Commit Graph

128 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Marcel Moolenaar
cd28f17da2 Change the thread ID (thr_id_t) used for 1:1 threading from being a
pointer to the corresponding struct thread to the thread ID (lwpid_t)
assigned to that thread. The primary reason for this change is that
libthr now internally uses the same ID as the debugger and the kernel
when referencing to a kernel thread. This allows us to implement the
support for debugging without additional translations and/or mappings.

To preserve the ABI, the 1:1 threading syscalls, including the umtx
locking API have not been changed to work on a lwpid_t. Instead the
1:1 threading syscalls operate on long and the umtx locking API has
not been changed except for the contested bit. Previously this was
the least significant bit. Now it's the most significant bit. Since
the contested bit should not be tested by userland, this change is
not expected to be visible. Just to be sure, UMTX_CONTESTED has been
removed from <sys/umtx.h>.

Reviewed by: mtm@
ABI preservation tested on: i386, ia64
2004-07-02 00:40:07 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
105711487e When a thread is created suspended have libthr suspend it explicitly
instead of asking the kernel to do it when we create the thread.
2004-06-30 15:57:36 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
03d74100cf Implement pthread_atfork in libthr. This is mostly from deichen's
work in libpthread.

Submitted by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
2004-06-27 10:01:35 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
356c2d4f58 In the case that the global thread list is being re-initialized after
a fork, make sure that the current thread isn't detached and freed. As
a consequence the thread should be inserted into the head of the
active list only once (in the beginning).
2004-06-27 09:53:06 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
4cd18a22d5 Make libthr async-signal-safe without costly signal masking. The guidlines I
followed are: Only 3 functions (pthread_cancel, pthread_setcancelstate,
pthread_setcanceltype) are required to be async-signal-safe by POSIX. None of
the rest of the pthread api is required to be async-signal-safe. This means
that only the three mentioned functions are safe to use from inside
signal handlers.
However, there are certain system/libc calls that are
cancellation points that a caller may call from within a signal handler,
and since they are cancellation points calls have to be made into libthr
to test for cancellation and exit the thread if necessary. So, the
cancellation test and thread exit code paths must be async-signal-safe
as well. A summary of the changes follows:

o Almost all of the code paths that masked signals, as well as locking the
  pthread structure now lock only the pthread structure.
o Signals are masked (and left that way) as soon as a thread enters
  pthread_exit().
o The active and dead threads locks now explicitly require that signals
  are masked.
o Access to the isdead field of the pthread structure is protected by both
  the active and dead list locks for writing. Either one is sufficient for
  reading.
o The thread state and type fields have been combined into one three-state
  switch to make it easier to read without requiring a lock. It doesn't need
  a lock for writing (and therefore for reading either) because only the
  current thread can write to it and it is an integer value.
o The thread state field of the pthread structure has been eliminated. It
  was an unnecessary field that mostly duplicated the flags field, but
  required additional locking that would make a lot more code paths require
  signal masking. Any truly unique values (such as PS_DEAD) have been
  reborn as separate members of the pthread structure.
o Since the mutex and condvar pthread functions are not async-signal-safe
  there is no need to muck about with the wait queues when handling
  a signal ...
o ... which also removes the need for wrapping signal handlers and sigaction(2).
o The condvar and mutex async-cancellation code had to be revised as a result
  of some of these changes, which resulted in semi-unrelated changes which
  would have been difficult to work on as a separate commit, so they are
  included as well.

