Commit Graph

451 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
davidxu
ae38138034 Always deliver synchronous signal to UTS for SA threads. 2003-07-21 00:26:52 +00:00
davidxu
97d2d9dfed Fix sigwait to conform to POSIX.
When a signal is being delivered to process, first find a sigwait
thread to deliver, POSIX's argument is speed of delivering signal
to sigwait thread is faster than other ways. A signal in its wait
set will cause sigwait to return the signal number, a signal not
in its wait set but in not blocked by the thread also causes sigwait
to return, but sigwait returns EINTR, sigwait is oneshot operation,
only one signal can be delivered to its wait set, when a signal is
delivered to the sigwait thread, the thread's sigwait state is canceled.
2003-07-17 22:52:55 +00:00
davidxu
15825cd99f Rename thread_siginfo to cpu_thread_siginfo 2003-07-15 04:26:26 +00:00
davidxu
59f688ef90 If a thread is sending signal to its process, if the thread can handle
the signal itself, it should get it without looking for other threads.
2003-07-11 13:42:23 +00:00
mtm
50c58f0282 Make the conditional, which decides what siglist to put a signal on,
more concise and improve the comment.

Submitted by: bde
2003-07-05 08:37:40 +00:00
mtm
6f4ee681fd Signals sent specifically to a particular thread must
be delivered to that thread, regardless of whether it
has it masked or not.

Previously, if the targeted thread had the signal masked,
it would be put on the processes' siglist. If
another thread has the signal umasked or unmasks it before
the target, then the thread it was intended for would never
receive it.

This patch attempts to solve the problem by requiring callers
of tdsignal() to say whether the signal is for the thread or
for the process. If it is for the process, then normal processing
occurs and any thread that has it unmasked can receive it.
But if it is destined for a specific thread, it is put on
that thread's pending list regardless of whether it is currently
masked or not.

The new behaviour still needs more work, though.  If the signal
is reposted for some reason it is always posted back to the
thread that handled it because the information regarding the
target of the signal has been lost by then.

Reviewed by:	jdp, jeff, bde (style)
2003-07-03 19:09:59 +00:00
davidxu
788b1fc17a o Change kse_thr_interrupt to allow send a signal to a specified thread,
or unblock a thread in kernel, and allow UTS to specify whether syscall
  should be restarted.
o Add ability for UTS to monitor signal comes in and removed from process,
  the flag PS_SIGEVENT is used to indicate the events.
o Add a KMF_WAITSIGEVENT for KSE mailbox flag, UTS call kse_release with
  this flag set to wait for above signal event.
o For SA based thread, kernel masks all signal in its signal mask, let
  UTS to use kse_thr_interrupt interrupt a thread, and install a signal
  frame in userland for the thread.
o Add a tm_syncsig in thread mailbox, when a hardware trap occurs,
  it is used to deliver synchronous signal to userland, and upcall
  is schedule, so UTS can process the synchronous signal for the thread.

Reviewed by: julian (mentor)
2003-06-28 08:29:05 +00:00
davidxu
c6c7b174d1 Fix POSIX compatible bug for sigwaitinfo and sigtimedwait.
POSIX says siginfo pointer parameter can be NULL and if the
function success, it should return signal number but not zero.
The waitset it past should be negatived before it can be
used as thread signal mask.
2003-06-28 08:03:28 +00:00
davidxu
88ed270c3d When a STOP signal is being sent to a process, it is possible all
threads in the process have already masked the signal, so job control
is delayed. But later a thread unmasking the STOP signal should enable
job control, so in issignal(), scanning all threads in process to see
if we can direct suspend some of them, not just suspend current thread.
2003-06-20 03:36:45 +00:00
davidxu
c0a849442b Fix typo. td should be td0. 2003-06-20 01:56:28 +00:00
davidxu
1d77a8e0f6 1. Add code to support bound thread. when blocked, a bound thread never
schedules an upcall. Signal delivering to a bound thread is same as
   non-threaded process. This is intended to be used by libpthread to
   implement PTHREAD_SCOPE_SYSTEM thread.
2. Simplify kse_release() a bit, remove sleep loop.
2003-06-15 12:51:26 +00:00
davidxu
abb4420bbe Rename P_THREADED to P_SA. P_SA means a process is using scheduler
activations.
2003-06-15 00:31:24 +00:00
obrien
3b8fff9e4c Use __FBSDID(). 2003-06-11 00:56:59 +00:00
jhb
ae45522340 - Add a td_pflags field to struct thread for private flags accessed only by
curthread.  Unlike td_flags, this field does not need any locking.
- Replace the td_inktr and td_inktrace variables with equivalent private
  thread flags.
- Move TDF_OLDMASK over to the private flags field so it no longer requires
  sched_lock.
2003-06-09 17:38:32 +00:00
obrien
384dc4a2a3 Fix long standing bug that prevents the PT_CONTINUE, PT_KILL and
PT_DETACH ptrace(2) requests from functioning as advertised in the
manual page.  As described in kern/35175, the PT_DETACH request will,
under certain circumstances, pass an unwanted signal on to the traced
process upan detaching from it.  The PT_CONTINUE request will
sometimes fail if you make it pass a signal that has "properties" that
differ from the properties of the signal that origionally caused the
traced process to be stopped.  Since PT_KILL is nothing than
PT_CONTINUE with SIGKILL, it is broken too.  In the PT_KILL case, this
leads to an unkillable process.

PR:		44011
Submitted by:	Mark Kettenis <kettenis@chello.nl>
Approved by:	re(jhb)
2003-05-16 01:34:23 +00:00
jhb
89a4eb17de - Merge struct procsig with struct sigacts.
- Move struct sigacts out of the u-area and malloc() it using the
  M_SUBPROC malloc bucket.
- Add a small sigacts_*() API for managing sigacts structures: sigacts_alloc(),
  sigacts_free(), sigacts_copy(), sigacts_share(), and sigacts_shared().
- Remove the p_sigignore, p_sigacts, and p_sigcatch macros.
- Add a mutex to struct sigacts that protects all the members of the struct.
- Add sigacts locking.
- Remove Giant from nosys(), kill(), killpg(), and kern_sigaction() now
  that sigacts is locked.
- Several in-kernel functions such as psignal(), tdsignal(), trapsignal(),
  and thread_stopped() are now MP safe.

Reviewed by:	arch@
Approved by:	re (rwatson)
2003-05-13 20:36:02 +00:00
jhb
9efb8e111e Remove Giant from kern_sigsuspend() and osigsuspend() as these should now
be MP safe.

Approved by:	re (scottl)
2003-05-09 19:11:32 +00:00
jhb
65572963c9 Mostly sort the includes. 2003-05-05 21:26:25 +00:00
jhb
099389efb0 Lock the proc lock around calls to tdsignal() in the sigwait() family of
syscalls.
2003-05-05 21:18:10 +00:00
jhb
755cc1e549 Make issignal() private to kern_sig.c since it is only called from cursig()
and cursig() is now a function rather than a macro.
2003-05-05 21:16:28 +00:00
jhb
65f917c9f1 Forgot to remove Giant around call to kern_sigaction() in
freebsd4_sigaction() in revision 1.232.
2003-04-30 19:45:13 +00:00
jhb
57c0e7ab21 Push Giant down into kern_sigaction() instead of locking it around calls
to kern_sigaction() in the various callers of the function.
2003-04-25 20:01:19 +00:00
jhb
9b55ca02a0 Remove Giant from osigblock(), osigsetmask(), and kern_sigaltstack(). 2003-04-23 19:49:18 +00:00
jhb
89c52cff2e - Reorganize osigstack() to do the copyin first, grab the proc lock once,
do all the various sigstack dances, unlock the proc lock, and finally do
  the copyout.  This more closely resembles the behavior of
  kern_sigaltstack() and closes a small race.
- Remove Giant from osigstack as it is no longer needed.
2003-04-23 18:50:25 +00:00
davidxu
28038e92fe Unbreak sigaltstack syscall. sigonstack is now a function and
want proc lock be held.
2003-04-19 05:04:06 +00:00
jhb
801acfe1d4 - Make sigonstack() a regular function instead of an inline and add a proc
lock assertion to it.
- SIGPENDING() no longer needs sched_lock, so only grab sched_lock to set
  the TDF_NEEDSIGCHK and TDF_ASTPENDING flags in signotify().
- Add a proc lock assertion to tdsigwakeup().
- Since we always set TDF_OLDMASK while holding the proc lock, the proc
  lock is sufficient protection to check its state in postsig() and we only
  need sched_lock when clearing the actual flag.
2003-04-18 20:59:05 +00:00
jhb
fa6200c9ec Rename do_sigprocmask() to kern_sigprocmask() and make it a global symbol
so that it can be used by binary emulators.
2003-04-18 20:18:44 +00:00
jhb
5921ce0c8b Don't hold the proc lock while performing sigset conversions on local
variables.
2003-04-17 22:07:56 +00:00
jhb
4b2bc05ffe - Remove garbage SIGSETOR() that snuck into struct sigpending_args
definition.
- Use the proper constant for the last arg to kern_sigaction() in osigvec()
  instead of a magic value.
2003-04-17 22:06:43 +00:00
davidxu
d5e8438f32 Style fix. 2003-04-12 02:54:46 +00:00
davidxu
cb24fd3c57 Check SIG_HOLD action ealier to avoid missing test it in later code. 2003-04-12 00:38:47 +00:00
jeff
3c4f704ebe - p will be unused in cursig() if INVARIANTS is not defined. Access it
through td->td_proc to avoid the unused variable.

Spotted by:	Maxim Konovalov <maxim@macomnet.ru>
2003-04-01 09:07:36 +00:00
jeff
b23496dd54 - Define sigwait, sigtimedwait, and sigwaitinfo in terms of
kern_sigtimedwait() which is capable of supporting all of their semantics.
 - These should be POSIX compliant but more careful review is needed before
   we announce this.
2003-03-31 23:30:41 +00:00
jeff
46e6ba39f1 - Move p->p_sigmask to td->td_sigmask. Signal masks will be per thread with
a follow on commit to kern_sig.c
 - signotify() now operates on a thread since unmasked pending signals are
   stored in the thread.
 - PS_NEEDSIGCHK moves to TDF_NEEDSIGCHK.
2003-03-31 22:49:17 +00:00
jeff
6e01278555 - Mark signals which may be delivered to any thread in the process with
SA_PROC.  Signals without this flag should be directed to a particular
   thread if this is possible.
2003-03-31 22:12:09 +00:00
jeff
4a3718fb25 - Change trapsignal() to accept a thread and not a proc.
- Change all consumers to pass in a thread.

Right now this does not cause any functional changes but it will be important
later when signals can be delivered to specific threads.
2003-03-31 22:02:38 +00:00
davidxu
bb4f70ad77 Fix threaded process job control bug. SMP tested.
Reviewed by: julian
2003-03-11 00:07:53 +00:00
tjr
0b60094f80 Hold the proc lock while accessing p_procsig in trapsignal(). 2003-03-09 01:40:55 +00:00
jhb
e4bcd25517 Replace calls to WITNESS_SLEEP() and witness_list() with equivalent calls
to WITNESS_WARN().
2003-03-04 21:03:05 +00:00
julian
3fc9836d46 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
davidxu
53f79e941f Fix a bug when handling SIGCONT.
Reported By: Mike Makonnen <mtm@identd.net>
2003-02-26 12:47:46 +00:00
jeff
5c29a640b8 - Add a new function, thread_signal_add(), that is called from postsig to
add a signal to a mailbox's pending set.
 - Add a new function, thread_signal_upcall(), this causes the current thread
   to upcall so that we can deliver pending signals.

