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pthread_tsd.c revision 1.6.2.1
      1 /*	$NetBSD: pthread_tsd.c,v 1.6.2.1 2008/05/18 12:30:40 yamt Exp $	*/
      2 
      3 /*-
      4  * Copyright (c) 2001, 2007 The NetBSD Foundation, Inc.
      5  * All rights reserved.
      6  *
      7  * This code is derived from software contributed to The NetBSD Foundation
      8  * by Nathan J. Williams, and by Andrew Doran.
      9  *
     10  * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
     11  * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
     12  * are met:
     13  * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
     14  *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
     15  * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
     16  *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
     17  *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
     18  *
     19  * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE NETBSD FOUNDATION, INC. AND CONTRIBUTORS
     20  * ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
     21  * TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
     22  * PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE FOUNDATION OR CONTRIBUTORS
     23  * BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
     24  * CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
     25  * SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
     26  * INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
     27  * CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
     28  * ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
     29  * POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
     30  */
     31 
     32 #include <sys/cdefs.h>
     33 __RCSID("$NetBSD: pthread_tsd.c,v 1.6.2.1 2008/05/18 12:30:40 yamt Exp $");
     34 
     35 /* Functions and structures dealing with thread-specific data */
     36 #include <errno.h>
     37 
     38 #include "pthread.h"
     39 #include "pthread_int.h"
     40 
     41 static pthread_mutex_t tsd_mutex = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER;
     42 static int nextkey;
     43 void *pthread__tsd_alloc[PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX];
     44 void (*pthread__tsd_destructors[PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX])(void *);
     45 
     46 __strong_alias(__libc_thr_keycreate,pthread_key_create)
     47 __strong_alias(__libc_thr_keydelete,pthread_key_delete)
     48 
     49 int
     50 pthread_key_create(pthread_key_t *key, void (*destructor)(void *))
     51 {
     52 	int i;
     53 
     54 	/* Get a lock on the allocation list */
     55 	pthread_mutex_lock(&tsd_mutex);
     56 
     57 	/* Find an available slot */
     58 	/* 1. Search from "nextkey" to the end of the list. */
     59 	for (i = nextkey; i < PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX; i++)
     60 		if (pthread__tsd_alloc[i] == NULL)
     61 			break;
     62 
     63 	if (i == PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX) {
     64 		/* 2. If that didn't work, search from the start
     65 		 *    of the list back to "nextkey".
     66 		 */
     67 		for (i = 0; i < nextkey; i++)
     68 			if (pthread__tsd_alloc[i] == NULL)
     69 				break;
     70 
     71 		if (i == nextkey) {
     72 			/* If we didn't find one here, there isn't one
     73 			 * to be found.
     74 			 */
     75 			pthread_mutex_unlock(&tsd_mutex);
     76 			return EAGAIN;
     77 		}
     78 	}
     79 
     80 	/* Got one. */
     81 	pthread__tsd_alloc[i] = (void *)__builtin_return_address(0);
     82 	nextkey = (i + 1) % PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX;
     83 	pthread__tsd_destructors[i] = destructor;
     84 	pthread_mutex_unlock(&tsd_mutex);
     85 	*key = i;
     86 
     87 	return 0;
     88 }
     89 
     90 int
     91 pthread_key_delete(pthread_key_t key)
     92 {
     93 
     94 	/*
     95 	 * This is tricky.  The standard says of pthread_key_create()
     96 	 * that new keys have the value NULL associated with them in
     97 	 * all threads.  According to people who were present at the
     98 	 * standardization meeting, that requirement was written
     99 	 * before pthread_key_delete() was introduced, and not
    100 	 * reconsidered when it was.
    101 	 *
    102 	 * See David Butenhof's article in comp.programming.threads:
    103 	 * Subject: Re: TSD key reusing issue
    104 	 * Message-ID: <u97d8.29$fL6.200 (at) news.cpqcorp.net>
    105 	 * Date: Thu, 21 Feb 2002 09:06:17 -0500
    106 	 * http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&selm=u97d8.29%24fL6.200%40news.cpqcorp.net
    107 	 *
    108 	 * Given:
    109 	 *
    110 	 * 1: Applications are not required to clear keys in all
    111 	 *    threads before calling pthread_key_delete().
    112 	 * 2: Clearing pointers without running destructors is a
    113 	 *    memory leak.
    114 	 * 3: The pthread_key_delete() function is expressly forbidden
    115 	 *    to run any destructors.
    116 	 *
    117 	 * Option 1: Make this function effectively a no-op and
    118 	 * prohibit key reuse. This is a possible resource-exhaustion
    119 	 * problem given that we have a static storage area for keys,
    120 	 * but having a non-static storage area would make
    121 	 * pthread_setspecific() expensive (might need to realloc the
    122 	 * TSD array).