The only part of the changes I am worried about is related to locking for
the pthread joining fields. But, I will take a closer look at them once this
mega-patch is committed.
2004-05-20 12:06:16 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
7295f69667 q§ 2004-05-20 11:55:04 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
afa647196b Unconditionaly initialize any spin lock passed to pthread_spin_init(). While
makeing sure the spinlock isn't already in use might be a nice feature to
have in theory, it's hard to implement in practice since the passed in
pointer may not be NULL, but still be an invalid value (i.e. 1..2..3.. etc).
2004-04-24 09:38:41 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
572d95e285 o Also check that the mutex type is not less than the minimum allowable value.
o Don't check attribute for NULL. It's the callers responsibility.
2004-03-29 13:57:55 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
0ad70ba98e Make the minimum implementation of pthread_kill conform to the
functionality spelled out in SUSv3.
	o Signal of 0 means do everything except send the signal
	o Check that the signal is not invalid
	o Check that the target thread is not dead/invalid
2004-03-29 13:56:04 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
b321aa9888 o Don't explicitly check the thread for NULL. That is the caller's
responsibility.
o If a thread is not joinable, the correct return value is EINVAL.
2004-03-29 13:53:43 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
8c223652fb o If a thread is marked as detached AND on the dead threads list
the correct return value is ESRCH.
o Don't check the attribute for NULL. It's the caller's responsibility.
o Make the bitwise comparison explicit.
2004-03-29 13:51:51 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
61bf8f4731 If a condition variable is statically initialized don't return
an error. Return successfully without doing anything.
2004-03-29 11:24:02 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
0c3a942692 The thread suspend function now returns ETIMEDOUT, not EAGAIN. 2004-03-29 09:35:07 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
0465e53d8c o Remove more references to SIGTHR
o Remove clock resolution information left over from libc_r
2004-03-29 05:45:01 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
1c6f63018d Remove the garbage collector thread. All resources are freed
in-line. If the exiting thread cannot release a resource, then
the next thread to exit will release it.
2004-03-28 14:05:28 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
8bd3b0415b o Since we're not using signals for thread synchronization anymore,
sigprocmask no longer needs to be wrapped.
o raise(3) is applied to the calling thread in a threaded program.
o In the sigaction wrapper reference the correct structure.
o Don't treat SIGTHR especially anymore (infact it won't exist in
  a little while).
2004-03-27 15:05:28 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
7c8aa41383 Stop using signals for synchronizing threads. The performance penalty
was too much.
2004-03-27 14:39:21 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
81fda5bdd5 o The mutex locking functions aren't normally cancellation points. But,
we still have to DTRT when an asynchronously cancellable thread is
  cancelled while waiting for a mutex.
o While dequeueing a waiting mutex don't skip a thread if it has
  a cancel pending. Only skip it if it is also async cancellable.
2004-03-26 14:47:54 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
8733f60328 o Initialize a local variable before referencing it. This was not
the cause of any bugs because it is *always* indirectly set
  in the for...loop, but better to be explicit about it.
o Check the magic number of the passed in thread only after it has
  been found in the active thread list. Otherwise, if the check is done
  at the very beginning we may end up pointing to garbage if the
  thread was once a valid thread, but has now been destroyed.
2004-03-26 14:45:35 +00:00
Mark Murray
16fc3635f7 Make NULL a (void*)0 whereever possible, and fix the warnings(-Werror)
that this provokes. "Wherever possible" means "In the kernel OR NOT
C++" (implying C).

There are places where (void *) pointers are not valid, such as for
function pointers, but in the special case of (void *)0, agreement
settles on it being OK.

Most of the fixes were NULL where an integer zero was needed; many
of the fixes were NULL where ascii <nul> ('\0') was needed, and a
few were just "other".

Tested on: i386 sparc64
2004-03-05 08:10:19 +00:00
Peter Grehan
a95a647dcc libthr powerpc support.
Submitted by:  Suleiman Souhlal <refugee@segfaulted.com>
Tested with: most libpthread tests, Apache 'worker' MDM
2004-03-02 06:25:20 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
d4d7df5c0c Implement PThreads barriers and barrier attributes. 2004-02-19 13:51:52 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
8c18819a81 Don't wake up the thread after the signal handler
has been executed. On return from the signal handler
the call will either be restarted or EINTR will be returned,
but it will not go back to its previous state. So, it is
sufficient to simply change the state to 'running' without
actually trying to wake up the thread.
2004-02-19 13:47:12 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
097c5e8da4 Remove thr_getschedparam.c since it's contents have been moved into
thr_setschedparam.c
2004-02-18 15:59:54 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
32eaa7dddd There are consumers of rwlocks, inluding our own libc, that depend on
a PTHREAD_RWLOCK_INITIALIZER to do for rwlocks what
a similarly named symbol does for statically initialized mutexes.
This symbol was dropped in The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6
and does not exist in IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003, but it should still be
supported for backwards compatibility.