Reviewed by:	mini
2003-02-17 09:58:11 +00:00
julian
af55753a06 Move a bunch of flags from the KSE to the thread.
I was in two minds as to where to put them in the first case..
I should have listenned to the other mind.

Submitted by:	 parts by davidxu@
Reviewed by:	jeff@ mini@
2003-02-17 09:55:10 +00:00
jeff
590a39e29b - 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
tjr
c831929bbb Acquire Giant around calls to kern_sigaction() in sigaction(),
freebsd4_sigaction() and osigaction() instead of around the whole
body of those functions. They now no longer hold Giant around calls
to copyin() and copyout(), and it is slightly more obvious what
Giant is protecting.
2003-02-15 09:56:09 +00:00
tjr
a000ef163a osigpending() no longer needs Giant, for the same reason sigpending()
does not.
2003-02-15 09:15:30 +00:00
tjr
f12b647e3e All uses of p_siglist are protected by the proc lock now, so there's
no need to acquire Giant in sigpending() anymore.
2003-02-15 08:42:02 +00:00
julian
e8efa7328e 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
peter
d7e400a15f No longer force COMPAT_FREEBSD4 to be on. 2003-01-27 23:01:03 +00:00
davidxu
4b9b549ca2 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
davidxu
5e7b42c50b Forgot to call setrunnable() for un-idled thread. 2003-01-07 06:04:33 +00:00
davidxu
87b58b1648 Check signals for idled threads. 2003-01-07 05:56:38 +00:00
julian
dde96893c9 Add code to ddb to allow backtracing an arbitrary thread.
(show thread {address})

Remove the IDLE kse state and replace it with a change in
the way threads sahre KSEs. Every KSE now has a thread, which is
considered its "owner" however a KSE may also be lent to other
threads in the same group to allow completion of in-kernel work.
n this case the owner remains the same and the KSE will revert to the
owner when the other work has been completed.

All creations of upcalls etc. is now done from
kse_reassign() which in turn is called from mi_switch or
thread_exit(). This means that special code can be removed from
msleep() and cv_wait().

kse_release() does not leave a KSE with no thread any more but
converts the existing thread into teh KSE's owner, and sets it up
for doing an upcall. It is just inhibitted from being scheduled until
there is some reason to do an upcall.

Remove all trace of the kse_idle queue since it is no-longer needed.
"Idle" KSEs are now on the loanable queue.
2002-12-28 01:23:07 +00:00
phk
7e42ab358e Don't cast a pointer to (intptr_t) and then on to (int) when we cannot
be sure that (int) is large enough.  Instead cast only to (intptr_t) and
cast the switch/case values to (intptr_t) as well.
2002-12-17 19:13:03 +00:00
peter
f7fa86b743 Split 4.x and 5.x signal handling so that we can keep 4.x signal
handling clean and functional as 5.x evolves.  This allows some of the
nasty bandaids in the 5.x codepaths to be unwound.

Encapsulate 4.x signal handling under COMPAT_FREEBSD4 (there is an
anti-foot-shooting measure in place, 5.x folks need this for a while) and
finish encapsulating the older stuff under COMPAT_43.  Since the ancient
stuff is required on alpha (longjmp(3) passes a 'struct osigcontext *'
to the current sigreturn(2), instead of the 'ucontext_t *' that sigreturn
is supposed to take), add a compile time check to prevent foot shooting
there too.  Add uniform COMPAT_43 stubs for ia64/sparc64/powerpc.

Tested on: i386, alpha, ia64.  Compiled on sparc64 (a few days ago).
Approved by: re
2002-10-25 19:10:58 +00:00
phk
76d8452fbf Fix mis-indentation.
Spotted by:	FlexeLint
2002-10-02 09:09:25 +00:00
jmallett
7a693db242 Back our kernel support for reliable signal queues.
Requested by:	rwatson, phk, and many others
2002-10-01 17:15:53 +00:00
jmallett
8ff3150660 Back out code changes that snuck into the previous forced commit. 2002-10-01 00:16:17 +00:00
jmallett
a8d86705cf (Forced commit, to clarify previous commit of ksiginfo/signal queue code.)
I've added a structure, kernel-private, to represent a pending or in-delivery
signal, called `ksiginfo'.  It is roughly analogous to the basic information
that is exported by the POSIX interface 'siginfo_t', but more basic.  I've
added functions to allocate these structures, and further to wrap all signal
operations using them.

Once the operations are wrapped, I've added a TailQ (see queue(3)) of these
structures to 'struct proc', and all pending signals are in that TailQ.  When
a signal is being delivered, it is dequeued from the list.  Once I finish
the spreading of ksiginfo throughout the tree, the dequeued structure will be
delivered to the process in question, whereas currently and normally, the
signal number is what is used.
2002-10-01 00:07:28 +00:00
jmallett
0341f71df1 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
obrien
30b02a2de2 Fix style nit where conditionally compiled code was unconditionalized,
but style(9) was consulted.

Submitted by:	bde
2002-09-29 04:47:41 +00:00
phk
1dfc2c167f Be consistent about "static" functions: if the function is marked
static in its prototype, mark it static at the definition too.

Inspired by:    FlexeLint warning #512
2002-09-28 17:15:38 +00:00
mini
94ac5d965f 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
c7e9e7e892 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
5702a380a5 Completely redo thread states.
Reviewed by:	davidxu@freebsd.org
2002-09-11 08:13:56 +00:00
davidxu
b1d94c37f7 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
davidxu
de678b0952 In the kernel code, we have the tsleep() call with the PCATCH argument.
PCATCH means 'if we get a signal, interrupt me!" and tsleep returns
either EINTR or ERESTART depending on the circumstances.  ERESTART is
"special" because it causes the system call to fail, but right as it
returns back to userland it tells the trap handler to move %eip back a
bit so that userland will immediately re-run the syscall.
This is a syscall restart. It only works for things like read() etc where
nothing has changed yet. Note that *userland* is tricked into restarting
the syscall by the kernel. The kernel doesn't actually do the restart. It
is deadly for things like select, poll, nanosleep etc where it might cause
the elapsed time to be reset and start again from scratch.  So those
syscalls do this to prevent userland rerunning the syscall:
  if (error == ERESTART) error = EINTR;

Fake "signals" like SIGTSTP from ^Z etc do not normally invoke userland
signal handlers. But, in -current, the PCATCH *is* being triggered and
tsleep is returning ERESTART, and the syscall is aborted even though no
userland signal handler was run.
That is the fault here.  We're triggering the PCATCH in cases that we
shouldn't.  ie: it is being triggered on *any* signal processing, rather
than the case where the signal is posted to userland.
	--- Peter

The work of psignal() is a patchwork of special case required by the process
debugging and job-control facilities...
	--- Kirk McKusick
	"The design and impelementation of the 4.4BSD Operating system"
	Page 105

in STABLE source, when psignal is posting a STOP signal to sleeping
process and the signal action of the process is SIG_DFL, system will
directly change the process state from SSLEEP to SSTOP, and when
SIGCONT is posted to the stopped process, if it finds that the process
is still on sleep queue, the process state will be restored to SSLEEP,
and won't wakeup the process.

this commit mimics the behaviour in STABLE source tree.

Reviewed by: Jon Mini, Tim Robbins, Peter Wemm
Approved by: julian@freebsd.org (mentor)
2002-09-03 12:56:01 +00:00
iedowse
be17b12cb6 Split out a number of mostly VFS and signal related syscalls into
a kernel-internal kern_*() version and a wrapper that is called via
the syscall vector table. For paths and structure pointers, the
internal version either takes a uio_seg parameter or requires the
caller to copyin() the data to kernel memory as appropiate. This
will permit emulation layers to use these syscalls without having
to copy out translated arguments to the stack gap.

Discussed on:		-arch
Review/suggestions:	bde, jhb, peter, marcel
2002-09-01 20:37:28 +00:00
julian
db3b659129 move the assert to cover more cases 2002-08-26 05:02:56 +00:00
julian
90d0ff41ba Don't re-lock the sched lock if we didn't unlock it.
Original error by: David Xu <bsddiy@yahoo.com>
Fix by:	David Xu <bsddiy@yahoo.com>
Completely failed to spot it: Julian Elischer <julian@freebsd.org>
2002-08-23 07:23:44 +00:00
julian
c99effb6f5 Revert some suspension/sleep/signal code from KSE-III
We need to rethink a bit of this and it doesn't matter if
we break the KSE test program for now as long
as non-KSE programs act as expected.

Submitted by:	David Xu <bsddiy@yahoo.com>
	(this guy's just asking to get hit with a commit bit..)
2002-08-21 20:03:55 +00:00
julian
77f180ef67 Do some work on keeping better track of stopped/continued state.
I'm not sure what happenned to the original setting of the P_CONTINUED
flag. it appears to have been lost in the paper shuffling...

Submitted by:	David Xu <bsddiy@yahoo.com>
2002-08-08 06:18:41 +00:00
bde
2e0be03c3e Try harder to "set signal flags proprly [sic] for ast()". See rev.1.154. 2002-08-06 15:22:09 +00:00
julian
b3aca85def Slight cleanup of some comments/whitespace.
Make idle process state more consistant.
Add an assert on thread state.
Clean up idleproc/mi_switch() interaction.
Use a local instead of referencing curthread 7 times in a row
(I've been told curthread can be expensive on some architectures)
Remove some commented out code.
Add a little commented out code (completion coming soon)

Reviewed by:	jhb@freebsd.org
2002-08-01 18:45:10 +00:00
julian
04c188f506 Don't need to hold schedlock specifically for stop() ans it calls wakeup()
that locks it anyhow.

Reviewed by: jhb@freebsd.org
2002-07-30 21:13:48 +00:00
julian
50bdfea7d1 revert some of the handling of STOP signals in
issignal(). Let thread_suspend_check() actually do the suspension
at the user boundary.

Submitted by:	David Xu <bsddiy@yahoo.com>
2002-07-24 07:23:41 +00:00
truckman
69db9157a1 Rearrange the code so that it checks whether the file is something
valid to write a core dump to before doing the preparations to actually
write to the file.

Call VOP_GETATTR() before dropping the initial vnode lock.
2002-07-10 06:31:35 +00:00
julian
27e23d9345 Try clean up some of the mess that resulted from layers and layers
of p4 merges from -current as things started getting different.

