os_bsd.cpp revision 3890:d2f8c38e543d
1132718Skan/* 2132718Skan * Copyright (c) 1999, 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 3169689Skan * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER. 4169689Skan * 5169689Skan * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it 6169689Skan * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as 7169689Skan * published by the Free Software Foundation. 8132718Skan * 9169689Skan * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT 10169689Skan * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or 11169689Skan * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License 12 * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that 13 * accompanied this code). 14 * 15 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version 16 * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 17 * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. 18 * 19 * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA 20 * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any 21 * questions. 22 * 23 */ 24 25// no precompiled headers 26#include "classfile/classLoader.hpp" 27#include "classfile/systemDictionary.hpp" 28#include "classfile/vmSymbols.hpp" 29#include "code/icBuffer.hpp" 30#include "code/vtableStubs.hpp" 31#include "compiler/compileBroker.hpp" 32#include "compiler/disassembler.hpp" 33#include "interpreter/interpreter.hpp" 34#include "jvm_bsd.h" 35#include "memory/allocation.inline.hpp" 36#include "memory/filemap.hpp" 37#include "mutex_bsd.inline.hpp" 38#include "oops/oop.inline.hpp" 39#include "os_share_bsd.hpp" 40#include "prims/jniFastGetField.hpp" 41#include "prims/jvm.h" 42#include "prims/jvm_misc.hpp" 43#include "runtime/arguments.hpp" 44#include "runtime/extendedPC.hpp" 45#include "runtime/globals.hpp" 46#include "runtime/interfaceSupport.hpp" 47#include "runtime/java.hpp" 48#include "runtime/javaCalls.hpp" 49#include "runtime/mutexLocker.hpp" 50#include "runtime/objectMonitor.hpp" 51#include "runtime/osThread.hpp" 52#include "runtime/perfMemory.hpp" 53#include "runtime/sharedRuntime.hpp" 54#include "runtime/statSampler.hpp" 55#include "runtime/stubRoutines.hpp" 56#include "runtime/thread.inline.hpp" 57#include "runtime/threadCritical.hpp" 58#include "runtime/timer.hpp" 59#include "services/attachListener.hpp" 60#include "services/runtimeService.hpp" 61#include "utilities/decoder.hpp" 62#include "utilities/defaultStream.hpp" 63#include "utilities/events.hpp" 64#include "utilities/growableArray.hpp" 65#include "utilities/vmError.hpp" 66 67// put OS-includes here 68# include <sys/types.h> 69# include <sys/mman.h> 70# include <sys/stat.h> 71# include <sys/select.h> 72# include <pthread.h> 73# include <signal.h> 74# include <errno.h> 75# include <dlfcn.h> 76# include <stdio.h> 77# include <unistd.h> 78# include <sys/resource.h> 79# include <pthread.h> 80# include <sys/stat.h> 81# include <sys/time.h> 82# include <sys/times.h> 83# include <sys/utsname.h> 84# include <sys/socket.h> 85# include <sys/wait.h> 86# include <time.h> 87# include <pwd.h> 88# include <poll.h> 89# include <semaphore.h> 90# include <fcntl.h> 91# include <string.h> 92# include <sys/param.h> 93# include <sys/sysctl.h> 94# include <sys/ipc.h> 95# include <sys/shm.h> 96#ifndef __APPLE__ 97# include <link.h> 98#endif 99# include <stdint.h> 100# include <inttypes.h> 101# include <sys/ioctl.h> 102 103#if defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined(__NetBSD__) 104# include <elf.h> 105#endif 106 107#ifdef __APPLE__ 108# include <mach/mach.h> // semaphore_* API 109# include <mach-o/dyld.h> 110# include <sys/proc_info.h> 111# include <objc/objc-auto.h> 112#endif 113 114#ifndef MAP_ANONYMOUS 115#define MAP_ANONYMOUS MAP_ANON 116#endif 117 118#define MAX_PATH (2 * K) 119 120// for timer info max values which include all bits 121#define ALL_64_BITS CONST64(0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF) 122 123#define LARGEPAGES_BIT (1 << 6) 124//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 125// global variables 126julong os::Bsd::_physical_memory = 0; 127 128 129int (*os::Bsd::_clock_gettime)(clockid_t, struct timespec *) = NULL; 130pthread_t os::Bsd::_main_thread; 131int os::Bsd::_page_size = -1; 132 133static jlong initial_time_count=0; 134 135static int clock_tics_per_sec = 100; 136 137// For diagnostics to print a message once. see run_periodic_checks 138static sigset_t check_signal_done; 139static bool check_signals = true; 140 141static pid_t _initial_pid = 0; 142 143/* Signal number used to suspend/resume a thread */ 144 145/* do not use any signal number less than SIGSEGV, see 4355769 */ 146static int SR_signum = SIGUSR2; 147sigset_t SR_sigset; 148 149 150//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 151// utility functions 152 153static int SR_initialize(); 154static int SR_finalize(); 155 156julong os::available_memory() { 157 return Bsd::available_memory(); 158} 159 160julong os::Bsd::available_memory() { 161 // XXXBSD: this is just a stopgap implementation 162 return physical_memory() >> 2; 163} 164 165julong os::physical_memory() { 166 return Bsd::physical_memory(); 167} 168 169julong os::allocatable_physical_memory(julong size) { 170#ifdef _LP64 171 return size; 172#else 173 julong result = MIN2(size, (julong)3800*M); 174 if (!is_allocatable(result)) { 175 // See comments under solaris for alignment considerations 176 julong reasonable_size = (julong)2*G - 2 * os::vm_page_size(); 177 result = MIN2(size, reasonable_size); 178 } 179 return result; 180#endif // _LP64 181} 182 183//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 184// environment support 185 186bool os::getenv(const char* name, char* buf, int len) { 187 const char* val = ::getenv(name); 188 if (val != NULL && strlen(val) < (size_t)len) { 189 strcpy(buf, val); 190 return true; 191 } 192 if (len > 0) buf[0] = 0; // return a null string 193 return false; 194} 195 196 197// Return true if user is running as root. 198 199bool os::have_special_privileges() { 200 static bool init = false; 201 static bool privileges = false; 202 if (!init) { 203 privileges = (getuid() != geteuid()) || (getgid() != getegid()); 204 init = true; 205 } 206 return privileges; 207} 208 209 210 211// Cpu architecture string 212#if defined(ZERO) 213static char cpu_arch[] = ZERO_LIBARCH; 214#elif defined(IA64) 215static char cpu_arch[] = "ia64"; 216#elif defined(IA32) 217static char cpu_arch[] = "i386"; 218#elif defined(AMD64) 219static char cpu_arch[] = "amd64"; 220#elif defined(ARM) 221static char cpu_arch[] = "arm"; 222#elif defined(PPC) 223static char cpu_arch[] = "ppc"; 