh zeroed object on each loop items)

IL_0001: ldloca.s V_1 IL_0003: initobj Program

After this, we can actually call the constructor for the class, and storing the pointer/reference to the class on the stack to the variable program (our now transient variable):

IL_0009: ldloca.s V_1 IL_000b: dup IL_000c: call instance void Program::.ctor() IL_0011: stloc.0 // store into program variable

Finally, we can just call a regular method exactly like for an object allocated on the heap:

IL_0012: ldloc.0 IL_0013: callvirt instance void Program::Run()

Note that my requirements of not introducing a new IL opcode was mainly motivated by the fact that I was not confident about the implications in the CLR, so I wanted to rely on stuff already working. I had only to patch existing code paths in CoreCLR in order to allow class to pass on the stack. It may be relevant that a new opcode could be used with a more compact syntax.

While it is a basic support of the stackalloc operator (notice that I haven’t implemented anything for array allocations for example), that’s all we need to do to generate IL bytecode for at least our simple use case.

Again, this whole series of prototypes should not be considered as fully tested or safe. They are just a proof of concept!

Implementation in CoreCLR

As I expected from my previous post, and unlike struct inheritance that was requiring just 2 lines of code changes, bringing stackalloc for class to the CoreCLR required significantly more trial and crash steps in order to progressively reach a stable runtime.

As I’m not familiar with the CoreCLR codebase, It took me a bit of time to figure out where I should actually make these changes. Someone from the CoreCLR team would have most likely done this a bit more cleanly and less hacky (and even differently)

In summary, I made the choice to initialize the class on the stack with the same layout than as it would have had on the heap: It means that the class is prefixed by the 8 bytes struct ObjHeader which is holding some information required by the GC (more about it later why it has been implemented like this).

In practice, it means that whenever the GC finds a variable on the stack (transient or not), it will first check if it is actually an object allocated on the stack. If yes, the GC will not scan fields for the class from this reference, because instead, we rely on the fact that the class is flatten on the stack (as a struct would be flatten), and ultimately, the GC will scan the fields of the class allocated on the stack (so we rely on the already existing infrastructure that allows the GC to scan fields of a struct on allocated on a stack)

I’m gonna try to give a bit more details about the commits to support this stackalloc operator, what are the main changes to CoreCLR and what kind of problems I have encountered. In all the code changes, I have tried to prefix them by a ClassAsValue message (here is just an highlight of the commits, there are a bit more in the branch):

First step was to get rid of the exception that is verifying that a local variable cannot be declared with a class token. This is not super clean to allow token class for valuetype in all circumstances (it may be an invalid code not related to stackalloc), but in my case I didn’t bother about this.

This commit is modifying the ICorStaticInfo to introduce two methods that will be used later by the code.

// Gets the full size of a class (not valuetype), including the methodtable pointer virtual unsigned getBaseSize( CORINFO_CLASS_HANDLE cls ) = 0; // Gets the method table for a class (Not valid for valueType) virtual void* getMethodTable(CORINFO_CLASS_HANDLE cls) = 0;

Basically, we need to be able to:

Retrieve the full size of a class via the method getBaseSize . There is another method getClassSize in this interface, but this method returns in fact the size of a pointer for a reference type. Allow to retrieve the current method table for a particular class. This will be required to instantiate and initialize the class on the stack.

3) Some changes to the file /src/jit/lclvars.cpp

This is where we are starting to store the information about local variables declared as class on the stack:

This is a first commit that is generating some x64 code in order to initialize the method table of the object.

It is a first step to generate a compliant class layout on the stack. A class is only differentiated by the presence of this methodtable pointer (or commonly called vtable ) at the offset 0 . This is through this pointer that we can find type information, perform cast, find and call virtual methods…etc. This initialization of the methodtable of a class on the stack is only done once per stackalloc call site (or shadow variable) at the prolog of the method (just after the JIT has generated zeroing code)

Notice that in the generated code here, I still don’t output the small ObjHeader that is required for a GC object. It required a bit more changes…

5) Changes made to the ObjHeader

The commit 265453c4fd is making the following changes:

Add objheader_common.h that contains SIZEOF_OBJHEADER and can be used from everywhere (as it was previously not accessible from JIT for example).

Always use a 8 bytes ObjHeader and add extra bits for Class Allocated on stack.

Update codegen to identity allocation on the stack.

The idea here is that I wanted to store the information of whether this instance is allocated on the stack directly on the object. So I’m using the ObjHeader and using an unused part of it (on x64 platform, while on x86, it is only 4 bytes so we would have to expand it). If the lower bit is set to 1, this current object is actually on the heap.

This information is later used in GCHeap::Promote and GCHeap::Relocate, in order to skip reference that are allocated on the stack when performing a Garbabe Collect cycle

I’m also making sure that when the class is allocated on the stack, we are allocating the space for the ObjHeader , and setting the flag allocate on stack in this ObjHeader , again all of this is done just once per stackalloc call site in the prolog of the method.

