freebsd-dev/sys/kern/sysv_msg.c

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/* $Id: sysv_msg.c,v 1.9 1995/10/21 19:49:57 bde Exp $ */
/*
* Implementation of SVID messages
*
* Author: Daniel Boulet
*
* Copyright 1993 Daniel Boulet and RTMX Inc.
*
* This system call was implemented by Daniel Boulet under contract from RTMX.
*
* Redistribution and use in source forms, with and without modification,
* are permitted provided that this entire comment appears intact.
*
* Redistribution in binary form may occur without any restrictions.
* Obviously, it would be nice if you gave credit where credit is due
* but requiring it would be too onerous.
*
* This software is provided ``AS IS'' without any warranties of any kind.
*/
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
Start including <sys/sysproto.h> to get the correct args structs and prototypes for all syscalls. The args structs are still declared in comments as in VOP implementation functions. I don't like the duplication for this, but several more layers of changes are required to get it right. First we need to catch up with 4.4lite2, which uses macros to handle struct padding. Then we need to catch up with NetBSD, which passes the args correctly (as void *). Then we need to handle varargs functions and struct padding better. I think all the details can be hidden in machine-generated functions so that the args structs and verbose macros to reference them don't have to appear in the core sources. Add prototypes. Add bogus casts to hide the evil type puns exposed by the previous steps. &uap[1] was used to get at the args after the first. This worked because only the first arg in *uap was declared. This broke when the machine- genenerated args struct declared all the args (actually it declares extra args in some cases and depends on the user stack having some accessible junk after the last arg, not to mention the user args being on the stack. It isn't possible to declare a correct args struct for a varargs syscall). The msgsys(), semsys() and shmsys() syscall interfaces are BAD because they multiplex several syscalls that have different types of args. There was no reason to duplicate this sysv braindamage but now we're stuck with it. NetBSD has reimplemented the syscalls properly as separate syscalls #220-231. Declare static functions as static in both their prototype and their implementation (the latter is optional, and this misfeature was used). Remove gratuitous #includes. Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
1995-10-21 19:50:00 +00:00
#include <sys/sysproto.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/msg.h>
Start including <sys/sysproto.h> to get the correct args structs and prototypes for all syscalls. The args structs are still declared in comments as in VOP implementation functions. I don't like the duplication for this, but several more layers of changes are required to get it right. First we need to catch up with 4.4lite2, which uses macros to handle struct padding. Then we need to catch up with NetBSD, which passes the args correctly (as void *). Then we need to handle varargs functions and struct padding better. I think all the details can be hidden in machine-generated functions so that the args structs and verbose macros to reference them don't have to appear in the core sources. Add prototypes. Add bogus casts to hide the evil type puns exposed by the previous steps. &uap[1] was used to get at the args after the first. This worked because only the first arg in *uap was declared. This broke when the machine- genenerated args struct declared all the args (actually it declares extra args in some cases and depends on the user stack having some accessible junk after the last arg, not to mention the user args being on the stack. It isn't possible to declare a correct args struct for a varargs syscall). The msgsys(), semsys() and shmsys() syscall interfaces are BAD because they multiplex several syscalls that have different types of args. There was no reason to duplicate this sysv braindamage but now we're stuck with it. NetBSD has reimplemented the syscalls properly as separate syscalls #220-231. Declare static functions as static in both their prototype and their implementation (the latter is optional, and this misfeature was used). Remove gratuitous #includes. Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
1995-10-21 19:50:00 +00:00
#include <sys/sysent.h>
static void msginit __P((void *));
SYSINIT(sysv_msg, SI_SUB_SYSV_MSG, SI_ORDER_FIRST, msginit, NULL)
#define MSG_DEBUG
#undef MSG_DEBUG_OK
Start including <sys/sysproto.h> to get the correct args structs and prototypes for all syscalls. The args structs are still declared in comments as in VOP implementation functions. I don't like the duplication for this, but several more layers of changes are required to get it right. First we need to catch up with 4.4lite2, which uses macros to handle struct padding. Then we need to catch up with NetBSD, which passes the args correctly (as void *). Then we need to handle varargs functions and struct padding better. I think all the details can be hidden in machine-generated functions so that the args structs and verbose macros to reference them don't have to appear in the core sources. Add prototypes. Add bogus casts to hide the evil type puns exposed by the previous steps. &uap[1] was used to get at the args after the first. This worked because only the first arg in *uap was declared. This broke when the machine- genenerated args struct declared all the args (actually it declares extra args in some cases and depends on the user stack having some accessible junk after the last arg, not to mention the user args being on the stack. It isn't possible to declare a correct args struct for a varargs syscall). The msgsys(), semsys() and shmsys() syscall interfaces are BAD because they multiplex several syscalls that have different types of args. There was no reason to duplicate this sysv braindamage but now we're stuck with it. NetBSD has reimplemented the syscalls properly as separate syscalls #220-231. Declare static functions as static in both their prototype and their implementation (the latter is optional, and this misfeature was used). Remove gratuitous #includes. Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
