freebsd-nq/sys/kern/sysv_shm.c

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/* $Id: sysv_shm.c,v 1.40 1999/01/21 08:29:04 dillon Exp $ */
/* $NetBSD: sysv_shm.c,v 1.23 1994/07/04 23:25:12 glass Exp $ */
/*
* Copyright (c) 1994 Adam Glass and Charles Hannum. All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
* must display the following acknowledgement:
* This product includes software developed by Adam Glass and Charles
* Hannum.
* 4. The names of the authors may not be used to endorse or promote products
* derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHORS ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
* OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
* IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
* INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
* NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
* DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
* THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
* (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
* THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include "opt_compat.h"
#include "opt_rlimit.h"
#include <sys/param.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.
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#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/sysproto.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/shm.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
#include <sys/stat.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.
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#include <sys/sysent.h>
#include <vm/vm.h>
#include <vm/vm_param.h>
#include <vm/vm_prot.h>
#include <sys/lock.h>
#include <vm/pmap.h>
#include <vm/vm_object.h>
#include <vm/vm_map.h>
#include <vm/vm_page.h>
#include <vm/vm_pager.h>
#include <vm/vm_inherit.h>
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_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.
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struct shmat_args;
extern int shmat __P((struct proc *p, struct shmat_args *uap));
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.
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struct shmctl_args;
extern int shmctl __P((struct proc *p, struct shmctl_args *uap));
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.
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struct shmdt_args;
extern int shmdt __P((struct proc *p, struct shmdt_args *uap));
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.
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struct shmget_args;
extern int shmget __P((struct proc *p, struct shmget_args *uap));
#endif
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.
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static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_SHM, "shm", "SVID compatible shared memory segments");
static void shminit __P((void *));
SYSINIT(sysv_shm, SI_SUB_SYSV_SHM, SI_ORDER_FIRST, shminit, NULL)
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 oshmctl_args;
static int oshmctl __P((struct proc *p, struct oshmctl_args *uap));
static int shmget_allocate_segment __P((struct proc *p, struct shmget_args *uap, int mode));
static int shmget_existing __P((struct proc *p, struct shmget_args *uap, int mode, int segnum));
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.