Corroborated by: Similar patches just mailed by BDE.
2002-07-03 09:15:20 +00:00
julian
c897d1c09f White space commit.
I'm working on this file but I wanted to make the whitespece commit
separatly.
2002-07-03 06:15:26 +00:00
gallatin
0a24d4225f Hold the sched lock across call to forward_signal() in tdsignal() to
keep SMP systems from panic'ing when ^C'ing an app

suggested by julian
2002-07-03 02:55:48 +00:00
julian
aa2dc0a5d9 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
97873dcbf3 more caddr_t removal. 2002-06-29 02:00:02 +00:00
jhb
11b212e025 - trapsignal() no longer needs to acquire Giant for ktrpsig().
- Catch up to new ktrace API.
2002-06-07 05:43:02 +00:00
davidc
b44a13481e s/!SIGNOTEMPY/SIGISEMPTY/
Reviewed by: marcel, jhb, alfred
2002-06-06 19:12:41 +00:00
mike
1b681bdeaa 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
julian
304195369e CURSIG() is not a macro so rename it cursig().
Obtained from:	KSE tree
2002-05-29 23:44:32 +00:00
jhb
b6d6774e76 Change p_can{debug,see,sched,signal}()'s first argument to be a thread
pointer instead of a proc pointer and require the process pointed to
by the second argument to be locked.  We now use the thread ucred reference
for the credential checks in p_can*() as a result.  p_canfoo() should now
no longer need Giant.
2002-05-19 00:14:50 +00:00
rwatson
61d5a9043f p_cansignal() returns an errno value; at some point, the check for
inter-process signalling ceased to preserve and return that value,
instead always returning EPERM.  This meant that it was possible
to "probe" the pid space for processes that were not otherwise
visible.  This change reverts that reversion.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-05-14 23:07:15 +00:00
mini
b6d1cd6b33 Remove trace_req().
Reviewed by:	alfred, jhb, peter
2002-05-09 04:13:41 +00:00
alfred
8de609e473 expand_name fixes:
.) don't use MAXPATHLEN + 1, fix logic to compensate.
.) style(9) function parameters.
.) fix line wrapping.
.) remove duplicated error and string handling code.
.) don't NUL terminate already NUL terminated string.
.) all string length variables changed from int to size_t.
.) constify variables.
.) catch when corename would be truncated.
.) cast pid_t and uid_t args for format string.
.) add parens around return arguments.

Help and suggestions from: bde
2002-05-08 09:06:47 +00:00
alfred
c4da65d875 M_ZERO the temp buffer in expand_name() otherwise if an error occurs
while logging we may pass a non NUL terminated string to log(9) for a
%s format arg.
2002-05-07 23:37:07 +00:00
bde
31ade1b13e Return the correct error code (ENOSYS, not EINVAL) from nosys(). Getting
killed by SIGSYS for unimlemented syscalls is bad enough.

Obtained from:	Lite2 branch

The Lite2 branch has some other interesting unmerged (?) bits in this
file.  They are well hidden among cosmetic regressions.
2002-05-05 04:50:47 +00:00
jhb
ce5fb0dc3a - Reorder execve() so that it performs blocking operations before it
locks the process.
- Defer other blocking operations such as vrele()'s until after we
  release locks.
- execsigs() now requires the proc lock to be held when it is called
  rather than locking the process internally.
2002-05-02 15:00:14 +00:00
alfred
798c53d495 Redo the sigio locking.
Turn the sigio sx into a mutex.

Sigio lock is really only needed to protect interrupts from dereferencing
the sigio pointer in an object when the sigio itself is being destroyed.

In order to do this in the most unintrusive manner change pgsigio's
sigio * argument into a **, that way we can lock internally to the
function.
2002-05-01 20:44:46 +00:00
iedowse
08fc3f3e82 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
jhb
dba04cd736 Lock proctree_lock instead of pgrpsess_lock. 2002-04-16 17:11:34 +00:00
jhb
e93a8a367d - Change killpg1()'s first argument to be a thread instead of a process so
we can use td_ucred.
- In killpg1(), the proc lock is sufficient to check if p_stat is SZOMB
  or not.  We don't need sched_lock.
- Close some races in psignal().  In psignal() there is a big switch
  statement based on p_stat.  All the different cases are assuming that
  the process (or thread) isn't going to change state out from under it.
  To ensure this is true, just lock sched_lock for the entire switch.  We
  practically held it the entire time already anyways.  This also
  simplifies the locking somewhat and actually results in fewer lock
  operations.
- Allow signotify() to be called with the sched_lock held since psignal()
  now does that.
- Use td_ucred in a couple of places.
2002-04-13 23:33:36 +00:00
bde
14ae95f735 Moved signal handling and rescheduling from userret() to ast() so that
they aren't in the usual path of execution for syscalls and traps.
The main complication for this is that we have to set flags to control
ast() everywhere that changes the signal mask.

Avoid locking in userret() in most of the remaining cases.

Submitted by:	luoqi (first part only, long ago, reorganized by me)
Reminded by:	dillon
2002-04-04 17:49:48 +00:00
bde
3b8182ff40 Optimized the check for unmasked pending signals in CURSIG() using a new
inline function sigsetmasked() and a new macro SIGPENDING().  CURSIG()
will soon be moved out of the normal path of execution for syscalls and
traps.  Then its efficiency will be less important but the new interfaces
will be useful for checking for unmasked pending signals in more places.

Submitted by:		luoqi (long ago, in a slightly different form)

Assert that sched_lock is not held in CURSIG().
2002-04-04 15:19:41 +00:00
bde
90f30ee936 Fixed some style bugs in the removal of __P(()). The main ones were
not removing tabs before "__P((", and not outdenting continuation lines
to preserve non-KNF lining up of code with parentheses.  Switch to KNF
formatting and/or rewrap the whole prototype in some cases.
2002-03-24 05:09:11 +00:00
alfred
357e37e023 Remove __P. 2002-03-19 21:25:46 +00:00
phk
944071fc6d Fix warning in !SMP case.
Submitted by:	 Maxime Henrion <mux@mu.org>
2002-02-26 09:21:52 +00:00
tanimura
a09da29859 Lock struct pgrp, session and sigio.
New locks are:

- pgrpsess_lock which locks the whole pgrps and sessions,
- pg_mtx which protects the pgrp members, and
- s_mtx which protects the session members.

Please refer to sys/proc.h for the coverage of these locks.

Changes on the pgrp/session interface:

- pgfind() needs the pgrpsess_lock held.

- The caller of enterpgrp() is responsible to allocate a new pgrp and
  session.

- Call enterthispgrp() in order to enter an existing pgrp.

- pgsignal() requires a pgrp lock held.

Reviewed by:	jhb, alfred
Tested on:	cvsup.jp.FreeBSD.org
		(which is a quad-CPU machine running -current)
2002-02-23 11:12:57 +00:00
bde
60f2b0c638 Fixed a typo in rev.1.65 that gave a reference to a nonexistent variable.
This was not detected by LINT because LINT is missing COMPAT_SUNOS.
2002-02-15 03:54:01 +00:00
julian
37369620df In a threaded world, differnt priorirites become properties of
different entities.  Make it so.

Reviewed by:	jhb@freebsd.org (john baldwin)
2002-02-11 20:37:54 +00:00
rwatson
5e6a46b8e5 Add a comment indicating that VOP_GETATTR() is called without appropriate
locking in the core dump code.  This should be fixed.
2002-02-10 21:45:16 +00:00
julian
b5eb64d6f0 Pre-KSE/M3 commit.
this is a low-functionality change that changes the kernel to access the main
thread of a process via the linked list of threads rather than
assuming that it is embedded in the process. It IS still embeded there
but remove all teh code that assumes that in preparation for the next commit
which will actually move it out.

Reviewed by: peter@freebsd.org, gallatin@cs.duke.edu, benno rice,
2002-02-07 20:58:47 +00:00
rwatson
9f1ff731e4 o Revert kern_sig.c#1.143, as cr_cansignal() doesn't currently permit
a number of desirable cases in which SIGIO/SIGURG are delivered.  We'll
  keep tweaking.

Reported by:	Alexander Kabaev <ak03@gte.com>
2002-01-10 01:25:35 +00:00
rwatson
51a1c19396 - Teach SIGIO code to use cr_cansignal() instead of a custom CANSIGIO()
macro.  As a result, mandatory signal delivery policies will be
  applied consistently across the kernel.

- Note that this subtly changes the protection semantics, and we should
  watch out for any resulting breakage.  Previously, delivery of SIGIO
  in this circumstance was limited to situations where the subject was
  privileged, or where one of the subject's (ruid, euid) matched one
  of the object's (ruid, euid).  In the new scenario, subject (ruid, euid)
  are matched against the object's (ruid, svuid), and the object uid's
  must be a subset of the subject uid's.  Likewise, jail now affects
  delivery, and special handling for P_SUGID of the object is present.
  This change can always be reversed or tweaked if it proves to disrupt
  application behavior substantially.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-01-06 00:54:46 +00:00
jhb
1ce407b675 Change the preemption code for software interrupt thread schedules and
mutex releases to not require flags for the cases when preemption is
not allowed:

The purpose of the MTX_NOSWITCH and SWI_NOSWITCH flags is to prevent
switching to a higher priority thread on mutex releease and swi schedule,
respectively when that switch is not safe.  Now that the critical section
API maintains a per-thread nesting count, the kernel can easily check
whether or not it should switch without relying on flags from the
programmer.  This fixes a few bugs in that all current callers of
swi_sched() used SWI_NOSWITCH, when in fact, only the ones called from
fast interrupt handlers and the swi_sched of softclock needed this flag.
Note that to ensure that swi_sched()'s in clock and fast interrupt
handlers do not switch, these handlers have to be explicitly wrapped
in critical_enter/exit pairs.  Presently, just wrapping the handlers is
sufficient, but in the future with the fully preemptive kernel, the
interrupt must be EOI'd before critical_exit() is called.  (critical_exit()
can switch due to a deferred preemption in a fully preemptive kernel.)

I've tested the changes to the interrupt code on i386 and alpha.  I have
not tested ia64, but the interrupt code is almost identical to the alpha
code, so I expect it will work fine.  PowerPC and ARM do not yet have
interrupt code in the tree so they shouldn't be broken.  Sparc64 is
broken, but that's been ok'd by jake and tmm who will be fixing the
interrupt code for sparc64 shortly.

Reviewed by:	peter
Tested on:	i386, alpha
2002-01-05 08:47:13 +00:00
rwatson
9e2b770a8f o Wording fix in comment.
Submitted by:	tanimura via p4
2001-12-14 00:38:01 +00:00
peter
bd5684dc54 _SIG_MAXSIG (128) is the highest legal signal. The arrays are offset
by one - see _SIG_IDX().  Revert part of my mis-correction in kern_sig.c
(but signal 0 still has to be allowed) and fix _SIG_VALID() (it was
rejecting ignal 128).
2001-11-03 13:26:15 +00:00
peter
43929480b6 Partial reversion of rev 1.138. kill and killpg allow a signal
argument of 0.  You cannot return EINVAL for signal 0.  This broke
(in 5 minutes of testing) at least ssh-agent and screen.

However, there was a bug in the original code.  Signal 128 is not
valid.

Pointy-hat to: des, jhb
2001-11-03 12:36:16 +00:00
des
84073a96d1 We have a _SIG_VALID() macro, so use it instead of duplicating the test all
over the place.  Also replace a printf() + panic() with a KASSERT().

Reviewed by:	jhb
2001-11-02 23:50:00 +00:00
iedowse
c0a87dce40 Fix a typo in do_sigaction() where sa_sigaction and sa_handler were
confused. Since sa_sigaction and sa_handler alias each other in a
union, the bug was completely harmless. This had been fixed as part
of the SIGCHLD changes in revision 1.125, but it was reverted when
they were backed out in revision 1.126.
2001-10-07 16:11:37 +00:00
ps
6dd5e71c08 Lock the vnode while truncating the corefile. This fixes a panic
with softupdates dangling deps.

Submitted by:	peter
MFC:		ASAP :)
2001-09-26 01:24:07 +00:00
julian
d733f76a38 Replace line accidentally deleted during KSE additions.
Symptom.. Stopped program unable to be restarted if it was stopped
while already sleeping.
2001-09-17 20:42:25 +00:00
rwatson
448e9232ac o Correct authorization check in CANSIGIO(), which suffered from incorrect
transcription during the (pcred,ucred) merge; this was not used for
  the kill() system call, so does not affect direct explicit process
  signalling.

