freebsd-skq/contrib/lib9p/threadpool.c

423 lines
12 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

/*
* Copyright 2016 Jakub Klama <jceel@FreeBSD.org>
* All rights reserved
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted providing 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.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``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 AUTHOR 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 <errno.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <pthread.h>
#if defined(__FreeBSD__)
#include <pthread_np.h>
#endif
#include <sys/queue.h>
#include "lib9p.h"
#include "threadpool.h"
static void l9p_threadpool_rflush(struct l9p_threadpool *tp,
struct l9p_request *req);
static void *
l9p_responder(void *arg)
{
struct l9p_threadpool *tp;
struct l9p_worker *worker = arg;
struct l9p_request *req;
tp = worker->ltw_tp;
for (;;) {
/* get next reply to send */
pthread_mutex_lock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
while (STAILQ_EMPTY(&tp->ltp_replyq) && !worker->ltw_exiting)
pthread_cond_wait(&tp->ltp_reply_cv, &tp->ltp_mtx);
if (worker->ltw_exiting) {
pthread_mutex_unlock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
break;
}
/* off reply queue */
req = STAILQ_FIRST(&tp->ltp_replyq);
STAILQ_REMOVE_HEAD(&tp->ltp_replyq, lr_worklink);
/* request is now in final glide path, can't be Tflush-ed */
req->lr_workstate = L9P_WS_REPLYING;
/* any flushers waiting for this request can go now */
if (req->lr_flushstate != L9P_FLUSH_NONE)
l9p_threadpool_rflush(tp, req);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
/* send response */
l9p_respond(req, false, true);
}
return (NULL);
}
static void *
l9p_worker(void *arg)
{
struct l9p_threadpool *tp;
struct l9p_worker *worker = arg;
struct l9p_request *req;
tp = worker->ltw_tp;
pthread_mutex_lock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
for (;;) {
while (STAILQ_EMPTY(&tp->ltp_workq) && !worker->ltw_exiting)
pthread_cond_wait(&tp->ltp_work_cv, &tp->ltp_mtx);
if (worker->ltw_exiting)
break;
/* off work queue; now work-in-progress, by us */
req = STAILQ_FIRST(&tp->ltp_workq);
STAILQ_REMOVE_HEAD(&tp->ltp_workq, lr_worklink);
req->lr_workstate = L9P_WS_INPROGRESS;
req->lr_worker = worker;
pthread_mutex_unlock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
/* actually try the request */
req->lr_error = l9p_dispatch_request(req);
/* move to responder queue, updating work-state */
pthread_mutex_lock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
req->lr_workstate = L9P_WS_RESPQUEUED;
req->lr_worker = NULL;
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&tp->ltp_replyq, req, lr_worklink);
/* signal the responder */
pthread_cond_signal(&tp->ltp_reply_cv);
}
pthread_mutex_unlock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
return (NULL);
}
/*
* Just before finally replying to a request that got touched by
* a Tflush request, we enqueue its flushers (requests of type
* Tflush, which are now on the flushee's lr_flushq) onto the
* response queue.
*/
static void
l9p_threadpool_rflush(struct l9p_threadpool *tp, struct l9p_request *req)
{
struct l9p_request *flusher;
/*
* https://swtch.com/plan9port/man/man9/flush.html says:
*
* "Should multiple Tflushes be received for a pending
* request, they must be answered in order. A Rflush for
* any of the multiple Tflushes implies an answer for all
* previous ones. Therefore, should a server receive a
* request and then multiple flushes for that request, it
* need respond only to the last flush." This means
* we could march through the queue of flushers here,
* marking all but the last one as "to be dropped" rather
* than "to be replied-to".
*
* However, we'll leave that for later, if ever -- it
* should be harmless to respond to each, in order.