Then there are a couple of commits to make object.Validate() working. Lots of these checks are done in debug mode, but we still don’t want to crash here. I have made the choice to almost bypass everything, but their could be relevant checks to keep, or even additional checks for an object allocated on the stack…

Note about the ObjHeader : If I had to rebuild an ObjHeader and had an opportunity to create a new language, I would completely remove support for lock(object) in the language, as these things can be done with dedicated mutex objects. The fact is that the ObjHeader can generates a shadow object called the syncblk that will contains the hashcode (if it was requested by a method), the monitor on the object, some stuff related to COM…etc. While I don’t mind to have metadatas associated to object instance, having a cluttered ObjHeader that is basically encoding a pointer to this syncblk is restricting some interesting optims for the GC (for example, when I implemented a basic Immix GC, I used the ObjHeader to store the size of the object in order to quickly scan them without having to go through the MethodTable for example)

This commit is mostly dealing with generating proper code for the initobj keyword. The changes mostly consist in shifting the current address loaded from the shadow variable to feed initobj (recall above the ldloca.s ), as it is pointing to the start of the object (including the methodtable pointer), but we don’t want the initobj generated code to clear this methodtable that is setup just once at the prolog of the method. So in the case of a initobj performed on a class on stack, we are shifting by a pointer size the start where things are zeroed (and we decrease of course the size of the data to zeroed)

This was my last commit in order to get something working correctly with the GC. The JIT_CheckedWriteBarrier is basically a small shell around the regular WriteBarrier (a write barrier is used in the context of generational GC: whenever an object is stored in the field of another object, the write barrier allow to store somewhere in a cardtable the reference to the object that is receiving the reference source object in order to quickly identify which object should be scan - the object receiver - and which source object is most likely to be promoted - in case of the gen0 allocation)

The code of the JIT_CheckedWriteBarrier is:

LEAF_ENTRY JIT_CheckedWriteBarrier, _TEXT ; When WRITE_BARRIER_CHECK is defined _NotInHeap will write the reference ; but if it isn't then it will just return. ; ; See if this is in GCHeap cmp rcx, [g_lowest_address] jb NotInHeap cmp rcx, [g_highest_address] jnb NotInHeap jmp JIT_WriteBarrier NotInHeap: ; See comment above about possible AV mov [rcx], rdx ret

It is basically ensuring that we are not going to use a write barrier if our pointer is not on the HEAP, and this is exactly what we want for our class instantiated on the stack. If we start to store a heap object to a field of an object allocated on the stack, we want to early exit (without it, it would try to flag a cardtable bit into an invalid memory location).

I haven’t measured the performance impact of getting through this small shell on all field assignments ( JIT_CheckedWriteBarrier is actually used for ref pointers, as we don’t know if a ref is on the stack - ref to a field struct - or the heap, so it is less used than JIT_WriteBarrier ) so it may be an issue, but considering all the code involved afterwards for the barrier itself, it is still small, so that might not be a big issue after all.

Woot, And that’s all! If you compile the CoreCLR on this branch, you will get a basic support for stackalloc for class!

Results and Sample

This is the sample program I used to test the implementation of the stackalloc for class:

using System; public abstract class HelloClassOnStackBase { private int valueBase; private Random random; private object unusedButCheckForGC1; private object unusedButCheckForGC2; protected HelloClassOnStackBase(Random random) { this.random = random; valueBase = (byte)random.Next(); } public virtual int Compute(int x) { return valueBase + x; } } public class HelloClassOnStack : HelloClassOnStackBase { private int addValue; public HelloClassOnStack(Random random) : base(random) { addValue = (byte)random.Next(); } public override int Compute(int x) { var result = base.Compute(x); result += 1; return result; } } public class Program2 { public unsafe static void Main(string[] args) { // Don't use Stopwatch as it is not in mscorlib.dll var startTime = DateTime.Now; Console.WriteLine("Mode: {0}{1}", args.Length == 0 ? "StackAlloc" : "HeapAlloc", args.Length == 0 ? " . To switch to HeapAlloc, simply pass an argument to this exe" : string.Empty); Console.WriteLine("[before] GC gen0 collect: {0}", GC.CollectionCount(0)); Console.WriteLine("[before] GC gen1 collect: {0}", GC.CollectionCount(1)); Console.WriteLine("[before] GC gen2 collect: {0}", GC.CollectionCount(2)); var random = new Random(0); int result = 0; const int Count = 10000000; if (args.Length > 0) { for (int i = 0; i < Count; i++) { // Alloc class on heap var hello = new HelloClassOnStack(random); result += hello.Compute(i); } } else { for (int i = 0; i < Count; i++) { // Alloc class on stack var hello = stackalloc HelloClassOnStack(random); result += hello.Compute(i); } } Console.WriteLine("Result: {0}", result); Console.WriteLine("[after] GC gen0 collect: {0}", GC.CollectionCount(0)); Console.WriteLine("[after] GC gen1 collect: {0}", GC.CollectionCount(1)); Console.WriteLine("[after] GC gen2 collect: {0}", GC.CollectionCount(2)); Console.WriteLine("Elapsed: {0}ms", (DateTime.Now - startTime).TotalMilliseconds); } }

If you run this sample without any args, it will allocate on the stack, otherwise if you pass an argument, it will allocate on the heap.

So? What are the results of these changes? If you run the program above:

The stack version will run in 400 ms with 0 GC collect

The heap version will run in 5000 ms with 100+ GC collect

I don’t claim that using stackalloc is always going to give you 10x times performance, but it is just to demonstrate that allocation on the heap hurts more than you would think and your program may benefit allocating class on the stacks in such scenarios.

Next?

This prototype demonstrates that stackalloc for class is something that could become real for .NET CoreCLR and could bring lots of opportunities for optimizations!

As it is only a prototype, I don’t expect it to be back ported to CoreCLR anytime soon as-is, though I will push this to a PR, just to get some feedback about the things that might be problematic in this proposal.

I’m also very happy to be able to play with the .NET CLR, such a pleasure to be able to experiement things like this! Even if you don’t agree with the changes, take this series of CoreCLR/Roslyn posts as educational - don’t be shy getting your hands dirty with CoreCLR!, at least, it is the case for me.

Not sure I will prototype all the other features soon (like the embed in class), but at least that you can find interesting bits here and there!

Anyway, there is a new toy in town, stackalloc for class, happy coding!