Commit Graph

309 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
rwatson
e7b290ea3d Consistently use ANSI C declarationsfor all functions in kern_synch.c. 2008-03-16 18:59:21 +00:00
rwatson
877d7c65ba In keeping with style(9)'s recommendations on macros, use a ';'
after each SYSINIT() macro invocation.  This makes a number of
lightweight C parsers much happier with the FreeBSD kernel
source, including cflow's prcc and lxr.

MFC after:	1 month
Discussed with:	imp, rink
2008-03-16 10:58:09 +00:00
jeff
acb93d599c Remove kernel support for M:N threading.
While the KSE project was quite successful in bringing threading to
FreeBSD, the M:N approach taken by the kse library was never developed
to its full potential.  Backwards compatibility will be provided via
libmap.conf for dynamically linked binaries and static binaries will
be broken.
2008-03-12 10:12:01 +00:00
jeff
3b1acbdce2 - Pass the priority argument from *sleep() into sleepq and down into
sched_sleep().  This removes extra thread_lock() acquisition and
   allows the scheduler to decide what to do with the static boost.
 - Change the priority arguments to cv_* to match sleepq/msleep/etc.
   where 0 means no priority change.  Catch -1 in cv_broadcastpri() and
   convert it to 0 for now.
 - Set a flag when sleeping in a way that is compatible with swapping
   since direct priority comparisons are meaningless now.
 - Add a sysctl to ule, kern.sched.static_boost, that defaults to on which
   controls the boost behavior.  Turning it off gives better performance
   in some workloads but needs more investigation.
 - While we're modifying sleepq, change signal and broadcast to both
   return with the lock held as the lock was held on enter.

Reviewed by:	jhb, peter
2008-03-12 06:31:06 +00:00
jeff
aa3cc14d3d - Handle kdb switch panics outside of mi_switch() to remove some instructions
from the common path and make the code more clear.  Whether this has any
   impact on performance may depend on optimization levels.

Sponsored by:	Nokia
2008-03-10 03:16:51 +00:00
rwatson
f261f9865b Don't zero td_runtime when billing thread CPU usage to the process;
maintain a separate td_incruntime to hold unbilled CPU usage for
the thread that has the previous properties of td_runtime.

When thread information is requested using the thread monitoring
sysctls, export thread td_runtime instead of process rusage runtime
in kinfo_proc.

This restores the display of individual ithread and other kernel
thread CPU usage since inception in ps -H and top -SH, as well for
libthr user threads, valuable debugging information lost with the
move to try kthreads since they are no longer independent processes.

There is universal agreement that we should rewrite the process and
thread export sysctls, but this commit gets things going a bit
better in the mean time.  Likewise, there are resevations about the
continued validity of statclock given the speed of modern processors.

Reviewed by:		attilio, emaste, jhb, julian
2008-01-10 22:11:20 +00:00
julian
7ee6259be7 A bunch more files that should probably print out a thread name
instead of a process name.
2007-11-14 06:51:33 +00:00
julian
b2732e0c22 generally we are interested in what thread did something as
opposed to what process. Since threads by default have teh name of the
process unless over-written with more useful information, just print the
thread name instead.
2007-11-14 06:21:24 +00:00
jeff
065472edb7 - Restore historical yield() behavior by manually lowering priority and
switching.

Approved by:	re
2007-10-08 23:40:40 +00:00
jeff
3fc0f8b973 - Move all of the PS_ flags into either p_flag or td_flags.
- p_sflag was mostly protected by PROC_LOCK rather than the PROC_SLOCK or
   previously the sched_lock.  These bugs have existed for some time.
 - Allow swapout to try each thread in a process individually and then
   swapin the whole process if any of these fail.  This allows us to move
   most scheduler related swap flags into td_flags.
 - Keep ki_sflag for backwards compat but change all in source tools to
   use the new and more correct location of P_INMEM.

Reported by:	pho
Reviewed by:	attilio, kib
Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-09-17 05:31:39 +00:00
jeff
ea7c909871 Commit 2/14 of sched_lock decomposition.
- Adapt sleepqueues to the new thread_lock() mechanism.
 - Delay assigning the sleep queue spinlock as the thread lock until after
   we've checked for signals.  It is illegal for a thread to return in
   mi_switch() with any lock assigned to td_lock other than the scheduler
   locks.
 - Change sleepq_catch_signals() to do the switch if necessary to simplify
   the callers.
 - Simplify timeout handling now that locking a sleeping thread has the
   side-effect of locking the sleepqueue.  Some previous races are no
   longer possible.

