Commit Graph

201 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
4e8074eba2 Whitespace cleanup. 2003-03-19 00:33:38 +00:00
John Baldwin
a5881ea55a - Cache a reference to the credential of the thread that starts a ktrace in
struct proc as p_tracecred alongside the current cache of the vnode in
  p_tracep.  This credential is then used for all later ktrace operations on
  this file rather than using the credential of the current thread at the
  time of each ktrace event.
- Now that we have multiple ktrace-related items in struct proc that are
  pointers, rename p_tracep to p_tracevp to make it less ambiguous.

Requested by:	rwatson (1)
2003-03-13 18:24:22 +00:00
Tim J. Robbins
6ec62361c8 Tidy up previous change: move comment about obtaining an exclusive
reference where it belongs, and remove a blank line to make it more
obvious what the comment applies to.
2003-03-13 00:57:47 +00:00
Tim J. Robbins
3890793e9c In wait1(), remove the zombie process from zombproc before removing
it from its pgrp to avoid leaving zombies around with p_pgrp == NULL.
This bug was apparent as a NULL-dereference in the pid selection code
in fork1().
2003-03-12 11:10:04 +00:00
David Xu
e574e444e0 Fix threaded process job control bug. SMP tested.
Reviewed by: julian
2003-03-11 00:07:53 +00:00
Julian Elischer
ac2e415327 Change the process flags P_KSES to be P_THREADED.
This is just a cosmetic change but I've been meaning to do it for about a year.
2003-02-27 02:05:19 +00:00
Warner Losh
a163d034fa Back out M_* changes, per decision of the TRB.
Approved by: trb
2003-02-19 05:47:46 +00:00
Tim J. Robbins
96d7f8ef46 Use the proc lock to protect p_realtimer instead of Giant, and obtain
sched_lock around accesses to p_stats->p_timer[] to avoid a potential
race with hardclock. getitimer(), setitimer() and the realitexpire()
callout are now Giant-free.
2003-02-17 10:03:02 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
5215b1872f - Split the struct kse into struct upcall and struct kse. struct kse will
soon be visible only to schedulers.  This greatly simplifies much the
   KSE code.

Submitted by:	davidxu
2003-02-17 05:14:26 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
edf6699ae6 Fix LOR with PROC/filedesc. Introduce fdesc_mtx that will be used as a
barrier between free'ing filedesc structures.  Basically if you want to
access another process's filedesc, you want to hold this mutex over the
entire operation.
2003-02-15 05:52:56 +00:00
Julian Elischer
a282253a29 A little infrastructure, preceding some upcoming changes
to the profiling and statistics code.

Submitted by:	DavidXu@
Reviewed by:	peter@
2003-02-08 02:58:16 +00:00
Julian Elischer
6f8132a867 Reversion of commit by Davidxu plus fixes since applied.
I'm not convinced there is anything major wrong with the patch but
them's the rules..

I am using my "David's mentor" hat to revert this as he's
offline for a while.
2003-02-01 12:17:09 +00:00
David Xu
0dbb100b9b Move UPCALL related data structure out of kse, introduce a new
data structure called kse_upcall to manage UPCALL. All KSE binding
and loaning code are gone.

A thread owns an upcall can collect all completed syscall contexts in
its ksegrp, turn itself into UPCALL mode, and takes those contexts back
to userland. Any thread without upcall structure has to export their
contexts and exit at user boundary.

Any thread running in user mode owns an upcall structure, when it enters
kernel, if the kse mailbox's current thread pointer is not NULL, then
when the thread is blocked in kernel, a new UPCALL thread is created and
the upcall structure is transfered to the new UPCALL thread. if the kse
mailbox's current thread pointer is NULL, then when a thread is blocked
in kernel, no UPCALL thread will be created.

Each upcall always has an owner thread. Userland can remove an upcall by
calling kse_exit, when all upcalls in ksegrp are removed, the group is
atomatically shutdown. An upcall owner thread also exits when process is
in exiting state. when an owner thread exits, the upcall it owns is also
removed.

