Commit Graph

8878 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Xu
9da8a32aae o Turn on MPSAFE flag for mqueuefs.
o Reuse si_mqd field in siginfo_t, this also gives userland
  information about which descriptor is notified.
2005-12-06 06:22:12 +00:00
David Xu
027f760408 Fix a lock leak in childproc_continued(). 2005-12-06 05:30:13 +00:00
John Baldwin
5d2162b2f8 Tweak witness handling of lock object to shave 2 pointers off of each
lock object (and thus off of each mutex and sx lock):
- Rename the all_locks list to pending_locks and only put locks initialized
  before SI_SUB_WITNESS on the list so that the SI_SUB_WITNESS can add them
  to witness once it starts up.
- Now that pending_locks is only used during early startup, change it from
  a TAILQ to an STAILQ.  This removes a pointer from the STAILQ_ENTRY in
  struct lock_object.
- Since the pending_locks list is only used during the single-threaded
  early boot it no longer needs to be protected by a mutex, so remove
  all_mtx.
- Since the lo_list member of struct lock_object is now only used during
  early boot before witness is running, collapse lo_list and lo_witness
  into a union.  This shaves the second pointer off of struct lock_object.
- Axe lock_cur_cnt and lock_max_cnt.

With these changes, struct mtx shrinks from 36 to 28 bytes on 32-bit
platforms and from 72 to 56 bytes on 64-bit platforms.  Note that this
commit will completely and utterly destroy the kernel ABI, so no MFC.

Tested on:	alpha, amd64, i386, sparc64
2005-12-05 20:45:24 +00:00
David Xu
052ea11c71 After reading some documents, I realized SIGEV_NONE != NULL, also
fix code in mqueue_send_notification to handle SIGEV_NONE.
2005-12-05 04:41:32 +00:00
David Xu
9947b45978 Handle SIGEV_NONE, if notification is SIGEV_NONE, error status and
return status will be set, but no notification will be registered.
Increase hard limit of maxmsg to 100, so posixtestsuite ports can run.
2005-12-05 03:23:27 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
f4e9888107 Fix -Wundef. 2005-12-04 02:12:43 +00:00
Craig Rodrigues
1245b3433e Add "rdonly" to global_opts, and parse it in vfs_donmount().
Requested by:	rwatson
2005-12-03 12:04:20 +00:00
Craig Rodrigues
ec528a3472 - Add "rw" mount option to global_opts.
- In vfs_donmount(), parse "ro", "noro", and "rw", in order to set or
  unset the MNT_RDONLY filesystem flag.
2005-12-03 01:26:27 +00:00
David Xu
5ee2d4ac5a 1. Cleanup including.
2. Set configuration value for CTL_P1003_1B_MESSAGE_PASSING.
2005-12-02 14:09:32 +00:00
David Xu
a6de716d7e 1. Check if message priority is less than MQ_PRIO_MAX.
2. Use getnanotime instead of getnanouptime.
3. Don't free message in _mqueue_send, mqueue_send will free it.
2005-12-02 08:23:49 +00:00
David Xu
77e718f773 1. Set timer configuration values for sysconf().
2. Set overrun limit to INT_MAX, report ERANGE error if overrun will be
   greater than INT_MAX.
2005-12-01 07:56:15 +00:00
David Xu
b51d237a67 set signal queue values for sysconf(). 2005-12-01 00:25:50 +00:00
David Xu
b2f92ef96b Last step to make mq_notify conform to POSIX standard, If the process
has successfully attached a notification request to the message queue
via a queue descriptor, file closing should remove the attachment.
2005-11-30 05:12:03 +00:00
John Baldwin
398293a8de Fix snderr() to not leak the socket buffer lock if an error occurs in
sosend().  Robert accidentally changed the snderr() macro to jump to the
out label which assumes the lock is already released rather than the
release label which drops the lock in his previous change to sosend().
This should fix the recent panics about returning from write(2) with the
socket lock held and the most recent LOR on current@.
2005-11-29 23:07:14 +00:00
Robert Watson
66dd8a6f99 Move zero copy statistics structure before sosend_copyin().
MFC after:	1 month
Reported by:	tinderbox, sam
2005-11-28 21:45:36 +00:00
John Baldwin
ef627e7da0 When checking to see if a process has exceeded its time limit, flag the
process as over the limit when its time is >= to the limit rather than >
the limit.  Technically, if p->p_rux.rux_runtime.sec == p->p_pcpulimit
and p->p_rux.rux_runtime.frac == 0, the process hasn't exceeded the limit
yet.  However, having the fraction exactly equal to 0 is rather rare, and
it is not worth the overhead to handle that edge case.  With just the >
comparison, the process would have to exceed its limit by almost a second
before it was killed.

