Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Daniel Eischen
d8b5986dd6 Remove much of the dereferencing of the fd table entries to look
at file flags and replace it with functions that will avoid null
pointer checks.

MFC to be done by archie ;-)

PR:		42100
Reviewed by:	archie, robert
MFC after:	3 days
2002-08-29 23:06:07 +00:00
John Birrell
9db56888ee Fix a bug where a short write to a non-blocking socket would
leave the descriptor locked, causing other threads to hang
if they happened to access the socket.

MFC after:	5 days
2002-02-22 04:26:54 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
b68bb42b5c Silence a warning by initializing the return value. This wasn't
set in the case of a short write, and I think returning 0 for this
is what was intended.
2002-02-09 19:48:55 +00:00
David Greenman
2e4bf827e5 Undo the work-around for the sendfile bug where nbytes needed the hdr/trl
size added to it in order for it to work properly when nbytes != 0.

Reviewed by:	alfred
MFC after:	3 days
2002-01-22 23:35:09 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
a9ee9c593d Fix a number of subtle and evil bugs in the libc_r wrapping of sendfile(2).
o) Since we unwrap the sendfile syscall, check the return value of
   writev(2) to see if it didn't complete all the data.
   Previously if only a partial writev() succeeded, it would proceed
   to sendfile(2) even though the headers weren't completely sent.

o) Properly adjust the "bytes to send" to take into account sendfile(2)'s
   behaviour of counting the headers against the bytes to be transfered
   from the file.

o) Correct the problem where EAGAIN was being returned from _sys_sendfile(2)
   however the wrapper didn't update the 'sent bytes' parameter to take into
   account for it.  This is because sendfile can return EAGAIN even though
   it has actually transfered data.

Special thanks to Justin Erenkrantz <jerenkrantz@apache.org> for bringing
this to my attention and giving an excellent way to reproduce the problem.

PR: kern/32684
MFC After: 1 week
2001-12-12 08:02:24 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
437df4859a To be consistent, use the __weak_reference macro from <sys/cdefs.h>
instead of #pragma weak to create weak definitions.

Suggested by:	bde
2001-04-10 04:19:21 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
e5106342c6 Add weak definitions for wrapped system calls. In general:
_foo - wrapped system call
	foo - weak definition to _foo

and for cancellation points:

	_foo - wrapped system call
	__foo - enter cancellation point, call _foo(), leave
	        cancellation point
	foo - weak definition to __foo

Change use of global _thread_run to call a function to get the
currently running thread.

Make all pthread_foo functions weak definitions to _pthread_foo,
where _pthread_foo is the implementation.  This allows an application
to provide its own pthread functions.

Provide slightly different versions of pthread_mutex_lock and
pthread_mutex_init so that we can tell the difference between
a libc mutex and an application mutex.  Threads holding mutexes
internal to libc should never be allowed to exit, call signal
handlers, or cancel.

Approved by:	-arch
2001-01-24 13:03:38 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
fbeb36e4bf Implement zero system call thread switching. Performance of
thread switches should be on par with that under scheduler
activations.

  o Timing is achieved through the use of a fixed interval
    timer (ITIMER_PROF) to count scheduling ticks instead
    of retrieving the time-of-day upon every thread switch
    and calculating elapsed real time.

  o Polling for I/O readiness is performed once for each
    scheduling tick instead of every thread switch.

  o The non-signal saving/restoring versions of setjmp/longjmp
    are used to save and restore thread contexts.  This may
    allow the removal of _THREAD_SAFE macros from setjmp()
    and longjmp() - needs more investigation.

Change signal handling so that signals are handled in the
context of the thread that is receiving the signal.  When
signals are dispatched to a thread, a special signal handling
frame is created on top of the target threads stack.  The
frame contains the threads saved state information and a new
context in which the thread can run.  The applications signal
handler is invoked through a wrapper routine that knows how
to restore the threads saved state and unwind to previous
frames.

Fix interruption of threads due to signals.  Some states
were being improperly interrupted while other states were
not being interrupted.  This should fix several PRs.

Signal handlers, which are invoked as a result of a process
signal (not by pthread_kill()), are now called with the
code (or siginfo_t if SA_SIGINFO was set in sa_flags) and
sigcontext_t as received from the process signal handler.

Modify the search for a thread to which a signal is delivered.
The search algorithm is now:

  o First thread found in sigwait() with signal in wait mask.
  o First thread found sigsuspend()'d on the signal.
  o Current thread if signal is unmasked.
  o First thread found with signal unmasked.

Collapse machine dependent support into macros defined in
pthread_private.h.  These should probably eventually be moved
into separate MD files.

Change the range of settable priorities to be compliant with
POSIX (0-31).  The threads library uses higher priorities
internally for real-time threads (not yet implemented) and
threads executing signal handlers.  Real-time threads and
threads running signal handlers add 64 and 32, respectively,
to a threads base priority.

Some other small changes and cleanups.

PR:		17757 18559 21943
Reviewed by:	jasone
2000-10-13 22:12:32 +00:00
Jason Evans
8e234adf86 Change my email address in the copyright notices for the sake of consistency
(jasone@canonware.com --> jasone@freebsd.org).
2000-07-18 01:38:19 +00:00
Jason Evans
98a1f447bb Add a wrapper for the sendfile() system call.
PR:		bin/17366
2000-04-27 00:59:44 +00:00