KSE is a pure scheduler entity. it represents a virtual cpu. when a thread
is running, it always has a KSE associated with it. scheduler is free to
assign a KSE to thread according thread priority, if thread priority is changed,
KSE can be moved from one thread to another.

When a ksegrp is created, there is always N KSEs created in the group. the
N is the number of physical cpu in the current system. This makes it is
possible that even an userland UTS is single CPU safe, threads in kernel still
can execute on different cpu in parallel. Userland calls kse_create to add more
upcall structures into ksegrp to increase concurrent in userland itself, kernel
is not restricted by number of upcalls userland provides.

The code hasn't been tested under SMP by author due to lack of hardware.

Reviewed by: julian
2003-01-26 11:41:35 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
44956c9863 Remove M_TRYWAIT/M_WAITOK/M_WAIT. Callers should use 0.
Merge M_NOWAIT/M_DONTWAIT into a single flag M_NOWAIT.
2003-01-21 08:56:16 +00:00
Matthew Dillon
3db161e079 It is possible for an active aio to prevent shared memory from being
dereferenced when a process exits due to the vmspace ref-count being
bumped.  Change shmexit() and shmexit_myhook() to take a vmspace instead
of a process and call it in vmspace_dofree().  This way if it is missed
in exit1()'s early-resource-free it will still be caught when the zombie is
reaped.

Also fix a potential race in shmexit_myhook() by NULLing out
vmspace->vm_shm prior to calling shm_delete_mapping() and free().

MFC after:	7 days
2003-01-13 23:04:32 +00:00
Matthew Dillon
389d2b6e21 Fix a refcount race with the vmspace structure. In order to prevent
resource starvation we clean-up as much of the vmspace structure as we
can when the last process using it exits.  The rest of the structure
is cleaned up when it is reaped.  But since exit1() decrements the ref
count it is possible for a double-free to occur if someone else, such as
the process swapout code, references and then dereferences the structure.
Additionally, the final cleanup of the structure should not occur until
the last process referencing it is reaped.

This commit solves the problem by introducing a secondary reference count,
calling 'vm_exitingcnt'.  The normal reference count is decremented on exit
and vm_exitingcnt is incremented.  vm_exitingcnt is decremented when the
process is reaped.  When both vm_exitingcnt and vm_refcnt are 0, the
structure is freed for real.

MFC after:	3 weeks
2002-12-15 18:50:04 +00:00
Julian Elischer
696058c3c5 Unbreak the KSE code. Keep track of zobie threads using the Per-CPU storage
during the context switch. Rearrange thread cleanups
to avoid problems with Giant. Clean threads when freed or
when recycled.

Approved by:	re (jhb)
2002-12-10 02:33:45 +00:00
Alan Cox
2d21129db2 Acquire and release the page queues lock around pmap_remove_pages() because
it updates several of vm_page's fields.
2002-11-25 04:37:44 +00:00
Robert Watson
2555374c4f Introduce p_label, extensible security label storage for the MAC framework
in struct proc.  While the process label is actually stored in the
struct ucred pointed to by p_ucred, there is a need for transient
storage that may be used when asynchronous (deferred) updates need to
be performed on the "real" label for locking reasons.  Unlike other
label storage, this label has no locking semantics, relying on policies
to provide their own protection for the label contents, meaning that
a policy leaf mutex may be used, avoiding lock order issues.  This
permits policies that act based on historical process behavior (such
as audit policies, the MAC Framework port of LOMAC, etc) can update
process properties even when many existing locks are held without
violating the lock order.  No currently committed policies implement use
of this label storage.

Approved by:	re
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2002-11-20 15:41:25 +00:00
John Baldwin
c65440644e - Add a new global mutex 'ppeers_lock' to protect the p_peers list of
processes forked with RFTHREAD.
- Use a goto to a label for common code when exiting from fork1() in case
  of an error.
- Move the RFTHREAD linkage setup code later in fork since the ppeers_lock
  cannot be locked while holding a proc lock.  Handle the race of a task
  leader exiting and killing its peers while a peer is forking a new child.
  In that case, go ahead and let the peer process proceed normally as the
  parent is about to kill it.  However, the task leader may have already
  gone to sleep to wait for the peers to die, so the new child process may
  not receive a SIGKILL from the task leader.  Rather than try to destruct
  the new child process, just go ahead and send it a SIGKILL directly and
  add it to the p_peers list.  This ensures that the task leader will wait
  until both the peer process doing the fork() and the new child process
  have received their KILL signals and exited.