PR:		kern/83192
Submitted by:	Maciej Zawadzinski mzawadzinski at gmail dot com
Reviewed by:	bde
MFC after:	1 week
2005-11-28 19:09:08 +00:00
Robert Watson
a725629cf8 Break out functionality in sosend() responsible for building mbuf
chains and copying in mbufs from the body of the send logic, creating
a new function sosend_copyin().  This changes makes sosend() almost
readable, and will allow the same logic to be used by tailored socket
send routines.

MFC after:	1 month
Reviewed by:	andre, glebius
2005-11-28 18:09:03 +00:00
David Xu
f72b11a40c Fix a stupid compiler warining, remove a redundant line. 2005-11-27 22:59:47 +00:00
David Xu
47bf2cf9fe Change filesystem name from mqueue to mqueuefs for style consistent.
Suggested by: rwatson
2005-11-27 08:30:12 +00:00
David Xu
6829585c43 Regen. 2005-11-27 01:23:31 +00:00
David Xu
94e1294b06 Don't use OpenBSD syscall numbers, instead, use new syscall numbers
for POSIX message queue.

Suggested by: rwatson
2005-11-27 01:13:00 +00:00
Robert Watson
5e758b9561 Add several aliases for existing clockid_t names to indicate that the
application wishes to request high precision time stamps be returned:

Alias                           Existing

CLOCK_REALTIME_PRECISE          CLOCK_REALTIME
CLOCK_MONOTONIC_PRECISE         CLOCK_MONOTONIC
CLOCK_UPTIME_PRECISE            CLOCK_UPTIME

Add experimental low-precision clockid_t names corresponding to these
clocks, but implemented using cached timestamps in kernel rather than
a full time counter query.  This offers a minimum update rate of 1/HZ,
but in practice will often be more frequent due to the frequency of
time stamping in the kernel:

New clockid_t name              Approximates existing clockid_t

CLOCK_REALTIME_FAST             CLOCK_REALTIME
CLOCK_MONOTONIC_FAST            CLOCK_MONOTONIC
CLOCK_UPTIME_FAST               CLOCK_UPTIME

Add one additional new clockid_t, CLOCK_SECOND, which returns the
current second without performing a full time counter query or cache
lookup overhead to make sure the cached timestamp is stable.  This is
intended to support very low granularity consumers, such as time(3).

The names, visibility, and implementation of the above are subject
to change, and will not be MFC'd any time soon.  The goal is to
expose lower quality time measurement to applications willing to
sacrifice accuracy in performance critical paths, such as when taking
time stamps for the purpose of rescheduling select() and poll()
timeouts.  Future changes might include retrofitting the time counter
infrastructure to allow the "fast" time query mechanisms to use a
different time counter, rather than a cached time counter (i.e.,
TSC).

NOTE: With different underlying time mechanisms exposed, using
different time query mechanisms in the same application may result in
relative non-monoticity or the appearance of clock stalling for a
single clockid_t, as a cached time stamp queried after a precision
time stamp lookup may be "before" the time returned by the earlier
live time counter query.
2005-11-27 00:55:18 +00:00
David Xu
7023331e59 Regen. 2005-11-26 12:45:22 +00:00
David Xu
655291f2ae Bring in experimental kernel support for POSIX message queue. 2005-11-26 12:42:35 +00:00
Craig Rodrigues
5e6b93a014 In nmount() and vfs_donmount(), do not strcmp() the options in the iovec
directly.  We need to copyin() the strings in the iovec before
we can strcmp() them.  Also, when we want to send the errmsg back
to userspace, we need to copyout()/copystr() the string.

Add a small helper function vfs_getopt_pos() which takes in the
name of an option, and returns the array index of the name in the iovec,
or -1 if not found.  This allows us to locate an option in
the iovec without actually manipulating the iovec members. directly via
strcmp().

