/* * CDDL HEADER START * * The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the * Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). * You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * * You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE * or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions * and limitations under the License. * * When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each * file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. * If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the * fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying * information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] * * CDDL HEADER END */ /* * Copyright 2008 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. * Use is subject to license terms. */ #include "lint.h" #include "thr_uberdata.h" #include /* * These symbols should not be exported from libc, but * /lib/libm.so.2 references them. libm needs to be fixed. * Also, some older versions of the Studio compiler/debugger * components reference them. These need to be fixed, too. */ #pragma weak _thr_getspecific = thr_getspecific #pragma weak _thr_keycreate = thr_keycreate #pragma weak _thr_setspecific = thr_setspecific /* * 128 million keys should be enough for anyone. * This allocates half a gigabyte of memory for the keys themselves and * half a gigabyte of memory for each thread that uses the largest key. */ #define MAX_KEYS 0x08000000U int thr_keycreate(thread_key_t *pkey, void (*destructor)(void *)) { tsd_metadata_t *tsdm = &curthread->ul_uberdata->tsd_metadata; void (**old_data)(void *) = NULL; void (**new_data)(void *); uint_t old_nkeys; uint_t new_nkeys; lmutex_lock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); /* * Unfortunately, pthread_getspecific() specifies that a * pthread_getspecific() on an allocated key upon which the * calling thread has not performed a pthread_setspecifc() * must return NULL. Consider the following sequence: * * pthread_key_create(&key); * pthread_setspecific(key, datum); * pthread_key_delete(&key); * pthread_key_create(&key); * val = pthread_getspecific(key); * * According to POSIX, if the deleted key is reused for the new * key returned by the second pthread_key_create(), then the * pthread_getspecific() in the above example must return NULL * (and not the stale datum). The implementation is thus left * with two alternatives: * * (1) Reuse deleted keys. If this is to be implemented optimally, * it requires that pthread_key_create() somehow associate * the value NULL with the new (reused) key for each thread. * Keeping the hot path fast and lock-free induces substantial * complexity on the implementation. * * (2) Never reuse deleted keys. This allows the pthread_getspecific() * implementation to simply perform a check against the number * of keys set by the calling thread, returning NULL if the * specified key is larger than the highest set key. This has * the disadvantage of wasting memory (a program which simply * loops calling pthread_key_create()/pthread_key_delete() * will ultimately run out of memory), but permits an optimal * pthread_getspecific() while allowing for simple key creation * and deletion. * * All Solaris implementations have opted for (2). Given the * ~10 years that this has been in the field, it is safe to assume * that applications don't loop creating and destroying keys; we * stick with (2). */ if (tsdm->tsdm_nused == (old_nkeys = tsdm->tsdm_nkeys)) { /* * We need to allocate or double the number of keys. * tsdm->tsdm_nused must always be a power of two. */ if ((new_nkeys = (old_nkeys << 1)) == 0) new_nkeys = 8; if (new_nkeys > MAX_KEYS) { lmutex_unlock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); return (EAGAIN); } if ((new_data = lmalloc(new_nkeys * sizeof (void *))) == NULL) { lmutex_unlock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); return (ENOMEM); } if ((old_data = tsdm->tsdm_destro) == NULL) { /* key == 0 is always invalid */ new_data[0] = TSD_UNALLOCATED; tsdm->tsdm_nused = 1; } else { (void) memcpy(new_data, old_data, old_nkeys * sizeof (void *)); } tsdm->tsdm_destro = new_data; tsdm->tsdm_nkeys = new_nkeys; } *pkey = tsdm->tsdm_nused; tsdm->tsdm_destro[tsdm->tsdm_nused++] = destructor; lmutex_unlock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); if (old_data != NULL) lfree(old_data, old_nkeys * sizeof (void *)); return (0); } #pragma weak _pthread_key_create = pthread_key_create int pthread_key_create(pthread_key_t *pkey, void (*destructor)(void *)) { return (thr_keycreate(pkey, destructor)); } /* * Same as thr_keycreate(), above, except that the key creation * is performed only once. This relies upon the fact that a key * value of THR_ONCE_KEY is invalid, and requires that the key be * allocated with a value of THR_ONCE_KEY before calling here. * THR_ONCE_KEY and PTHREAD_ONCE_KEY_NP, defined in * and respectively, must have the same value. * Example: * * static pthread_key_t key = PTHREAD_ONCE_KEY_NP; * ... * pthread_key_create_once_np(&key, destructor); */ #pragma weak pthread_key_create_once_np = thr_keycreate_once int thr_keycreate_once(thread_key_t *keyp, void (*destructor)(void *)) { static mutex_t key_lock = DEFAULTMUTEX; thread_key_t key; int error; if (*keyp == THR_ONCE_KEY) { lmutex_lock(&key_lock); if (*keyp == THR_ONCE_KEY) { error = thr_keycreate(&key, destructor); if (error) { lmutex_unlock(&key_lock); return (error); } membar_producer(); *keyp = key; } lmutex_unlock(&key_lock); } membar_consumer(); return (0); } int pthread_key_delete(pthread_key_t key) { tsd_metadata_t *tsdm = &curthread->ul_uberdata->tsd_metadata; lmutex_lock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); if (key >= tsdm->tsdm_nused || tsdm->tsdm_destro[key] == TSD_UNALLOCATED) { lmutex_unlock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); return (EINVAL); } tsdm->tsdm_destro[key] = TSD_UNALLOCATED; lmutex_unlock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); return (0); } /* * Blessedly, the pthread_getspecific() interface is much better than the * thr_getspecific() interface in that it cannot return an error status. * Thus, if the key specified is bogus, pthread_getspecific()'s behavior * is undefined. As an added bonus (and as an artificat of not returning * an error code), the requested datum is returned rather than stored * through a parameter -- thereby avoiding the unnecessary store/load pair * incurred by thr_getspecific(). Every once in a while, the Standards * get it right -- but usually by accident. */ void * pthread_getspecific(pthread_key_t key) { tsd_t *stsd; /* * We are cycle-shaving in this function because some * applications make heavy use of it and one machine cycle * can make a measurable difference in performance. This * is why we waste a little memory and allocate a NULL value * for the invalid key == 0 in curthread->ul_ftsd[0] rather * than adjusting the key by subtracting one. */ if (key < TSD_NFAST) return (curthread->ul_ftsd[key]); if ((stsd = curthread->ul_stsd) != NULL && key < stsd->tsd_nalloc) return (stsd->tsd_data[key]); return (NULL); } int thr_getspecific(thread_key_t key, void **valuep) { tsd_t *stsd; /* * Amazingly, some application code (and worse, some particularly * fugly Solaris library code) _relies_ on the fact that 0 is always * an invalid key. To preserve this semantic, 0 is never returned * as a key from thr_/pthread_key_create(); we explicitly check * for it here and return EINVAL. */ if (key == 0) return (EINVAL); if (key < TSD_NFAST) *valuep = curthread->ul_ftsd[key]; else if ((stsd = curthread->ul_stsd) != NULL && key < stsd->tsd_nalloc) *valuep = stsd->tsd_data[key]; else *valuep = NULL; return (0); } /* * We call thr_setspecific_slow() when the key specified * is beyond the current thread's currently allocated range. * This case is in a separate function because we want * the compiler to optimize for the common case. */ static int thr_setspecific_slow(thread_key_t key, void *value) { ulwp_t *self = curthread; tsd_metadata_t *tsdm = &self->ul_uberdata->tsd_metadata; tsd_t *stsd; tsd_t *ntsd; uint_t nkeys; /* * It isn't necessary to grab locks in this path; * tsdm->tsdm_nused can only increase. */ if (key >= tsdm->tsdm_nused) return (EINVAL); /* * We would like to test (tsdm->tsdm_destro[key] == TSD_UNALLOCATED) * here but that would require acquiring tsdm->tsdm_lock and we * want to avoid locks in this path. * * We have a key which is (or at least _was_) valid. If this key * is later deleted (or indeed, is deleted before we set the value), * we don't care; such a condition would indicate an application * race for which POSIX thankfully leaves the behavior unspecified. * * First, determine our new size. To avoid allocating more than we * have to, continue doubling our size only until the new key fits. * stsd->tsd_nalloc must always be a power of two. */ nkeys = ((stsd = self->ul_stsd) != NULL)? stsd->tsd_nalloc : 8; for (; key >= nkeys; nkeys <<= 1) continue; /* * Allocate the new TSD. */ if ((ntsd = lmalloc(nkeys * sizeof (void *))) == NULL) return (ENOMEM); if (stsd != NULL) { /* * Copy the old TSD across to the new. */ (void) memcpy(ntsd, stsd, stsd->tsd_nalloc * sizeof (void *)); lfree(stsd, stsd->tsd_nalloc * sizeof (void *)); } ntsd->tsd_nalloc = nkeys; ntsd->tsd_data[key] = value; self->ul_stsd = ntsd; return (0); } int thr_setspecific(thread_key_t key, void *value) { tsd_t *stsd; int ret; ulwp_t *self = curthread; /* * See the comment in thr_getspecific(), above. */ if (key == 0) return (EINVAL); if (key < TSD_NFAST) { curthread->ul_ftsd[key] = value; return (0); } if ((stsd = curthread->ul_stsd) != NULL && key < stsd->tsd_nalloc) { stsd->tsd_data[key] = value; return (0); } /* * This is a critical region since we are dealing with memory * allocation and free. Similar protection required in tsd_free(). */ enter_critical(self); ret = thr_setspecific_slow(key, value); exit_critical(self); return (ret); } int pthread_setspecific(pthread_key_t key, const void *value) { return (thr_setspecific(key, (void *)value)); } /* * Contract-private interface for java. See PSARC/2003/159 * * If the key falls within the TSD_NFAST range, return a non-negative * offset that can be used by the caller to fetch the TSD data value * directly out of the thread structure using %g7 (sparc) or %gs (x86). * With the advent of TLS, %g7 and %gs are part of the ABI, even though * the definition of the thread structure itself (ulwp_t) is private. * * We guarantee that the offset returned on sparc will fit within * a SIMM13 field (that is, it is less than 2048). * * On failure (key is not in the TSD_NFAST range), return -1. */ ptrdiff_t _thr_slot_offset(thread_key_t key) { if (key != 0 && key < TSD_NFAST) return ((ptrdiff_t)offsetof(ulwp_t, ul_ftsd[key])); return (-1); } /* * This is called by _thrp_exit() to apply destructors to the thread's tsd. */ void tsd_exit() { ulwp_t *self = curthread; tsd_metadata_t *tsdm = &self->ul_uberdata->tsd_metadata; thread_key_t key; int recheck; void *val; void (*func)(void *); lmutex_lock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); do { recheck = 0; for (key = 1; key < TSD_NFAST && key < tsdm->tsdm_nused; key++) { if ((func = tsdm->tsdm_destro[key]) != NULL && func != TSD_UNALLOCATED && (val = self->ul_ftsd[key]) != NULL) { self->ul_ftsd[key] = NULL; lmutex_unlock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); (*func)(val); lmutex_lock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); recheck = 1; } } if (self->ul_stsd == NULL) continue; /* * Any of these destructors could cause us to grow the number * TSD keys in the slow TSD; we cannot cache the slow TSD * pointer through this loop. */ for (; key < self->ul_stsd->tsd_nalloc && key < tsdm->tsdm_nused; key++) { if ((func = tsdm->tsdm_destro[key]) != NULL && func != TSD_UNALLOCATED && (val = self->ul_stsd->tsd_data[key]) != NULL) { self->ul_stsd->tsd_data[key] = NULL; lmutex_unlock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); (*func)(val); lmutex_lock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); recheck = 1; } } } while (recheck); lmutex_unlock(&tsdm->tsdm_lock); /* * We're done; if we have slow TSD, we need to free it. */ tsd_free(self); } void tsd_free(ulwp_t *ulwp) { tsd_t *stsd; ulwp_t *self = curthread; enter_critical(self); if ((stsd = ulwp->ul_stsd) != NULL) lfree(stsd, stsd->tsd_nalloc * sizeof (void *)); ulwp->ul_stsd = NULL; exit_critical(self); }