Pointed out by:	fenner
2001-09-15 22:34:46 +00:00
julian
5596676e6c KSE Milestone 2
Note ALL MODULES MUST BE RECOMPILED
make the kernel aware that there are smaller units of scheduling than the
process. (but only allow one thread per process at this time).
This is functionally equivalent to teh previousl -current except
that there is a thread associated with each process.

Sorry john! (your next MFC will be a doosie!)

Reviewed by: peter@freebsd.org, dillon@freebsd.org

X-MFC after:    ha ha ha ha
2001-09-12 08:38:13 +00:00
dillon
d73b3c59f0 This brings in a Yahoo coredump patch from Paul, with additional mods by
me (addition of vn_rdwr_inchunks).  The problem Yahoo is solving is that
if you have large process images core dumping, or you have a large number of
forked processes all core dumping at the same time, the original coredump code
would leave the vnode locked throughout.  This can cause the directory vnode
to get locked up, which can cause the parent directory vnode to get locked
up, and so on all the way to the root node, locking the entire machine up
for extremely long periods of time.

This patch solves the problem in two ways.  First it uses an advisory
non-blocking lock to abort multiple processes trying to core to the same
file.  Second (my contribution) it chunks up the writes and uses bwillwrite()
to avoid holding the vnode locked while blocking in the buffer cache.

Submitted by:	ps
Reviewed by:	dillon
MFC after:	2 weeks
2001-09-08 20:02:33 +00:00
jhb
054237d0be Call sendsig() with the proc lock held and return with it held. 2001-09-06 22:20:41 +00:00
dillon
91ecbe11ac Giant Pushdown
clock_gettime() clock_settime() nanosleep() settimeofday()
adjtime() getitimer() setitimer() __sysctl() ogetkerninfo()
sigaction() osigaction() sigpending() osigpending() osigvec()
osigblock() osigsetmask() sigsuspend() osigsuspend() osigstack()
sigaltstack() kill() okillpg() trapsignal() nosys()
2001-09-01 18:19:21 +00:00
dillon
08e732a88b Remove the MPSAFE keyword from the parser for syscalls.master.
Instead introduce the [M] prefix to existing keywords.  e.g.
MSTD is the MP SAFE version of STD.  This is prepatory for a
massive Giant lock pushdown.  The old MPSAFE keyword made
syscalls.master too messy.

Begin comments MP-Safe procedures with the comment:
/*
 * MPSAFE
 */
This comments means that the procedure may be called without
Giant held (The procedure itself may still need to obtain
Giant temporarily to do its thing).

sv_prepsyscall() is now MP SAFE and assumed to be MP SAFE
sv_transtrap() is now MP SAFE and assumed to be MP SAFE

ktrsyscall() and ktrsysret() are now MP SAFE (Giant Pushdown)
trapsignal() is now MP SAFE (Giant Pushdown)

Places which used to do the if (mtx_owned(&Giant)) mtx_unlock(&Giant)
test in syscall[2]() in */*/trap.c now do not.  Instead they
explicitly unlock Giant if they previously obtained it, and then
assert that it is no longer held to catch broken system calls.

Rebuild syscall tables.
2001-08-30 18:50:57 +00:00
roam
81537f200c Prevent passing a null pointer as a filename to vn_open(),
if for some reason expand_name() failed to build a core file name.

PR:		29931
Submitted by:	Foldi Tamas <crow@kapu.hu>
Reviewed by:	dd, -arch
MFC after:	1 month
2001-08-24 15:49:30 +00:00
peter
4694b279a2 Make COMPAT_43 optional again. XXX we need COMPAT_FBSD3 etc for this
stuff.
2001-08-21 02:32:59 +00:00
peter
9f38eeae58 Temporarily back out kern_sig.c rev 1.125 and kern_exit.c rev 1.131.
This paniced my one of my machines one time too many :-( and there is
no sign of a solution in the pipeline.  The deltas are still easily
available in cvs.  The problem is that if the parent has been swapped
out, the child process cannot grope around in the parent's UPAGES to
see the sigact[] array or it will fault.  This probably is a showstopper
for this implementation anyway.
2001-08-01 20:35:24 +00:00
dillon
5064dfdc7c As per further discussions on hackers redo the SIGCHLD patch to not generate
an unexpected user-visible side effect with the sigaction flags.  Also cleanup
a minor union issue.

Submitted by: Rudolf Cejka <cejkar@dcse.fee.vutbr.cz>
MFC addendum: MFC will be combined w/ original commit
MFC after: 3 days
2001-07-22 18:47:31 +00:00
jhb
7bb1f29898 Grab Giant around postsig() since sendsig() can call into the vm to
grow the stack and we already needed Giant for KTRACE.
2001-07-03 05:27:53 +00:00
jhb
8210b8d106 - Change CURSIG() and postsig() to require that the proc lock is held
rather than grabbing it and releasing it themselves.  This allows callers
  of these functions to get the lock to close race conditions.
- Grab Giant around ktrace in postsig.
- Count the switches performed on SIGSTOP's as involuntary context switches
  in the resource usage stats.

Reported by:	tegge (signal race), bde (missing csw stats)
2001-06-22 23:02:37 +00:00
jhb
1852c17085 Lock Giant in postsig() for the KTRACE case as ktrpsig() needs Giant when
it writes out to the trace file.

Reported by:	peter, gallatin, and others
2001-06-18 19:23:43 +00:00
dwmalone
46ac202c04 Try to make the setting of the SIGCHLD handler the same as setting of
the NOCLDWAI flag. Susv2 seems to require this.

Submitted by:	Cejka Rudolf <cejkar@dcse.fee.vutbr.cz>
Reviewed by:	dillon
2001-06-11 09:15:41 +00:00
rwatson
f504530d9f o Merge contents of struct pcred into struct ucred. Specifically, add the
real uid, saved uid, real gid, and saved gid to ucred, as well as the
  pcred->pc_uidinfo, which was associated with the real uid, only rename
  it to cr_ruidinfo so as not to conflict with cr_uidinfo, which
  corresponds to the effective uid.
o Remove p_cred from struct proc; add p_ucred to struct proc, replacing
  original macro that pointed.
  p->p_ucred to p->p_cred->pc_ucred.
o Universally update code so that it makes use of ucred instead of pcred,
  p->p_ucred instead of p->p_pcred, cr_ruidinfo instead of p_uidinfo,
  cr_{r,sv}{u,g}id instead of p_*, etc.
o Remove pcred0 and its initialization from init_main.c; initialize
  cr_ruidinfo there.
o Restruction many credential modification chunks to always crdup while
  we figure out locking and optimizations; generally speaking, this
  means moving to a structure like this:
        newcred = crdup(oldcred);
        ...
        p->p_ucred = newcred;
        crfree(oldcred);
  It's not race-free, but better than nothing.  There are also races
  in sys_process.c, all inter-process authorization, fork, exec, and
  exit.
o Remove sigio->sio_ruid since sigio->sio_ucred now contains the ruid;
  remove comments indicating that the old arrangement was a problem.
o Restructure exec1() a little to use newcred/oldcred arrangement, and
  use improved uid management primitives.
o Clean up exit1() so as to do less work in credential cleanup due to
  pcred removal.
o Clean up fork1() so as to do less work in credential cleanup and
  allocation.
o Clean up ktrcanset() to take into account changes, and move to using
  suser_xxx() instead of performing a direct uid==0 comparision.
o Improve commenting in various kern_prot.c credential modification
  calls to better document current behavior.  In a couple of places,
  current behavior is a little questionable and we need to check
  POSIX.1 to make sure it's "right".  More commenting work still
  remains to be done.
o Update credential management calls, such as crfree(), to take into
  account new ruidinfo reference.
o Modify or add the following uid and gid helper routines:
      change_euid()
      change_egid()
      change_ruid()
      change_rgid()
      change_svuid()
      change_svgid()
  In each case, the call now acts on a credential not a process, and as
  such no longer requires more complicated process locking/etc.  They
  now assume the caller will do any necessary allocation of an
  exclusive credential reference.  Each is commented to document its
  reference requirements.
o CANSIGIO() is simplified to require only credentials, not processes
  and pcreds.
o Remove lots of (p_pcred==NULL) checks.
o Add an XXX to authorization code in nfs_lock.c, since it's
  questionable, and needs to be considered carefully.
o Simplify posix4 authorization code to require only credentials, not
  processes and pcreds.  Note that this authorization, as well as
  CANSIGIO(), needs to be updated to use the p_cansignal() and
  p_cansched() centralized authorization routines, as they currently
  do not take into account some desirable restrictions that are handled
  by the centralized routines, as well as being inconsistent with other
  similar authorization instances.
o Update libkvm to take these changes into account.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Reviewed by:	green, bde, jhb, freebsd-arch, freebsd-audit
2001-05-25 16:59:11 +00:00
jhb
36dcd7aa2f - Remove unneeded include of sys/ipl.h.
- Require the proc lock be held for killproc() to allow for the vmdaemon to
  kill a process when memory is exhausted while holding the lock of the
  process to kill.
2001-05-15 23:13:58 +00:00
knu
fa8314227c Properly copy the P_ALTSTACK flag in struct proc::p_flag to the child
process on fork(2).

It is the supposed behavior stated in the manpage of sigaction(2), and
Solaris, NetBSD and FreeBSD 3-STABLE correctly do so.

The previous fix against libc_r/uthread/uthread_fork.c fixed the
problem only for the programs linked with libc_r, so back it out and
fix fork(2) itself to help those not linked with libc_r as well.

PR:		kern/26705
Submitted by:	KUROSAWA Takahiro <fwkg7679@mb.infoweb.ne.jp>
Tested by:	knu, GOTOU Yuuzou <gotoyuzo@notwork.org>,
		and some other people
Not objected by:	hackers
MFC in:		3 days
2001-05-07 18:07:29 +00:00
jhb
8bfdafc934 Overhaul of the SMP code. Several portions of the SMP kernel support have
been made machine independent and various other adjustments have been made
to support Alpha SMP.

- It splits the per-process portions of hardclock() and statclock() off
  into hardclock_process() and statclock_process() respectively.  hardclock()
  and statclock() call the *_process() functions for the current process so
  that UP systems will run as before.  For SMP systems, it is simply necessary
  to ensure that all other processors execute the *_process() functions when the
  main clock functions are triggered on one CPU by an interrupt.  For the alpha
  4100, clock interrupts are delievered in a staggered broadcast fashion, so
  we simply call hardclock/statclock on the boot CPU and call the *_process()
  functions on the secondaries.  For x86, we call statclock and hardclock as
  usual and then call forward_hardclock/statclock in the MD code to send an IPI
  to cause the AP's to execute forwared_hardclock/statclock which then call the
  *_process() functions.
- forward_signal() and forward_roundrobin() have been reworked to be MI and to
  involve less hackery.  Now the cpu doing the forward sets any flags, etc. and
  sends a very simple IPI_AST to the other cpu(s).  AST IPIs now just basically
  return so that they can execute ast() and don't bother with setting the
  astpending or needresched flags themselves.  This also removes the loop in
  forward_signal() as sched_lock closes the race condition that the loop worked
  around.
- need_resched(), resched_wanted() and clear_resched() have been changed to take
  a process to act on rather than assuming curproc so that they can be used to
  implement forward_roundrobin() as described above.
- Various other SMP variables have been moved to a MI subr_smp.c and a new
  header sys/smp.h declares MI SMP variables and API's.   The IPI API's from
  machine/ipl.h have moved to machine/smp.h which is included by sys/smp.h.
- The globaldata_register() and globaldata_find() functions as well as the
  SLIST of globaldata structures has become MI and moved into subr_smp.c.
  Also, the globaldata list is only available if SMP support is compiled in.