Tested by:      kris, current@
Tested on:      i386, amd64, ULE, 4BSD, libthr, libkse, PREEMPTION, etc.
Discussed with: kris, attilio, kmacy, jhb, julian, bde (small parts each)
2007-06-04 23:50:56 +00:00
attilio
9bd4fdf7ce Do proper "locking" for missing vmmeters part.
Now, we assume no more sched_lock protection for some of them and use the
distribuited loads method for vmmeter (distribuited through CPUs).

Reviewed by: alc, bde
Approved by: jeff (mentor)
2007-06-04 21:45:18 +00:00
jeff
a7a8bac81f - Move rusage from being per-process in struct pstats to per-thread in
td_ru.  This removes the requirement for per-process synchronization in
   statclock() and mi_switch().  This was previously supported by
   sched_lock which is going away.  All modifications to rusage are now
   done in the context of the owning thread.  reads proceed without locks.
 - Aggregate exiting threads rusage in thread_exit() such that the exiting
   thread's rusage is not lost.
 - Provide a new routine, rufetch() to fetch an aggregate of all rusage
   structures from all threads in a process.  This routine must be used
   in any place requiring a rusage from a process prior to it's exit.  The
   exited process's rusage is still available via p_ru.
 - Aggregate tick statistics only on demand via rufetch() or when a thread
   exits.  Tick statistics are kept in the thread and protected by sched_lock
   until it exits.

Initial patch by:	attilio
Reviewed by:		attilio, bde (some objections), arch (mostly silent)
2007-06-01 01:12:45 +00:00
attilio
7dd8ed88a9 Revert VMCNT_* operations introduction.
Probabilly, a general approach is not the better solution here, so we should
solve the sched_lock protection problems separately.

Requested by: alc
Approved by: jeff (mentor)
2007-05-31 22:52:15 +00:00
jeff
e1996cb960 - define and use VMCNT_{GET,SET,ADD,SUB,PTR} macros for manipulating
vmcnts.  This can be used to abstract away pcpu details but also changes
   to use atomics for all counters now.  This means sched lock is no longer
   responsible for protecting counts in the switch routines.

Contributed by:		Attilio Rao <attilio@FreeBSD.org>
2007-05-18 07:10:50 +00:00
jhb
b5754be873 Fix a potential LOR with sx_sleep() and cv_wait() with sx locks by
1) adding the thread to the sleepq via sleepq_add() before dropping the
lock, and 2) dropping the sleepq lock around calls to lc_unlock() for
sleepable locks (i.e. locks that use sleepq's in their implementation).
2007-05-08 21:49:59 +00:00
jhb
a84f74bb36 Rename the 'mtx_object', 'rw_object', and 'sx_object' members of mutexes,
rwlocks, and sx locks to 'lock_object'.
2007-03-21 21:20:51 +00:00
jhb
f5e3969340 Allow threads to atomically release rw and sx locks while waiting for an
event.  Locking primitives that support this (mtx, rw, and sx) now each
include their own foo_sleep() routine.
- Rename msleep() to _sleep() and change it's 'struct mtx' object to a
  'struct lock_object' pointer.  _sleep() uses the recently added
  lc_unlock() and lc_lock() function pointers for the lock class of the
  specified lock to release the lock while the thread is suspended.
- Add wrappers around _sleep() for mutexes (mtx_sleep()), rw locks
  (rw_sleep()), and sx locks (sx_sleep()).  msleep() still exists and
  is now identical to mtx_sleep(), but it is deprecated.
- Rename SLEEPQ_MSLEEP to SLEEPQ_SLEEP.
- Rewrite much of sleep.9 to not be msleep(9) centric.
- Flesh out the 'RETURN VALUES' section in sleep.9 and add an 'ERRORS'
  section.
- Add __nonnull(1) to _sleep() and msleep_spin() so that the compiler will
  warn if you try to pass a NULL wait channel.  The functions already have
  a KASSERT to that effect.
2007-03-09 22:41:01 +00:00
julian
80d6cde009 Instead of doing comparisons using the pcpu area to see if
a thread is an idle thread, just see if it has the IDLETD
flag set. That flag will probably move to the pflags word
as it's permenent and never chenges for the life of the
system so it doesn't need locking.
2007-03-08 06:44:34 +00:00
rwatson
69938bd196 Further system call comment cleanup:
- Remove also "MP SAFE" after prior "MPSAFE" pass. (suggested by bde)
- Remove extra blank lines in some cases.
- Add extra blank lines in some cases.
- Remove no-op comments consisting solely of the function name, the word
  "syscall", or the system call name.
- Add punctuation.
- Re-wrap some comments.
2007-03-05 13:10:58 +00:00
jhb
b7c2a59c51 Print tid's rather than thread pointers in KTR_PROC traces. 2007-02-27 18:46:07 +00:00
jhb
401f7aaf8a Add a new kernel sleep function pause(9). pause(9) is for places that
want an equivalent of DELAY(9) that sleeps instead of spins.  It accepts
a wmesg and a timeout and is not interrupted by signals.  It uses a private
wait channel that should never be woken up by wakeup(9) or wakeup_one(9).