Noticed by:	kris on sparc64
2005-11-23 20:51:15 +00:00
John Polstra
ba3612cd5c Fix a bug in the loop in sonewconn that makes room on the incomplete
connection queue for a new connection.  It was removing connections
from the wrong list.

Submitted by:	Paul Mikesell
Sponsored by:	Isilon Systems
MFC after:	1 week
2005-11-22 01:55:29 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
60b7823989 Fix bug introduced in revision 1.186:
When all file systems have a time stamp of zero, which is the case
for example when the root file system is on a read-only medium, we
ended up not calling inittodr() at all.  A potential uncleanliness
existed as well. If multiple file systems had a non-zero time stamp,
we would call inittodr() multiple times. While this should not be
harmful, it's definitely not ideal.
Fix both issues by iterating over the mounted file systems to find
the largest time stamp and call inittodr() exactly once with that
time stamp. This could of course be a zero time stamp if none of the
mounted file systems have a non-zero time stamp. In that case the
annoying errors mentioned in the commit log for revision 1.186 still
haven't been avoided. The bottom line is that inittodr() should not
complain when it gets a time base of zero. At the time of this
commit only alpha seems to have that problem.

Reported by: Dario Freni (saturnero at freesbie dot org)
MFC after: 1 week
2005-11-19 21:51:45 +00:00
Craig Rodrigues
425e5b6268 Parse more mount options in vfs_donmount(), before vfs_domount()
is called.  It looks like there are lots of different mount flags checked
in vfs_domount(), so we need to do the parsing for these particular
mount flags earlier on.  The new flags parsed are:
async, force, multilabel, noasync, noatime, noclusterr, noclusterw,
noexec, nosuid, nosymfollow, snapshot, suiddir, sync, union.

Existing code which uses mount() to mount UFS filesystems is not
affected, but new code which uses nmount() to mount UFS filesystems
should behave better.
2005-11-19 21:22:21 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
5eefd88949 Add CLOCK_UPTIME to clock_gettime(2) reporting the current
uptime measured in SI seconds.

Sponsored by:	TCP/IP Optimization Fundraise 2005
2005-11-18 16:51:13 +00:00
Craig Rodrigues
8fd860cfa1 In vfs_nmount(), check to see if "update" mount option was passed
in, and if so, set MNT_UPDATE filesystem flag.
vfs_nmount() calls vfs_domount(), and there is special logic
inside vfs_domount() if MNT_UPDATE is set.  This is very important
when we want to do an update mount of the root filesystem, using nmount().
2005-11-18 01:31:10 +00:00
Pyun YongHyeon
dc22aef2ae Prefer NULL to 0.
Add missing lock/unlock in sysctl handler.
Protect accessing NULL pointer when resource allocation was failed.
style(9)

Reviewed by:	scottl
MFC after:	1 week
2005-11-17 08:56:21 +00:00
Olivier Houchard
481a1fe19e Add a new sysctl, kern.elf[32|64].can_exec_dyn. When set to 1, one can
execute a ET_DYN binary (shared object).
This does not make much sense, but some linux scripts expect to be able to
execute /lib/ld-linux.so.2 (ldd comes to mind).
The sysctl defaults to 0.

MFC after:	3 days
2005-11-14 22:24:00 +00:00
Robert Watson
c5c9bd5b72 In ktr_getrequest(), acquire ktrace_mtx earlier -- while the race
currently present is minor and offers no real semantic issues, it also
doesn't make sense since an earlier lockless check has already
occurred.  Also hold the mutex longer, over a manipulation of
per-process ktrace state, which requires synchronization.

MFC after:	1 month
Pointed out by:	jhb
2005-11-14 19:30:09 +00:00
Robert Watson
2c255e9df6 Moderate rewrite of kernel ktrace code to attempt to generally improve
reliability when tracing fast-moving processes or writing traces to
slow file systems by avoiding unbounded queueuing and dropped records.
Record loss was previously possible when the global pool of records
become depleted as a result of record generation outstripping record
commit, which occurred quickly in many common situations.

These changes partially restore the 4.x model of committing ktrace
records at the point of trace generation (synchronous), but maintain
the 5.x deferred record commit behavior (asynchronous) for situations
where entering VFS and sleeping is not possible (i.e., in the
scheduler).  Records are now queued per-process as opposed to
globally, with processes responsible for committing records from their
own context as required.

