summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/lib/libpthread/NOTES
blob: cebdc6a396c3faf6e3229c88633ec12bb4210e2d (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59

Here are some notes on the internals of the implementation.

LIBC routines.

	Unfortuanately many of the libc routine return a pointer to static data.
There are two methods to deal with this. One write a new routine where the
arguments are different, and have one argument be a pointer to some space
to store the data, or two use thread specific data and warn the user that
data isn't valid if the calling thread is terminated.

INTERNAL LOCKING
To prevent deadlocks the following rules were used for locks.

1.	Local locks for mutex queues and other like things are only locked
	by running threads, at NO time will a local lock be held by
	a thread in a non running state.
2.  Only threads that are in a run state can attempt to lock another thread,
	this way, we can assume that the lock will be released shortly, and don't
	have to unlock the local lock.
3.	The only time a thread will have a pthread->lock and is not in a run
	state is when it is in the reschedule routine.
4.	The reschedule routine assumes all local locks have been released,
	there is a lock on the currently running thread (pthread_run),
	and that this thread is being rescheduled to a non running state.
	It is safe to unlock the currently running threads lock after it
	has been rescheduled.
5.	The reschedule routine locks the kernel, sets the state of the currently
	running thread, unlocks the currently running thread, calls the
	context switch routines.
6	the kernel lock is used only ...


7.	The order of locking is ...

1 local locks
2 pthread->lock			/* Assumes it will get it soon */
3 pthread_run->lock		/* Assumes it will get it soon, but must release 2 */
4 kernel lock			/* Currently assumes it will ALWAYS get it. */

8.	The kernel lock will be changed to a spin lock for systems that
already support kernel threads, this way we can mutiplex threads onto
kernel threads.
9.	There are points where the kernel is locked and it needs to get
either a local lock or a pthread lock, if at these points the code
fails to get the lock the kernel gives up and sets a flag which will
be checked at a later point.
10.	Interrupts are dissabled while the kernel is locked, the interrupt
mask must be checked afterwards or cleared in some way, after interrputs
have been reenabled, this allows back to back interrupts, but should always
avoid missing one.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright (c) 1994 Chris Provenzano. All rights reserved.
This product includes software developed by the Univeristy of California,
Berkeley and its contributors.

For further licencing and distribution restrictions see the file COPYRIGHT
included in this directory.