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- Pitfall: It is forbidden to pass addresses of locals on stack to an async IN clause
- Solutions:
- Use the OUT clause
- Pass a pointer to a data-structure allocated on the heap
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// Invalid example => Non-deterministic runtime error
int a = 0;
int * ptr = &a;
finish async IN(ptr) { *ptr = 10; }
// Here the address of 'a' stored in ptr may now
// points to a deallocated portion of the stack.
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// Legal code
int * ptr = malloc(sizeof(int));
finish async IN(ptr) { *ptr = 10; }
// the address pointed to by ptr is
// allocated in the heap and remains so.
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- Pitfall: Arrays allocated on stack are currently not supported
- Solutions:
- Work with arrays allocated on the heap
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// Invalid example => Non-deterministic runtime error
int a [10];
finish async IN(a) { a[0] = 1; }
// Here the address of 'a' may now points
// to a deallocated portion of the stack.
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- Pitfall: Only a single IN, OUT or INOUT clause can be provided to an async.
- Solution:
- IN can take several arguments (similarly to a method call invocation).
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// Legal code: a single IN clause, that takes a list several arguments
async IN(a,b) OUT(x) { code }
// Invalid example => Compile time error (two IN clauses specified)
async IN(a) IN(b) OUT(x) { code }
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- Pitfall: OUT variables are guaranteed to have been written back only after the enclosing finish scope is finished
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int a = 0;
int x = 0; // 1
finish {
async IN(a) OUT(x) {
// compute something
x = someValue; // 2
}
// here 'x' has an undetermined value could
// be either the value x from 1 or x from 2
}
// here 'x' contains the value computed in the async
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