1995-10-21 19:50:00 +00:00
struct msgctl_args;
static int msgctl __P((struct proc *p, struct msgctl_args *uap, int *retval));
struct msgget_args;
static int msgget __P((struct proc *p, struct msgget_args *uap, int *retval));
struct msgsnd_args;
static int msgsnd __P((struct proc *p, struct msgsnd_args *uap, int *retval));
struct msgrcv_args;
static int msgrcv __P((struct proc *p, struct msgrcv_args *uap, int *retval));
static void msg_freehdr __P((struct msg *msghdr));
/* XXX casting to (sy_call_t *) is bogus, as usual. */
static sy_call_t *msgcalls[] = {
Start including <sys/sysproto.h> to get the correct args structs and prototypes for all syscalls. The args structs are still declared in comments as in VOP implementation functions. I don't like the duplication for this, but several more layers of changes are required to get it right. First we need to catch up with 4.4lite2, which uses macros to handle struct padding. Then we need to catch up with NetBSD, which passes the args correctly (as void *). Then we need to handle varargs functions and struct padding better. I think all the details can be hidden in machine-generated functions so that the args structs and verbose macros to reference them don't have to appear in the core sources. Add prototypes. Add bogus casts to hide the evil type puns exposed by the previous steps. &uap[1] was used to get at the args after the first. This worked because only the first arg in *uap was declared. This broke when the machine- genenerated args struct declared all the args (actually it declares extra args in some cases and depends on the user stack having some accessible junk after the last arg, not to mention the user args being on the stack. It isn't possible to declare a correct args struct for a varargs syscall). The msgsys(), semsys() and shmsys() syscall interfaces are BAD because they multiplex several syscalls that have different types of args. There was no reason to duplicate this sysv braindamage but now we're stuck with it. NetBSD has reimplemented the syscalls properly as separate syscalls #220-231. Declare static functions as static in both their prototype and their implementation (the latter is optional, and this misfeature was used). Remove gratuitous #includes. Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
1995-10-21 19:50:00 +00:00
(sy_call_t *)msgctl, (sy_call_t *)msgget,
(sy_call_t *)msgsnd, (sy_call_t *)msgrcv
};
static int nfree_msgmaps; /* # of free map entries */
static short free_msgmaps; /* head of linked list of free map entries */
static struct msg *free_msghdrs; /* list of free msg headers */
char *msgpool; /* MSGMAX byte long msg buffer pool */
struct msgmap *msgmaps; /* MSGSEG msgmap structures */
struct msg *msghdrs; /* MSGTQL msg headers */
struct msqid_ds *msqids; /* MSGMNI msqid_ds struct's */
1994-09-17 13:24:29 +00:00
void
Start including <sys/sysproto.h> to get the correct args structs and prototypes for all syscalls. The args structs are still declared in comments as in VOP implementation functions. I don't like the duplication for this, but several more layers of changes are required to get it right. First we need to catch up with 4.4lite2, which uses macros to handle struct padding. Then we need to catch up with NetBSD, which passes the args correctly (as void *). Then we need to handle varargs functions and struct padding better. I think all the details can be hidden in machine-generated functions so that the args structs and verbose macros to reference them don't have to appear in the core sources. Add prototypes. Add bogus casts to hide the evil type puns exposed by the previous steps. &uap[1] was used to get at the args after the first. This worked because only the first arg in *uap was declared. This broke when the machine- genenerated args struct declared all the args (actually it declares extra args in some cases and depends on the user stack having some accessible junk after the last arg, not to mention the user args being on the stack. It isn't possible to declare a correct args struct for a varargs syscall). The msgsys(), semsys() and shmsys() syscall interfaces are BAD because they multiplex several syscalls that have different types of args. There was no reason to duplicate this sysv braindamage but now we're stuck with it. NetBSD has reimplemented the syscalls properly as separate syscalls #220-231. Declare static functions as static in both their prototype and their implementation (the latter is optional, and this misfeature was used). Remove gratuitous #includes. Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
1995-10-21 19:50:00 +00:00
msginit(dummy)
void *dummy;
{
register int i;
/*
* msginfo.msgssz should be a power of two for efficiency reasons.
* It is also pretty silly if msginfo.msgssz is less than 8
* or greater than about 256 so ...