- Eliminate the ktrace worker thread and global record queue, as they
  are no longer used.  Keep the global free record list, as records
  are still used.

- Add a per-process record queue, which will hold any asynchronously
  generated records, such as from context switches.  This replaces the
  global queue as the place to submit asynchronous records to.

- When a record is committed asynchronously, simply queue it to the
  process.

- When a record is committed synchronously, first drain any pending
  per-process records in order to maintain ordering as best we can.
  Currently ordering between competing threads is provided via a global
  ktrace_sx, but a per-process flag or lock may be desirable in the
  future.

- When a process returns to user space following a system call, trap,
  signal delivery, etc, flush any pending records.

- When a process exits, flush any pending records.

- Assert on process tear-down that there are no pending records.

- Slightly abstract the notion of being "in ktrace", which is used to
  prevent the recursive generation of records, as well as generating
  traces for ktrace events.

Future work here might look at changing the set of events marked for
synchronous and asynchronous record generation, re-balancing queue
depth, timeliness of commit to disk, and so on.  I.e., performing a
drain every (n) records.

MFC after:	1 month
Discussed with:	jhb
Requested by:	Marc Olzheim <marcolz at stack dot nl>
2005-11-13 13:27:44 +00:00
Craig Rodrigues
d5328381f1 style(9) cleanups.
Spotted by:	njl, bde
2005-11-12 14:41:44 +00:00
Robert Watson
71909edec8 Significant refactoring of the accounting code to improve locking and VFS
happiness, as well as correct other bugs:

- Replace notion of current and saved accounting credential/vnode with a
  single credential/vnode and an acct_suspended flag.  This simplifies the
  accounting logic substantially.

- Replace acct_mtx with acct_sx, a sleepable lock held exclusively during
  reconfiguration and space polling, but shared during log entry
  generation.  This avoids holding a mutex over sleepable VFS operations.

- Hold the sx lock over the duration of the I/O so that the vnode I/O
  cannot occur after vnode close, which could occur previously if
  accounting was disabled as a process exited.

- Write the accounting log entry with Giant conditionally acquired based
  on the file system where the log is stored.  Previously, the accounting
  code relied on the caller acquiring Giant.

- Acquire Giant conditionally in the accounting callout based on the file
  system where the accounting log is stored.  Run the callout MPSAFE.

- Expose acct_suspended via a read-only sysctl so it is possibly to
  programmatically determine whether accounting is suspended or not without
  attempting to parse logs.

- Check both acct_vp and acct_suspended lock-free before entering the
  accounting sx lock in acct().

- When accounting is disabled due to a VBAD vnode (i.e., forceable unmount),
  generate a log message indicating accounting has been disabled.

- Correct a long-standing bug in how free space is calculated and compared
  to the required space: generate and compare signed results, not unsigned
  results, or negative free space will cause accounting to not be suspended
  when required, or worse, incorrectly resumed once negative free space is
  reached.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2005-11-12 10:45:13 +00:00
David Xu
413cf3bbe1 Make sure only remove one signal by debugger. 2005-11-12 04:22:16 +00:00
Robert Watson
a0ec558af0 Correct a number of serious and closely related bugs in the UNIX domain
socket file descriptor garbage collection code, which is intended to
detect and clear cycles of orphaned file descriptors that are "in-flight"
in a socket when that socket is closed before they are received.  The
algorithm present was both run at poor times (resulting in recursion and
reentrance), and also buggy in the presence of parallelism.  In order to
fix these problems, make the following changes:

- When there are in-flight sockets and a UNIX domain socket is destroyed,
  asynchronously schedule the garbage collector, rather than running it
  synchronously in the current context.  This avoids lock order issues
  when the garbage collection code reenters the UNIX domain socket code,
  avoiding lock order reversals, deadlocks, etc.  Run the code
  asynchronously in a task queue.

- In the garbage collector, when skipping file descriptors that have
  entered a closing state (i.e., have f_count == 0), re-test the FDEFER
  flag, and decrement unp_defer.  As file descriptors can now transition
  to a closed state, while the garbage collector is running, it is no
  longer the case that unp_defer will remain an accurate count of
  deferred sockets in the mark portion of the GC algorithm.  Otherwise,
  the garbage collector will loop waiting waiting for unp_defer to reach
  zero, which it will never do as it is skipping file descriptors that
  were marked in an earlier pass, but now closed.