Pointy hat: mtm
2004-02-18 15:30:10 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
b3d73b9b1e o Catch up with the mutex priority protocol fixes.
o Move pthread_getschedparam() into the same file with it's
  pthread_set* counterpart. Copyright on both files is identical.
2004-02-18 15:26:00 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
b325a92087 o Style
o Instead of checking both the passed in pointer and its value
  for NULL, only check the latter. Any caller that passes in
  a NULL pointer is obviously wrong.
2004-02-18 15:22:52 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
a561651c34 o Refactor and, among other things, get rid of insane nesting levels.
o Fix mutex priority protocols. Keep separate counts of priority
  inheritance and protection mutexes to make things easier.
  This will not have much affect since this is only the
  userland side, and the rest involves kernel scheduling.
2004-02-18 15:16:31 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
06e5becb69 Move the initialization of thread priority to a common function. 2004-02-18 15:05:56 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
0d48409fe2 Move the weak references to the top of the file to conform
to the format of other similar files in libthr.
2004-02-18 14:56:20 +00:00
Colin Percival
d623b765cf style cleanup: Remove duplicate $FreeBSD$ tags.
These files had tags after the copyright notice,
inside the comment block (incorrect, removed),
and outside the comment block (correct).

Approved by:	rwatson (mentor)
2004-02-10 20:42:33 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
518ae0c8fd Remove the band-aid (#include <time.h>). 2004-02-03 22:30:01 +00:00
Daniel Eischen
fc9579997c Add <time.h> -- bandaid to unbreak world in <semaphore.h>. 2004-02-03 15:55:30 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
4e3c587d23 Bump up the maximum number concurrent threads on x86. 2004-02-01 15:33:01 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
1baa64733c I update the rwlock code in libthr to be more standards compliant and
what do I get for my troubles? libc breaks offcourse!

Reimplement a hack (in libthr) that allows libc to use
rwlocks without initializing them first. The hack was reimplemented
so that only a private libc version of the rwlock locking functions
initializes an uninitialized rwlock. The application version will
correctly fail.
2004-01-29 12:03:17 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
98a11db62d When suspending a thread if the timeout was very short or
the system call got interrupted and the absolute timeout is
converted to a relative timeout, it may happen that we get a
negative number. In such a case, simply set the timeout to
zero so that if the event that the thread wants to wait for has
happened it can still return successfully, but if it hasn't
happened then the thread doesn't suspend indefinitely. This should
fix certain applications (including mozilla) that seem to hang
indefinitely sometimes.

Noticed and debugged by: Morten Johansen <root@morten-johansen.net>
2004-01-29 09:44:36 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
dec04f43d9 o Implement the pthread_spin_* functions in libthr.
o Man pages
2004-01-22 15:31:56 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
1c6841ae78 Refactor _pthread_mutex_init
o Simplify the logic by removing a lot of unnecesary nesting
	o Reduce the amount of local variables
	o Zero-out the allocated structure and get rid of
	  all the unnecessary setting to 0 and NULL;