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/* XXX casting to (sy_call_t *) is bogus, as usual. */
1998-02-09 06:11:36 +00:00
static sy_call_t *shmcalls[] = {
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.
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(sy_call_t *)shmat, (sy_call_t *)oshmctl,
(sy_call_t *)shmdt, (sy_call_t *)shmget,
(sy_call_t *)shmctl
};
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#define SHMSEG_FREE 0x0200
#define SHMSEG_REMOVED 0x0400
#define SHMSEG_ALLOCATED 0x0800
#define SHMSEG_WANTED 0x1000
static int shm_last_free, shm_nused, shm_committed;
struct shmid_ds *shmsegs;
struct shm_handle {
/* vm_offset_t kva; */
vm_object_t shm_object;
};
struct shmmap_state {
vm_offset_t va;
int shmid;
};
static void shm_deallocate_segment __P((struct shmid_ds *));
static int shm_find_segment_by_key __P((key_t));
static struct shmid_ds *shm_find_segment_by_shmid __P((int));
static int shm_delete_mapping __P((struct proc *, struct shmmap_state *));
static int
shm_find_segment_by_key(key)
key_t key;
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < shminfo.shmmni; i++)
if ((shmsegs[i].shm_perm.mode & SHMSEG_ALLOCATED) &&
shmsegs[i].shm_perm.key == key)
return i;
return -1;
}
static struct shmid_ds *
shm_find_segment_by_shmid(shmid)
int shmid;
{
int segnum;
struct shmid_ds *shmseg;
segnum = IPCID_TO_IX(shmid);
if (segnum < 0 || segnum >= shminfo.shmmni)
return NULL;
shmseg = &shmsegs[segnum];
if ((shmseg->shm_perm.mode & (SHMSEG_ALLOCATED | SHMSEG_REMOVED))
!= SHMSEG_ALLOCATED ||
shmseg->shm_perm.seq != IPCID_TO_SEQ(shmid))
return NULL;
return shmseg;
}
static void
shm_deallocate_segment(shmseg)
struct shmid_ds *shmseg;
{
struct shm_handle *shm_handle;
size_t size;
shm_handle = shmseg->shm_internal;
vm_object_deallocate(shm_handle->shm_object);
free((caddr_t)shm_handle, M_SHM);
shmseg->shm_internal = NULL;
size = round_page(shmseg->shm_segsz);
shm_committed -= btoc(size);
shm_nused--;
shmseg->shm_perm.mode = SHMSEG_FREE;
}
static int
shm_delete_mapping(p, shmmap_s)
struct proc *p;
struct shmmap_state *shmmap_s;
{
struct shmid_ds *shmseg;
int segnum, result;
size_t size;
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segnum = IPCID_TO_IX(shmmap_s->shmid);
shmseg = &shmsegs[segnum];
size = round_page(shmseg->shm_segsz);
result = vm_map_remove(&p->p_vmspace->vm_map, shmmap_s->va, shmmap_s->va + size);
if (result != KERN_SUCCESS)
return EINVAL;
shmmap_s->shmid = -1;
shmseg->shm_dtime = time_second;
if ((--shmseg->shm_nattch <= 0) &&
(shmseg->shm_perm.mode & SHMSEG_REMOVED)) {
shm_deallocate_segment(shmseg);
shm_last_free = segnum;
}
return 0;
}
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
struct shmdt_args {
void *shmaddr;
};
#endif
int
shmdt(p, uap)
struct proc *p;
struct shmdt_args *uap;
{
struct shmmap_state *shmmap_s;
int i;
shmmap_s = (struct shmmap_state *)p->p_vmspace->vm_shm;
if (shmmap_s == NULL)
return EINVAL;
for (i = 0; i < shminfo.shmseg; i++, shmmap_s++)
if (shmmap_s->shmid != -1 &&
shmmap_s->va == (vm_offset_t)uap->shmaddr)
break;
if (i == shminfo.shmseg)
return EINVAL;
return shm_delete_mapping(p, shmmap_s);
}
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
struct shmat_args {
int shmid;
void *shmaddr;
int shmflg;
};
#endif
int
shmat(p, uap)
struct proc *p;
struct shmat_args *uap;
{
int error, i, flags;
struct shmid_ds *shmseg;
struct shmmap_state *shmmap_s = NULL;