    123 	 *
    124 	 * Option 2: Ignore the specified behavior of
    125 	 * pthread_key_create() and leave the old values. If an
    126 	 * application deletes a key that still has non-NULL values in
    127 	 * some threads... it's probably a memory leak and hence
    128 	 * incorrect anyway, and we're within our rights to let the
    129 	 * application lose. However, it's possible (if unlikely) that
    130 	 * the application is storing pointers to non-heap data, or
    131 	 * non-pointers that have been wedged into a void pointer, so
    132 	 * we can't entirely write off such applications as incorrect.
    133 	 * This could also lead to running (new) destructors on old
    134 	 * data that was never supposed to be associated with that
    135 	 * destructor.
    136 	 *
    137 	 * Option 3: Follow the specified behavior of
    138 	 * pthread_key_create().  Either pthread_key_create() or
    139 	 * pthread_key_delete() would then have to clear the values in
    140 	 * every thread's slot for that key. In order to guarantee the
    141 	 * visibility of the NULL value in other threads, there would
    142 	 * have to be synchronization operations in both the clearer
    143 	 * and pthread_getspecific().  Putting synchronization in
    144 	 * pthread_getspecific() is a big performance lose.  But in
    145 	 * reality, only (buggy) reuse of an old key would require
    146 	 * this synchronization; for a new key, there has to be a
    147 	 * memory-visibility propagating event between the call to
    148 	 * pthread_key_create() and pthread_getspecific() with that
    149 	 * key, so setting the entries to NULL without synchronization
    150 	 * will work, subject to problem (2) above. However, it's kind
    151 	 * of slow.
    152 	 *
    153 	 * Note that the argument in option 3 only applies because we
    154 	 * keep TSD in ordinary memory which follows the pthreads
    155 	 * visibility rules. The visibility rules are not required by
    156 	 * the standard to apply to TSD, so the argument doesn't
    157 	 * apply in general, just to this implementation.
    158 	 */
    159 
    160 	/* For the momemt, we're going with option 1. */
    161 	pthread_mutex_lock(&tsd_mutex);
    162 	pthread__tsd_destructors[key] = NULL;
    163 	pthread_mutex_unlock(&tsd_mutex);
    164 
    165 	return 0;
    166 }
    167 
    168 /* Perform thread-exit-time destruction of thread-specific data. */
    169 void
    170 pthread__destroy_tsd(pthread_t self)
    171 {
    172 	int i, done, iterations;
    173 	void *val;
    174 	void (*destructor)(void *);
    175 
    176 	if (!self->pt_havespecific)
    177 		return;
    178 	pthread_mutex_unlock(&self->pt_lock);
    179 
    180 	/* Butenhof, section 5.4.2 (page 167):
    181 	 *
    182 	 * ``Also, Pthreads sets the thread-specific data value for a
    183 	 * key to NULL before calling that key's destructor (passing
    184 	 * the previous value of the key) when a thread terminates [*].
    185 	 * ...
    186 	 * [*] That is, unfortunately, not what the standard
    187 	 * says. This is one of the problems with formal standards -
    188 	 * they say what they say, not what they were intended to
    189 	 * say. Somehow, an error crept in, and the sentence
    190 	 * specifying that "the implementation clears the
    191 	 * thread-specific data value before calling the destructor"
    192 	 * was deleted. Nobody noticed, and the standard was approved
    193 	 * with the error. So the standard says (by omission) that if
    194 	 * you want to write a portable application using
    195 	 * thread-specific data, that will not hang on thread
    196 	 * termination, you must call pthread_setspecific within your
    197 	 * destructor function to change the value to NULL. This would
    198 	 * be silly, and any serious implementation of Pthreads will
    199 	 * violate the standard in this respect. Of course, the
    200 	 * standard will be fixed, probably by the 1003.1n amendment
    201 	 * (assorted corrections to 1003.1c-1995), but that will take
    202 	 * a while.''
    203 	 */
    204 
    205 	iterations = 4; /* We're not required to try very hard */
    206 	do {
    207 		done = 1;
    208 		for (i = 0; i < PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX; i++) {
    209 			if (self->pt_specific[i] != NULL) {
    210 				pthread_mutex_lock(&tsd_mutex);
    211 				destructor = pthread__tsd_destructors[i];
    212 				pthread_mutex_unlock(&tsd_mutex);
    213 			    if (destructor != NULL) {
    214 				    done = 0;
    215 				    val = self->pt_specific[i];
    216 				    self->pt_specific[i] = NULL; /* see above */
    217 				    (*destructor)(val);
    218 			    }
    219 			}
    220 		}
    221 	} while (!done && iterations--);
    222 
    223 	self->pt_havespecific = 0;
    224 	pthread_mutex_lock(&self->pt_lock);
    225 }
    226