*/
i = 8;
while (i < 1024 && i != msginfo.msgssz)
i <<= 1;
if (i != msginfo.msgssz) {
printf("msginfo.msgssz=%d (0x%x)\n", msginfo.msgssz,
msginfo.msgssz);
panic("msginfo.msgssz not a small power of 2");
}
if (msginfo.msgseg > 32767) {
printf("msginfo.msgseg=%d\n", msginfo.msgseg);
panic("msginfo.msgseg > 32767");
}
if (msgmaps == NULL)
panic("msgmaps is NULL");
for (i = 0; i < msginfo.msgseg; i++) {
if (i > 0)
msgmaps[i-1].next = i;
msgmaps[i].next = -1; /* implies entry is available */
}
free_msgmaps = 0;
nfree_msgmaps = msginfo.msgseg;
if (msghdrs == NULL)
panic("msghdrs is NULL");
for (i = 0; i < msginfo.msgtql; i++) {
msghdrs[i].msg_type = 0;
if (i > 0)
msghdrs[i-1].msg_next = &msghdrs[i];
msghdrs[i].msg_next = NULL;
}
free_msghdrs = &msghdrs[0];
if (msqids == NULL)
panic("msqids is NULL");
for (i = 0; i < msginfo.msgmni; i++) {
msqids[i].msg_qbytes = 0; /* implies entry is available */
msqids[i].msg_perm.seq = 0; /* reset to a known value */
}
}
/*
* Entry point for all MSG calls
*/
int
msgsys(p, uap, retval)
Start including <sys/sysproto.h> to get the correct args structs and prototypes for all syscalls. The args structs are still declared in comments as in VOP implementation functions. I don't like the duplication for this, but several more layers of changes are required to get it right. First we need to catch up with 4.4lite2, which uses macros to handle struct padding. Then we need to catch up with NetBSD, which passes the args correctly (as void *). Then we need to handle varargs functions and struct padding better. I think all the details can be hidden in machine-generated functions so that the args structs and verbose macros to reference them don't have to appear in the core sources. Add prototypes. Add bogus casts to hide the evil type puns exposed by the previous steps. &uap[1] was used to get at the args after the first. This worked because only the first arg in *uap was declared. This broke when the machine- genenerated args struct declared all the args (actually it declares extra args in some cases and depends on the user stack having some accessible junk after the last arg, not to mention the user args being on the stack. It isn't possible to declare a correct args struct for a varargs syscall). The msgsys(), semsys() and shmsys() syscall interfaces are BAD because they multiplex several syscalls that have different types of args. There was no reason to duplicate this sysv braindamage but now we're stuck with it. NetBSD has reimplemented the syscalls properly as separate syscalls #220-231. Declare static functions as static in both their prototype and their implementation (the latter is optional, and this misfeature was used). Remove gratuitous #includes. Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
1995-10-21 19:50:00 +00:00
struct proc *p;
/* XXX actually varargs. */
struct msgsys_args /* {
u_int which;
int a2;
int a3;
int a4;
int a5;
int a6;
} */ *uap;
int *retval;
{
if (uap->which >= sizeof(msgcalls)/sizeof(msgcalls[0]))
return (EINVAL);
Start including <sys/sysproto.h> to get the correct args structs and prototypes for all syscalls. The args structs are still declared in comments as in VOP implementation functions. I don't like the duplication for this, but several more layers of changes are required to get it right. First we need to catch up with 4.4lite2, which uses macros to handle struct padding. Then we need to catch up with NetBSD, which passes the args correctly (as void *). Then we need to handle varargs functions and struct padding better. I think all the details can be hidden in machine-generated functions so that the args structs and verbose macros to reference them don't have to appear in the core sources. Add prototypes. Add bogus casts to hide the evil type puns exposed by the previous steps. &uap[1] was used to get at the args after the first. This worked because only the first arg in *uap was declared. This broke when the machine- genenerated args struct declared all the args (actually it declares extra args in some cases and depends on the user stack having some accessible junk after the last arg, not to mention the user args being on the stack. It isn't possible to declare a correct args struct for a varargs syscall). The msgsys(), semsys() and shmsys() syscall interfaces are BAD because they multiplex several syscalls that have different types of args. There was no reason to duplicate this sysv braindamage but now we're stuck with it. NetBSD has reimplemented the syscalls properly as separate syscalls #220-231. Declare static functions as static in both their prototype and their implementation (the latter is optional, and this misfeature was used). Remove gratuitous #includes. Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
1995-10-21 19:50:00 +00:00
return ((*msgcalls[uap->which])(p, &uap->a2, retval));
}
static void
msg_freehdr(msghdr)
struct msg *msghdr;
{
while (msghdr->msg_ts > 0) {
short next;
if (msghdr->msg_spot < 0 || msghdr->msg_spot >= msginfo.msgseg)
panic("msghdr->msg_spot out of range");
next = msgmaps[msghdr->msg_spot].next;
msgmaps[msghdr->msg_spot].next = free_msgmaps;
free_msgmaps = msghdr->msg_spot;
nfree_msgmaps++;
msghdr->msg_spot = next;
if (msghdr->msg_ts >= msginfo.msgssz)
msghdr->msg_ts -= msginfo.msgssz;
else
msghdr->msg_ts = 0;
}
if (msghdr->msg_spot != -1)
panic("msghdr->msg_spot != -1");
msghdr->msg_next = free_msghdrs;
free_msghdrs = msghdr;
}
struct msgctl_args {
int msqid;
int cmd;
struct msqid_ds *user_msqptr;
};