struct shm_handle *shm_handle;
vm_offset_t attach_va;
vm_prot_t prot;
vm_size_t size;
int rv;
shmmap_s = (struct shmmap_state *)p->p_vmspace->vm_shm;
if (shmmap_s == NULL) {
size = shminfo.shmseg * sizeof(struct shmmap_state);
shmmap_s = malloc(size, M_SHM, M_WAITOK);
for (i = 0; i < shminfo.shmseg; i++)
shmmap_s[i].shmid = -1;
p->p_vmspace->vm_shm = (caddr_t)shmmap_s;
}
shmseg = shm_find_segment_by_shmid(uap->shmid);
if (shmseg == NULL)
return EINVAL;
error = ipcperm(p, &shmseg->shm_perm,
(uap->shmflg & SHM_RDONLY) ? IPC_R : IPC_R|IPC_W);
if (error)
return error;
for (i = 0; i < shminfo.shmseg; i++) {
if (shmmap_s->shmid == -1)
break;
shmmap_s++;
}
if (i >= shminfo.shmseg)
return EMFILE;
size = round_page(shmseg->shm_segsz);
prot = VM_PROT_READ;
if ((uap->shmflg & SHM_RDONLY) == 0)
prot |= VM_PROT_WRITE;
flags = MAP_ANON | MAP_SHARED;
if (uap->shmaddr) {
flags |= MAP_FIXED;
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if (uap->shmflg & SHM_RND)
attach_va = (vm_offset_t)uap->shmaddr & ~(SHMLBA-1);
else if (((vm_offset_t)uap->shmaddr & (SHMLBA-1)) == 0)
attach_va = (vm_offset_t)uap->shmaddr;
else
return EINVAL;
} else {
/* This is just a hint to vm_map_find() about where to put it. */
attach_va = round_page((vm_offset_t)p->p_vmspace->vm_taddr + MAXTSIZ + MAXDSIZ);
}
shm_handle = shmseg->shm_internal;
vm_object_reference(shm_handle->shm_object);
rv = vm_map_find(&p->p_vmspace->vm_map, shm_handle->shm_object,
0, &attach_va, size, (flags & MAP_FIXED)?0:1, prot, prot, 0);
if (rv != KERN_SUCCESS) {
return ENOMEM;
}
vm_map_inherit(&p->p_vmspace->vm_map,
attach_va, attach_va + size, VM_INHERIT_SHARE);
shmmap_s->va = attach_va;
shmmap_s->shmid = uap->shmid;
shmseg->shm_lpid = p->p_pid;
shmseg->shm_atime = time_second;
shmseg->shm_nattch++;
p->p_retval[0] = attach_va;
return 0;
}
struct oshmid_ds {
struct ipc_perm shm_perm; /* operation perms */
int shm_segsz; /* size of segment (bytes) */
ushort shm_cpid; /* pid, creator */
ushort shm_lpid; /* pid, last operation */
short shm_nattch; /* no. of current attaches */
time_t shm_atime; /* last attach time */
time_t shm_dtime; /* last detach time */
time_t shm_ctime; /* last change time */
void *shm_handle; /* internal handle for shm segment */
};
struct oshmctl_args {
int shmid;
int cmd;
struct oshmid_ds *ubuf;
};
static int
oshmctl(p, uap)
struct proc *p;
struct oshmctl_args *uap;
{
#ifdef COMPAT_43
int error;
struct shmid_ds *shmseg;
struct oshmid_ds outbuf;
shmseg = shm_find_segment_by_shmid(uap->shmid);
if (shmseg == NULL)
return EINVAL;
switch (uap->cmd) {
case IPC_STAT:
error = ipcperm(p, &shmseg->shm_perm, IPC_R);
if (error)
return error;
outbuf.shm_perm = shmseg->shm_perm;
outbuf.shm_segsz = shmseg->shm_segsz;
outbuf.shm_cpid = shmseg->shm_cpid;
outbuf.shm_lpid = shmseg->shm_lpid;
outbuf.shm_nattch = shmseg->shm_nattch;
outbuf.shm_atime = shmseg->shm_atime;
outbuf.shm_dtime = shmseg->shm_dtime;
outbuf.shm_ctime = shmseg->shm_ctime;
outbuf.shm_handle = shmseg->shm_internal;
error = copyout((caddr_t)&outbuf, uap->ubuf, sizeof(outbuf));
if (error)
return error;
break;
default:
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
/* XXX casting to (sy_call_t *) is bogus, as usual. */
return ((sy_call_t *)shmctl)(p, uap);
}
return 0;
#else
return EINVAL;
#endif
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
}
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
struct shmctl_args {