Reviewed by:	jake, peter
Looked over by:	eivind
2001-04-27 19:28:25 +00:00
jhb
9c03a8ae91 Change the pfind() and zpfind() functions to lock the process that they
find before releasing the allproc lock and returning.

Reviewed by:	-smp, dfr, jake
2001-04-24 00:51:53 +00:00
rwatson
366237b31f o Replace p_cankill() with p_cansignal(), remove wrappage of p_can()
from signal authorization checking.
o p_cansignal() takes three arguments: subject process, object process,
  and signal number, unlike p_cankill(), which only took into account
  the processes and not the signal number, improving the abstraction
  such that CANSIGNAL() from kern_sig.c can now also be eliminated;
  previously CANSIGNAL() special-cased the handling of SIGCONT based
  on process session.  privused is now deprecated.
o The new p_cansignal() further limits the set of signals that may
  be delivered to processes with P_SUGID set, and restructures the
  access control check to allow it to be extended more easily.
o These changes take into account work done by the OpenBSD Project,
  as well as by Robert Watson and Thomas Moestl on the TrustedBSD
  Project.

Obtained from:  TrustedBSD Project
2001-04-12 02:38:08 +00:00
jhb
dbc07c9dc3 Change stop() to require the sched_lock as well as p's process lock to
avoid silly lock contention on sched_lock since in 2 out of the 3 places
that we call stop(), we get sched_lock right after calling it and we were
locking sched_lock inside of stop() anyways.
2001-04-03 01:39:23 +00:00
jhb
2e3a4ffcee - Move the second stop() of process 'p' in issignal() to be after we send
SIGCHLD to our parent process.  Otherwise, we could block while obtaining
  the process lock for our parent process and switch out while we were
  in SSTOP.  Even worse, when we try to resume from the mutex being blocked
  on our p_stat will be SRUN, not SSTOP.
- Fix a comment above stop() to indicate that it requires that the proc lock
  be held, not a proctree lock.

Reported by:	markm
Sleuthing by:	jake
2001-04-02 17:26:51 +00:00
jhb
79cf991a6b Convert the allproc and proctree locks from lockmgr locks to sx locks. 2001-03-28 11:52:56 +00:00
jhb
3aabb22260 - Resort some includes to deal with the new witness code coming in shortly.
- Make sure we have Giant locked before calling coredump() in sigexit().

Spotted by:	peter (2)
2001-03-28 08:41:04 +00:00
jhb
d18d94674a - Proc locking. Most of signal handling is now MP safe and doesn't require
Giant.  The only exception is the CANSIGNAL() macro.  Unlocking the proc
  lock around sendsig() in trapsignal() is also questionable.  Note that
  the functions sigexit(), psignal(), and issignal() must be called with
  the proc lock of the process in question held.  postsig() and
  trapsignal() should not be called with the proc lock held, but they
  also do not require Giant anymore either.
- Remove spl's that are now no longer needed as they are fully replaced.
2001-03-07 02:59:54 +00:00
bde
3941e24095 Fixed a longstanding latency bug in signal delivery. When a signal
is sent to a process, psignal() needs to schedule an AST for the
process if the process is runnable, not just if it is current, so that
pending signals get checked for on the next return of the process to
user mode.  This wasn't practical until recently because the AST flag
was per-cpu so setting it for a non-current process would usually just
cause a bogus AST for the current process.

For non-current processes looping in user mode, it took accidental
(?) magic to deliver signals at all.  Signals were usually delivered
late as a side effect of rescheduling (need_resched() sets astpending,
etc.).  In pre-SMPng, delivery was delayed by at most 1 quantum (the
need_resched() call in roundrobin() is certain to occur within 1
quantum for looping processes).  In -current, things are complicated
by normal interrupt handlers being threads.  Missing handling of the
complications makes roundrobin() a bogus no-op, but preemptive
scheduling sort of works anyway due to even larger bogons elsewhere.
2001-02-19 09:40:58 +00:00
jake
55d5108ac5 Implement a unified run queue and adjust priority levels accordingly.
- All processes go into the same array of queues, with different
  scheduling classes using different portions of the array.  This
  allows user processes to have their priorities propogated up into
  interrupt thread range if need be.
- I chose 64 run queues as an arbitrary number that is greater than
  32.  We used to have 4 separate arrays of 32 queues each, so this
  may not be optimal.  The new run queue code was written with this
  in mind; changing the number of run queues only requires changing
  constants in runq.h and adjusting the priority levels.
- The new run queue code takes the run queue as a parameter.  This
  is intended to be used to create per-cpu run queues.  Implement
  wrappers for compatibility with the old interface which pass in
  the global run queue structure.
- Group the priority level, user priority, native priority (before
  propogation) and the scheduling class into a struct priority.
- Change any hard coded priority levels that I found to use
  symbolic constants (TTIPRI and TTOPRI).
- Remove the curpriority global variable and use that of curproc.
  This was used to detect when a process' priority had lowered and
  it should yield.  We now effectively yield on every interrupt.
- Activate propogate_priority().  It should now have the desired
  effect without needing to also propogate the scheduling class.
- Temporarily comment out the call to vm_page_zero_idle() in the
  idle loop.  It interfered with propogate_priority() because
  the idle process needed to do a non-blocking acquire of Giant
  and then other processes would try to propogate their priority
  onto it.  The idle process should not do anything except idle.
  vm_page_zero_idle() will return in the form of an idle priority
  kernel thread which is woken up at apprioriate times by the vm
  system.
- Update struct kinfo_proc to the new priority interface.  Deliberately
  change its size by adjusting the spare fields.  It remained the same
  size, but the layout has changed, so userland processes that use it
  would parse the data incorrectly.  The size constraint should really
  be changed to an arbitrary version number.  Also add a debug.sizeof
  sysctl node for struct kinfo_proc.
2001-02-12 00:20:08 +00:00
jhb
a9c84e00da - Make astpending and need_resched process attributes rather than CPU
attributes.  This is needed for AST's to be properly posted in a preemptive
  kernel.  They are backed by two new flags in p_sflag: PS_ASTPENDING and
  PS_NEEDRESCHED.  They are still accesssed by their old macros:
  aston(), astoff(), etc.  For completeness, an astpending() macro has been
  added to check for a pending AST, and clear_resched() has been added to
  clear need_resched().
- Rename syscall2() on the x86 back to syscall() to be consistent with
  other architectures.
2001-02-10 02:20:34 +00:00
bmilekic
f364d4ac36 Change and clean the mutex lock interface.
mtx_enter(lock, type) becomes:

mtx_lock(lock) for sleep locks (MTX_DEF-initialized locks)
mtx_lock_spin(lock) for spin locks (MTX_SPIN-initialized)

similarily, for releasing a lock, we now have:

mtx_unlock(lock) for MTX_DEF and mtx_unlock_spin(lock) for MTX_SPIN.
We change the caller interface for the two different types of locks
because the semantics are entirely different for each case, and this
makes it explicitly clear and, at the same time, it rids us of the
extra `type' argument.

The enter->lock and exit->unlock change has been made with the idea
that we're "locking data" and not "entering locked code" in mind.

Further, remove all additional "flags" previously passed to the
lock acquire/release routines with the exception of two:

MTX_QUIET and MTX_NOSWITCH

The functionality of these flags is preserved and they can be passed
to the lock/unlock routines by calling the corresponding wrappers:

mtx_{lock, unlock}_flags(lock, flag(s)) and
mtx_{lock, unlock}_spin_flags(lock, flag(s)) for MTX_DEF and MTX_SPIN
locks, respectively.

Re-inline some lock acq/rel code; in the sleep lock case, we only
inline the _obtain_lock()s in order to ensure that the inlined code
fits into a cache line. In the spin lock case, we inline recursion and
actually only perform a function call if we need to spin. This change
has been made with the idea that we generally tend to avoid spin locks
and that also the spin locks that we do have and are heavily used
(i.e. sched_lock) do recurse, and therefore in an effort to reduce
function call overhead for some architectures (such as alpha), we
inline recursion for this case.

Create a new malloc type for the witness code and retire from using
the M_DEV type. The new type is called M_WITNESS and is only declared
if WITNESS is enabled.

Begin cleaning up some machdep/mutex.h code - specifically updated the
"optimized" inlined code in alpha/mutex.h and wrote MTX_LOCK_SPIN
and MTX_UNLOCK_SPIN asm macros for the i386/mutex.h as we presently
need those.

Finally, caught up to the interface changes in all sys code.

Contributors: jake, jhb, jasone (in no particular order)
2001-02-09 06:11:45 +00:00
jhb
d161c1e3f8 - Proc locking.
- Catch up to proc flag changes.
2001-01-24 11:08:02 +00:00
jhb
a4116607b8 Revert revision 1.102. I don't think p_nice needs to be protected with
sched_lock, and I'm fairly certain P_TRACED will be protected with the
proc lock instead.

Pointed out indirectly by:	bde
2001-01-19 08:23:22 +00:00
jasone
20a8a23d2b Implement condition variables. 2001-01-16 01:00:43 +00:00
jhb
9615a97594 Protect p_nice and P_TRACED in psignal() above the switch statement with
sched_lock.
2001-01-06 00:08:39 +00:00
jhb
dd03284643 The previous commit wasn't entirely correct. At least one goto to the
out: label in psignal() did not grab sched_lock before trying to release
it.  Also, the previous version had several cases where it grabbed
sched_lock before jumping to out: unneccessarily, so rework this a bit.
The runfast: and out: labels must be called with sched_lock released, and
the run: label must be called with it held.  Appropriate mtx_assert()'s
have been added that should catch any bugs that may still be in this
code.

Noticed by:	bde
2001-01-02 18:54:09 +00:00
jhb
c368baf0b4 Push down sched_lock in psignal(). sched_lock was being held across
recursive calls into psignal() as well as calls to signotify(),
forward_signal(), etc.
2001-01-01 02:31:08 +00:00
jhb
37f5912410 Add in a missing release of the proctree lock.
Submitted by:	Sja <sakari.jalovaara@eqonline.fi>
2001-01-01 02:19:51 +00:00
jake
fa7a58ab48 Protect proc.p_pptr and proc.p_children/p_sibling with the
proctree_lock.

linprocfs not locked pending response from informal maintainer.

Reviewed by:	jhb, -smp@
2000-12-23 19:43:10 +00:00
marcel
cb4ef1e3d5 Fix a typo that allowed signals caused by traps to be delivered
to the process when said signal is masked.

PR: 23457
Submitted by: Yasuhiko Watanabe <yasu@mrit.mei.co.jp>
2000-12-16 21:03:48 +00:00
jake
a4ad237eaa - Change the allproc_lock to use a macro, ALLPROC_LOCK(how), instead
of explicit calls to lockmgr.  Also provides macros for the flags
  pased to specify shared, exclusive or release which map to the
  lockmgr flags.  This is so that the use of lockmgr can be easily
  replaced with optimized reader-writer locks.
- Add some locking that I missed the first time.
2000-12-13 00:17:05 +00:00
jhb
6a64e36210 Protect p_stat with sched_lock. 2000-12-01 23:43:15 +00:00
marcel
75c76bdc6b Don't use p->p_sigstk.ss_flags to keep state of whether the
process is on the alternate stack or not. For compatibility
with sigstack(2) state is being updated if such is needed.

