the signal handlers with the context information in the deferrred
case.
Only enable the use of getcontextx(3) in the deferred signal delivery
code on amd64 and i386. Sparc64 seems to have some undetermined issues
with interaction of alloca(3) and signal delivery.
Tested by: flo (who also provided sparc64 harware access for me), pho
Discussed with: marius
MFC after: 1 month
whether asynchronous mode is turned on or not, this always gives us a
chance to decide whether thread should be canceled or not in
cancellation points.
add a wrapper for it in libc and rework the code in libthr, the
system call still can return EINTR, we keep this feature.
Discussed on: thread
Reviewed by: jilles
some cases we want to improve:
1) if a thread signal got a signal while in cancellation point,
it is possible the TDP_WAKEUP may be eaten by signal handler
if the handler called some interruptibly system calls.
2) In signal handler, we want to disable cancellation.
3) When thread holding some low level locks, it is better to
disable signal, those code need not to worry reentrancy,
sigprocmask system call is avoided because it is a bit expensive.
The signal handler wrapper works in this way:
1) libthr installs its signal handler if user code invokes sigaction
to install its handler, the user handler is recorded in internal
array.
2) when a signal is delivered, libthr's signal handler is invoke,
libthr checks if thread holds some low level lock or is in critical
region, if it is true, the signal is buffered, and all signals are
masked, once the thread leaves critical region, correct signal
mask is restored and buffered signal is processed.
3) before user signal handler is invoked, cancellation is temporarily
disabled, after user signal handler is returned, cancellation state
is restored, and pending cancellation is rescheduled.
which does not know what is the state of interrupted system call, for
example, open() system call opened a file and the thread is still cancelled,
result is descriptor leak, there are other problems which can cause resource
leak or undeterminable side effect when a thread is cancelled. However, this
is no longer true in new implementation.
In defering mode, a thread is canceled if cancellation request is pending and
later the thread enters a cancellation point, otherwise, a later
pthread_cancel() just causes SIGCANCEL to be sent to the target thread, and
causes target thread to abort system call, userland code in libthr then checks
cancellation state, and cancels the thread if needed. For example, the
cancellation point open(), the thread may be canceled at start,
but later, if it opened a file descriptor, it is not canceled, this avoids
file handle leak. Another example is read(), a thread may be canceled at start
of the function, but later, if it read some bytes from a socket, the thread
is not canceled, the caller then can decide if it should still enable cancelling
or disable it and continue reading data until it thinks it has read all
bytes of a packet, and keeps a protocol stream in health state, if user ignores
partly reading of a packet without disabling cancellation, then second iteration
of read loop cause the thread to be cancelled.
An exception is that the close() cancellation point always closes a file handle
despite whether the thread is cancelled or not.
The old mechanism is still kept, for a functions which is not so easily to
fix a cancellation problem, the rough mechanism is used.
Reviewed by: kib@
_thr_suspend_check() which messes sigmask saved in thread structure.
- Don't suspend a thread has force_exit set.
- In pthread_exit(), if there is a suspension flag set, wake up waiting-
thread after setting PS_DEAD, this causes waiting-thread to break loop
in suspend_common().
however if current thread is executing cancellation handler, signal
SIGCANCEL may have already been blocked, this is unexpected, unblock the
signal in new thread if this happens.
MFC after: 1 week
wait(), waitpid() and usleep(), they are internal versions and
should not be cancellation points.
2. Make wait3() as a cancellation point.
3. Move raise() and pause() into file thr_sig.c.
4. Add functions _sigsuspend, _sigwait, _sigtimedwait and _sigwaitinfo,
remove SIGCANCEL bit in wait-set for those functions, the signal is
used internally to implement thread cancellation.
operation, the caller is blocked util target threads are really
suspended, also avoid suspending a thread when it is holding a
critical lock.
Fix a bug in _thr_ref_delete which tests a never set flag.
1. fast simple type mutex.
2. __thread tls works.
3. asynchronous cancellation works ( using signal ).
4. thread synchronization is fully based on umtx, mainly, condition
variable and other synchronization objects were rewritten by using
umtx directly. those objects can be shared between processes via
shared memory, it has to change ABI which does not happen yet.
5. default stack size is increased to 1M on 32 bits platform, 2M for
64 bits platform.
As the result, some mysql super-smack benchmarks show performance is
improved massivly.
Okayed by: jeff, mtm, rwatson, scottl
followed are: Only 3 functions (pthread_cancel, pthread_setcancelstate,
pthread_setcanceltype) are required to be async-signal-safe by POSIX. None of
the rest of the pthread api is required to be async-signal-safe. This means
that only the three mentioned functions are safe to use from inside
signal handlers.
However, there are certain system/libc calls that are
cancellation points that a caller may call from within a signal handler,
and since they are cancellation points calls have to be made into libthr
to test for cancellation and exit the thread if necessary. So, the
cancellation test and thread exit code paths must be async-signal-safe
as well. A summary of the changes follows:
o Almost all of the code paths that masked signals, as well as locking the
pthread structure now lock only the pthread structure.
o Signals are masked (and left that way) as soon as a thread enters
pthread_exit().
o The active and dead threads locks now explicitly require that signals
are masked.
o Access to the isdead field of the pthread structure is protected by both
the active and dead list locks for writing. Either one is sufficient for
reading.
o The thread state and type fields have been combined into one three-state
switch to make it easier to read without requiring a lock. It doesn't need
a lock for writing (and therefore for reading either) because only the
current thread can write to it and it is an integer value.
o The thread state field of the pthread structure has been eliminated. It
was an unnecessary field that mostly duplicated the flags field, but
required additional locking that would make a lot more code paths require
signal masking. Any truly unique values (such as PS_DEAD) have been
reborn as separate members of the pthread structure.
o Since the mutex and condvar pthread functions are not async-signal-safe
there is no need to muck about with the wait queues when handling
a signal ...
o ... which also removes the need for wrapping signal handlers and sigaction(2).
o The condvar and mutex async-cancellation code had to be revised as a result
of some of these changes, which resulted in semi-unrelated changes which
would have been difficult to work on as a separate commit, so they are
included as well.
The only part of the changes I am worried about is related to locking for
the pthread joining fields. But, I will take a closer look at them once this
mega-patch is committed.
functionality spelled out in SUSv3.
o Signal of 0 means do everything except send the signal
o Check that the signal is not invalid
o Check that the target thread is not dead/invalid
sigprocmask no longer needs to be wrapped.
o raise(3) is applied to the calling thread in a threaded program.
o In the sigaction wrapper reference the correct structure.
o Don't treat SIGTHR especially anymore (infact it won't exist in
a little while).
has been executed. On return from the signal handler
the call will either be restarted or EINTR will be returned,
but it will not go back to its previous state. So, it is
sufficient to simply change the state to 'running' without
actually trying to wake up the thread.
_get_curthread(). This is similar to the kernel's curthread. Doing
this saves stack overhead and is more convenient to the programmer.
- Pass the pointer to the newly created thread to _thread_init().
- Remove _get_curthread_slow().