*/
STAILQ_FOREACH(flusher, &req->lr_flushq, lr_flushlink) {
flusher->lr_workstate = L9P_WS_RESPQUEUED;
#ifdef notdef
if (not the last) {
flusher->lr_flushstate = L9P_FLUSH_NOT_RUN;
/* or, flusher->lr_drop = true ? */
}
#endif
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&tp->ltp_replyq, flusher, lr_worklink);
}
}
int
l9p_threadpool_init(struct l9p_threadpool *tp, int size)
{
struct l9p_worker *worker;
#if defined(__FreeBSD__)
char threadname[16];
#endif
int error;
int i, nworkers, nresponders;
if (size <= 0)
return (EINVAL);
error = pthread_mutex_init(&tp->ltp_mtx, NULL);
if (error)
return (error);
error = pthread_cond_init(&tp->ltp_work_cv, NULL);
if (error)
goto fail_work_cv;
error = pthread_cond_init(&tp->ltp_reply_cv, NULL);
if (error)
goto fail_reply_cv;
STAILQ_INIT(&tp->ltp_workq);
STAILQ_INIT(&tp->ltp_replyq);
LIST_INIT(&tp->ltp_workers);
nresponders = 0;
nworkers = 0;
for (i = 0; i <= size; i++) {
worker = calloc(1, sizeof(struct l9p_worker));
worker->ltw_tp = tp;
worker->ltw_responder = i == 0;
error = pthread_create(&worker->ltw_thread, NULL,
worker->ltw_responder ? l9p_responder : l9p_worker,
(void *)worker);
if (error) {
free(worker);
break;
}
if (worker->ltw_responder)
nresponders++;
else
nworkers++;
#if defined(__FreeBSD__)
if (worker->ltw_responder) {
pthread_set_name_np(worker->ltw_thread, "9p-responder");
} else {
sprintf(threadname, "9p-worker:%d", i - 1);
pthread_set_name_np(worker->ltw_thread, threadname);
}
#endif
LIST_INSERT_HEAD(&tp->ltp_workers, worker, ltw_link);
}
if (nresponders == 0 || nworkers == 0) {
/* need the one responder, and at least one worker */
l9p_threadpool_shutdown(tp);
return (error);
}
return (0);
/*
* We could avoid these labels by having multiple destroy
* paths (one for each error case), or by having booleans
* for which variables were initialized. Neither is very
* appealing...
*/
fail_reply_cv:
pthread_cond_destroy(&tp->ltp_work_cv);
fail_work_cv:
pthread_mutex_destroy(&tp->ltp_mtx);
return (error);
}
/*
* Run a request, usually by queueing it.
*/
void
l9p_threadpool_run(struct l9p_threadpool *tp, struct l9p_request *req)
{
/*
* Flush requests must be handled specially, since they
* can cancel / kill off regular requests. (But we can
* run them through the regular dispatch mechanism.)
*/
if (req->lr_req.hdr.type == L9P_TFLUSH) {
/* not on a work queue yet so we can touch state */
req->lr_workstate = L9P_WS_IMMEDIATE;
(void) l9p_dispatch_request(req);
} else {
pthread_mutex_lock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
req->lr_workstate = L9P_WS_NOTSTARTED;
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&tp->ltp_workq, req, lr_worklink);
pthread_cond_signal(&tp->ltp_work_cv);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
}
}
/*
* Run a Tflush request. Called via l9p_dispatch_request() since
* it has some debug code in it, but not called from worker thread.
*/
int
l9p_threadpool_tflush(struct l9p_request *req)
{
struct l9p_connection *conn;
struct l9p_threadpool *tp;
struct l9p_request *flushee;
uint16_t oldtag;
enum l9p_flushstate nstate;
/*
* Find what we're supposed to flush (the flushee, as it were).
*/
req->lr_error = 0; /* Tflush always succeeds */
conn = req->lr_conn;
tp = &conn->lc_tp;
oldtag = req->lr_req.tflush.oldtag;
ht_wrlock(&conn->lc_requests);
flushee = ht_find_locked(&conn->lc_requests, oldtag);
if (flushee == NULL) {
/*
* Nothing to flush! The old request must have
* been done and gone already. Just queue this
* Tflush for a success reply.