We now determine whether the process is on the alternate
stack by looking at its stack pointer. This allows a process
to siglongjmp from a signal handler on the alternate stack
to the place of the sigsetjmp on the normal stack. When
maintaining state, this would have invalidated the state
information and causing a subsequent signal to be delivered
on the normal stack instead of the alternate stack.

PR: 22286
2000-11-30 05:23:49 +00:00
jake
0c0be4e826 Protect the following with a lockmgr lock:
allproc
	zombproc
	pidhashtbl
	proc.p_list
	proc.p_hash
	nextpid

Reviewed by:	jhb
Obtained from:	BSD/OS and netbsd
2000-11-22 07:42:04 +00:00
jake
3a97b3e213 - Split the run queue and sleep queue linkage, so that a process
may block on a mutex while on the sleep queue without corrupting
it.
- Move dropping of Giant to after the acquire of sched_lock.

Tested by:	John Hay <jhay@icomtek.csir.co.za>
		jhb
2000-11-17 18:09:18 +00:00
jhb
c0bba69cbe Don't release and acquire Giant in mi_switch(). Instead, release and
acquire Giant as needed in functions that call mi_switch().  The releases
need to be done outside of the sched_lock to avoid potential deadlocks
from trying to acquire Giant while interrupts are disabled.

Submitted by:	witness
2000-11-16 02:16:44 +00:00
marcel
1a7266b24d Make MINSIGSTKSZ machine dependent, and have the sigaltstack
syscall compare against a variable sv_minsigstksz in struct
sysentvec as to properly take the size of the machine- and
ABI dependent struct sigframe into account.

The SVR4 and iBCS2 modules continue to have a minsigstksz of
8192 to preserve behavior. The real values (if different) are
not known at this time. Other ABI modules use the real
values.

The native MINSIGSTKSZ is now defined as follows:

Arch		MINSIGSTKSZ
----		-----------
alpha		    4096
i386		    2048
ia64		   12288

Reviewed by: mjacob
Suggested by: bde
2000-11-09 08:25:48 +00:00
jhb
d944886e4d Catch up to moving headers:
- machine/ipl.h -> sys/ipl.h
- machine/mutex.h -> sys/mutex.h
2000-10-20 07:58:15 +00:00
bde
43da3c7d53 Unpessimized CURSIG(). The fast path through CURSIG() was broken in
the 128-bit sigset_t changes by moving conditionally (rarely) executed
code to the beginning where it is always executed, and since this code
now involves 3 128-bit operations, the pessimization was relatively
large.  This change speeds up lmbench's pipe latency benchmark by
3.5%.

Fixed style bugs in CURSIG().
2000-09-17 15:12:04 +00:00
bde
80d33b22bf Uninlined CURSIG() and unpolluted <sys/signalvar.h>. CURSIG() had become
very bloated, first with 128-bit sigset_t's, then with locking in the
SMP case, then with locking in all cases.  The space bloat was probably
also time bloat, partly because the fast path through CURSIG() was
pessimized by the sigset_t changes.  This change speeds up lmbench's
pipe-based latency benchmark by 4% on a Celeron.  <sys/signalvar.h>
had become very polluted to support the bloat.
2000-09-17 14:28:33 +00:00
dfr
d721d5e1d6 Move the include of <sys/systm.h> so that KTR gets a declaration for
snprintf().
2000-09-10 13:54:52 +00:00
jasone
769e0f974d Major update to the way synchronization is done in the kernel. Highlights
include:

* Mutual exclusion is used instead of spl*().  See mutex(9).  (Note: The
  alpha port is still in transition and currently uses both.)

* Per-CPU idle processes.

* Interrupts are run in their own separate kernel threads and can be
  preempted (i386 only).

Partially contributed by:	BSDi (BSD/OS)
Submissions by (at least):	cp, dfr, dillon, grog, jake, jhb, sheldonh
2000-09-07 01:33:02 +00:00
rwatson
3dc6d2b9ea o Centralize inter-process access control, introducing:
int p_can(p1, p2, operation, privused)

  which allows specification of subject process, object process,
  inter-process operation, and an optional call-by-reference privused
  flag, allowing the caller to determine if privilege was required
  for the call to succeed.  This allows jail, kern.ps_showallprocs and
  regular credential-based interaction checks to occur in one block of
  code.  Possible operations are P_CAN_SEE, P_CAN_SCHED, P_CAN_KILL,
  and P_CAN_DEBUG.  p_can currently breaks out as a wrapper to a
  series of static function checks in kern_prot, which should not
  be invoked directly.

o Commented out capabilities entries are included for some checks.

o Update most inter-process authorization to make use of p_can() instead
  of manual checks, PRISON_CHECK(), P_TRESPASS(), and
  kern.ps_showallprocs.

o Modify suser{,_xxx} to use const arguments, as it no longer modifies
  process flags due to the disabling of ASU.

o Modify some checks/errors in procfs so that ENOENT is returned instead
  of ESRCH, further improving concealment of processes that should not
  be visible to other processes.  Also introduce new access checks to
  improve hiding of processes for procfs_lookup(), procfs_getattr(),
  procfs_readdir().  Correct a bug reported by bp concerning not
  handling the CREATE case in procfs_lookup().  Remove volatile flag in
  procfs that caused apparently spurious qualifier warnigns (approved by
  bde).

o Add comment noting that ktrace() has not been updated, as its access
  control checks are different from ptrace(), whereas they should
  probably be the same.  Further discussion should happen on this topic.

Reviewed by:	bde, green, phk, freebsd-security, others
Approved by:	bde
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2000-08-30 04:49:09 +00:00
marcel
2aa2f64ab1 Make this file compile again when COMPAT_43 has not been
defined. This boils down to conditionally compile the
old signal syscalls.

We might want to extend the types in syscalls.master to
make these syscalls conditionally on something more
appropriate than COMPAT_43.
2000-08-26 02:27:01 +00:00
mckusick
a3d0c189ea Add snapshots to the fast filesystem. Most of the changes support
the gating of system calls that cause modifications to the underlying
filesystem. The gating can be enabled by any filesystem that needs
to consistently suspend operations by adding the vop_stdgetwritemount
to their set of vnops. Once gating is enabled, the function
vfs_write_suspend stops all new write operations to a filesystem,
allows any filesystem modifying system calls already in progress
to complete, then sync's the filesystem to disk and returns. The
function vfs_write_resume allows the suspended write operations to
begin again. Gating is not added by default for all filesystems as
for SMP systems it adds two extra locks to such critical kernel
paths as the write system call. Thus, gating should only be added
as needed.

Details on the use and current status of snapshots in FFS can be
found in /sys/ufs/ffs/README.snapshot so for brevity and timelyness
is not included here. Unless and until you create a snapshot file,
these changes should have no effect on your system (famous last words).
2000-07-11 22:07:57 +00:00
mckusick
040e64cd97 Move the truncation code out of vn_open and into the open system call
after the acquisition of any advisory locks. This fix corrects a case
in which a process tries to open a file with a non-blocking exclusive
lock. Even if it fails to get the lock it would still truncate the
file even though its open failed. With this change, the truncation
is done only after the lock is successfully acquired.

Obtained from:	 BSD/OS
2000-07-04 03:34:11 +00:00
jake
961b97d434 Back out the previous change to the queue(3) interface.
It was not discussed and should probably not happen.

Requested by:		msmith and others
2000-05-26 02:09:24 +00:00
jake
d93fbc9916 Change the way that the queue(3) structures are declared; don't assume that
the type argument to *_HEAD and *_ENTRY is a struct.

Suggested by:	phk
Reviewed by:	phk
Approved by:	mdodd
2000-05-23 20:41:01 +00:00
phk
10914aa708 Remove unneeded #include <vm/vm_zone.h>
Generated by:	src/tools/tools/kerninclude
2000-04-30 18:52:11 +00:00
jlemon
c41c876463 Introduce kqueue() and kevent(), a kernel event notification facility. 2000-04-16 18:53:38 +00:00
dillon
6fa0b056f4 Make the sigprocmask() and geteuid() system calls MP SAFE. Expand
commentary for copyin/copyout to indicate that they are MP SAFE as
    well.

Reviewed by: msmith
2000-04-02 17:52:43 +00:00
dillon
b852fcb160 The SMP cleanup commit broke UP compiles. Make UP compiles work again. 2000-03-28 18:06:49 +00:00
dillon
689641c1ea Commit major SMP cleanups and move the BGL (big giant lock) in the
syscall path inward.  A system call may select whether it needs the MP
    lock or not (the default being that it does need it).

    A great deal of conditional SMP code for various deadended experiments
    has been removed.  'cil' and 'cml' have been removed entirely, and the
    locking around the cpl has been removed.  The conditional
    separately-locked fast-interrupt code has been removed, meaning that
    interrupts must hold the CPL now (but they pretty much had to anyway).
    Another reason for doing this is that the original separate-lock for
    interrupts just doesn't apply to the interrupt thread mechanism being
    contemplated.

    Modifications to the cpl may now ONLY occur while holding the MP
    lock.  For example, if an otherwise MP safe syscall needs to mess with
    the cpl, it must hold the MP lock for the duration and must (as usual)
    save/restore the cpl in a nested fashion.

    This is precursor work for the real meat coming later: avoiding having
    to hold the MP lock for common syscalls and I/O's and interrupt threads.
    It is expected that the spl mechanisms and new interrupt threading
    mechanisms will be able to run in tandem, allowing a slow piecemeal
    transition to occur.

    This patch should result in a moderate performance improvement due to
    the considerable amount of code that has been removed from the critical
    path, especially the simplification of the spl*() calls.  The real
    performance gains will come later.

Approved by: jkh
Reviewed by: current, bde (exception.s)
Some work taken from: luoqi's patch
2000-03-28 07:16:37 +00:00
ps
111d9e3e61 Add sysctl kern.coredump to enable/disable core dumps system wide. 2000-03-21 07:10:42 +00:00
eivind
87724eb673 Introduce NDFREE (and remove VOP_ABORTOP) 1999-12-15 23:02:35 +00:00
phk
fd22d5412a Introduce the new function
p_trespass(struct proc *p1, struct proc *p2)
which returns zero or an errno depending on the legality of p1 trespassing
on p2.

Replace kern_sig.c:CANSIGNAL() with call to p_trespass() and one
extra signal related check.

Replace procfs.h:CHECKIO() macros with calls to p_trespass().

Only show command lines to process which can trespass on the target
process.
1999-11-21 19:03:20 +00:00
phk
d19d6e6b45 s/p_cred->pc_ucred/p_ucred/g 1999-11-21 12:38:21 +00:00
phk
8fca18de89 This is a partial commit of the patch from PR 14914:
Alot of the code in sys/kern directly accesses the *Q_HEAD and *Q_ENTRY
   structures for list operations.  This patch makes all list operations
   in sys/kern use the queue(3) macros, rather than directly accessing the
   *Q_{HEAD,ENTRY} structures.

This batch of changes compile to the same object files.

Reviewed by:    phk
Submitted by:   Jake Burkholder <jake@checker.org>
PR:     14914
1999-11-16 10:56:05 +00:00
sef
b13167ae88 Bail out of the process early if the coredumpfile limit is 0.
PR:	kern/14540
Reviewed by:	Nate Williams
1999-10-30 18:55:11 +00:00
marcel
fbb8752f70 Don't let osigaction and osigvec accept the new signal numbers.
Fix style bugs caused by the sigset_t in general while I'm here.

