pthread_atfork.c revision 1.4 1 1.4 lukem /* $NetBSD: pthread_atfork.c,v 1.4 2005/06/01 05:30:54 lukem Exp $ */
2 1.1 nathanw
3 1.1 nathanw /*-
4 1.1 nathanw * Copyright (c) 2002 The NetBSD Foundation, Inc.
5 1.1 nathanw * All rights reserved.
6 1.1 nathanw *
7 1.1 nathanw * This code is derived from software contributed to The NetBSD Foundation
8 1.1 nathanw * by Nathan J. Williams.
9 1.1 nathanw *
10 1.1 nathanw * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
11 1.1 nathanw * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
12 1.1 nathanw * are met:
13 1.1 nathanw * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
14 1.1 nathanw * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
15 1.1 nathanw * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
16 1.1 nathanw * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
17 1.1 nathanw * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
18 1.1 nathanw * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
19 1.1 nathanw * must display the following acknowledgement:
20 1.1 nathanw * This product includes software developed by the NetBSD
21 1.1 nathanw * Foundation, Inc. and its contributors.
22 1.1 nathanw * 4. Neither the name of The NetBSD Foundation nor the names of its
23 1.1 nathanw * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
24 1.1 nathanw * from this software without specific prior written permission.
25 1.1 nathanw *
26 1.1 nathanw * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE NETBSD FOUNDATION, INC. AND CONTRIBUTORS
27 1.1 nathanw * ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
28 1.1 nathanw * TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
29 1.1 nathanw * PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE FOUNDATION OR CONTRIBUTORS
30 1.1 nathanw * BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
31 1.1 nathanw * CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
32 1.1 nathanw * SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
33 1.1 nathanw * INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
34 1.1 nathanw * CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
35 1.1 nathanw * ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
36 1.1 nathanw * POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
37 1.1 nathanw */
38 1.1 nathanw
39 1.1 nathanw #include <sys/cdefs.h>
40 1.1 nathanw #if defined(LIBC_SCCS) && !defined(lint)
41 1.4 lukem __RCSID("$NetBSD: pthread_atfork.c,v 1.4 2005/06/01 05:30:54 lukem Exp $");
42 1.1 nathanw #endif /* LIBC_SCCS and not lint */
43 1.1 nathanw
44 1.1 nathanw #define __LIBC12_SOURCE__
45 1.1 nathanw
46 1.1 nathanw #include "namespace.h"
47 1.1 nathanw
48 1.1 nathanw #include <errno.h>
49 1.1 nathanw #include <stdlib.h>
50 1.1 nathanw #include <unistd.h>
51 1.1 nathanw #include <sys/queue.h>
52 1.1 nathanw #include "reentrant.h"
53 1.1 nathanw
54 1.1 nathanw #ifdef __weak_alias
55 1.1 nathanw __weak_alias(pthread_atfork, _pthread_atfork)
56 1.1 nathanw __weak_alias(fork, _fork)
57 1.1 nathanw #endif /* __weak_alias */
58 1.1 nathanw
59 1.1 nathanw pid_t __fork __P((void)); /* XXX */
60 1.1 nathanw
61 1.1 nathanw struct atfork_callback {
62 1.1 nathanw SIMPLEQ_ENTRY(atfork_callback) next;
63 1.1 nathanw void (*fn)(void);
64 1.1 nathanw };
65 1.1 nathanw
66 1.1 nathanw /*
67 1.1 nathanw * Hypothetically, we could protect the queues with a rwlock which is
68 1.1 nathanw * write-locked by pthread_atfork() and read-locked by fork(), but
69 1.1 nathanw * since the intended use of the functions is obtaining locks to hold
70 1.1 nathanw * across the fork, forking is going to be serialized anyway.
71 1.1 nathanw */
72 1.1 nathanw static mutex_t atfork_lock = MUTEX_INITIALIZER;
73 1.1 nathanw SIMPLEQ_HEAD(atfork_callback_q, atfork_callback);
74 1.1 nathanw
75 1.2 nathanw static struct atfork_callback_q prepareq = SIMPLEQ_HEAD_INITIALIZER(prepareq);
76 1.2 nathanw static struct atfork_callback_q parentq = SIMPLEQ_HEAD_INITIALIZER(parentq);
77 1.2 nathanw static struct atfork_callback_q childq = SIMPLEQ_HEAD_INITIALIZER(childq);
78 1.1 nathanw
79 1.1 nathanw int
80 1.1 nathanw pthread_atfork(void (*prepare)(void), void (*parent)(void),
81 1.1 nathanw void (*child)(void))
82 1.1 nathanw {
83 1.1 nathanw struct atfork_callback *newprepare, *newparent, *newchild;
84 1.1 nathanw
85 1.4 lukem newprepare = newparent = newchild = NULL;
86 1.4 lukem
87 1.1 nathanw if (prepare != NULL) {
88 1.1 nathanw newprepare = malloc(sizeof(struct atfork_callback));
89 1.1 nathanw if (newprepare == NULL)
90 1.1 nathanw return ENOMEM;
91 1.1 nathanw newprepare->fn = prepare;
92 1.1 nathanw }
93 1.1 nathanw
94 1.1 nathanw if (parent != NULL) {
95 1.1 nathanw newparent = malloc(sizeof(struct atfork_callback));
96 1.1 nathanw if (newparent == NULL) {
97 1.1 nathanw if (newprepare != NULL)
98 1.1 nathanw free(newprepare);
99 1.1 nathanw return ENOMEM;
100 1.1 nathanw }
101 1.1 nathanw newparent->fn = parent;
102 1.1 nathanw }
103 1.1 nathanw
104 1.1 nathanw if (child != NULL) {
105 1.1 nathanw newchild = malloc(sizeof(struct atfork_callback));
106 1.1 nathanw if (newchild == NULL) {
107 1.1 nathanw if (newprepare != NULL)
108 1.1 nathanw free(newprepare);
109 1.1 nathanw if (newparent != NULL)
110 1.1 nathanw free(newparent);
111 1.1 nathanw return ENOMEM;
112 1.1 nathanw }
113 1.1 nathanw newchild->fn = child;
114 1.1 nathanw }
115 1.1 nathanw
116 1.1 nathanw mutex_lock(&atfork_lock);
117 1.1 nathanw /*
118 1.1 nathanw * The order in which the functions are called is specified as
119 1.1 nathanw * LIFO for the prepare handler and FIFO for the others; insert
120 1.1 nathanw * at the head and tail as appropriate so that SIMPLEQ_FOREACH()
121 1.1 nathanw * produces the right order.