Start including <sys/sysproto.h> to get the correct args structs and prototypes for all syscalls. The args structs are still declared in comments as in VOP implementation functions. I don't like the duplication for this, but several more layers of changes are required to get it right. First we need to catch up with 4.4lite2, which uses macros to handle struct padding. Then we need to catch up with NetBSD, which passes the args correctly (as void *). Then we need to handle varargs functions and struct padding better. I think all the details can be hidden in machine-generated functions so that the args structs and verbose macros to reference them don't have to appear in the core sources. Add prototypes. Add bogus casts to hide the evil type puns exposed by the previous steps. &uap[1] was used to get at the args after the first. This worked because only the first arg in *uap was declared. This broke when the machine- genenerated args struct declared all the args (actually it declares extra args in some cases and depends on the user stack having some accessible junk after the last arg, not to mention the user args being on the stack. It isn't possible to declare a correct args struct for a varargs syscall). The msgsys(), semsys() and shmsys() syscall interfaces are BAD because they multiplex several syscalls that have different types of args. There was no reason to duplicate this sysv braindamage but now we're stuck with it. NetBSD has reimplemented the syscalls properly as separate syscalls #220-231. Declare static functions as static in both their prototype and their implementation (the latter is optional, and this misfeature was used). Remove gratuitous #includes. Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
1995-10-21 19:50:00 +00:00
static int
msgctl(p, uap, retval)
struct proc *p;
register struct msgctl_args *uap;
int *retval;
{
int msqid = uap->msqid;
int cmd = uap->cmd;
struct msqid_ds *user_msqptr = uap->user_msqptr;
struct ucred *cred = p->p_ucred;
int rval, eval;
struct msqid_ds msqbuf;
register struct msqid_ds *msqptr;
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("call to msgctl(%d, %d, 0x%x)\n", msqid, cmd, user_msqptr);
#endif
msqid = IPCID_TO_IX(msqid);
if (msqid < 0 || msqid >= msginfo.msgmni) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msqid (%d) out of range (0<=msqid<%d)\n", msqid,
msginfo.msgmni);
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
msqptr = &msqids[msqid];
if (msqptr->msg_qbytes == 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("no such msqid\n");
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
if (msqptr->msg_perm.seq != IPCID_TO_SEQ(uap->msqid)) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("wrong sequence number\n");
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
eval = 0;
rval = 0;
switch (cmd) {
case IPC_RMID:
{
struct msg *msghdr;
if ((eval = ipcperm(cred, &msqptr->msg_perm, IPC_M)))
return(eval);
/* Free the message headers */
msghdr = msqptr->msg_first;
while (msghdr != NULL) {
struct msg *msghdr_tmp;
/* Free the segments of each message */
msqptr->msg_cbytes -= msghdr->msg_ts;
msqptr->msg_qnum--;
msghdr_tmp = msghdr;
msghdr = msghdr->msg_next;
msg_freehdr(msghdr_tmp);
}
if (msqptr->msg_cbytes != 0)
panic("msg_cbytes is screwed up");
if (msqptr->msg_qnum != 0)
panic("msg_qnum is screwed up");
msqptr->msg_qbytes = 0; /* Mark it as free */
wakeup((caddr_t)msqptr);
}
break;
case IPC_SET:
if ((eval = ipcperm(cred, &msqptr->msg_perm, IPC_M)))
return(eval);
if ((eval = copyin(user_msqptr, &msqbuf, sizeof(msqbuf))) != 0)
return(eval);
if (msqbuf.msg_qbytes > msqptr->msg_qbytes && cred->cr_uid != 0)
return(EPERM);
if (msqbuf.msg_qbytes > msginfo.msgmnb) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("can't increase msg_qbytes beyond %d (truncating)\n",
msginfo.msgmnb);
#endif
msqbuf.msg_qbytes = msginfo.msgmnb; /* silently restrict qbytes to system limit */
}
if (msqbuf.msg_qbytes == 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("can't reduce msg_qbytes to 0\n");
#endif
return(EINVAL); /* non-standard errno! */
}
msqptr->msg_perm.uid = msqbuf.msg_perm.uid; /* change the owner */
msqptr->msg_perm.gid = msqbuf.msg_perm.gid; /* change the owner */
msqptr->msg_perm.mode = (msqptr->msg_perm.mode & ~0777) |
(msqbuf.msg_perm.mode & 0777);
msqptr->msg_qbytes = msqbuf.msg_qbytes;
msqptr->msg_ctime = time.tv_sec;
break;
case IPC_STAT:
if ((eval = ipcperm(cred, &msqptr->msg_perm, IPC_R))) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("requester doesn't have read access\n");
#endif
return(eval);
}
eval = copyout((caddr_t)msqptr, user_msqptr,
sizeof(struct msqid_ds));
break;
default:
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("invalid command %d\n", cmd);
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
if (eval == 0)
*retval = rval;
return(eval);
}
struct msgget_args {
key_t key;
int msgflg;
};
Start including <sys/sysproto.h> to get the correct args structs and prototypes for all syscalls. The args structs are still declared in comments as in VOP implementation functions. I don't like the duplication for this, but several more layers of changes are required to get it right. First we need to catch up with 4.4lite2, which uses macros to handle struct padding. Then we need to catch up with NetBSD, which passes the args correctly (as void *). Then we need to handle varargs functions and struct padding better. I think all the details can be hidden in machine-generated functions so that the args structs and verbose macros to reference them don't have to appear in the core sources. Add prototypes. Add bogus casts to hide the evil type puns exposed by the previous steps. &uap[1] was used to get at the args after the first. This worked because only the first arg in *uap was declared. This broke when the machine- genenerated args struct declared all the args (actually it declares extra args in some cases and depends on the user stack having some accessible junk after the last arg, not to mention the user args being on the stack. It isn't possible to declare a correct args struct for a varargs syscall). The msgsys(), semsys() and shmsys() syscall interfaces are BAD because they multiplex several syscalls that have different types of args. There was no reason to duplicate this sysv braindamage but now we're stuck with it. NetBSD has reimplemented the syscalls properly as separate syscalls #220-231. Declare static functions as static in both their prototype and their implementation (the latter is optional, and this misfeature was used). Remove gratuitous #includes. Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