224#elif defined(SPARC) 225# ifdef _LP64 226static char cpu_arch[] = "sparcv9"; 227# else 228static char cpu_arch[] = "sparc"; 229# endif 230#else 231#error Add appropriate cpu_arch setting 232#endif 233 234// Compiler variant 235#ifdef COMPILER2 236#define COMPILER_VARIANT "server" 237#else 238#define COMPILER_VARIANT "client" 239#endif 240 241 242void os::Bsd::initialize_system_info() { 243 int mib[2]; 244 size_t len; 245 int cpu_val; 246 u_long mem_val; 247 248 /* get processors count via hw.ncpus sysctl */ 249 mib[0] = CTL_HW; 250 mib[1] = HW_NCPU; 251 len = sizeof(cpu_val); 252 if (sysctl(mib, 2, &cpu_val, &len, NULL, 0) != -1 && cpu_val >= 1) { 253 set_processor_count(cpu_val); 254 } 255 else { 256 set_processor_count(1); // fallback 257 } 258 259 /* get physical memory via hw.usermem sysctl (hw.usermem is used 260 * instead of hw.physmem because we need size of allocatable memory 261 */ 262 mib[0] = CTL_HW; 263 mib[1] = HW_USERMEM; 264 len = sizeof(mem_val); 265 if (sysctl(mib, 2, &mem_val, &len, NULL, 0) != -1) 266 _physical_memory = mem_val; 267 else 268 _physical_memory = 256*1024*1024; // fallback (XXXBSD?) 269 270#ifdef __OpenBSD__ 271 { 272 // limit _physical_memory memory view on OpenBSD since 273 // datasize rlimit restricts us anyway. 274 struct rlimit limits; 275 getrlimit(RLIMIT_DATA, &limits); 276 _physical_memory = MIN2(_physical_memory, (julong)limits.rlim_cur); 277 } 278#endif 279} 280 281#ifdef __APPLE__ 282static const char *get_home() { 283 const char *home_dir = ::getenv("HOME"); 284 if ((home_dir == NULL) || (*home_dir == '\0')) { 285 struct passwd *passwd_info = getpwuid(geteuid()); 286 if (passwd_info != NULL) { 287 home_dir = passwd_info->pw_dir; 288 } 289 } 290 291 return home_dir; 292} 293#endif 294 295void os::init_system_properties_values() { 296// char arch[12]; 297// sysinfo(SI_ARCHITECTURE, arch, sizeof(arch)); 298 299 // The next steps are taken in the product version: 300 // 301 // Obtain the JAVA_HOME value from the location of libjvm[_g].so. 302 // This library should be located at: 303 // <JAVA_HOME>/jre/lib/<arch>/{client|server}/libjvm[_g].so. 304 // 305 // If "/jre/lib/" appears at the right place in the path, then we 306 // assume libjvm[_g].so is installed in a JDK and we use this path. 307 // 308 // Otherwise exit with message: "Could not create the Java virtual machine." 309 // 310 // The following extra steps are taken in the debugging version: 311 // 312 // If "/jre/lib/" does NOT appear at the right place in the path 313 // instead of exit check for $JAVA_HOME environment variable. 314 // 315 // If it is defined and we are able to locate $JAVA_HOME/jre/lib/<arch>, 316 // then we append a fake suffix "hotspot/libjvm[_g].so" to this path so 317 // it looks like libjvm[_g].so is installed there 318 // <JAVA_HOME>/jre/lib/<arch>/hotspot/libjvm[_g].so. 319 // 320 // Otherwise exit. 321 // 322 // Important note: if the location of libjvm.so changes this 323 // code needs to be changed accordingly. 324 325 // The next few definitions allow the code to be verbatim: 326#define malloc(n) (char*)NEW_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char, (n), mtInternal) 327#define getenv(n) ::getenv(n) 328 329/* 330 * See ld(1): 331 * The linker uses the following search paths to locate required 332 * shared libraries: 333 * 1: ... 334 * ... 335 * 7: The default directories, normally /lib and /usr/lib. 336 */ 337#ifndef DEFAULT_LIBPATH 338#define DEFAULT_LIBPATH "/lib:/usr/lib" 339#endif 340 341#define EXTENSIONS_DIR "/lib/ext" 342#define ENDORSED_DIR "/lib/endorsed" 343#define REG_DIR "/usr/java/packages" 344 345#ifdef __APPLE__ 346#define SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIR "/Library/Java/Extensions" 347#define SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIRS SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIR ":/Network" SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIR ":/System" SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIR ":/usr/lib/java" 348 const char *user_home_dir = get_home(); 349 // the null in SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIRS counts for the size of the colon after user_home_dir 350 int system_ext_size = strlen(user_home_dir) + sizeof(SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIR) + 351 sizeof(SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIRS); 352#endif 353 354 { 355 /* sysclasspath, java_home, dll_dir */ 356 { 357 char *home_path; 358 char *dll_path; 359 char *pslash; 360 char buf[MAXPATHLEN]; 361 os::jvm_path(buf, sizeof(buf)); 362 363 // Found the full path to libjvm.so. 364 // Now cut the path to <java_home>/jre if we can. 365 *(strrchr(buf, '/')) = '\0'; /* get rid of /libjvm.so */ 366 pslash = strrchr(buf, '/'); 367 if (pslash != NULL) 368 *pslash = '\0'; /* get rid of /{client|server|hotspot} */ 369 dll_path = malloc(strlen(buf) + 1); 370 if (dll_path == NULL) 371 return; 372 strcpy(dll_path, buf); 373 Arguments::set_dll_dir(dll_path); 374 375 if (pslash != NULL) { 376 pslash = strrchr(buf, '/'); 377 if (pslash != NULL) { 378 *pslash = '\0'; /* get rid of /<arch> (/lib on macosx) */ 379#ifndef __APPLE__ 380 pslash = strrchr(buf, '/'); 381 if (pslash != NULL) 382 *pslash = '\0'; /* get rid of /lib */ 383#endif 384 } 385 } 386 387 home_path = malloc(strlen(buf) + 1); 388 if (home_path == NULL) 389 return; 390 strcpy(home_path, buf); 391 Arguments::set_java_home(home_path); 392 393 if (!set_boot_path('/', ':')) 394 return; 395 } 396 397 /* 398 * Where to look for native libraries 399 * 400 * Note: Due to a legacy implementation, most of the library path 401 * is set in the launcher. This was to accomodate linking restrictions 402 * on legacy Bsd implementations (which are no longer supported). 403 * Eventually, all the library path setting will be done here. 404 * 405 * However, to prevent the proliferation of improperly built native 406 * libraries, the new path component /usr/java/packages is added here. 407 * Eventually, all the library path setting will be done here. 408 */ 409 { 410 char *ld_library_path; 411 412 /* 413 * Construct the invariant part of ld_library_path. Note that the 414 * space for the colon and the trailing null are provided by the 415 * nulls included by the sizeof operator (so actually we allocate 416 * a byte more than necessary). 