int shmid;
int cmd;
struct shmid_ds *buf;
};
#endif
int
shmctl(p, uap)
struct proc *p;
struct shmctl_args *uap;
{
int error;
struct shmid_ds inbuf;
struct shmid_ds *shmseg;
shmseg = shm_find_segment_by_shmid(uap->shmid);
if (shmseg == NULL)
return EINVAL;
switch (uap->cmd) {
case IPC_STAT:
error = ipcperm(p, &shmseg->shm_perm, IPC_R);
if (error)
return error;
error = copyout((caddr_t)shmseg, uap->buf, sizeof(inbuf));
if (error)
return error;
break;
case IPC_SET:
error = ipcperm(p, &shmseg->shm_perm, IPC_M);
if (error)
return error;
error = copyin(uap->buf, (caddr_t)&inbuf, sizeof(inbuf));
if (error)
return error;
shmseg->shm_perm.uid = inbuf.shm_perm.uid;
shmseg->shm_perm.gid = inbuf.shm_perm.gid;
shmseg->shm_perm.mode =
(shmseg->shm_perm.mode & ~ACCESSPERMS) |
(inbuf.shm_perm.mode & ACCESSPERMS);
shmseg->shm_ctime = time_second;
break;
case IPC_RMID:
error = ipcperm(p, &shmseg->shm_perm, IPC_M);
if (error)
return error;
shmseg->shm_perm.key = IPC_PRIVATE;
shmseg->shm_perm.mode |= SHMSEG_REMOVED;
if (shmseg->shm_nattch <= 0) {
shm_deallocate_segment(shmseg);
shm_last_free = IPCID_TO_IX(uap->shmid);
}
break;
#if 0
case SHM_LOCK:
case SHM_UNLOCK:
#endif
default:
return EINVAL;
}
return 0;
}
#ifndef _SYS_SYSPROTO_H_
struct shmget_args {
key_t key;
size_t size;
int shmflg;
};
#endif
static int
shmget_existing(p, uap, mode, segnum)
struct proc *p;
struct shmget_args *uap;
int mode;
int segnum;
{
struct shmid_ds *shmseg;
int error;
shmseg = &shmsegs[segnum];
if (shmseg->shm_perm.mode & SHMSEG_REMOVED) {
/*
* This segment is in the process of being allocated. Wait
* until it's done, and look the key up again (in case the
* allocation failed or it was freed).
*/
shmseg->shm_perm.mode |= SHMSEG_WANTED;
error = tsleep((caddr_t)shmseg, PLOCK | PCATCH, "shmget", 0);
if (error)
return error;
return EAGAIN;
}
error = ipcperm(p, &shmseg->shm_perm, mode);
if (error)
return error;
if (uap->size && uap->size > shmseg->shm_segsz)
return EINVAL;
if ((uap->shmflg & (IPC_CREAT | IPC_EXCL)) == (IPC_CREAT | IPC_EXCL))
return EEXIST;
p->p_retval[0] = IXSEQ_TO_IPCID(segnum, shmseg->shm_perm);
return 0;
}
static int
shmget_allocate_segment(p, uap, mode)
struct proc *p;
struct shmget_args *uap;
int mode;
{
int i, segnum, shmid, size;
struct ucred *cred = p->p_ucred;
struct shmid_ds *shmseg;
struct shm_handle *shm_handle;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
if (uap->size < shminfo.shmmin || uap->size > shminfo.shmmax)
return EINVAL;
if (shm_nused >= shminfo.shmmni) /* any shmids left? */
return ENOSPC;
size = round_page(uap->size);
if (shm_committed + btoc(size) > shminfo.shmall)
return ENOMEM;
if (shm_last_free < 0) {
for (i = 0; i < shminfo.shmmni; i++)
if (shmsegs[i].shm_perm.mode & SHMSEG_FREE)
break;
if (i == shminfo.shmmni)
panic("shmseg free count inconsistent");
segnum = i;
} else {
segnum = shm_last_free;
shm_last_free = -1;
}
shmseg = &shmsegs[segnum];
/*
* In case we sleep in malloc(), mark the segment present but deleted
* so that noone else tries to create the same key.
*/
shmseg->shm_perm.mode = SHMSEG_ALLOCATED | SHMSEG_REMOVED;
shmseg->shm_perm.key = uap->key;
shmseg->shm_perm.seq = (shmseg->shm_perm.seq + 1) & 0x7fff;
shm_handle = (struct shm_handle *)
malloc(sizeof(struct shm_handle), M_SHM, M_WAITOK);
shmid = IXSEQ_TO_IPCID(segnum, shmseg->shm_perm);
/*
* We make sure that we have allocated a pager before we need
* to.
