Also remove logic to avoid unnecessary stores to the global variable.
Thread creation and destruction are heavy enough that any supposed savings
is in the noise.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 2-Clause license, however the tool I
was using mis-identified many licenses so this was mostly a manual - error
prone - task.
The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.
Fix warnings about:
- redundant declarations
- a local variable shadowing a global function (dlinfo)
- an old-style function definition (with an empty parameter list)
- a variable that is possibly used uninitialized
"make tinderbox" passes this time, except for a few unrelated
kernel failures.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10870
The threaded rtld lock implementation is faster even in the single-threaded
case because it postpones signal handlers via THR_CRITICAL_ENTER and
THR_CRITICAL_LEAVE instead of calling sigprocmask(2).
As a result, exception handling becomes faster in single-threaded
applications linked with libthr.
Reviewed by: kib
- Add flags CVWAIT_ABSTIME and CVWAIT_CLOCKID for umtx kernel based
condition variable, this should eliminate an extra system call to get
current time.
- Add sub-function UMTX_OP_NWAKE_PRIVATE to wake up N channels in single
system call. Create userland sleep queue for condition variable, in most
cases, thread will wait in the queue, the pthread_cond_signal will defer
thread wakeup until the mutex is unlocked, it tries to avoid an extra
system call and a extra context switch in time window of pthread_cond_signal
and pthread_mutex_unlock.
The changes are part of process-shared mutex project.
some cases we want to improve:
1) if a thread signal got a signal while in cancellation point,
it is possible the TDP_WAKEUP may be eaten by signal handler
if the handler called some interruptibly system calls.
2) In signal handler, we want to disable cancellation.
3) When thread holding some low level locks, it is better to
disable signal, those code need not to worry reentrancy,
sigprocmask system call is avoided because it is a bit expensive.
The signal handler wrapper works in this way:
1) libthr installs its signal handler if user code invokes sigaction
to install its handler, the user handler is recorded in internal
array.
2) when a signal is delivered, libthr's signal handler is invoke,
libthr checks if thread holds some low level lock or is in critical
region, if it is true, the signal is buffered, and all signals are
masked, once the thread leaves critical region, correct signal
mask is restored and buffered signal is processed.
3) before user signal handler is invoked, cancellation is temporarily
disabled, after user signal handler is returned, cancellation state
is restored, and pending cancellation is rescheduled.
1. fast simple type mutex.
2. __thread tls works.
3. asynchronous cancellation works ( using signal ).
4. thread synchronization is fully based on umtx, mainly, condition
variable and other synchronization objects were rewritten by using
umtx directly. those objects can be shared between processes via
shared memory, it has to change ABI which does not happen yet.
5. default stack size is increased to 1M on 32 bits platform, 2M for
64 bits platform.
As the result, some mysql super-smack benchmarks show performance is
improved massivly.
Okayed by: jeff, mtm, rwatson, scottl
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>
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.
and the disabling of signals. What we are really interested in is
keeping track of recursive disabling of signals. We should not
be recursively acquiring thread locks. Any such situations should
be reorganized to not require a recursive lock.
Separating the two out also allows us to block signals independent of
acquiring thread locks. This will be needed in libthr in the near future when
we put the pieces together to protect libc functions that use pthread mutexes
and low level locks.
implementation and the new improved one. We now precompute the
signal set passed to sigtimedwait, using an inverted set when
necessary for compatibility with older kernels.
pthread_cond_t) internaly in addition to the low-level spinlock_t. The
garbage collector mutex and condition variable are two such examples. This
might lead to critical sections nested within critical sections. Implement
a reference counting mechanism so that signals are masked only on the first
entry and unmasked on the last exit.
I'm not sure I like the idea of nested critical sections, but if
the library is going to use the pthread primitives it might be necessary.
Approved by: re/blanket libthr
Prevent one thread from messing up another thread's saved signal
mask by saving it in struct pthread instead of leaving it as a
global variable. D'oh!
Approved by: re/blanket libthr