Glanced at by:	phk
2007-02-23 16:22:09 +00:00
jeff
b5c5ce5407 - Fix schedgraph output with KSE threads. Call thread_switchout() after
calling CTR() so we don't confuse a new kse thread with a real preemption.
2007-01-03 02:38:41 +00:00
kmacy
7327d346fc Add second sleep queue so that sx and lockmgr can have separate sleep
queues for shared and exclusive acquisitions

Submitted by: Attilio Rao
Approved by: jhb
2006-12-16 06:54:09 +00:00
phk
b911f6e6f0 Only grab the sched_lock if we actually need to modify the thread priority.
During a buildworld only 2/3 of the calls to msleep actually changed
the priority.
2006-11-30 08:27:38 +00:00
pjd
63d82b700d Change sleepq_add(9) argument from 'struct mtx *' to 'struct lock_object *',
which allows to use it with different kinds of locks. For example it allows
to implement Solaris conditions variables which will be used in ZFS port on
top of sx(9) locks.

Reviewed by:	jhb
2006-11-16 01:02:00 +00:00
jhb
fa8eeee427 Adjust assertions to allow for magical properties of the 'lbolt' wait
channel for tsleep():
- Allow tsleep() on &lbolt without Giant with a timeout 0 since &lbolt has
  an implied timeout.
- If &lbolt is used with msleep() pass NULL to sleepq_add() for the lock
  object.  Unlike other sleepq channels, &lbolt doesn't have an associated
  owning lock.
2006-11-15 20:44:07 +00:00
jb
f82c799735 Make KSE a kernel option, turned on by default in all GENERIC
kernel configs except sun4v (which doesn't process signals properly
with KSE).

Reviewed by:	davidxu@
2006-10-26 21:42:22 +00:00
davidxu
1689a257a3 Use scheduler API sched_relinquish() to implement yield() syscall. 2006-06-15 06:41:57 +00:00
jhb
dc064c4d48 In the case of reentering the debugger due to an attempt to perform a
context switch while in the debugger, reenter the debugger sooner before
performing any statistics updates.
2006-06-03 20:49:44 +00:00
jhb
d535a5cb81 Change msleep() and tsleep() to not alter the calling thread's priority
if the specified priority is zero.  This avoids a race where the calling
thread could read a snapshot of it's current priority, then a different
thread could change the first thread's priority, then the original thread
would call sched_prio() inside msleep() undoing the change made by the
second thread.  I used a priority of zero as no thread that calls msleep()
or tsleep() should be specifying a priority of zero anyway.

The various places that passed 'curthread->td_priority' or some variant
as the priority now pass 0.
2006-04-17 18:20:38 +00:00
davidxu
e29c8e080b Fix a sleep queue race for KSE thread.
Reviewed by: jhb
2006-02-23 00:13:58 +00:00
jhb
1462e3bf37 Fixup some comments. Mutexes's are locked, not entered for several years
now and msleep blocks threads rather than processes.
2006-02-22 20:46:10 +00:00
davidxu
f1ce5c8660 Fix a long standing race between sleep queue and thread
suspension code. When a thread A is going to sleep, it calls
sleepq_catch_signals() to detect any pending signals or thread
suspension request, if nothing happens, it returns without
holding process lock or scheduler lock, this opens a race
window which allows thread B to come in and do process
suspension work, however since A is still at running state,
thread B can do nothing to A, thread A continues, and puts
itself into actually sleeping state, but B has never seen it,
and it sits there forever until B is woken up by other threads
sometimes later(this can be very long delay or never
happen). Fix this bug by forcing sleepq_catch_signals to
return with scheduler lock held.
Fix sleepq_abort() by passing it an interrupted code, previously,
it worked as wakeup_one(), and the interruption can not be
identified correctly by sleep queue code when the sleeping
thread is resumed.
Let thread_suspend_check() returns EINTR or ERESTART, so sleep
queue no longer has to use SIGSTOP as a hack to build a return
value.