1995-10-21 19:50:00 +00:00
static int
msgget(p, uap, retval)
struct proc *p;
register struct msgget_args *uap;
int *retval;
{
int msqid, eval;
int key = uap->key;
int msgflg = uap->msgflg;
struct ucred *cred = p->p_ucred;
1994-09-17 13:24:29 +00:00
register struct msqid_ds *msqptr = NULL;
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msgget(0x%x, 0%o)\n", key, msgflg);
#endif
if (key != IPC_PRIVATE) {
for (msqid = 0; msqid < msginfo.msgmni; msqid++) {
msqptr = &msqids[msqid];
if (msqptr->msg_qbytes != 0 &&
msqptr->msg_perm.key == key)
break;
}
if (msqid < msginfo.msgmni) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("found public key\n");
#endif
if ((msgflg & IPC_CREAT) && (msgflg & IPC_EXCL)) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("not exclusive\n");
#endif
return(EEXIST);
}
if ((eval = ipcperm(cred, &msqptr->msg_perm, msgflg & 0700 ))) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("requester doesn't have 0%o access\n",
msgflg & 0700);
#endif
return(eval);
}
goto found;
}
}
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("need to allocate the msqid_ds\n");
#endif
if (key == IPC_PRIVATE || (msgflg & IPC_CREAT)) {
for (msqid = 0; msqid < msginfo.msgmni; msqid++) {
/*
* Look for an unallocated and unlocked msqid_ds.
* msqid_ds's can be locked by msgsnd or msgrcv while
* they are copying the message in/out. We can't
* re-use the entry until they release it.
*/
msqptr = &msqids[msqid];
if (msqptr->msg_qbytes == 0 &&
(msqptr->msg_perm.mode & MSG_LOCKED) == 0)
break;
}
if (msqid == msginfo.msgmni) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("no more msqid_ds's available\n");
#endif
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
return(ENOSPC);
}
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msqid %d is available\n", msqid);
#endif
msqptr->msg_perm.key = key;
msqptr->msg_perm.cuid = cred->cr_uid;
msqptr->msg_perm.uid = cred->cr_uid;
msqptr->msg_perm.cgid = cred->cr_gid;
msqptr->msg_perm.gid = cred->cr_gid;
msqptr->msg_perm.mode = (msgflg & 0777);
/* Make sure that the returned msqid is unique */
msqptr->msg_perm.seq++;
msqptr->msg_first = NULL;
msqptr->msg_last = NULL;
msqptr->msg_cbytes = 0;
msqptr->msg_qnum = 0;
msqptr->msg_qbytes = msginfo.msgmnb;
msqptr->msg_lspid = 0;
msqptr->msg_lrpid = 0;
msqptr->msg_stime = 0;
msqptr->msg_rtime = 0;
msqptr->msg_ctime = time.tv_sec;
} else {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("didn't find it and wasn't asked to create it\n");
#endif
return(ENOENT);
}
found:
/* Construct the unique msqid */
*retval = IXSEQ_TO_IPCID(msqid, msqptr->msg_perm);
return(0);
}
struct msgsnd_args {
int msqid;
void *user_msgp;
size_t msgsz;
int msgflg;
};
Start including <sys/sysproto.h> to get the correct args structs and prototypes for all syscalls. The args structs are still declared in comments as in VOP implementation functions. I don't like the duplication for this, but several more layers of changes are required to get it right. First we need to catch up with 4.4lite2, which uses macros to handle struct padding. Then we need to catch up with NetBSD, which passes the args correctly (as void *). Then we need to handle varargs functions and struct padding better. I think all the details can be hidden in machine-generated functions so that the args structs and verbose macros to reference them don't have to appear in the core sources. Add prototypes. Add bogus casts to hide the evil type puns exposed by the previous steps. &uap[1] was used to get at the args after the first. This worked because only the first arg in *uap was declared. This broke when the machine- genenerated args struct declared all the args (actually it declares extra args in some cases and depends on the user stack having some accessible junk after the last arg, not to mention the user args being on the stack. It isn't possible to declare a correct args struct for a varargs syscall). The msgsys(), semsys() and shmsys() syscall interfaces are BAD because they multiplex several syscalls that have different types of args. There was no reason to duplicate this sysv braindamage but now we're stuck with it. NetBSD has reimplemented the syscalls properly as separate syscalls #220-231. Declare static functions as static in both their prototype and their implementation (the latter is optional, and this misfeature was used). Remove gratuitous #includes. Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
1995-10-21 19:50:00 +00:00
static int
msgsnd(p, uap, retval)
struct proc *p;
register struct msgsnd_args *uap;
int *retval;
{
int msqid = uap->msqid;
void *user_msgp = uap->user_msgp;
size_t msgsz = uap->msgsz;
int msgflg = uap->msgflg;
int segs_needed, eval;
struct ucred *cred = p->p_ucred;
register struct msqid_ds *msqptr;
register struct msg *msghdr;
short next;
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("call to msgsnd(%d, 0x%x, %d, %d)\n", msqid, user_msgp, msgsz,
msgflg);
#endif
msqid = IPCID_TO_IX(msqid);
if (msqid < 0 || msqid >= msginfo.msgmni) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msqid (%d) out of range (0<=msqid<%d)\n", msqid,