417 */ 418#ifdef __APPLE__ 419 ld_library_path = (char *) malloc(system_ext_size); 420 sprintf(ld_library_path, "%s" SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIR ":" SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIRS, user_home_dir); 421#else 422 ld_library_path = (char *) malloc(sizeof(REG_DIR) + sizeof("/lib/") + 423 strlen(cpu_arch) + sizeof(DEFAULT_LIBPATH)); 424 sprintf(ld_library_path, REG_DIR "/lib/%s:" DEFAULT_LIBPATH, cpu_arch); 425#endif 426 427 /* 428 * Get the user setting of LD_LIBRARY_PATH, and prepended it. It 429 * should always exist (until the legacy problem cited above is 430 * addressed). 431 */ 432#ifdef __APPLE__ 433 // Prepend the default path with the JAVA_LIBRARY_PATH so that the app launcher code can specify a directory inside an app wrapper 434 char *l = getenv("JAVA_LIBRARY_PATH"); 435 if (l != NULL) { 436 char *t = ld_library_path; 437 /* That's +1 for the colon and +1 for the trailing '\0' */ 438 ld_library_path = (char *) malloc(strlen(l) + 1 + strlen(t) + 1); 439 sprintf(ld_library_path, "%s:%s", l, t); 440 free(t); 441 } 442 443 char *v = getenv("DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH"); 444#else 445 char *v = getenv("LD_LIBRARY_PATH"); 446#endif 447 if (v != NULL) { 448 char *t = ld_library_path; 449 /* That's +1 for the colon and +1 for the trailing '\0' */ 450 ld_library_path = (char *) malloc(strlen(v) + 1 + strlen(t) + 1); 451 sprintf(ld_library_path, "%s:%s", v, t); 452 free(t); 453 } 454 455#ifdef __APPLE__ 456 // Apple's Java6 has "." at the beginning of java.library.path. 457 // OpenJDK on Windows has "." at the end of java.library.path. 458 // OpenJDK on Linux and Solaris don't have "." in java.library.path 459 // at all. To ease the transition from Apple's Java6 to OpenJDK7, 460 // "." is appended to the end of java.library.path. Yes, this 461 // could cause a change in behavior, but Apple's Java6 behavior 462 // can be achieved by putting "." at the beginning of the 463 // JAVA_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable. 464 { 465 char *t = ld_library_path; 466 // that's +3 for appending ":." and the trailing '\0' 467 ld_library_path = (char *) malloc(strlen(t) + 3); 468 sprintf(ld_library_path, "%s:%s", t, "."); 469 free(t); 470 } 471#endif 472 473 Arguments::set_library_path(ld_library_path); 474 } 475 476 /* 477 * Extensions directories. 478 * 479 * Note that the space for the colon and the trailing null are provided 480 * by the nulls included by the sizeof operator (so actually one byte more 481 * than necessary is allocated). 482 */ 483 { 484#ifdef __APPLE__ 485 char *buf = malloc(strlen(Arguments::get_java_home()) + 486 sizeof(EXTENSIONS_DIR) + system_ext_size); 487 sprintf(buf, "%s" SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIR ":%s" EXTENSIONS_DIR ":" 488 SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIRS, user_home_dir, Arguments::get_java_home()); 489#else 490 char *buf = malloc(strlen(Arguments::get_java_home()) + 491 sizeof(EXTENSIONS_DIR) + sizeof(REG_DIR) + sizeof(EXTENSIONS_DIR)); 492 sprintf(buf, "%s" EXTENSIONS_DIR ":" REG_DIR EXTENSIONS_DIR, 493 Arguments::get_java_home()); 494#endif 495 496 Arguments::set_ext_dirs(buf); 497 } 498 499 /* Endorsed standards default directory. */ 500 { 501 char * buf; 502 buf = malloc(strlen(Arguments::get_java_home()) + sizeof(ENDORSED_DIR)); 503 sprintf(buf, "%s" ENDORSED_DIR, Arguments::get_java_home()); 504 Arguments::set_endorsed_dirs(buf); 505 } 506 } 507 508#ifdef __APPLE__ 509#undef SYS_EXTENSIONS_DIR 510#endif 511#undef malloc 512#undef getenv 513#undef EXTENSIONS_DIR 514#undef ENDORSED_DIR 515 516 // Done 517 return; 518} 519 520//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 521// breakpoint support 522 523void os::breakpoint() { 524 BREAKPOINT; 525} 526 527extern "C" void breakpoint() { 528 // use debugger to set breakpoint here 529} 530 531//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 532// signal support 533 534debug_only(static bool signal_sets_initialized = false); 535static sigset_t unblocked_sigs, vm_sigs, allowdebug_blocked_sigs; 536 537bool os::Bsd::is_sig_ignored(int sig) { 538 struct sigaction oact; 539 sigaction(sig, (struct sigaction*)NULL, &oact); 540 void* ohlr = oact.sa_sigaction ? CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, oact.sa_sigaction) 541 : CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, oact.sa_handler); 542 if (ohlr == CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, SIG_IGN)) 543 return true; 544 else 545 return false; 546} 547 548void os::Bsd::signal_sets_init() { 549 // Should also have an assertion stating we are still single-threaded. 550 assert(!signal_sets_initialized, "Already initialized"); 551 // Fill in signals that are necessarily unblocked for all threads in 552 // the VM. Currently, we unblock the following signals: 553 // SHUTDOWN{1,2,3}_SIGNAL: for shutdown hooks support (unless over-ridden 554 // by -Xrs (=ReduceSignalUsage)); 555 // BREAK_SIGNAL which is unblocked only by the VM thread and blocked by all 556 // other threads. The "ReduceSignalUsage" boolean tells us not to alter 557 // the dispositions or masks wrt these signals. 558 // Programs embedding the VM that want to use the above signals for their 559 // own purposes must, at this time, use the "-Xrs" option to prevent 560 // interference with shutdown hooks and BREAK_SIGNAL thread dumping. 561 // (See bug 4345157, and other related bugs). 562 // In reality, though, unblocking these signals is really a nop, since 563 // these signals are not blocked by default. 564 sigemptyset(&unblocked_sigs); 565 sigemptyset(&allowdebug_blocked_sigs); 566 sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SIGILL); 567 sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SIGSEGV); 568 sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SIGBUS); 569 sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SIGFPE); 570 sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SR_signum); 571 572 if (!ReduceSignalUsage) { 573 if (!os::Bsd::is_sig_ignored(SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL)) { 574 sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL); 575 sigaddset(&allowdebug_blocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL); 576 } 577 if (!os::Bsd::is_sig_ignored(SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL)) { 578 sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL); 579 sigaddset(&allowdebug_blocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL); 580 } 581 if (!os::Bsd::is_sig_ignored(SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL)) { 582 sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL); 583 sigaddset(&allowdebug_blocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL); 584 } 585 } 586 // Fill in signals that are blocked by all but the VM thread. 