Reviewed by:	jhb
MFC after:	1 week
2006-02-15 23:52:01 +00:00
phk
79081baaf0 CPU time accounting speedup (step 2)
Keep accounting time (in per-cpu) cputicks and the statistics counts
in the thread and summarize into struct proc when at context switch.

Don't reach across CPUs in calcru().

Add code to calibrate the top speed of cpu_tickrate() for variable
cpu_tick hardware (like TSC on power managed machines).

Don't enforce monotonicity (at least for now) in calcru.  While the
calibrated cpu_tickrate ramps up it may not be true.

Use 27MHz counter on i386/Geode.

Use TSC on amd64 & i386 if present.

Use tick counter on sparc64
2006-02-11 09:33:07 +00:00
phk
bb2f62f536 Modify the way we account for CPU time spent (step 1)
Keep track of time spent by the cpu in various contexts in units of
"cputicks" and scale to real-world microsec^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hclock_t
only when somebody wants to inspect the numbers.

For now "cputicks" are still derived from the current timecounter
and therefore things should by definition remain sensible also on
SMP machines.  (The main reason for this first milestone commit is
to verify that hypothesis.)

On slower machines, the avoided multiplications to normalize timestams
at every context switch, comes out as a 5-7% better score on the
unixbench/context1 microbenchmark.  On more modern hardware no change
in performance is seen.
2006-02-07 21:22:02 +00:00
jhb
c0024de329 patch(1) and I aren't friends today. Axe a duplicate copy of
the msleep_spin() function definition.

Spotted by:	pjd
2005-12-29 21:15:32 +00:00
jhb
dc2b7b5f5d Add a new function msleep_spin() which is a slightly stripped down version
of msleep().  msleep_spin() doesn't support changing the priority of the
thread while it is asleep nor does it support interruptible sleeps (PCATCH)
or the PDROP flag.  It does support timeouts however.  It differs from
msleep() in that the passed in mutex is a spin mutex.  This means one can
use msleep_spin() and wakeup() with a spin mutex similar to msleep() and
wakeup() with a regular mutex.  Note that the spin mutex in question needs
to come before sched_lock and the sleepq locks in lock order.
2005-12-29 20:57:45 +00:00
jhb
76c1ae2002 When checking to see if a process has exceeded its time limit, flag the
process as over the limit when its time is >= to the limit rather than >
the limit.  Technically, if p->p_rux.rux_runtime.sec == p->p_pcpulimit
and p->p_rux.rux_runtime.frac == 0, the process hasn't exceeded the limit
yet.  However, having the fraction exactly equal to 0 is rather rare, and
it is not worth the overhead to handle that edge case.  With just the >
comparison, the process would have to exceed its limit by almost a second
before it was killed.

PR:		kern/83192
Submitted by:	Maciej Zawadzinski mzawadzinski at gmail dot com
Reviewed by:	bde
MFC after:	1 week
2005-11-28 19:09:08 +00:00
ups
acfce18a2a Use low level constructs borrowed from interrupt threads to wait for
work in proc0.
Remove the TDP_WAKEPROC0 workaround.
2005-05-23 23:01:53 +00:00
ups
7bac02c146 Sprinkle some volatile magic and rearrange things a bit to avoid race
conditions in critical_exit now that it no longer blocks interrupts.

Reviewed by:	jhb
2005-04-08 03:37:53 +00:00
jhb
c5e6b72803 Don't recursively panic when we call mi_switch() in a critical section,
even though calling mi_switch() after a panic is likely a bug anyway as
the recursive panic only serves to make things worse.
2005-03-31 20:36:44 +00:00
jhb
7b611b0cb2 Stop explicitly touching td_base_pri outside of the scheduler and simply
set a thread's priority via sched_prio() when that is the desired action.
The schedulers will start managing td_base_pri internally shortly.
2004-12-30 20:29:58 +00:00
jeff
c2b9649e7a - Define KTR points for KTR_SCHED. 2004-12-26 00:14:21 +00:00
davidxu
9188104a8f Unlock mutex if PDROP was set by caller. 2004-11-27 11:43:31 +00:00
scottl
e049505e4b If a process needs to be swapped in, wakeup the swapper from within
critical_exit as the process is getting scheduled to run.  This is subotimal
but for now avoid the LOR between the scheduler and the sleepq systems.
This is a 5.3 candidate.