Discussed with:	truckman (earlier versions)
2002-10-15 00:14:32 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
b43179fbe8 - Create a new scheduler api that is defined in sys/sched.h
- Begin moving scheduler specific functionality into sched_4bsd.c
 - Replace direct manipulation of scheduler data with hooks provided by the
   new api.
 - Remove KSE specific state modifications and single runq assumptions from
   kern_switch.c

Reviewed by:	-arch
2002-10-12 05:32:24 +00:00
Julian Elischer
48bfcddd94 Round out the facilty for a 'bound' thread to loan out its KSE
in specific situations. The owner thread must be blocked, and the
borrower can not proceed back to user space with the borrowed KSE.
The borrower will return the KSE on the next context switch where
teh owner wants it back. This removes a lot of possible
race conditions and deadlocks. It is consceivable that the
borrower should inherit the priority of the owner too.
that's another discussion and would be simple to do.

Also, as part of this, the "preallocatd spare thread" is attached to the
thread doing a syscall rather than the KSE. This removes the need to lock
the scheduler when we want to access it, as it's now "at hand".

DDB now shows a lot mor info for threaded proceses though it may need
some optimisation to squeeze it all back into 80 chars again.
(possible JKH project)

Upcalls are now "bound" threads, but "KSE Lending" now means that
other completing syscalls can be completed using that KSE before the upcall
finally makes it back to the UTS. (getting threads OUT OF THE KERNEL is
one of the highest priorities in the KSE system.) The upcall when it happens
will present all the completed syscalls to the KSE for selection.
2002-10-09 02:33:36 +00:00
Julian Elischer
4162f2fe92 Whitespace fix only 2002-10-02 23:12:01 +00:00
Juli Mallett
1d9c56964d Back our kernel support for reliable signal queues.
Requested by:	rwatson, phk, and many others
2002-10-01 17:15:53 +00:00
Juli Mallett
1226f694e6 First half of implementation of ksiginfo, signal queues, and such. This
gets signals operating based on a TailQ, and is good enough to run X11,
GNOME, and do job control.  There are some intricate parts which could be
more refined to match the sigset_t versions, but those require further
evaluation of directions in which our signal system can expand and contract
to fit our needs.

After this has been in the tree for a while, I will make in kernel API
changes, most notably to trapsignal(9) and sendsig(9), to use ksiginfo
more robustly, such that we can actually pass information with our
(queued) signals to the userland.  That will also result in using a
struct ksiginfo pointer, rather than a signal number, in a lot of
kern_sig.c, to refer to an individual pending signal queue member, but
right now there is no defined behaviour for such.

CODAFS is unfinished in this regard because the logic is unclear in
some places.

Sponsored by:	New Gold Technology
Reviewed by:	bde, tjr, jake [an older version, logic similar]
2002-09-30 20:20:22 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
05ba50f522 Use the fields in the sysentvec and in the vm map header in place of the
constants VM_MIN_ADDRESS, VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS, USRSTACK and PS_STRINGS.
This is mainly so that they can be variable even for the native abi, based
on different machine types.  Get stack protections from the sysentvec too.
This makes it trivial to map the stack non-executable for certain abis, on
machines that support it.
2002-09-21 22:07:17 +00:00
Jonathan Mini
c76e33b681 Add kernel support needed for the KSE-aware libpthread:
- Use ucontext_t's to store KSE thread state.
	- Synthesize state for the UTS upon each upcall, rather than
	  saving and copying a trapframe.
	- Deliver signals to KSE-aware processes via upcall.
	- Rename kse mailbox structure fields to be more BSD-like.
	- Store the UTS's stack in struct proc in a stack_t.

