cosmopolitan/libc/calls/clock_nanosleep.c
Justine Tunney 60cb435cb4
Implement pthread_atfork()
If threads are being used, then fork() will now acquire and release and
runtime locks so that fork() may be safely used from threads. This also
makes vfork() thread safe, because pthread mutexes will do nothing when
the process is a child of vfork(). More torture tests have been written
to confirm this all works like a charm. Additionally:

- Invent hexpcpy() api
- Rename nsync_malloc_() to kmalloc()
- Complete posix named semaphore implementation
- Make pthread_create() asynchronous signal safe
- Add rm, rmdir, and touch to command interpreter builtins
- Invent sigisprecious() and modify sigset functions to use it
- Add unit tests for posix_spawn() attributes and fix its bugs

One unresolved problem is the reclaiming of *NSYNC waiter memory in the
forked child processes, within apps which have threads waiting on locks
2022-10-16 12:25:13 -07:00

124 lines
6 KiB
C

/*-*- mode:c;indent-tabs-mode:nil;c-basic-offset:2;tab-width:8;coding:utf-8 -*-│
│vi: set net ft=c ts=2 sts=2 sw=2 fenc=utf-8 :vi│
╞══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╡
│ Copyright 2022 Justine Alexandra Roberts Tunney │
│ │
│ Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for │
│ any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the │
│ above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. │
│ │
│ THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL │
│ WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED │
│ WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE │
│ AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL │
│ DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR │
│ PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER │
│ TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR │
│ PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. │
╚─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────*/
#include "libc/calls/asan.internal.h"
#include "libc/calls/state.internal.h"
#include "libc/calls/struct/timespec.h"
#include "libc/calls/struct/timespec.internal.h"
#include "libc/calls/struct/timeval.h"
#include "libc/calls/struct/timeval.internal.h"
#include "libc/dce.h"
#include "libc/errno.h"
#include "libc/intrin/describeflags.internal.h"
#include "libc/intrin/strace.internal.h"
#include "libc/sysv/consts/clock.h"
#include "libc/sysv/consts/timer.h"
#include "libc/sysv/errfuns.h"
#include "libc/thread/tls.h"
/**
* Sleeps for particular amount of time.
*
* Here's how you could sleep for one second:
*
* clock_nanosleep(0, 0, &(struct timespec){1}, 0);
*
* Your sleep will be interrupted automatically if you do something like
* press ctrl-c during the wait. That's an `EINTR` error and it lets you
* immediately react to status changes. This is always the case, even if
* you're using `SA_RESTART` since this is a `@norestart` system call.
*
* void OnCtrlC(int sig) {} // EINTR only happens after delivery
* signal(SIGINT, OnCtrlC); // do delivery rather than kill proc
* printf("save me from sleeping forever by pressing ctrl-c\n");
* clock_nanosleep(0, 0, &(struct timespec){INT_MAX}, 0);
* printf("you're my hero\n");
*
* If you want to perform an uninterruptible sleep without having to use
* sigprocmask() to block all signals then this function provides a good
* solution to that problem. For example:
*
* struct timespec rel, now, abs;
* clock_gettime(CLOCK_REALTIME, &now);
* rel = _timespec_frommillis(100);
* abs = _timespec_add(now, rel);
* while (clock_nanosleep(CLOCK_REALTIME, TIMER_ABSTIME, &abs, 0));
*
* will accurately spin on `EINTR` errors. That way you're not impeding
* signal delivery and you're not losing precision on your wait timeout.
* This function has first-class support on Linux, FreeBSD, and NetBSD;
* on OpenBSD it's good; on XNU it's bad; and on Windows it's ugly.
*
* @param clock should be `CLOCK_REALTIME` and you may consult the docs
* of your preferred platforms to see what other clocks might work
* @param flags can be 0 for relative and `TIMER_ABSTIME` for absolute
* @param req can be a relative or absolute time, depending on `flags`
* @param rem shall be updated with the remainder of unslept time when
* (1) it's non-null; (2) `flags` is 0; and (3) -1 w/ `EINTR` is
* returned; if this function returns 0 then `rem` is undefined;
* if flags is `TIMER_ABSTIME` then `rem` is ignored
* @return 0 on success, or errno on error
* @raise EINTR when a signal got delivered while we were waiting
* @raise ENOTSUP if `clock` is known but we can't use it here
* @raise EFAULT if `req` or null or bad memory was passed
* @raise EINVAL if `clock` is unknown to current platform
* @raise EINVAL if `flags` has an unrecognized value
* @raise EINVAL if `req->tv_nsec ∉ [0,1000000000)`
* @raise ENOSYS on bare metal
* @returnserrno
* @norestart
*/
errno_t clock_nanosleep(int clock, int flags, const struct timespec *req,
struct timespec *rem) {
int rc, e = errno;
if (!req || (IsAsan() && (!__asan_is_valid_timespec(req) ||
(rem && !__asan_is_valid_timespec(rem))))) {
rc = efault();
} else if (clock == 127 || //
(flags & ~TIMER_ABSTIME) || //
req->tv_sec < 0 || //
!(0 <= req->tv_nsec && req->tv_nsec <= 999999999)) {
rc = einval();
} else if (IsLinux() || IsFreebsd() || IsNetbsd()) {
rc = sys_clock_nanosleep(clock, flags, req, rem);
} else if (IsXnu()) {
rc = sys_clock_nanosleep_xnu(clock, flags, req, rem);
} else if (IsOpenbsd()) {
rc = sys_clock_nanosleep_openbsd(clock, flags, req, rem);
} else if (IsMetal()) {
rc = enosys();
} else {
rc = sys_clock_nanosleep_nt(clock, flags, req, rem);
}
if (rc == -1) {
rc = errno;
errno = e;
}
#if SYSDEBUG
if (__tls_enabled && !(__get_tls()->tib_flags & TIB_FLAG_TIME_CRITICAL)) {
STRACE("clock_nanosleep(%s, %s, %s, [%s]) → %s", DescribeClockName(clock),
DescribeSleepFlags(flags), DescribeTimespec(0, req),
DescribeTimespec(rc, rem), DescribeErrnoResult(rc));
}
#endif
return rc;
}