Refactor _pthread_mutex_destroy
	o Simplify the logic by removing a lot of unnecesary nesting
	o No need to check pointer that the mutex attributes points
	  to. Checking passed in pointer is enough.
2004-01-19 15:00:57 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
c40bafac85 Implement reference counting of read-write locks. This uses
a list in the thread structure to keep track of the locks and
how many times they have been locked. This list is checked
on every lock and unlock. The traversal through the list is
O(n). Most applications don't hold so many locks at once that
this will become a problem. However, if it does become a problem
it might be a good idea to review this once libthr is
off probation and in the optimization cycle.
This fixes:
	o deadlock when a thread tries to recursively acquire a
	  read lock when a writer is waiting on the lock.
	o a thread could previously successfully unlock a lock it did not own
	o deadlock when a thread tries to acquire a write lock on
	  a lock it already owns for reading or writing [ this is admittedly
	  not required by POSIX, but is nice to have ]
2004-01-19 14:51:45 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
104ff764e5 Add an implementation of pthread_rwlock_timed{rd,wr}lock() to libthr with
attendant documentation.
2004-01-16 10:52:10 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
14f8ddcd08 o We are not required to initialize an invalid rwlock. So axe all that
code and simply return EINVAL (which is allowed by the standard) in
  all those pthread functions that previously initialized it.

o Refactor the pthread_rwlock_[try]rdlock() and pthread_rwlock_[try]wrlock()
  functions. They are now completeley condensed into rwlock_rdlock_common()
  and rwlock_wrlock_common(), respectively.

o If the application tries to destroy an rwlock that is currently
  held by a thread return EBUSY where it previously went ahead and
  freed all resources associated with the lock.

o Refactor _pthread_rwlock_init() to make it look (relatively) sane.

o When obtaining a read lock on an rwlock the check for whether it
  would exceed the maximum allowed read locks should happen *before*
  we obtain the lock.

o The pthread_rwlock_* functions shall *never* return EINTR, so make
  sure to requeue/resuspend the thread if it encounters such an error.

o Make a note that pthread_rwlock_unlock() needs to ensure it holds a
  lock on an rwlock it tries to unlock. It will be implemented in a
  separate commit because it requires some additional rwlock infrastructure.
2004-01-16 07:10:30 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
2ed59d22bd Return ENOTSUP instead of -1. 2004-01-15 16:09:58 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
2aa9de1f77 o Implement pthread_mutex_timedlock(), which does not block indefinitely on
a mutex locked by another thread.
o document it: pthread_mutex_timedlock(3)
2003-12-30 08:44:55 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
2b33fc6470 Make it possible for the library to specify a timeout value when
waiting on a locked mutex. This involves passing a struct timespec
from the pthread mutex locking interfaces all the way down to the
function that suspends the thread until the mutex is released.
The timeout is assumed to be an absolute time (i.e. not relative to
the current time).

Also, in _thread_suspend() make the passed in timespec const.
2003-12-30 08:34:57 +00:00
Doug Rabson
795a502646 Don't block SIGTRAP - it makes it hard to debug programs with gdb.
Reviewed by: mtm
2003-12-26 12:11:16 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
f2c3dd08ec Preparations to make libthr work in multi-threaded fork()ing applications.
o Remove some code duplication between _thread_init(), which is run once
  to initialize libthr and the intitial thread, and pthread_create(), which
  initializes newly created threads, into a new function called from both
  places: init_td_common()
o Move initialization of certain parts of libthr into a separate
  function. These include:
	- Active threads list and it's lock
	- Dead threads list and it's lock & condition variable
	- Naming and insertion of the initial thread into the
	  active threads list.
2003-12-26 08:16:17 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
8657fd166c Remove _giant_mutex and its associated macros. 2003-12-15 12:38:06 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
2543fd4700 Comment out most of pthread_setschedparam. Pthread priorities didn't
work before anyways, and I didn't want to fix broken code I had no
way of testing. It was necessary however, in order to get rid of GIANT_LOCK.
Pthread priorities will have to wait a little longer to get fixed.
2003-12-15 12:31:46 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
c830473999 When creating a pthread in the suspended state their were two
problems: (1) The wrong flag was being checked for in the attribute
	  (2) The pthread's state was not being set to indicate it was
	      suspended.

Noticed by: Igor Sysoev <is@rambler-co.ru>
2003-12-15 09:35:02 +00:00
Mike Makonnen
099fe19901 Doh! Lock the thread passed in by the caller, not the current thread. 2003-12-12 09:51:39 +00:00