Submitted by: bde
1999-10-12 13:14:18 +00:00
luoqi
fd8b4427a5 Add a per-signal flag to mark handlers registered with osigaction, so we
can provide the correct context to each signal handler.

Fix broken sigsuspend(): don't use p_oldsigmask as a flag, use SAS_OLDMASK
as we did before the linuxthreads support merge (submitted by bde).

Move ps_sigstk from to p_sigacts to the main proc structure since signal
stack should not be shared among threads.

Move SAS_OLDMASK and SAS_ALTSTACK flags from sigacts::ps_flags to proc::p_flag.
Move PS_NOCLDSTOP and PS_NOCLDWAIT flags from proc::p_flag to procsig::ps_flag.

Reviewed by:	marcel, jdp, bde
1999-10-11 20:33:17 +00:00
marcel
d5e8d714b9 sigset_t change (part 2 of 5)
-----------------------------

The core of the signalling code has been rewritten to operate
on the new sigset_t. No methodological changes have been made.
Most references to a sigset_t object are through macros (see
signalvar.h) to create a level of abstraction and to provide
a basis for further improvements.

The NSIG constant has not been changed to reflect the maximum
number of signals possible. The reason is that it breaks
programs (especially shells) which assume that all signals
have a non-null name in sys_signame. See src/bin/sh/trap.c
for an example. Instead _SIG_MAXSIG has been introduced to
hold the maximum signal possible with the new sigset_t.

struct sigprop has been moved from signalvar.h to kern_sig.c
because a) it is only used there, and b) access must be done
though function sigprop(). The latter because the table doesn't
holds properties for all signals, but only for the first NSIG
signals.

signal.h has been reorganized to make reading easier and to
add the new and/or modified structures. The "old" structures
are moved to signalvar.h to prevent namespace polution.

Especially the coda filesystem suffers from the change, because
it contained lines like (p->p_sigmask == SIGIO), which is easy
to do for integral types, but not for compound types.

NOTE: kdump (and port linux_kdump) must be recompiled.

Thanks to Garrett Wollman and Daniel Eischen for pressing the
importance of changing sigreturn as well.
1999-09-29 15:03:48 +00:00
sef
f0113d31fc Make prototype match function. 1999-09-01 16:21:57 +00:00
julian
777a32c865 General cleanup of core-dumping code.
Submitted by: Sean Fagan,
1999-09-01 00:29:56 +00:00
peter
3b842d34e8 $Id$ -> $FreeBSD$ 1999-08-28 01:08:13 +00:00
cracauer
4920857850 Fix a mistake in my last SA_SIGINFO commit. Processes could block
SIGKILL and SIGSTOP.

PR:		kern/13293
Submitted by:	dwmalone@maths.tcd.ie
Obtained from:	PR had correct fix
1999-08-23 13:53:25 +00:00
billf
722a2243a9 expand_name:
use pid_t and uid_t in the declaration as that is what we are passed
	fix printf formatters accordingly.

Reviewed by:	green
1999-08-16 18:13:39 +00:00
alfred
bef9e7accb Fix potential overflow, remove unnecessary bzero.
Pointed out by: green

remove redundant strlen, sprintf returns the length.

Reviewed by: peter
1999-08-14 19:58:58 +00:00
peter
c8095f053a Reset SA_NOCLDWAIT on exec().
PR:		kern/12669
Submitted by:	Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@whistle.com>
1999-07-18 13:40:11 +00:00
cracauer
53573bf465 Implement SA_SIGINFO for i386. Thanks to Bruce Evans for much more
than a review, this was a nice puzzle.

This is supposed to be binary and source compatible with older
applications that access the old FreeBSD-style three arguments to a
signal handler.

Except those applications that access hidden signal handler arguments
bejond the documented third one. If you have applications that do,
please let me know so that we take the opportunity to provide the
functionality they need in a documented manner.

Also except application that use 'struct sigframe' directly. You need
to recompile gdb and doscmd. `make world` is recommended.

Example program that demonstrates how SA_SIGINFO and old-style FreeBSD
handlers (with their three args) may be used in the same process is at
http://www3.cons.org/tmp/fbsd-siginfo.c

Programs that use the old FreeBSD-style three arguments are easy to
change to SA_SIGINFO (although they don't need to, since the old style
will still work):

  Old args to signal handler:
    void handler_sn(int sig, int code, struct sigcontext *scp)

  New args:
    void handler_si(int sig, siginfo_t *si, void *third)
  where:
    old:code == new:second->si_code
    old:scp == &(new:si->si_scp)     /* Passed by value! */

The latter is also pointed to by new:third, but accessing via
si->si_scp is preferred because it is type-save.

FreeBSD implementation notes:
- This is just the framework to make the interface POSIX compatible.
  For now, no additional functionality is provided. This is supposed
  to happen now, starting with floating point values.
- We don't use 'sigcontext_t.si_value' for now (POSIX meant it for
  realtime-related values).
- Documentation will be updated when new functionality is added and
  the exact arguments passed are determined. The comments in
  sys/signal.h are meant to be useful.

Reviewed by:	BDE
1999-07-06 07:13:48 +00:00
billf
dd35516544 Add sysctl descriptions to many SYSCTL_XXXs
PR:		kern/11197
Submitted by:	Adrian Chadd <adrian@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed by:	billf(spelling/style/minor nits)
Looked at by:	bde(style)
1999-05-03 23:57:32 +00:00
phk
ca21a25f17 This Implements the mumbled about "Jail" feature.
This is a seriously beefed up chroot kind of thing.  The process
is jailed along the same lines as a chroot does it, but with
additional tough restrictions imposed on what the superuser can do.

For all I know, it is safe to hand over the root bit inside a
prison to the customer living in that prison, this is what
it was developed for in fact:  "real virtual servers".

Each prison has an ip number associated with it, which all IP
communications will be coerced to use and each prison has its own
hostname.

Needless to say, you need more RAM this way, but the advantage is
that each customer can run their own particular version of apache
and not stomp on the toes of their neighbors.

It generally does what one would expect, but setting up a jail
still takes a little knowledge.

A few notes:

   I have no scripts for setting up a jail, don't ask me for them.

   The IP number should be an alias on one of the interfaces.

   mount a /proc in each jail, it will make ps more useable.

   /proc/<pid>/status tells the hostname of the prison for
   jailed processes.

   Quotas are only sensible if you have a mountpoint per prison.

   There are no privisions for stopping resource-hogging.

   Some "#ifdef INET" and similar may be missing (send patches!)

If somebody wants to take it from here and develop it into
more of a "virtual machine" they should be most welcome!

Tools, comments, patches & documentation most welcome.

Have fun...

Sponsored by:   http://www.rndassociates.com/
Run for almost a year by:       http://www.servetheweb.com/
1999-04-28 11:38:52 +00:00
julian
05a2232887 Enable Linux threads support by default.
This takes the conditionals out of the code that has been tested by
various people for a while.
ps and friends (libkvm) will need a recompile as some proc structure
changes are made.

Submitted by:	"Richard Seaman, Jr." <dick@tar.com>
1999-01-26 02:38:12 +00:00
eivind
89e1199534 KNFize, by bde. 1999-01-10 01:58:29 +00:00
eivind
a8dc66f457 Split DIAGNOSTIC -> DIAGNOSTIC, INVARIANTS, and INVARIANT_SUPPORT as
discussed on -hackers.

Introduce 'KASSERT(assertion, ("panic message", args))' for simple
check + panic.

Reviewed by:	msmith
1999-01-08 17:31:30 +00:00
julian
61490236bc Reviewed by: Luoqi Chen, Jordan Hubbard
Submitted by:	 "Richard Seaman, Jr." <lists@tar.com>
Obtained from:	linux :-)

Code to allow Linux Threads to run under FreeBSD.

By default not enabled
This code is dependent on the conditional
COMPAT_LINUX_THREADS (suggested by Garret)
This is not yet a 'real' option but will be within some number of hours.
1998-12-19 02:55:34 +00:00
eivind
d757350127 Check return value of malloc() in expand_name.
Reviewed by:	sef
1998-12-02 01:53:48 +00:00
truckman
de184682fa Installed the second patch attached to kern/7899 with some changes suggested
by bde, a few other tweaks to get the patch to apply cleanly again and
some improvements to the comments.

This change closes some fairly minor security holes associated with
F_SETOWN, fixes a few bugs, and removes some limitations that F_SETOWN
had on tty devices.  For more details, see the description on the PR.

Because this patch increases the size of the proc and pgrp structures,
it is necessary to re-install the includes and recompile libkvm,
the vinum lkm, fstat, gcore, gdb, ipfilter, ps, top, and w.

PR:		kern/7899
Reviewed by:	bde, elvind
1998-11-11 10:04:13 +00:00
jdp
74b341f8c8 Eliminate a superfluous comment. 1998-10-21 16:31:38 +00:00
jdp
e988dcb149 Remove includes that are no longer needed, now that the core dumping
code has been moved into the respective imgact_xxx.c sources.
1998-09-14 23:25:18 +00:00
jdp
70bb8503aa Add provisions for variant core dump file formats, depending on the
object format of the executable being dumped.  This is the first
step toward producing ELF core dumps in the proper format.  I will
commit the code to generate the ELF core dumps Real Soon Now.  In
the meantime, ELF executables won't dump core at all.  That is
probably no less useful than dumping a.out-style core dumps as they
have done until now.

Submitted by:	Alex <garbanzo@hooked.net> (with very minor changes by me)
1998-09-14 05:36:51 +00:00
joerg
d4df58a7bc Make the logging of abnormally exiting processes optional by a sysctl.
PR:		kern/1711
Submitted by:	Nick Sayer <nsayer@kfu.com>
1998-07-28 22:34:12 +00:00
bde
863d5c8b68 Cast pointers to uintptr_t/intptr_t instead of to u_long/long,
respectively.  Most of the longs should probably have been
u_longs, but this changes is just to prevent warnings about
casts between pointers and integers of different sizes, not
to fix poorly chosen types.
1998-07-15 02:32:35 +00:00
sef
831331ce50 Add support for run-time configuration of core file names. In a nutshell,
you can specify the corefile name by using:

	sysctl -w kern.corefile="format"

where format is a pathname (relative or absolute -- default is "%N.core"),
with "%N" (process name), "%P" (process ID), and "%U" (user ID) formats.

Reviewed by:	Mike Smith, with strong requests by Julian :)
1998-07-08 06:38:39 +00:00
dg
30d4d38f8d Added a sysctl variable kern.sugid_coredump for controlling coredump
behavior of setuid/setgid binaries that defaults to 0 (coredump disabled).
1998-06-28 08:37:45 +00:00
dfr
1d5f38ac22 This commit fixes various 64bit portability problems required for
FreeBSD/alpha.  The most significant item is to change the command
argument to ioctl functions from int to u_long.  This change brings us
inline with various other BSD versions.  Driver writers may like to
use (__FreeBSD_version == 300003) to detect this change.

The prototype FreeBSD/alpha machdep will follow in a couple of days
time.
1998-06-07 17:13:14 +00:00
tegge
beae57c5b3 Forward the signal if the process runs on a different CPU. This reduces
the signal handling latency for cpu-bound processes that performs very
few system calls.