587 sigemptyset(&vm_sigs); 588 if (!ReduceSignalUsage) 589 sigaddset(&vm_sigs, BREAK_SIGNAL); 590 debug_only(signal_sets_initialized = true); 591 592} 593 594// These are signals that are unblocked while a thread is running Java. 595// (For some reason, they get blocked by default.) 596sigset_t* os::Bsd::unblocked_signals() { 597 assert(signal_sets_initialized, "Not initialized"); 598 return &unblocked_sigs; 599} 600 601// These are the signals that are blocked while a (non-VM) thread is 602// running Java. Only the VM thread handles these signals. 603sigset_t* os::Bsd::vm_signals() { 604 assert(signal_sets_initialized, "Not initialized"); 605 return &vm_sigs; 606} 607 608// These are signals that are blocked during cond_wait to allow debugger in 609sigset_t* os::Bsd::allowdebug_blocked_signals() { 610 assert(signal_sets_initialized, "Not initialized"); 611 return &allowdebug_blocked_sigs; 612} 613 614void os::Bsd::hotspot_sigmask(Thread* thread) { 615 616 //Save caller's signal mask before setting VM signal mask 617 sigset_t caller_sigmask; 618 pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, NULL, &caller_sigmask); 619 620 OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread(); 621 osthread->set_caller_sigmask(caller_sigmask); 622 623 pthread_sigmask(SIG_UNBLOCK, os::Bsd::unblocked_signals(), NULL); 624 625 if (!ReduceSignalUsage) { 626 if (thread->is_VM_thread()) { 627 // Only the VM thread handles BREAK_SIGNAL ... 628 pthread_sigmask(SIG_UNBLOCK, vm_signals(), NULL); 629 } else { 630 // ... all other threads block BREAK_SIGNAL 631 pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, vm_signals(), NULL); 632 } 633 } 634} 635 636 637////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 638// create new thread 639 640static address highest_vm_reserved_address(); 641 642// check if it's safe to start a new thread 643static bool _thread_safety_check(Thread* thread) { 644 return true; 645} 646 647#ifdef __APPLE__ 648// library handle for calling objc_registerThreadWithCollector() 649// without static linking to the libobjc library 650#define OBJC_LIB "/usr/lib/libobjc.dylib" 651#define OBJC_GCREGISTER "objc_registerThreadWithCollector" 652typedef void (*objc_registerThreadWithCollector_t)(); 653extern "C" objc_registerThreadWithCollector_t objc_registerThreadWithCollectorFunction; 654objc_registerThreadWithCollector_t objc_registerThreadWithCollectorFunction = NULL; 655#endif 656 657// Thread start routine for all newly created threads 658static void *java_start(Thread *thread) { 659 // Try to randomize the cache line index of hot stack frames. 660 // This helps when threads of the same stack traces evict each other's 661 // cache lines. The threads can be either from the same JVM instance, or 662 // from different JVM instances. The benefit is especially true for 663 // processors with hyperthreading technology. 664 static int counter = 0; 665 int pid = os::current_process_id(); 666 alloca(((pid ^ counter++) & 7) * 128); 667 668 ThreadLocalStorage::set_thread(thread); 669 670 OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread(); 671 Monitor* sync = osthread->startThread_lock(); 672 673 // non floating stack BsdThreads needs extra check, see above 674 if (!_thread_safety_check(thread)) { 675 // notify parent thread 676 MutexLockerEx ml(sync, Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag); 677 osthread->set_state(ZOMBIE); 678 sync->notify_all(); 679 return NULL; 680 } 681 682#ifdef __APPLE__ 683 // thread_id is mach thread on macos 684 osthread->set_thread_id(::mach_thread_self()); 685#else 686 // thread_id is pthread_id on BSD 687 osthread->set_thread_id(::pthread_self()); 688#endif 689 // initialize signal mask for this thread 690 os::Bsd::hotspot_sigmask(thread); 691 692 // initialize floating point control register 693 os::Bsd::init_thread_fpu_state(); 694 695#ifdef __APPLE__ 696 // register thread with objc gc 697 if (objc_registerThreadWithCollectorFunction != NULL) { 698 objc_registerThreadWithCollectorFunction(); 699 } 700#endif 701 702 // handshaking with parent thread 703 { 704 MutexLockerEx ml(sync, Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag); 705 706 // notify parent thread 707 osthread->set_state(INITIALIZED); 708 sync->notify_all(); 709 710 // wait until os::start_thread() 711 while (osthread->get_state() == INITIALIZED) { 712 sync->wait(Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag); 713 } 714 } 715 716 // call one more level start routine 717 thread->run(); 718 719 return 0; 720} 721 722bool os::create_thread(Thread* thread, ThreadType thr_type, size_t stack_size) { 723 assert(thread->osthread() == NULL, "caller responsible"); 724 725 // Allocate the OSThread object 726 OSThread* osthread = new OSThread(NULL, NULL); 727 if (osthread == NULL) { 728 return false; 729 } 730 731 // set the correct thread state 732 osthread->set_thread_type(thr_type); 733 734 // Initial state is ALLOCATED but not INITIALIZED 735 osthread->set_state(ALLOCATED); 736 737 thread->set_osthread(osthread); 738 739 // init thread attributes 740 pthread_attr_t attr; 741 pthread_attr_init(&attr); 742 pthread_attr_setdetachstate(&attr, PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED); 743 744 // stack size 745 if (os::Bsd::supports_variable_stack_size()) { 746 // calculate stack size if it's not specified by caller 747 if (stack_size == 0) { 748 stack_size = os::Bsd::default_stack_size(thr_type); 749 750 switch (thr_type) { 751 case os::java_thread: 752 // Java threads use ThreadStackSize which default value can be 753 // changed with the flag -Xss 754 assert (JavaThread::stack_size_at_create() > 0, "this should be set"); 755 stack_size = JavaThread::stack_size_at_create(); 756 break; 757 case os::compiler_thread: 758 if (CompilerThreadStackSize > 0) { 759 stack_size = (size_t)(CompilerThreadStackSize * K); 760 break; 761 } // else fall through: 762 // use VMThreadStackSize if CompilerThreadStackSize is not defined 763 case os::vm_thread: 764 case os::pgc_thread: 765 case os::cgc_thread: 766 case os::watcher_thread: 767 if (VMThreadStackSize > 0) stack_size = (size_t)(VMThreadStackSize * K); 768 break; 769 } 770 } 771 772 stack_size = MAX2(stack_size, os::Bsd::min_stack_allowed); 773 pthread_attr_setstacksize(&attr, stack_size); 774 } else { 775 // let pthread_create() pick the default value. 