122 1.1 nathanw */
123 1.1 nathanw if (prepare)
124 1.1 nathanw SIMPLEQ_INSERT_HEAD(&prepareq, newprepare, next);
125 1.1 nathanw if (parent)
126 1.1 nathanw SIMPLEQ_INSERT_TAIL(&parentq, newparent, next);
127 1.1 nathanw if (child)
128 1.1 nathanw SIMPLEQ_INSERT_TAIL(&childq, newchild, next);
129 1.1 nathanw mutex_unlock(&atfork_lock);
130 1.1 nathanw
131 1.1 nathanw return 0;
132 1.1 nathanw }
133 1.1 nathanw
134 1.3 lukem pid_t
135 1.3 lukem fork(void)
136 1.1 nathanw {
137 1.1 nathanw struct atfork_callback *iter;
138 1.1 nathanw pid_t ret;
139 1.1 nathanw
140 1.1 nathanw mutex_lock(&atfork_lock);
141 1.1 nathanw SIMPLEQ_FOREACH(iter, &prepareq, next)
142 1.1 nathanw (*iter->fn)();
143 1.1 nathanw
144 1.1 nathanw ret = __fork();
145 1.1 nathanw
146 1.1 nathanw if (ret != 0) {
147 1.1 nathanw /*
148 1.1 nathanw * We are the parent. It doesn't matter here whether
149 1.1 nathanw * the fork call succeeded or failed.
150 1.1 nathanw */
151 1.1 nathanw SIMPLEQ_FOREACH(iter, &parentq, next)
152 1.1 nathanw (*iter->fn)();
153 1.1 nathanw mutex_unlock(&atfork_lock);
154 1.1 nathanw } else {
155 1.1 nathanw /* We are the child */
156 1.1 nathanw SIMPLEQ_FOREACH(iter, &childq, next)
157 1.1 nathanw (*iter->fn)();
158 1.1 nathanw /*
159 1.1 nathanw * Note: We are explicitly *not* unlocking
160 1.1 nathanw * atfork_lock. Unlocking atfork_lock is problematic,
161 1.1 nathanw * because if any threads in the parent blocked on it
162 1.1 nathanw * between the initial lock and the fork() syscall,
163 1.1 nathanw * unlocking in the child will try to schedule
164 1.1 nathanw * threads, and either the internal mutex interlock or
165 1.1 nathanw * the runqueue spinlock could have been held at the
166 1.1 nathanw * moment of fork(). Since the other threads do not
167 1.1 nathanw * exist in this process, the spinlock will never be
168 1.1 nathanw * unlocked, and we would wedge.
169 1.1 nathanw * Instead, we reinitialize atfork_lock, since we know
170 1.1 nathanw * that the state of the atfork lists is consistent here,
171 1.1 nathanw * and that there are no other threads to be affected by
172 1.1 nathanw * the forcible cleaning of the queue.
173 1.1 nathanw * This permits double-forking to work, although
174 1.1 nathanw * it requires knowing that it's "safe" to initialize
175 1.1 nathanw * a locked mutex in this context.
176 1.1 nathanw *
177 1.1 nathanw * The problem exists for users of this interface,
178 1.1 nathanw * too, since the intented use of pthread_atfork() is
179 1.1 nathanw * to acquire locks across the fork call to ensure
180 1.1 nathanw * that the child sees consistent state. There's not
181 1.1 nathanw * much that can usefully be done in a child handler,
182 1.1 nathanw * and conventional wisdom discourages using them, but
183 1.1 nathanw * they're part of the interface, so here we are...
184 1.1 nathanw */
185 1.1 nathanw mutex_init(&atfork_lock, NULL);
186 1.1 nathanw }
187 1.1 nathanw
188 1.1 nathanw return ret;
189 1.1 nathanw }
190