*/
shm_handle->shm_object =
vm_pager_allocate(OBJT_SWAP, 0, size, VM_PROT_DEFAULT, 0);
vm_object_clear_flag(shm_handle->shm_object, OBJ_ONEMAPPING);
vm_object_set_flag(shm_handle->shm_object, OBJ_NOSPLIT);
shmseg->shm_internal = shm_handle;
shmseg->shm_perm.cuid = shmseg->shm_perm.uid = cred->cr_uid;
shmseg->shm_perm.cgid = shmseg->shm_perm.gid = cred->cr_gid;
shmseg->shm_perm.mode = (shmseg->shm_perm.mode & SHMSEG_WANTED) |
(mode & ACCESSPERMS) | SHMSEG_ALLOCATED;
shmseg->shm_segsz = uap->size;
shmseg->shm_cpid = p->p_pid;
shmseg->shm_lpid = shmseg->shm_nattch = 0;
shmseg->shm_atime = shmseg->shm_dtime = 0;
shmseg->shm_ctime = time_second;
shm_committed += btoc(size);
shm_nused++;
if (shmseg->shm_perm.mode & SHMSEG_WANTED) {
/*
* Somebody else wanted this key while we were asleep. Wake
* them up now.
*/
shmseg->shm_perm.mode &= ~SHMSEG_WANTED;
wakeup((caddr_t)shmseg);
}
p->p_retval[0] = shmid;
return 0;
}
int
shmget(p, uap)
struct proc *p;
struct shmget_args *uap;
{
int segnum, mode, error;
mode = uap->shmflg & ACCESSPERMS;
if (uap->key != IPC_PRIVATE) {
again:
segnum = shm_find_segment_by_key(uap->key);
if (segnum >= 0) {
error = shmget_existing(p, uap, mode, segnum);
if (error == EAGAIN)
goto again;
return error;
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
if ((uap->shmflg & IPC_CREAT) == 0)
return ENOENT;
}
return shmget_allocate_segment(p, uap, mode);
}
int
shmsys(p, uap)
struct proc *p;
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
/* XXX actually varargs. */
struct shmsys_args /* {
u_int which;
int a2;
int a3;
int a4;
} */ *uap;
{
if (uap->which >= sizeof(shmcalls)/sizeof(shmcalls[0]))
return EINVAL;
return ((*shmcalls[uap->which])(p, &uap->a2));
}
void
shmfork(p1, p2)
struct proc *p1, *p2;
{
struct shmmap_state *shmmap_s;
size_t size;
int i;
size = shminfo.shmseg * sizeof(struct shmmap_state);
shmmap_s = malloc(size, M_SHM, M_WAITOK);
bcopy((caddr_t)p1->p_vmspace->vm_shm, (caddr_t)shmmap_s, size);
p2->p_vmspace->vm_shm = (caddr_t)shmmap_s;
for (i = 0; i < shminfo.shmseg; i++, shmmap_s++)
if (shmmap_s->shmid != -1)
shmsegs[IPCID_TO_IX(shmmap_s->shmid)].shm_nattch++;
}
void
shmexit(p)
struct proc *p;
{
struct shmmap_state *shmmap_s;
int i;
shmmap_s = (struct shmmap_state *)p->p_vmspace->vm_shm;
for (i = 0; i < shminfo.shmseg; i++, shmmap_s++)
if (shmmap_s->shmid != -1)
shm_delete_mapping(p, shmmap_s);
free((caddr_t)p->p_vmspace->vm_shm, M_SHM);
p->p_vmspace->vm_shm = NULL;
}
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
shminit(dummy)
void *dummy;
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < shminfo.shmmni; i++) {
shmsegs[i].shm_perm.mode = SHMSEG_FREE;
shmsegs[i].shm_perm.seq = 0;
}
shm_last_free = 0;
shm_nused = 0;
shm_committed = 0;
}