776 } 777 778 ThreadState state; 779 780 { 781 pthread_t tid; 782 int ret = pthread_create(&tid, &attr, (void* (*)(void*)) java_start, thread); 783 784 pthread_attr_destroy(&attr); 785 786 if (ret != 0) { 787 if (PrintMiscellaneous && (Verbose || WizardMode)) { 788 perror("pthread_create()"); 789 } 790 // Need to clean up stuff we've allocated so far 791 thread->set_osthread(NULL); 792 delete osthread; 793 return false; 794 } 795 796 // Store pthread info into the OSThread 797 osthread->set_pthread_id(tid); 798 799 // Wait until child thread is either initialized or aborted 800 { 801 Monitor* sync_with_child = osthread->startThread_lock(); 802 MutexLockerEx ml(sync_with_child, Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag); 803 while ((state = osthread->get_state()) == ALLOCATED) { 804 sync_with_child->wait(Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag); 805 } 806 } 807 808 } 809 810 // Aborted due to thread limit being reached 811 if (state == ZOMBIE) { 812 thread->set_osthread(NULL); 813 delete osthread; 814 return false; 815 } 816 817 // The thread is returned suspended (in state INITIALIZED), 818 // and is started higher up in the call chain 819 assert(state == INITIALIZED, "race condition"); 820 return true; 821} 822 823///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 824// attach existing thread 825 826// bootstrap the main thread 827bool os::create_main_thread(JavaThread* thread) { 828 assert(os::Bsd::_main_thread == pthread_self(), "should be called inside main thread"); 829 return create_attached_thread(thread); 830} 831 832bool os::create_attached_thread(JavaThread* thread) { 833#ifdef ASSERT 834 thread->verify_not_published(); 835#endif 836 837 // Allocate the OSThread object 838 OSThread* osthread = new OSThread(NULL, NULL); 839 840 if (osthread == NULL) { 841 return false; 842 } 843 844 // Store pthread info into the OSThread 845#ifdef __APPLE__ 846 osthread->set_thread_id(::mach_thread_self()); 847#else 848 osthread->set_thread_id(::pthread_self()); 849#endif 850 osthread->set_pthread_id(::pthread_self()); 851 852 // initialize floating point control register 853 os::Bsd::init_thread_fpu_state(); 854 855 // Initial thread state is RUNNABLE 856 osthread->set_state(RUNNABLE); 857 858 thread->set_osthread(osthread); 859 860 // initialize signal mask for this thread 861 // and save the caller's signal mask 862 os::Bsd::hotspot_sigmask(thread); 863 864 return true; 865} 866 867void os::pd_start_thread(Thread* thread) { 868 OSThread * osthread = thread->osthread(); 869 assert(osthread->get_state() != INITIALIZED, "just checking"); 870 Monitor* sync_with_child = osthread->startThread_lock(); 871 MutexLockerEx ml(sync_with_child, Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag); 872 sync_with_child->notify(); 873} 874 875// Free Bsd resources related to the OSThread 876void os::free_thread(OSThread* osthread) { 877 assert(osthread != NULL, "osthread not set"); 878 879 if (Thread::current()->osthread() == osthread) { 880 // Restore caller's signal mask 881 sigset_t sigmask = osthread->caller_sigmask(); 882 pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, &sigmask, NULL); 883 } 884 885 delete osthread; 886} 887 888////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 889// thread local storage 890 891int os::allocate_thread_local_storage() { 892 pthread_key_t key; 893 int rslt = pthread_key_create(&key, NULL); 894 assert(rslt == 0, "cannot allocate thread local storage"); 895 return (int)key; 896} 897 898// Note: This is currently not used by VM, as we don't destroy TLS key 899// on VM exit. 900void os::free_thread_local_storage(int index) { 901 int rslt = pthread_key_delete((pthread_key_t)index); 902 assert(rslt == 0, "invalid index"); 903} 904 905void os::thread_local_storage_at_put(int index, void* value) { 906 int rslt = pthread_setspecific((pthread_key_t)index, value); 907 assert(rslt == 0, "pthread_setspecific failed"); 908} 909 910extern "C" Thread* get_thread() { 911 return ThreadLocalStorage::thread(); 912} 913 914 915//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 916// time support 917 918// Time since start-up in seconds to a fine granularity. 919// Used by VMSelfDestructTimer and the MemProfiler. 920double os::elapsedTime() { 921 922 return (double)(os::elapsed_counter()) * 0.000001; 923} 924 925jlong os::elapsed_counter() { 926 timeval time; 927 int status = gettimeofday(&time, NULL); 928 return jlong(time.tv_sec) * 1000 * 1000 + jlong(time.tv_usec) - initial_time_count; 929} 930 931jlong os::elapsed_frequency() { 932 return (1000 * 1000); 933} 934 935// XXX: For now, code this as if BSD does not support vtime. 936bool os::supports_vtime() { return false; } 937bool os::enable_vtime() { return false; } 938bool os::vtime_enabled() { return false; } 939double os::elapsedVTime() { 940 // better than nothing, but not much 941 return elapsedTime(); 942} 943 944jlong os::javaTimeMillis() { 945 timeval time; 946 int status = gettimeofday(&time, NULL); 947 assert(status != -1, "bsd error"); 948 return jlong(time.tv_sec) * 1000 + jlong(time.tv_usec / 1000); 949} 950 951#ifndef CLOCK_MONOTONIC 952#define CLOCK_MONOTONIC (1) 953#endif 954 955#ifdef __APPLE__ 956void os::Bsd::clock_init() { 957 // XXXDARWIN: Investigate replacement monotonic clock 958} 959#else 960void os::Bsd::clock_init() { 961 struct timespec res; 962 struct timespec tp; 963 if (::clock_getres(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &res) == 0 && 964 ::clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &tp) == 0) { 965 // yes, monotonic clock is supported 966 _clock_gettime = ::clock_gettime; 967 } 968} 969#endif 970 971 972jlong os::javaTimeNanos() { 973 if (Bsd::supports_monotonic_clock()) { 974 struct timespec tp; 975 int status = Bsd::clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &tp); 976 assert(status == 0, "gettime error"); 977 jlong result = jlong(tp.tv_sec) * (1000 * 1000 * 1000) + jlong(tp.tv_nsec); 978 return result; 979 } else { 980 timeval time; 981 int status = gettimeofday(&time, NULL); 982 assert(status != -1, "bsd error"); 983 jlong usecs = jlong(time.tv_sec) * (1000 * 1000) + jlong(time.tv_usec); 984 return 1000 * usecs; 985 } 986} 987 988void os::javaTimeNanos_info(jvmtiTimerInfo *info_ptr) { 989 if (Bsd::supports_monotonic_clock()) { 990 info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS; 991 992 // CLOCK_MONOTONIC - amount of time since some arbitrary point in the past 993 info_ptr->may_skip_backward = false; // not subject to resetting or drifting 994 info_ptr->may_skip_forward = false; // not subject to resetting or drifting 995 } else { 996 // gettimeofday - based on time in seconds since the Epoch thus does not wrap 997 info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS; 998 999 // gettimeofday is a real time clock so it skips 1000 info_ptr->may_skip_backward = true; 1001 info_ptr->may_skip_forward = true; 1002 } 1003 1004 info_ptr->kind = JVMTI_TIMER_ELAPSED; // elapsed not CPU time 1005} 1006 1007// Return the real, user, and system times in seconds from an 1008// arbitrary fixed point in the past. 1009bool os::getTimesSecs(double* process_real_time, 1010 double* process_user_time, 1011 double* process_system_time) { 1012 struct tms ticks; 1013 clock_t real_ticks = times(&ticks); 1014 1015 if (real_ticks == (clock_t) (-1)) { 1016 return false; 1017 } else { 1018 double ticks_per_second = (double) clock_tics_per_sec; 1019 *process_user_time = ((double) ticks.tms_utime) / ticks_per_second; 1020 *process_system_time = ((double) ticks.tms_stime) / ticks_per_second; 1021 *process_real_time = ((double) real_ticks) / ticks_per_second; 1022 1023 return true; 1024 } 1025} 1026 1027 1028char * os::local_time_string(char *buf, size_t buflen) { 1029 struct tm t; 1030 time_t long_time; 1031 time(&long_time); 1032 localtime_r(&long_time, &t); 1033 jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, "%d-%02d-%02d %02d:%02d:%02d", 1034 t.tm_year + 1900, t.tm_mon + 1, t.tm_mday, 1035 t.tm_hour, t.tm_min, t.tm_sec); 1036 return buf; 1037} 1038 1039struct tm* os::localtime_pd(const time_t* clock, struct tm* res) { 1040 return localtime_r(clock, res); 1041} 1042 1043//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 1044// runtime exit support 1045 1046// Note: os::shutdown() might be called very early during initialization, or 1047// called from signal handler. Before adding something to os::shutdown(), make 1048// sure it is async-safe and can handle partially initialized VM. 1049void os::shutdown() { 1050 1051 // allow PerfMemory to attempt cleanup of any persistent resources 1052 perfMemory_exit(); 1053 1054 // needs to remove object in file system 1055 AttachListener::abort(); 1056 1057 // flush buffered output, finish log files 1058 ostream_abort(); 1059 1060 // Check for abort hook 1061 abort_hook_t abort_hook = Arguments::abort_hook(); 1062 if (abort_hook != NULL) { 1063 abort_hook(); 1064 } 1065 1066} 1067 1068// Note: os::abort() might be called very early during initialization, or 1069// called from signal handler. Before adding something to os::abort(), make 1070// sure it is async-safe and can handle partially initialized VM. 1071void os::abort(bool dump_core) { 1072 os::shutdown(); 1073 if (dump_core) { 1074#ifndef PRODUCT 1075 fdStream out(defaultStream::output_fd()); 1076 out.print_raw("Current thread is "); 1077 char buf[16]; 1078 jio_snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), UINTX_FORMAT, os::current_thread_id()); 1079 out.print_raw_cr(buf); 1080 out.print_raw_cr("Dumping core ..."); 1081#endif 1082 ::abort(); // dump core 1083 } 1084 1085 ::exit(1); 1086} 1087 1088// Die immediately, no exit hook, no abort hook, no cleanup. 1089void os::die() { 1090 // _exit() on BsdThreads only kills current thread 1091 ::abort(); 1092} 1093 1094// unused on bsd for now. 1095void os::set_error_file(const char *logfile) {} 1096 1097 1098// This method is a copy of JDK's sysGetLastErrorString 1099// from src/solaris/hpi/src/system_md.c 1100 1101size_t os::lasterror(char *buf, size_t len) { 1102 1103 if (errno == 0) return 0; 1104 1105 const char *s = ::strerror(errno); 1106 size_t n = ::strlen(s); 1107 if (n >= len) { 1108 n = len - 1; 1109 } 1110 ::strncpy(buf, s, n); 1111 buf[n] = '\0'; 1112 return n; 1113} 1114 1115intx os::current_thread_id() { 1116#ifdef __APPLE__ 1117 return (intx)::mach_thread_self(); 1118#else 1119 return (intx)::pthread_self(); 1120#endif 1121} 1122int os::current_process_id() { 1123 1124 // Under the old bsd thread library, bsd gives each thread 1125 // its own process id. Because of this each thread will return 1126 // a different pid if this method were to return the result 1127 // of getpid(2). Bsd provides no api that returns the pid 1128 // of the launcher thread for the vm. This implementation 1129 // returns a unique pid, the pid of the launcher thread 1130 // that starts the vm 'process'. 1131 1132 // Under the NPTL, getpid() returns the same pid as the 1133 // launcher thread rather than a unique pid per thread. 1134 // Use gettid() if you want the old pre NPTL behaviour. 1135 1136 // if you are looking for the result of a call to getpid() that 1137 // returns a unique pid for the calling thread, then look at the 1138 // OSThread::thread_id() method in osThread_bsd.hpp file 1139 1140 return (int)(_initial_pid ? _initial_pid : getpid()); 1141} 1142 1143// DLL functions 1144 1145#define JNI_LIB_PREFIX "lib" 1146#ifdef __APPLE__ 1147#define JNI_LIB_SUFFIX ".dylib" 1148#else 1149#define JNI_LIB_SUFFIX ".so" 1150#endif 1151 1152const char* os::dll_file_extension() { return JNI_LIB_SUFFIX; } 1153 1154// This must be hard coded because it's the system's temporary 1155// directory not the java application's temp directory, ala java.io.tmpdir. 1156#ifdef __APPLE__ 1157// macosx has a secure per-user temporary directory 1158char temp_path_storage[PATH_MAX]; 1159const char* os::get_temp_directory() { 1160 static char *temp_path = NULL; 1161 if (temp_path == NULL) { 1162 int pathSize = confstr(_CS_DARWIN_USER_TEMP_DIR, temp_path_storage, PATH_MAX); 1163 if (pathSize == 0 || pathSize > PATH_MAX) { 1164 strlcpy(temp_path_storage, "/tmp/", sizeof(temp_path_storage)); 1165 } 1166 temp_path = temp_path_storage; 1167 } 1168 return temp_path; 1169} 1170#else /* __APPLE__ */ 1171const char* os::get_temp_directory() { return "/tmp"; } 1172#endif /* __APPLE__ */ 1173 1174static bool file_exists(const char* filename) { 1175 struct stat statbuf; 1176 if (filename == NULL || strlen(filename) == 0) { 1177 return false; 1178 } 1179 return os::stat(filename, &statbuf) == 0; 1180} 1181 1182bool os::dll_build_name(char* buffer, size_t buflen, 1183 const char* pname, const char* fname) { 1184 bool retval = false; 1185 // Copied from libhpi 1186 const size_t pnamelen = pname ? strlen(pname) : 0; 1187 1188 // Return error on buffer overflow. 