The IPI for forcing an additional software trap is no longer dependent upon
BETTER_CLOCK being defined.
1998-03-03 20:55:26 +00:00
eivind
4547a09753 Back out DIAGNOSTIC changes. 1998-02-06 12:14:30 +00:00
eivind
c552a9a1c3 Turn DIAGNOSTIC into a new-style option. 1998-02-04 22:34:03 +00:00
eivind
01dd6091ed Make COMPAT_43 and COMPAT_SUNOS new-style options. 1997-12-16 17:40:42 +00:00
sef
c7d273eccb Changes to allow event-based process monitoring and control. 1997-12-06 04:11:14 +00:00
phk
4c8218a5c7 Move the "retval" (3rd) parameter from all syscall functions and put
it in struct proc instead.

This fixes a boatload of compiler warning, and removes a lot of cruft
from the sources.

I have not removed the /*ARGSUSED*/, they will require some looking at.

libkvm, ps and other userland struct proc frobbing programs will need
recompiled.
1997-11-06 19:29:57 +00:00
joerg
b3004b96f0 Implement SA_NOCLDWAIT.
The implementation is done (unlike what i've originally been
contemplating) by reparenting kids of processes that have the
appropriate bit set to PID 1, and let PID 1 handle the zombie.  This
is far less problematical than what would seem to be ``doing it
right'', for a number of reasons.

Of our currently shipping PID-1-intended programs, 50 % fail the above
assumption. ;-)  (Read this: sysinstall doesn't do it right.  This is
no problem as long as no program called by sysinstall actually uses
SA_NOCLDWAIT.)

ToDo:		. clarify the correct SA_* flag inheritance, compared
		  to other systems,
		. decide whether the compat cruft (osigvec(9)) should
		  deal with new system additions or not,
		. merge OpenBSD's SA_SIGINFO implementation. ;)
Reviewed by:	bde
1997-09-13 19:42:29 +00:00
bde
6ffb8bf9af Removed unused #includes. 1997-09-02 20:06:59 +00:00
bde
b4bd137bbd Finished staticizing. 1997-08-26 00:31:04 +00:00
bde
0d3591bdbd Don't #include <sys/fcntl.h> in <sys/file.h> if KERNEL is defined.
Fixed everything that depended on getting fcntl.h stuff from the wrong
place.  Most things don't depend on file.h stuff at all.
1997-03-23 03:37:54 +00:00
peter
94b6d72794 Back out part 1 of the MCFH that changed $Id$ to $FreeBSD$. We are not
ready for it yet.
1997-02-22 09:48:43 +00:00
dyson
10f666af84 This is the kernel Lite/2 commit. There are some requisite userland
changes, so don't expect to be able to run the kernel as-is (very well)
without the appropriate Lite/2 userland changes.

The system boots and can mount UFS filesystems.

Untested: ext2fs, msdosfs, NFS
Known problems: Incorrect Berkeley ID strings in some files.
		Mount_std mounts will not work until the getfsent
		library routine is changed.

Reviewed by:	various people
Submitted by:	Jeffery Hsu <hsu@freebsd.org>
1997-02-10 02:22:35 +00:00
jkh
808a36ef65 Make the long-awaited change from $Id$ to $FreeBSD$
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.

Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore.  This update would have been
insane otherwise.
1997-01-14 07:20:47 +00:00
bde
0d3f6a9373 Fixed sigaction() for SIGKILL and SIGSTOP. Reading the old action now
succeeds.  Writing an action now succeeds iff the handler isn't changed.
(POSIX allows attempts to change the handler to be ignored or cause an
error.  Changing other parts of the action is allowed (except attempts
to mask unmaskable signals are silently ignored as usual).)

Found by:	NIST-PCTS
1996-11-29 18:01:55 +00:00
dg
d0ca57d30d Kill unnecessary test in coredump() that wasn't removed in rev 1.19
when the check for P_SUGID was added.
1996-10-19 01:06:20 +00:00
ache
09d5c22b13 Log not exited signal only, but the fact that core dumped (or not) too 1996-07-09 18:12:37 +00:00
bde
f92cdcae99 Removed unnecessary #includes from <sys/imgact.h> so that it is
self-sufficient and added explicit #includes where required.
1996-05-01 02:43:13 +00:00
peter
2659e4abf8 Correct the handling of NOCLDSTOP when using sigvec()
Make the SA_NODEFER handling more correct, previously if you called
sigaction to set a handler and had SA_NODEFER set, and manually masked
the signal itself in sa_mask, and when you read the settings back later,
you'd find SA_NODEFER incorrectly cleared.

Pointed out by: bde
1996-03-30 15:15:30 +00:00
peter
a219c408e3 Actually implement SA_RESETHAND - some of the sigaction code recognised it
but didn't actually do anything with it (*blush*).

This should fix bde's test case where the test program set SA_RESETHAND
and when reading it back, it was gone.

Tweak/optimize SA_NODEFER so that the implementation is a little simpler
and does not incur (slight) overhead for every signal at delivery time.
1996-03-15 08:01:33 +00:00
hsu
3efcd29606 From Lite2: proc LIST changes.
Reviewed by:	david & bde
1996-03-11 06:05:03 +00:00
hsu
bd04871d98 From Lite2: change code parameter to u_long and initialize ps_sig.
Reviewed by:	davidg & bde
1996-03-11 02:22:02 +00:00
peter
8465726bda Mega-commit for Linux emulator update.. This has been stress tested under
netscape-2.0 for Linux running all the Java stuff.  The scrollbars are now
working, at least on my machine. (whew! :-)

I'm uncomfortable with the size of this commit, but it's too
inter-dependant to easily seperate out.

The main changes:

COMPAT_LINUX is *GONE*.  Most of the code has been moved out of the i386
machine dependent section into the linux emulator itself.  The int 0x80
syscall code was almost identical to the lcall 7,0 code and a minor tweak
allows them to both be used with the same C code.  All kernels can now
just modload the lkm and it'll DTRT without having to rebuild the kernel
first.  Like IBCS2, you can statically compile it in with "options LINUX".

A pile of new syscalls implemented, including getdents(), llseek(),
readv(), writev(), msync(), personality().  The Linux-ELF libraries want
to use some of these.

linux_select() now obeys Linux semantics, ie: returns the time remaining
of the timeout value rather than leaving it the original value.

Quite a few bugs removed, including incorrect arguments being used in
syscalls..  eg:  mixups between passing the sigset as an int, vs passing
it as a pointer and doing a copyin(), missing return values, unhandled
cases, SIOC* ioctls, etc.

The build for the code has changed.  i386/conf/files now knows how
to build linux_genassym and generate linux_assym.h on the fly.

Supporting changes elsewhere in the kernel:

The user-mode signal trampoline has moved from the U area to immediately
below the top of the stack (below PS_STRINGS).  This allows the different
binary emulations to have their own signal trampoline code (which gets rid
of the hardwired syscall 103 (sigreturn on BSD, syslog on Linux)) and so
that the emulator can provide the exact "struct sigcontext *" argument to
the program's signal handlers.

The sigstack's "ss_flags" now uses SS_DISABLE and SS_ONSTACK flags, which
have the same values as the re-used SA_DISABLE and SA_ONSTACK which are
intended for sigaction only.  This enables the support of a SA_RESETHAND
flag to sigaction to implement the gross SYSV and Linux SA_ONESHOT signal
semantics where the signal handler is reset when it's triggered.

makesyscalls.sh no longer appends the struct sysentvec on the end of the
generated init_sysent.c code.  It's a lot saner to have it in a seperate
file rather than trying to update the structure inside the awk script. :-)

At exec time, the dozen bytes or so of signal trampoline code are copied
to the top of the user's stack, rather than obtaining the trampoline code
the old way by getting a clone of the parent's user area.  This allows
Linux and native binaries to freely exec each other without getting
trampolines mixed up.
1996-03-02 19:38:20 +00:00
dg
d31b06efba Improved killproc() log message and made it and the other similar message
tolerant of p_ucred being invalid. Starting using killproc() where
appropriate.
1996-01-31 12:44:33 +00:00
wollman
27a152b15d Converted two options over to the new scheme: USER_LDT and KTRACE. 1996-01-03 21:42:35 +00:00
phk
63ec2c0ae9 A Major staticize sweep. Generates a couple of warnings that I'll deal
with later.
A number of unused vars removed.
A number of unused procs removed or #ifdefed.
1995-12-14 08:32:45 +00:00
dg
c30f46c534 Untangled the vm.h include file spaghetti. 1995-12-07 12:48:31 +00:00
bde
a22b1aac63 Cleaned up SA_NODEFER changes.
Added prototypes.
1995-11-18 10:01:38 +00:00
bde
aa9a60640e Included <sys/sysproto.h> to get central declarations for syscall args
structs and prototypes for syscalls.

Ifdefed duplicated decentralized declarations of args structs.  It's
convenient to have this visible but they are hard to maintain.  Some
are already different from the central declarations.  4.4lite2 puts
them in comments in the function headers but I wanted to avoid the
large changes for that.
1995-11-12 06:43:28 +00:00
swallace
f62e0784cb Implement SA_NODEFER sa_flag for sigaction():
Add SA_NODEFER define to signal.h
	Add ps_nodefer field to struct sigacts in signalvar.h.
	Add code to kern_sig.c to handle SA_NODEFER.

If flag is set, when the signal is delivered, it is not masked automatically
from receiving the same signal again.

Reviewed by:	 wollman, bde
1995-10-19 19:16:01 +00:00
rgrimes
c86f0c7a71 Remove trailing whitespace. 1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
bde
289f11acb4 Add and move declarations to fix all of the warnings from `gcc -Wimplicit'
(except in netccitt, netiso and netns) and most of the warnings from
`gcc -Wnested-externs'.  Fix all the bugs found.  There were no serious
ones.
1995-03-16 18:17:34 +00:00
ats
98786bc351 Correct a name of one structure member in the sigaltstack structure.
Now it matches the man page and also the only other commercial implementation
i have found so far ( Solaris 2.x).
Changed the name from ss_base to ss_sp.
1995-01-29 01:19:25 +00:00
ache
721181d9ac Security nitpicking: don't make *.core world readable 1994-11-06 11:13:02 +00:00
phk
1395bb0791 Cosmetics. related to getting prototypes into view. 1994-10-10 01:00:49 +00:00
ache
a83f1d347b Log SA_CORE signals
Obtained from: FreeBSD 1.x
1994-09-30 00:38:34 +00:00
phk
f73f358983 While in the real world, I had a bad case of being swapped out for a lot of
cycles.  While waiting there I added a lot of the extra ()'s I have, (I have
never used LISP to any extent).  So I compiled the kernel with -Wall and
shut up a lot of "suggest you add ()'s", removed a bunch of unused var's
and added a couple of declarations here and there.  Having a lap-top is
highly recommended.  My kernel still runs, yell at me if you kernel breaks.
1994-09-25 19:34:02 +00:00
bde
04236ea592 Don't use SIG_DFL or SIG_IGN for case label expressions. ANSI requires
such expressions to have integral type.  "gcc -ansi -pedantic -W..."
fails to diagnose this constraint error.
1994-09-20 05:42:46 +00:00
dg
8d205697aa Added $Id$ 1994-08-02 07:55:43 +00:00
rgrimes
2469c867a1 The big 4.4BSD Lite to FreeBSD 2.0.0 (Development) patch.
Reviewed by:	Rodney W. Grimes
Submitted by:	John Dyson and David Greenman
1994-05-25 09:21:21 +00:00