msginfo.msgmni);
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
msqptr = &msqids[msqid];
if (msqptr->msg_qbytes == 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("no such message queue id\n");
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
if (msqptr->msg_perm.seq != IPCID_TO_SEQ(uap->msqid)) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("wrong sequence number\n");
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
if ((eval = ipcperm(cred, &msqptr->msg_perm, IPC_W))) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("requester doesn't have write access\n");
#endif
return(eval);
}
segs_needed = (msgsz + msginfo.msgssz - 1) / msginfo.msgssz;
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msgsz=%d, msgssz=%d, segs_needed=%d\n", msgsz, msginfo.msgssz,
segs_needed);
#endif
for (;;) {
int need_more_resources = 0;
/*
* check msgsz
* (inside this loop in case msg_qbytes changes while we sleep)
*/
1994-09-17 13:24:29 +00:00
if (msgsz > msqptr->msg_qbytes) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msgsz > msqptr->msg_qbytes\n");
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
if (msqptr->msg_perm.mode & MSG_LOCKED) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msqid is locked\n");
#endif
need_more_resources = 1;
}
if (msgsz + msqptr->msg_cbytes > msqptr->msg_qbytes) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msgsz + msg_cbytes > msg_qbytes\n");
#endif
need_more_resources = 1;
}
if (segs_needed > nfree_msgmaps) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("segs_needed > nfree_msgmaps\n");
#endif
need_more_resources = 1;
}
if (free_msghdrs == NULL) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("no more msghdrs\n");
#endif
need_more_resources = 1;
}
if (need_more_resources) {
int we_own_it;
if ((msgflg & IPC_NOWAIT) != 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("need more resources but caller doesn't want to wait\n");
#endif
return(EAGAIN);
}
if ((msqptr->msg_perm.mode & MSG_LOCKED) != 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("we don't own the msqid_ds\n");
#endif
we_own_it = 0;
} else {
/* Force later arrivals to wait for our
request */
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("we own the msqid_ds\n");
#endif
msqptr->msg_perm.mode |= MSG_LOCKED;
we_own_it = 1;
}
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("goodnight\n");
#endif
eval = tsleep((caddr_t)msqptr, (PZERO - 4) | PCATCH,
"msgwait", 0);
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("good morning, eval=%d\n", eval);
#endif
if (we_own_it)
msqptr->msg_perm.mode &= ~MSG_LOCKED;
if (eval != 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msgsnd: interrupted system call\n");
#endif
return(EINTR);
}
/*
* Make sure that the msq queue still exists
*/
if (msqptr->msg_qbytes == 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msqid deleted\n");
#endif
/* The SVID says to return EIDRM. */
#ifdef EIDRM
return(EIDRM);
#else
/* Unfortunately, BSD doesn't define that code
yet! */
return(EINVAL);
#endif
}
} else {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("got all the resources that we need\n");
#endif
break;
}
}
/*
* We have the resources that we need.
* Make sure!
*/
if (msqptr->msg_perm.mode & MSG_LOCKED)
panic("msg_perm.mode & MSG_LOCKED");
if (segs_needed > nfree_msgmaps)
panic("segs_needed > nfree_msgmaps");
if (msgsz + msqptr->msg_cbytes > msqptr->msg_qbytes)
panic("msgsz + msg_cbytes > msg_qbytes");
if (free_msghdrs == NULL)
panic("no more msghdrs");
/*
* Re-lock the msqid_ds in case we page-fault when copying in the
* message
*/
if ((msqptr->msg_perm.mode & MSG_LOCKED) != 0)
panic("msqid_ds is already locked");
msqptr->msg_perm.mode |= MSG_LOCKED;
/*
* Allocate a message header
*/
msghdr = free_msghdrs;
free_msghdrs = msghdr->msg_next;
msghdr->msg_spot = -1;
msghdr->msg_ts = msgsz;
/*
* Allocate space for the message
*/
while (segs_needed > 0) {
if (nfree_msgmaps <= 0)
panic("not enough msgmaps");
if (free_msgmaps == -1)
panic("nil free_msgmaps");
next = free_msgmaps;
if (next <= -1)
panic("next too low #1");
if (next >= msginfo.msgseg)
panic("next out of range #1");
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("allocating segment %d to message\n", next);
#endif
free_msgmaps = msgmaps[next].next;
nfree_msgmaps--;
msgmaps[next].next = msghdr->msg_spot;
msghdr->msg_spot = next;
segs_needed--;
}
/*
* Copy in the message type
*/
if ((eval = copyin(user_msgp, &msghdr->msg_type,
sizeof(msghdr->msg_type))) != 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("error %d copying the message type\n", eval);
#endif
msg_freehdr(msghdr);
msqptr->msg_perm.mode &= ~MSG_LOCKED;
wakeup((caddr_t)msqptr);
return(eval);
}
user_msgp += sizeof(msghdr->msg_type);
/*
* Validate the message type
*/
if (msghdr->msg_type < 1) {
msg_freehdr(msghdr);
msqptr->msg_perm.mode &= ~MSG_LOCKED;
wakeup((caddr_t)msqptr);
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("mtype (%d) < 1\n", msghdr->msg_type);
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
/*
* Copy in the message body
*/
next = msghdr->msg_spot;
while (msgsz > 0) {
size_t tlen;
if (msgsz > msginfo.msgssz)
tlen = msginfo.msgssz;
else
tlen = msgsz;
if (next <= -1)
panic("next too low #2");
if (next >= msginfo.msgseg)
panic("next out of range #2");
if ((eval = copyin(user_msgp, &msgpool[next * msginfo.msgssz],
tlen)) != 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("error %d copying in message segment\n", eval);
#endif
msg_freehdr(msghdr);
msqptr->msg_perm.mode &= ~MSG_LOCKED;
wakeup((caddr_t)msqptr);
return(eval);
}
msgsz -= tlen;
user_msgp += tlen;
next = msgmaps[next].next;
}
if (next != -1)
panic("didn't use all the msg segments");
/*
* We've got the message. Unlock the msqid_ds.