*/
ht_unlock(&conn->lc_requests);
pthread_mutex_lock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
goto done;
}
/*
* Found the original request. We'll need to inspect its
* work-state to figure out what to do.
*/
pthread_mutex_lock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
ht_unlock(&conn->lc_requests);
switch (flushee->lr_workstate) {
case L9P_WS_NOTSTARTED:
/*
* Flushee is on work queue, but not yet being
* handled by a worker.
*
* The documentation -- see
* http://ericvh.github.io/9p-rfc/rfc9p2000.html
* https://swtch.com/plan9port/man/man9/flush.html
* -- says that "the server should answer the
* flush message immediately". However, Linux
* sends flush requests for operations that
* must finish, such as Tclunk, and it's not
* possible to *answer* the flush request until
* it has been handled (if necessary) or aborted
* (if allowed).
*
* We therefore now just the original request
* and let the request-handler do whatever is
* appropriate. NOTE: we could have a table of
* "requests that can be aborted without being
* run" vs "requests that must be run to be
* aborted", but for now that seems like an
* unnecessary complication.
*/
nstate = L9P_FLUSH_REQUESTED_PRE_START;
break;
case L9P_WS_IMMEDIATE:
/*
* This state only applies to Tflush requests, and
* flushing a Tflush is illegal. But we'll do nothing
* special here, which will make us act like a flush
* request for the flushee that arrived too late to
* do anything about the flushee.
*/
nstate = L9P_FLUSH_REQUESTED_POST_START;
break;
case L9P_WS_INPROGRESS:
/*
* Worker thread flushee->lr_worker is working on it.
* Kick it to get it out of blocking system calls.
* (This requires that it carefully set up some
* signal handlers, and may be FreeBSD-dependent,
* it probably cannot be handled this way on MacOS.)
*/
#ifdef notyet
pthread_kill(...);
#endif
nstate = L9P_FLUSH_REQUESTED_POST_START;
break;
case L9P_WS_RESPQUEUED:
/*
* The flushee is already in the response queue.
* We'll just mark it as having had some flush
* action applied.
*/
nstate = L9P_FLUSH_TOOLATE;
break;
case L9P_WS_REPLYING:
/*
* Although we found the flushee, it's too late to
* make us depend on it: it's already heading out
* the door as a reply.
*
* We don't want to do anything to the flushee.
* Instead, we want to work the same way as if
* we had never found the tag.
*/
goto done;
}
/*
* Now add us to the list of Tflush-es that are waiting
* for the flushee (creating the list if needed, i.e., if
* this is the first Tflush for the flushee). We (req)
* will get queued for reply later, when the responder
* processes the flushee and calls l9p_threadpool_rflush().
*/
if (flushee->lr_flushstate == L9P_FLUSH_NONE)
STAILQ_INIT(&flushee->lr_flushq);
flushee->lr_flushstate = nstate;
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&flushee->lr_flushq, req, lr_flushlink);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
return (0);
done:
/*
* This immediate op is ready to be replied-to now, so just
* stick it onto the reply queue.
*/
req->lr_workstate = L9P_WS_RESPQUEUED;
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&tp->ltp_replyq, req, lr_worklink);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
pthread_cond_signal(&tp->ltp_reply_cv);
return (0);
}
int
l9p_threadpool_shutdown(struct l9p_threadpool *tp)
{
struct l9p_worker *worker, *tmp;
LIST_FOREACH_SAFE(worker, &tp->ltp_workers, ltw_link, tmp) {
pthread_mutex_lock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
worker->ltw_exiting = true;
if (worker->ltw_responder)
pthread_cond_signal(&tp->ltp_reply_cv);
else
pthread_cond_broadcast(&tp->ltp_work_cv);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&tp->ltp_mtx);
pthread_join(worker->ltw_thread, NULL);
LIST_REMOVE(worker, ltw_link);
free(worker);
}
pthread_cond_destroy(&tp->ltp_reply_cv);
pthread_cond_destroy(&tp->ltp_work_cv);
pthread_mutex_destroy(&tp->ltp_mtx);
return (0);
}