1189 if (pnamelen + strlen(fname) + strlen(JNI_LIB_PREFIX) + strlen(JNI_LIB_SUFFIX) + 2 > buflen) { 1190 return retval; 1191 } 1192 1193 if (pnamelen == 0) { 1194 snprintf(buffer, buflen, JNI_LIB_PREFIX "%s" JNI_LIB_SUFFIX, fname); 1195 retval = true; 1196 } else if (strchr(pname, *os::path_separator()) != NULL) { 1197 int n; 1198 char** pelements = split_path(pname, &n); 1199 for (int i = 0 ; i < n ; i++) { 1200 // Really shouldn't be NULL, but check can't hurt 1201 if (pelements[i] == NULL || strlen(pelements[i]) == 0) { 1202 continue; // skip the empty path values 1203 } 1204 snprintf(buffer, buflen, "%s/" JNI_LIB_PREFIX "%s" JNI_LIB_SUFFIX, 1205 pelements[i], fname); 1206 if (file_exists(buffer)) { 1207 retval = true; 1208 break; 1209 } 1210 } 1211 // release the storage 1212 for (int i = 0 ; i < n ; i++) { 1213 if (pelements[i] != NULL) { 1214 FREE_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char, pelements[i], mtInternal); 1215 } 1216 } 1217 if (pelements != NULL) { 1218 FREE_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char*, pelements, mtInternal); 1219 } 1220 } else { 1221 snprintf(buffer, buflen, "%s/" JNI_LIB_PREFIX "%s" JNI_LIB_SUFFIX, pname, fname); 1222 retval = true; 1223 } 1224 return retval; 1225} 1226 1227const char* os::get_current_directory(char *buf, int buflen) { 1228 return getcwd(buf, buflen); 1229} 1230 1231// check if addr is inside libjvm[_g].so 1232bool os::address_is_in_vm(address addr) { 1233 static address libjvm_base_addr; 1234 Dl_info dlinfo; 1235 1236 if (libjvm_base_addr == NULL) { 1237 dladdr(CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void *, os::address_is_in_vm), &dlinfo); 1238 libjvm_base_addr = (address)dlinfo.dli_fbase; 1239 assert(libjvm_base_addr !=NULL, "Cannot obtain base address for libjvm"); 1240 } 1241 1242 if (dladdr((void *)addr, &dlinfo)) { 1243 if (libjvm_base_addr == (address)dlinfo.dli_fbase) return true; 1244 } 1245 1246 return false; 1247} 1248 1249 1250#define MACH_MAXSYMLEN 256 1251 1252bool os::dll_address_to_function_name(address addr, char *buf, 1253 int buflen, int *offset) { 1254 Dl_info dlinfo; 1255 char localbuf[MACH_MAXSYMLEN]; 1256 1257 // dladdr will find names of dynamic functions only, but does 1258 // it set dli_fbase with mach_header address when it "fails" ? 1259 if (dladdr((void*)addr, &dlinfo) && dlinfo.dli_sname != NULL) { 1260 if (buf != NULL) { 1261 if(!Decoder::demangle(dlinfo.dli_sname, buf, buflen)) { 1262 jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, "%s", dlinfo.dli_sname); 1263 } 1264 } 1265 if (offset != NULL) *offset = addr - (address)dlinfo.dli_saddr; 1266 return true; 1267 } else if (dlinfo.dli_fname != NULL && dlinfo.dli_fbase != 0) { 1268 if (Decoder::decode((address)(addr - (address)dlinfo.dli_fbase), 1269 buf, buflen, offset, dlinfo.dli_fname)) { 1270 return true; 1271 } 1272 } 1273 1274 // Handle non-dymanic manually: 1275 if (dlinfo.dli_fbase != NULL && 1276 Decoder::decode(addr, localbuf, MACH_MAXSYMLEN, offset, dlinfo.dli_fbase)) { 1277 if(!Decoder::demangle(localbuf, buf, buflen)) { 1278 jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, "%s", localbuf); 1279 } 1280 return true; 1281 } 1282 if (buf != NULL) buf[0] = '\0'; 1283 if (offset != NULL) *offset = -1; 1284 return false; 1285} 1286 1287// ported from solaris version 1288bool os::dll_address_to_library_name(address addr, char* buf, 1289 int buflen, int* offset) { 1290 Dl_info dlinfo; 1291 1292 if (dladdr((void*)addr, &dlinfo)){ 1293 if (buf) jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, "%s", dlinfo.dli_fname); 1294 if (offset) *offset = addr - (address)dlinfo.dli_fbase; 1295 return true; 1296 } else { 1297 if (buf) buf[0] = '\0'; 1298 if (offset) *offset = -1; 1299 return false; 1300 } 1301} 1302 1303// Loads .dll/.so and 1304// in case of error it checks if .dll/.so was built for the 1305// same architecture as Hotspot is running on 1306 1307#ifdef __APPLE__ 1308void * os::dll_load(const char *filename, char *ebuf, int ebuflen) { 1309 void * result= ::dlopen(filename, RTLD_LAZY); 1310 if (result != NULL) { 1311 // Successful loading 1312 return result; 1313 } 1314 1315 // Read system error message into ebuf 1316 ::strncpy(ebuf, ::dlerror(), ebuflen-1); 1317 ebuf[ebuflen-1]='\0'; 1318 1319 return NULL; 1320} 1321#else 1322void * os::dll_load(const char *filename, char *ebuf, int ebuflen) 1323{ 1324 void * result= ::dlopen(filename, RTLD_LAZY); 1325 if (result != NULL) { 1326 // Successful loading 1327 return result; 1328 } 1329 1330 Elf32_Ehdr elf_head; 1331 1332 // Read system error message into ebuf 1333 // It may or may not be overwritten below 1334 ::strncpy(ebuf, ::dlerror(), ebuflen-1); 1335 ebuf[ebuflen-1]='\0'; 1336 int diag_msg_max_length=ebuflen-strlen(ebuf); 1337 char* diag_msg_buf=ebuf+strlen(ebuf); 1338 1339 if (diag_msg_max_length==0) { 1340 // No more space in ebuf for additional diagnostics message 1341 return NULL; 1342 } 1343 1344 1345 int file_descriptor= ::open(filename, O_RDONLY | O_NONBLOCK); 1346 1347 if (file_descriptor < 0) { 1348 // Can't open library, report dlerror() message 1349 return NULL; 1350 } 1351 1352 bool failed_to_read_elf_head= 1353 (sizeof(elf_head)!= 1354 (::read(file_descriptor, &elf_head,sizeof(elf_head)))) ; 1355 1356 ::close(file_descriptor); 1357 if (failed_to_read_elf_head) { 1358 // file i/o error - report dlerror() msg 1359 return NULL; 1360 } 1361 1362 typedef struct { 1363 Elf32_Half code; // Actual value as defined in elf.h 1364 Elf32_Half compat_class; // Compatibility of archs at VM's sense 1365 char elf_class; // 32 or 64 bit 1366 char endianess; // MSB or LSB 1367 char* name; // String representation 1368 } arch_t; 1369 1370 #ifndef EM_486 1371 #define EM_486 6 /* Intel 80486 */ 1372 #endif 1373 1374 #ifndef EM_MIPS_RS3_LE 1375 #define EM_MIPS_RS3_LE 10 /* MIPS */ 1376 #endif 1377 1378 #ifndef EM_PPC64 1379 #define EM_PPC64 21 /* PowerPC64 */ 1380 #endif 1381 1382 #ifndef EM_S390 1383 #define EM_S390 22 /* IBM System/390 */ 1384 #endif 1385 1386 #ifndef EM_IA_64 1387 #define EM_IA_64 50 /* HP/Intel IA-64 */ 1388 #endif 1389 1390 #ifndef EM_X86_64 1391 #define EM_X86_64 62 /* AMD x86-64 */ 1392 #endif 1393 1394 static const arch_t arch_array[]={ 1395 {EM_386, EM_386, ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"IA 32"}, 1396 {EM_486, EM_386, ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"IA 32"}, 1397 {EM_IA_64, EM_IA_64, ELFCLASS64, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"IA 64"}, 1398 {EM_X86_64, EM_X86_64, ELFCLASS64, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"AMD 64"}, 1399 {EM_SPARC, EM_SPARC, ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"Sparc 32"}, 1400 {EM_SPARC32PLUS, EM_SPARC, ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"Sparc 32"}, 1401 {EM_SPARCV9, EM_SPARCV9, ELFCLASS64, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"Sparc v9 64"}, 1402 {EM_PPC, EM_PPC, ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"Power PC 32"}, 1403 {EM_PPC64, EM_PPC64, ELFCLASS64, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"Power PC 64"}, 1404 {EM_ARM, EM_ARM, ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"ARM"}, 1405 {EM_S390, EM_S390, ELFCLASSNONE, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"IBM