*/
msqptr->msg_perm.mode &= ~MSG_LOCKED;
/*
* Make sure that the msqid_ds is still allocated.
*/
if (msqptr->msg_qbytes == 0) {
msg_freehdr(msghdr);
wakeup((caddr_t)msqptr);
/* The SVID says to return EIDRM. */
#ifdef EIDRM
return(EIDRM);
#else
/* Unfortunately, BSD doesn't define that code yet! */
return(EINVAL);
#endif
}
/*
* Put the message into the queue
*/
if (msqptr->msg_first == NULL) {
msqptr->msg_first = msghdr;
msqptr->msg_last = msghdr;
} else {
msqptr->msg_last->msg_next = msghdr;
msqptr->msg_last = msghdr;
}
msqptr->msg_last->msg_next = NULL;
msqptr->msg_cbytes += msghdr->msg_ts;
msqptr->msg_qnum++;
msqptr->msg_lspid = p->p_pid;
msqptr->msg_stime = time.tv_sec;
wakeup((caddr_t)msqptr);
*retval = 0;
return(0);
}
struct msgrcv_args {
int msqid;
void *msgp;
size_t msgsz;
long msgtyp;
int msgflg;
};
Start including <sys/sysproto.h> to get the correct args structs and prototypes for all syscalls. The args structs are still declared in comments as in VOP implementation functions. I don't like the duplication for this, but several more layers of changes are required to get it right. First we need to catch up with 4.4lite2, which uses macros to handle struct padding. Then we need to catch up with NetBSD, which passes the args correctly (as void *). Then we need to handle varargs functions and struct padding better. I think all the details can be hidden in machine-generated functions so that the args structs and verbose macros to reference them don't have to appear in the core sources. Add prototypes. Add bogus casts to hide the evil type puns exposed by the previous steps. &uap[1] was used to get at the args after the first. This worked because only the first arg in *uap was declared. This broke when the machine- genenerated args struct declared all the args (actually it declares extra args in some cases and depends on the user stack having some accessible junk after the last arg, not to mention the user args being on the stack. It isn't possible to declare a correct args struct for a varargs syscall). The msgsys(), semsys() and shmsys() syscall interfaces are BAD because they multiplex several syscalls that have different types of args. There was no reason to duplicate this sysv braindamage but now we're stuck with it. NetBSD has reimplemented the syscalls properly as separate syscalls #220-231. Declare static functions as static in both their prototype and their implementation (the latter is optional, and this misfeature was used). Remove gratuitous #includes. Continue cleaning up new init stuff.
1995-10-21 19:50:00 +00:00
static int
msgrcv(p, uap, retval)
struct proc *p;
register struct msgrcv_args *uap;
int *retval;
{
int msqid = uap->msqid;
void *user_msgp = uap->msgp;
size_t msgsz = uap->msgsz;
long msgtyp = uap->msgtyp;
int msgflg = uap->msgflg;
size_t len;
struct ucred *cred = p->p_ucred;
register struct msqid_ds *msqptr;
register struct msg *msghdr;
int eval;
short next;
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("call to msgrcv(%d, 0x%x, %d, %ld, %d)\n", msqid, user_msgp,
msgsz, msgtyp, msgflg);
#endif
msqid = IPCID_TO_IX(msqid);
if (msqid < 0 || msqid >= msginfo.msgmni) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msqid (%d) out of range (0<=msqid<%d)\n", msqid,
msginfo.msgmni);
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
msqptr = &msqids[msqid];
if (msqptr->msg_qbytes == 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("no such message queue id\n");
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
if (msqptr->msg_perm.seq != IPCID_TO_SEQ(uap->msqid)) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("wrong sequence number\n");
#endif
return(EINVAL);
}
if ((eval = ipcperm(cred, &msqptr->msg_perm, IPC_R))) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("requester doesn't have read access\n");
#endif
return(eval);
}
msghdr = NULL;
while (msghdr == NULL) {
if (msgtyp == 0) {
msghdr = msqptr->msg_first;
if (msghdr != NULL) {
if (msgsz < msghdr->msg_ts &&
(msgflg & MSG_NOERROR) == 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("first message on the queue is too big (want %d, got %d)\n",
msgsz, msghdr->msg_ts);
#endif
return(E2BIG);
}
if (msqptr->msg_first == msqptr->msg_last) {
msqptr->msg_first = NULL;
msqptr->msg_last = NULL;
} else {
msqptr->msg_first = msghdr->msg_next;
if (msqptr->msg_first == NULL)
panic("msg_first/last screwed up #1");
}
}
} else {
struct msg *previous;
struct msg **prev;
previous = NULL;
prev = &(msqptr->msg_first);
while ((msghdr = *prev) != NULL) {
/*
* Is this message's type an exact match or is
* this message's type less than or equal to
* the absolute value of a negative msgtyp?
