Comment by aapoalas
16 days ago
A short comparison to how V8 does these things:
1. All data in V8 is allocated into one of many heap parts: Usually new data goes into a nursery space, and if it does not get GC'd it moves to the old space. Relative position of data isn't really guaranteed at this point.
2. All heap references in V8 are true pointers or, if pointer compression is used, offsets from the heap base.
3. All objects in V8 include all the data needed for them to act as objects, and all of their data is stored in a single allocation (with the exception of properties, with some exceptions). The more specialised an object is, say an ArrayBuffer, Uint8Array, or a DataView, the bigger it has to be as the specialisation requires more data to be stored.
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