- Acquire the UNIX domain socket subsystem lock in unp_discard() when
  modifying the unp_rights counter, or a read/write race is risked with
  other threads also manipulating the counter.

While here:

- Remove #if 0'd code regarding acquiring the socket buffer sleep lock in
  the garbage collector, this is not required as we are able to use the
  socket buffer receive lock to protect scanning the receive buffer for
  in-flight file descriptors on the socket buffer.

- Annotate that the description of the garbage collector implementation
  is increasingly inaccurate and needs to be updated.

- Add counters of the number of deferred garbage collections and recycled
  file descriptors.  This will be removed and is here temporarily for
  debugging purposes.

With these changes in place, the unp_passfd regression test now appears
to be passed consistently on UP and SMP systems for extended runs,
whereas before it hung quickly or panicked, depending on which bug was
triggered.

Reported by:	Philip Kizer <pckizer at nostrum dot com>
MFC after:	2 weeks
2005-11-10 16:06:04 +00:00
Robert Watson
742be7821c Add the f_msgcount field to the set of struct file fields printed in show
files.

MFC after:	1 week
2005-11-10 13:26:29 +00:00
Robert Watson
2be165c93e Expanet of details printed for each file descriptor to include it's
garbage collection flags.  Reformat generally to make this fit and
leave some room for future expansion.

MFC after:	1 week
2005-11-10 11:35:59 +00:00
Robert Watson
b4e507aafa Add a DDB "show files" command to list the current open file list, some
state about each open file, and identify the first process in the process
table that references the file.  This is helpful in debugging leaks of
file descriptors.

MFC after:	1 week
2005-11-10 10:42:50 +00:00
Doug White
16e35dcc39 This is a workaround for a complicated issue involving VFS cookies and devfs.
The PR and patch have the details. The ultimate fix requires architectural
changes and clarifications to the VFS API, but this will prevent the system
from panicking when someone does "ls /dev" while running in a shell under the
linuxulator.

This issue affects HEAD and RELENG_6 only.

PR:		88249
Submitted by:	"Devon H. O'Dell" <dodell@ixsystems.com>
MFC after:	3 days
2005-11-09 22:03:50 +00:00
Robert Watson
f8a9ed1fa7 Fix typo in recent comment tweak.
Submitted by:	jkim
MFC after:	1 week
2005-11-09 22:02:02 +00:00
Robert Watson
923633b4b5 In closef(), remove the assumption that there is a thread associated
with the file descriptor.  When a file descriptor is closed as a result
of garbage collecting a UNIX domain socket, the file descriptor will
not have any associated thread, so the logic to identify advisory locks
held by that thread is not appropriate.  Check the thread for NULL to
avoid this scenario.  Expand an existing comment to say a bit more about
this.

MFC after:	1 week
2005-11-09 20:54:25 +00:00
Warner Losh
5d56add2ba General consensus is that it would be even better to run this in a
thread context.  While it doesn't matter too much at the moment, in
the future we could be back in the same boat if/when more restrictions
are placed (or enforced) in a SWI.

Suggested by: njl, bde, jhb, scottl
2005-11-09 16:22:56 +00:00
John Baldwin
26b7bd707c Use intptr_t casts to convert void * <--> int to make 64-bit archs happy. 2005-11-09 15:15:59 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
303989a2f3 Use sparse initializers for "struct domain" and "struct protosw",
so they are easier to follow for the human being.
2005-11-09 13:29:16 +00:00
David Xu
f4d8522334 WIFxxx macros requires an int type but p_xstat is short, convert it
to int before using the macros.

Bug reported by : Pyun YongHyeon pyunyh at gmail dot com
2005-11-09 07:58:16 +00:00
Warner Losh
161604d863 Kick off the suspend sequence from the keyboard in a SWI rather than
in the hardware interrupt context (even if it is likely just an
ithread).  We don't document that suspend/resume routines are run from
such a context and some of the things that happen in those routines
aren't interrupt safe.  Since there's no real need to run from that
context, this restores assumptions that suspend routines have made.

This fixes Thierry Herbelot's 'Trying to sleep while sleeping is
prohibited' problem.
2005-11-09 07:32:01 +00:00
Warner Losh
2002eaadb7 Clarify panic message, I parsed the old one 'trying to sleep while sleeping' 2005-11-09 07:28:52 +00:00