Submitted by: davidxu
MFC After: 3 days
2004-10-16 06:38:22 +00:00
jhb
a8c1c80ef5 Refine the turnstile and sleep queue interfaces just a bit:
- Add a new _lock() call to each API that locks the associated chain lock
  for a lock_object pointer or wait channel.  The _lookup() functions now
  require that the chain lock be locked via _lock() when they are called.
- Change sleepq_add(), turnstile_wait() and turnstile_claim() to lookup
  the associated queue structure internally via _lookup() rather than
  accepting a pointer from the caller.  For turnstiles, this means that
  the actual lookup of the turnstile in the hash table is only done when
  the thread actually blocks rather than being done on each loop iteration
  in _mtx_lock_sleep().  For sleep queues, this means that sleepq_lookup()
  is no longer used outside of the sleep queue code except to implement an
  assertion in cv_destroy().
- Change sleepq_broadcast() and sleepq_signal() to require that the chain
  lock is already required.  For condition variables, this lets the
  cv_broadcast() and cv_signal() functions lock the sleep queue chain lock
  while testing the waiters count.  This means that the waiters count
  internal to condition variables is no longer protected by the interlock
  mutex and cv_broadcast() and cv_signal() now no longer require that the
  interlock be held when they are called.  This lets consumers of condition
  variables drop the lock before waking other threads which can result in
  fewer context switches.

MFC after:	1 month
2004-10-12 18:36:20 +00:00
jhb
ce2d3f89af Rework how we store process times in the kernel such that we always store
the raw values including for child process statistics and only compute the
system and user timevals on demand.

- Fix the various kern_wait() syscall wrappers to only pass in a rusage
  pointer if they are going to use the result.
- Add a kern_getrusage() function for the ABI syscalls to use so that they
  don't have to play stackgap games to call getrusage().
- Fix the svr4_sys_times() syscall to just call calcru() to calculate the
  times it needs rather than calling getrusage() twice with associated
  stackgap, etc.
- Add a new rusage_ext structure to store raw time stats such as tick counts
  for user, system, and interrupt time as well as a bintime of the total
  runtime.  A new p_rux field in struct proc replaces the same inline fields
  from struct proc (i.e. p_[isu]ticks, p_[isu]u, and p_runtime).  A new p_crux
  field in struct proc contains the "raw" child time usage statistics.
  ruadd() has been changed to handle adding the associated rusage_ext
  structures as well as the values in rusage.  Effectively, the values in
  rusage_ext replace the ru_utime and ru_stime values in struct rusage.  These
  two fields in struct rusage are no longer used in the kernel.
- calcru() has been split into a static worker function calcru1() that
  calculates appropriate timevals for user and system time as well as updating
  the rux_[isu]u fields of a passed in rusage_ext structure.  calcru() uses a
  copy of the process' p_rux structure to compute the timevals after updating
  the runtime appropriately if any of the threads in that process are
  currently executing.  It also now only locks sched_lock internally while
  doing the rux_runtime fixup.  calcru() now only requires the caller to
  hold the proc lock and calcru1() only requires the proc lock internally.
  calcru() also no longer allows callers to ask for an interrupt timeval
  since none of them actually did.
- calcru() now correctly handles threads executing on other CPUs.
- A new calccru() function computes the child system and user timevals by
  calling calcru1() on p_crux.  Note that this means that any code that wants
  child times must now call this function rather than reading from p_cru
  directly.  This function also requires the proc lock.
- This finishes the locking for rusage and friends so some of the Giant locks
  in exit1() and kern_wait() are now gone.
- The locking in ttyinfo() has been tweaked so that a shared lock of the
  proctree lock is used to protect the process group rather than the process
  group lock.  By holding this lock until the end of the function we now
  ensure that the process/thread that we pick to dump info about will no
  longer vanish while we are trying to output its info to the console.

Submitted by:	bde (mostly)
MFC after:	1 month
2004-10-05 18:51:11 +00:00
julian
6461286b21 clean up thread runq accounting a bit.
MFC after:	3 days
2004-09-16 07:12:59 +00:00
julian
9993c65718 Add some code to allow threads to nominat a sibling to run if theyu are going to sleep.
MFC after:	1 week
2004-09-10 21:04:38 +00:00