Reviewed by:	bde, deischen, julian
Approved by:	-arch
2002-09-16 19:26:48 +00:00
Julian Elischer
4f0db5e08c Allocate KSEs and KSEGRPs separatly and remove them from the proc structure.
next step is to allow > 1 to be allocated per process. This would give
multi-processor threads. (when the rest of the infrastructure is
in place)

While doing this I noticed libkvm and sys/kern/kern_proc.c:fill_kinfo_proc
are diverging more than they should.. corrective action needed soon.
2002-09-15 23:52:25 +00:00
Julian Elischer
1faf202ea9 Use UMA as a complex object allocator.
The process allocator now caches and hands out complete process structures
*including substructures* .

i.e. it get's the process structure with the first thread (and soon KSE)
already allocated and attached, all in one hit.

For the average non threaded program (non KSE that is) the allocated thread and its stack remain attached to the process, even when the process is
unused and in the process cache. This saves having to allocate and attach it
later, effectively bringing us (hopefully) close to the efficiency
of pre-KSE systems where these were a single structure.

Reviewed by:	davidxu@freebsd.org, peter@freebsd.org
2002-09-06 07:00:37 +00:00
David Xu
1279572a92 s/SGNL/SIG/
s/SNGL/SINGLE/
s/SNGLE/SINGLE/

Fix abbreviation for P_STOPPED_* etc flags, in original code they were
inconsistent and difficult to distinguish between them.

Approved by: julian (mentor)
2002-09-05 07:30:18 +00:00
John Baldwin
12240b1159 Revert previous revision which accidentally snuck in with another commit.
It just removed a comment that doesn't make sense to me personally.
2002-08-01 13:44:33 +00:00
John Baldwin
fbd140c786 If we fail to write to a vnode during a ktrace write, then we drop all
other references to that vnode as a trace vnode in other processes as well
as in any pending requests on the todo list.  Thus, it is possible for a
ktrace request structure to have a NULL ktr_vp when it is destroyed in
ktr_freerequest().  We shouldn't call vrele() on the vnode in that case.

Reported by:	bde
2002-08-01 13:35:38 +00:00
Julian Elischer
e602ba25fd Part 1 of KSE-III
The ability to schedule multiple threads per process
(one one cpu) by making ALL system calls optionally asynchronous.
to come: ia64 and power-pc patches, patches for gdb, test program (in tools)

Reviewed by:	Almost everyone who counts
	(at various times, peter, jhb, matt, alfred, mini, bernd,
	and a cast of thousands)

	NOTE: this is still Beta code, and contains lots of debugging stuff.
	expect slight instability in signals..
2002-06-29 17:26:22 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
7f05b0353a More caddr_t removal, make fo_ioctl take a void * instead of a caddr_t. 2002-06-29 01:50:25 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
8ba3d077ff Add an MD callout like cpu_exit, but which is called after sched_lock is
obtained, when all other scheduling activity is suspended.  This is needed
on sparc64 to deactivate the vmspace of the exiting process on all cpus.
Otherwise if another unrelated process gets the exact same vmspace structure
allocated to it (same address), its address space will not be activated
properly.  This seems to fix some spontaneous signal 11 problems with smp
on sparc64.
2002-06-24 15:48:02 +00:00
John Baldwin
6c84de02e0 Properly lock accesses to p_tracep and p_traceflag. Also make a few
ktrace-only things #ifdef KTRACE that were not before.
2002-06-07 05:41:27 +00:00
Mike Barcroft
6ee093fb8f Add POSIX.1-2001 WCONTINUED option for waitpid(2). A proc flag
(P_CONTINUED) is set when a stopped process receives a SIGCONT and
cleared after it has notified a parent process that has requested
notification via waitpid(2) with WCONTINUED specified in its options
operand.  The status value can be checked with the new WIFCONTINUED()
macro.

Reviewed by:	jake
2002-06-01 18:37:46 +00:00
John Baldwin
a79c98fa98 Whitespace: trim a trailing tab. 2002-05-23 04:12:28 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
e649887b1e Make funsetown() take a 'struct sigio **' so that the locking can
be done internally.