* Note that the second half of this test can
* NEVER be true if msgtyp is positive since
* msg_type is always positive!
*/
if (msgtyp == msghdr->msg_type ||
msghdr->msg_type <= -msgtyp) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("found message type %d, requested %d\n",
msghdr->msg_type, msgtyp);
#endif
if (msgsz < msghdr->msg_ts &&
(msgflg & MSG_NOERROR) == 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("requested message on the queue is too big (want %d, got %d)\n",
msgsz, msghdr->msg_ts);
#endif
return(E2BIG);
}
*prev = msghdr->msg_next;
if (msghdr == msqptr->msg_last) {
if (previous == NULL) {
if (prev !=
&msqptr->msg_first)
panic("msg_first/last screwed up #2");
msqptr->msg_first =
NULL;
msqptr->msg_last =
NULL;
} else {
if (prev ==
&msqptr->msg_first)
panic("msg_first/last screwed up #3");
msqptr->msg_last =
previous;
}
}
break;
}
previous = msghdr;
prev = &(msghdr->msg_next);
}
}
/*
* We've either extracted the msghdr for the appropriate
* message or there isn't one.
* If there is one then bail out of this loop.
*/
if (msghdr != NULL)
break;
/*
* Hmph! No message found. Does the user want to wait?
*/
if ((msgflg & IPC_NOWAIT) != 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("no appropriate message found (msgtyp=%d)\n",
msgtyp);
#endif
/* The SVID says to return ENOMSG. */
#ifdef ENOMSG
return(ENOMSG);
#else
/* Unfortunately, BSD doesn't define that code yet! */
return(EAGAIN);
#endif
}
/*
* Wait for something to happen
*/
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msgrcv: goodnight\n");
#endif
eval = tsleep((caddr_t)msqptr, (PZERO - 4) | PCATCH, "msgwait",
0);
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msgrcv: good morning (eval=%d)\n", eval);
#endif
if (eval != 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msgsnd: interrupted system call\n");
#endif
return(EINTR);
}
/*
* Make sure that the msq queue still exists
*/
if (msqptr->msg_qbytes == 0 ||
msqptr->msg_perm.seq != IPCID_TO_SEQ(uap->msqid)) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("msqid deleted\n");
#endif
/* The SVID says to return EIDRM. */
#ifdef EIDRM
return(EIDRM);
#else
/* Unfortunately, BSD doesn't define that code yet! */
return(EINVAL);
#endif
}
}
/*
* Return the message to the user.
*
* First, do the bookkeeping (before we risk being interrupted).
*/
msqptr->msg_cbytes -= msghdr->msg_ts;
msqptr->msg_qnum--;
msqptr->msg_lrpid = p->p_pid;
msqptr->msg_rtime = time.tv_sec;
/*
* Make msgsz the actual amount that we'll be returning.
* Note that this effectively truncates the message if it is too long
* (since msgsz is never increased).
*/
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("found a message, msgsz=%d, msg_ts=%d\n", msgsz,
msghdr->msg_ts);
#endif
if (msgsz > msghdr->msg_ts)
msgsz = msghdr->msg_ts;
/*
* Return the type to the user.
*/
eval = copyout((caddr_t)&(msghdr->msg_type), user_msgp,
sizeof(msghdr->msg_type));
if (eval != 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("error (%d) copying out message type\n", eval);
#endif
msg_freehdr(msghdr);
wakeup((caddr_t)msqptr);
return(eval);
}
user_msgp += sizeof(msghdr->msg_type);
/*
* Return the segments to the user
*/
next = msghdr->msg_spot;
for (len = 0; len < msgsz; len += msginfo.msgssz) {
size_t tlen;
if (msgsz > msginfo.msgssz)
tlen = msginfo.msgssz;
else
tlen = msgsz;
if (next <= -1)
panic("next too low #3");
if (next >= msginfo.msgseg)
panic("next out of range #3");
eval = copyout((caddr_t)&msgpool[next * msginfo.msgssz],
user_msgp, tlen);
if (eval != 0) {
#ifdef MSG_DEBUG_OK
printf("error (%d) copying out message segment\n",
eval);
#endif
msg_freehdr(msghdr);
wakeup((caddr_t)msqptr);
return(eval);
}
user_msgp += tlen;
next = msgmaps[next].next;
}
/*
* Done, return the actual number of bytes copied out.
*/
msg_freehdr(msghdr);
wakeup((caddr_t)msqptr);
*retval = msgsz;
return(0);
}