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author | Thomas Schwinge <thomas@codesourcery.com> | 2013-01-08 21:34:29 +0100 |
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committer | Thomas Schwinge <thomas@codesourcery.com> | 2013-01-08 21:43:11 +0100 |
commit | cd42b6144bf707fa38555bc06e267bb16db011f5 (patch) | |
tree | ddebd4ae1c845bd062261b4335a9ab7a969a3c89 /open_issues/alarm_setitimer.mdwn | |
parent | a91114fc89dd554494801349e57bd5d29454a8b1 (diff) | |
parent | e66cb01b99b60f9483de2425bca3bb104bcc9ae8 (diff) | |
download | web-cd42b6144bf707fa38555bc06e267bb16db011f5.tar.gz web-cd42b6144bf707fa38555bc06e267bb16db011f5.tar.bz2 web-cd42b6144bf707fa38555bc06e267bb16db011f5.zip |
Merge remote-tracking branch 'fp/master'
Diffstat (limited to 'open_issues/alarm_setitimer.mdwn')
-rw-r--r-- | open_issues/alarm_setitimer.mdwn | 152 |
1 files changed, 151 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/open_issues/alarm_setitimer.mdwn b/open_issues/alarm_setitimer.mdwn index 3255683c..5999808c 100644 --- a/open_issues/alarm_setitimer.mdwn +++ b/open_issues/alarm_setitimer.mdwn @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc."]] +[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2012, 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc."]] [[!meta license="""[[!toggle id="license" text="GFDL 1.2+"]][[!toggleable id="license" text="Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this @@ -29,3 +29,153 @@ for a signal, while on GNU/Hurd it gets a new alarm and exits. <braunr> it seems doesn't seem to leave a timer disarmed when the interval is set to 0 <braunr> (which means a one shot timer is actually periodic ..) + + +## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-12-26 + + <braunr> youpi: tschwinge: the setitimer issue + http://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/open_issues/alarm_setitimer.html) is + because of the global preemptor installed by setitimer not being run when + sigalrm is catched + <braunr> if anyone has a good definition for a preemptor, let us know (mine + is currently "something that is scanned on signal delivery and can alter + this delivery") + <youpi> I don't have any better definition + <pinotree> braunr: ah, that explains indeed + <pinotree> thanks + <braunr> i think i found the problem :) + <braunr> seems to be a minor overlook from drepper + <braunr> (or the real author if he was only the committer) + <braunr> hurd_preempt_signals augments _hurdsig_preempted_set with the + signals from the installed preemptor + <braunr> but the inline version in setitimer doesn't + <braunr> and post_signal actually checks that + <braunr> the preemptor itself looks wrong, since its sigcode range is 0, 0 + whereas SI_TIMER is used when raising SIGALRM ... + <braunr> ah but that's a recent change, right + <braunr> it came with "implement SA_SIGINFO signal handlers" + (e19a2fad70b187e5efe79768f86a1f05cb5e0390, Tue Feb 21 02:41:18 2012) + <braunr> yes, fixed :) + <braunr> patch committed at + http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/hurd/glibc.git/log/?h=rbraun/setitimer_fix + <youpi> and pushed to the debian package + + +## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-12-27 + + <braunr> do we know any application that was broken because of setitimer ? + <pinotree> braunr: bits in the python and perl test suites + <braunr> ok + + +## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-12-28 + + <pinotree> braunr: ah, also libglib-perl's testsuite is affected by the + alarm/setitimer issue + <braunr> pinotree: only tests ? :( + <pinotree> braunr: yeah + <braunr> ok, we don't win that much on this fix, but anyway, still good to + have + <pinotree> but that source is pretty quick to compile and check + <pinotree> braunr: eh, so far that's what i found myself + + +## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-01-04 + +See also [[select]]. + + <youpi> bummer, we have broken ghc completely with the latest glibc patches + <pinotree> youpi: what do you mean? + <youpi> pinotree: it just hangs on installation + + +## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-01-05 + + <youpi> pinotree: it seems ghc was disturbed by the setitimer patch + <youpi> pinotree: http://paste.debian.net/221807/ + <youpi> pinotree: it seems to be simply due to nested locking of + _hurd_siglock :/ + <youpi> pinotree: I wonder whether this code has ever been really tested + <youpi> oops + <youpi> braunr: my comments above were for you actually :) + <youpi> braunr: see the update I've just commited to the debian patch + <youpi> I've added a parameter to setitimer_locked, to know whether the + lock is already taken or not + <youpi> that does fix ghc + <youpi> as well as the gdb ntpdate hang, apparently + <youpi> I can confirm that the single-select patch breaks ntpdate for some + reason + <youpi> I wonder whether it could be due to port set behavior being + different from single reply port + <youpi> I believe I understand what happens + +[[select_vs_signals]]. + + <youpi> I'll rebuild ntpdate with a 1s timeout + <youpi> that'll at least fix that + <youpi> rah, no, doesn't work, it insists on getting its alarm + <youpi> Mmm, no, the __mach_msg call doesn't even return + <youpi> even though MACH_RCV_TIMEOUT is set, and to is 1000 + <braunr> youpi: i see + <braunr> gnu_srs: and you, see how youpi analysed and understood the + problem, instead of just guessing :p + <braunr> youpi: it doesn't return ? + <braunr> iirc, the __mach_msg wrapper deals with the interruptible flag + <youpi> braunr: yes, __mach_msg deals with the interruptible flag by + looping ! + <youpi> and the info page says it: if it's interrupted too often, it may + just never return + <youpi> that's what actually happens here + <youpi> (ntpdate sets an itimer more often than every 1s) + <braunr> youpi: ew :) + <youpi> I'll test a bit more, and submit a patch + <pinotree> youpi: otoh a _locker function usually means it expects a locked + mutex ;) + <pinotree> i also i wondered whether there could be a race in the settimer + mini-thread, between its mach_msg and its reading of the interval + <youpi> pinotree: right, we could as well just lock anyway + <youpi> there could be indeed + <pinotree> youpi: i don't know much about the internals of signal + dispatching, but could it happen the following: + <pinotree> in timer thread, mach_msg expires → sig_post_request → before + the main thread receives/processes the signal, the timer thread iterates + again on its while(1), using the same interval previously used + <pinotree> ? + <youpi> did you check the comment above __msg_sig_post_request? + <pinotree> ah ok + <youpi> I'm not sure how that works, but it's supposed to :) + <pinotree> just wonder: wouldn't it be simplier if the logic to change the + timeout would be in the timer thread, instead of relying on the main + thread adjusting it? + <youpi> maybe there are some semantic details that wouldn't be right with + such approach + <pinotree> i see + <pinotree> i guess so if the new interval is 0, the thread can be properly + suspened (or killed, if the former fails) + <youpi> could be something like this, yes + <pinotree> youpi: ah, wrt your comments of tonight: at least with the + current setitimer patch (in -38), a simple alarm() test app works, and i + saw few python tests can be reenabled now + <youpi> ok + <pinotree> so even if not totally correct, at least it had some positive + effects + <pinotree> youpi: wrt the double lock issue of _hurd_siglock, what about + using the "crit" parameter of setitimer_locked? + <youpi> it may have various values + <youpi> depending whether we're already in the critical section etc. + <pinotree> restart_itimer does not take that lock, so we could check + whether crit is null, and in that case not even bothering to check the + signal preemptors, since it was called as a result of own setitimer + thread? + <youpi> I'd rather avoid binding whether the mutex is held to whether the + call is coming from the actual premptor + <youpi> again, crit may be null if we're already in the critical section + when setitimer is called + <braunr> setitimer already does unclean things with preemptors + <youpi> not a good thing to add more :) + <pinotree> fair enough, so a simple bool should do the job + <braunr> i mean, the whole thing is "cheezoid" :) + <braunr> it probably needs a rewrite some day + <braunr> so "in the meantime" (of years, i know) + <pinotree> braunr: and temporary, too + <braunr> but a bool is fine too, sure :) |