Ensure that no one can fsetown() to a dying process/pgrp.  We need
to check the process for P_WEXIT to see if it's exiting.  Process
groups are already safe because there is no such thing as a pgrp
zombie, therefore the proctree lock completely protects the pgrp
from having sigio structures associated with it after it runs
funsetownlst.

Add sigio lock to witness list under proctree and allproc, but over
proc and pgrp.

Seigo Tanimura helped with this.
2002-05-06 19:31:28 +00:00
John Baldwin
e746d950ab When checking to see if the init process calls exit1(), compare p to the
initproc proc pointer instead of checking to see if the pid is 1.

Submitted by:	bde
2002-05-06 17:07:10 +00:00
John Baldwin
276c516984 Style fixes in local variable declarations.
Submitted by:	bde
2002-05-06 17:04:29 +00:00
John Baldwin
7a6b989bfa - Style fixes in some comments.
- Whitespace nit.
- Sort some includes.

Submitted by:	bde (mostly)
2002-05-06 15:46:29 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
698f85d3e3 style(9): 'if' and 'while' need a space after them. 2002-05-04 07:40:49 +00:00
Seigo Tanimura
c8d8a686e4 Fix the lock order reversal between the sigio lock and a process/pgrp lock in
funsetownlst() by locking the sigio lock across funsetownlst().
2002-05-03 05:32:25 +00:00
John Baldwin
d7aadbf9ce - Reorder a few things so that when we lock the process at the end of
exit1() we don't have to release it until we acquire schd_lock to
  call cpu_throw().
- Since we can switch at any time due to preemption or a lock release
  prior to acquiring sched_lock, don't update switchtime and switchticks
  until the very end of exit1() after we have acquired sched_lock.
- Interlock the proctree_lock and proc lock in wait1() and exit1() to
  avoid lost wakeups when a parent blocks waiting for a child to exit at
  the bottom of wait1().  In exit1() the proc lock interlocked with
  proctree_lock (and released after acquiring sched_lock) is that of
  the parent process.
- In wait1() use an exclusive lock of proctree lock while we are
  looking for a process to harvest.  This allows us to completely
  remove all references to the process once we've found one (i.e.,
  disconnect it from pgrp's, session's, zombproc list, and it's parent's
  children list) "atomically" without needing to worry about a lock
  upgrade.
- We don't need sched_lock to test if p_stat is SZOMB or SSTOP when holding
  the proc lock since the proc lock is always held with p_stat is set to
  SZOMB or SSTOP.
- Protect nprocs with an xlock of the allproc_lock.
2002-05-02 15:09:58 +00:00
Ian Dowse
ba1551ca81 Avoid the user-visible effect of setting SA_NOCLDWAIT when the
SIGCHLD handler is SIG_IGN. This is a reimplementation of the
problematic revision 1.131 of kern_exit.c. To avoid accessing process
UPAGES, we set a new procsig flag when the SIGCHLD handler is SIG_IGN
and use that instead.
2002-04-27 22:41:41 +00:00
John Baldwin
ea97757a54 - Lock proctree_lock instead of pgrpsess_lock.
- Exclusively lock proctree_lock while calling leavepgrp().
2002-04-16 17:04:21 +00:00
John Baldwin
6dc958b9ff We don't need Giant to read the pgrp ID since the proc lock has protected
p_pgrp since the pgrp locking went in.  We also don't need it to check for
invalid values in the options argument to wait1(), so push Giant down
slightly.
2002-04-09 20:00:40 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
7b11fea64f Close some holes with p->p_args by NULL'ing out the p->p_args pointer
while holding the proc lock, and by holding the pargs structure when
accessing it from outside of the owner.

Submitted by: Jonathan Mini <mini@haikugeek.com>
2002-03-31 10:33:12 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
8899023f66 Make the reference counting of 'struct pargs' SMP safe.
There is still some locations where the PROC lock should be held
in order to prevent inconsistent views from outside (like the
proc->p_fd fix for kern/vfs_syscalls.c:checkdirs()) that can be
fixed later.

Submitted by: Jonathan Mini <mini@haikugeek.com>
2002-03-27 21:36:18 +00:00