System/390"}, 1406 {EM_ALPHA, EM_ALPHA, ELFCLASS64, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"Alpha"}, 1407 {EM_MIPS_RS3_LE, EM_MIPS_RS3_LE, ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"MIPSel"}, 1408 {EM_MIPS, EM_MIPS, ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"MIPS"}, 1409 {EM_PARISC, EM_PARISC, ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"PARISC"}, 1410 {EM_68K, EM_68K, ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"M68k"} 1411 }; 1412 1413 #if (defined IA32) 1414 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_386; 1415 #elif (defined AMD64) 1416 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_X86_64; 1417 #elif (defined IA64) 1418 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_IA_64; 1419 #elif (defined __sparc) && (defined _LP64) 1420 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_SPARCV9; 1421 #elif (defined __sparc) && (!defined _LP64) 1422 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_SPARC; 1423 #elif (defined __powerpc64__) 1424 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_PPC64; 1425 #elif (defined __powerpc__) 1426 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_PPC; 1427 #elif (defined ARM) 1428 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_ARM; 1429 #elif (defined S390) 1430 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_S390; 1431 #elif (defined ALPHA) 1432 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_ALPHA; 1433 #elif (defined MIPSEL) 1434 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_MIPS_RS3_LE; 1435 #elif (defined PARISC) 1436 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_PARISC; 1437 #elif (defined MIPS) 1438 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_MIPS; 1439 #elif (defined M68K) 1440 static Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_68K; 1441 #else 1442 #error Method os::dll_load requires that one of following is defined:\ 1443 IA32, AMD64, IA64, __sparc, __powerpc__, ARM, S390, ALPHA, MIPS, MIPSEL, PARISC, M68K 1444 #endif 1445 1446 // Identify compatability class for VM's architecture and library's architecture 1447 // Obtain string descriptions for architectures 1448 1449 arch_t lib_arch={elf_head.e_machine,0,elf_head.e_ident[EI_CLASS], elf_head.e_ident[EI_DATA], NULL}; 1450 int running_arch_index=-1; 1451 1452 for (unsigned int i=0 ; i < ARRAY_SIZE(arch_array) ; i++ ) { 1453 if (running_arch_code == arch_array[i].code) { 1454 running_arch_index = i; 1455 } 1456 if (lib_arch.code == arch_array[i].code) { 1457 lib_arch.compat_class = arch_array[i].compat_class; 1458 lib_arch.name = arch_array[i].name; 1459 } 1460 } 1461 1462 assert(running_arch_index != -1, 1463 "Didn't find running architecture code (running_arch_code) in arch_array"); 1464 if (running_arch_index == -1) { 1465 // Even though running architecture detection failed 1466 // we may still continue with reporting dlerror() message 1467 return NULL; 1468 } 1469 1470 if (lib_arch.endianess != arch_array[running_arch_index].endianess) { 1471 ::snprintf(diag_msg_buf, diag_msg_max_length-1," (Possible cause: endianness mismatch)"); 1472 return NULL; 1473 } 1474 1475#ifndef S390 1476 if (lib_arch.elf_class != arch_array[running_arch_index].elf_class) { 1477 ::snprintf(diag_msg_buf, diag_msg_max_length-1," (Possible cause: architecture word width mismatch)"); 1478 return NULL; 1479 } 1480#endif // !S390 1481 1482 if (lib_arch.compat_class != arch_array[running_arch_index].compat_class) { 1483 if ( lib_arch.name!=NULL ) { 1484 ::snprintf(diag_msg_buf, diag_msg_max_length-1, 1485 " (Possible cause: can't load %s-bit .so on a %s-bit platform)", 1486 lib_arch.name, arch_array[running_arch_index].name); 1487 } else { 1488 ::snprintf(diag_msg_buf, diag_msg_max_length-1, 1489 " (Possible cause: can't load this .so (machine code=0x%x) on a %s-bit platform)", 1490 lib_arch.code, 1491 arch_array[running_arch_index].name); 1492 } 1493 } 1494 1495 return NULL; 1496} 1497#endif /* !__APPLE__ */ 1498 1499// XXX: Do we need a lock around this as per Linux? 1500void* os::dll_lookup(void* handle, const char* name) { 1501 return dlsym(handle, name); 1502} 1503 1504 1505static bool _print_ascii_file(const char* filename, outputStream* st) { 1506 int fd = ::open(filename, O_RDONLY); 1507 if (fd == -1) { 1508 return false; 1509 } 1510 1511 char buf[32]; 1512 int bytes; 1513 while ((bytes = ::read(fd, buf, sizeof(buf))) > 0) { 1514 st->print_raw(buf, bytes); 1515 } 1516 1517 ::close(fd); 1518 1519 return true; 1520} 1521 1522void os::print_dll_info(outputStream *st) { 1523 st->print_cr("Dynamic libraries:"); 1524#ifdef RTLD_DI_LINKMAP 1525 Dl_info dli; 1526 void *handle; 1527 Link_map *map; 1528 Link_map *p; 1529 1530 if (!dladdr(CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void *, os::print_dll_info), &dli)) { 1531 st->print_cr("Error: Cannot print dynamic libraries."); 1532 return; 1533 } 1534 handle = dlopen(dli.dli_fname, RTLD_LAZY); 1535 if (handle == NULL) { 1536 st->print_cr("Error: Cannot print dynamic libraries."); 1537 return; 1538 } 1539 dlinfo(handle, RTLD_DI_LINKMAP, &map); 1540 if (map == NULL) { 1541 st->print_cr("Error: Cannot print dynamic libraries."); 1542 return; 1543 } 1544 1545 while (map->l_prev != NULL) 1546 map = map->l_prev; 1547 1548 while (map != NULL) { 1549 st->print_cr(PTR_FORMAT " \t%s", map->l_addr, map->l_name); 1550 map = map->l_next; 1551 } 1552 1553 dlclose(handle); 1554#elif defined(__APPLE__) 1555 uint32_t count; 1556 uint32_t i; 1557 1558 count = _dyld_image_count(); 1559 for (i = 1; i < count; i++) { 1560 const char *name = _dyld_get_image_name(i); 1561 intptr_t slide = _dyld_get_image_vmaddr_slide(i); 1562 st->print_cr(PTR_FORMAT " \t%s", slide, name); 1563 } 1564#else 1565 st->print_cr("Error: Cannot print dynamic libraries."); 1566#endif 1567} 1568 1569void os::print_os_info_brief(outputStream* st) { 1570 st->print("Bsd"); 1571 1572 os::Posix::print_uname_info(st); 1573} 1574 1575void os::print_os_info(outputStream* st) { 1576 st->print("OS:"); 1577 st->print("Bsd"); 1578 1579 os::Posix::print_uname_info(st); 1580 1581 os::Posix::print_rlimit_info(st); 1582 1583 os::Posix::print_load_average(st); 1584} 1585 1586void os::pd_print_cpu_info(outputStream* st) { 1587 // Nothing to do for now. 1588} 1589 1590void os::print_memory_info(outputStream* st) { 1591 1592 st->print("Memory:"); 1593 st->print(" %dk page", os::vm_page_size()>>10); 1594 1595 st->print(", physical " UINT64_FORMAT "k", 1596 os::physical_memory() >> 10); 1597 st->print("(" UINT64_FORMAT "k free)", 1598 os::available_memory() >> 10); 1599 st->cr(); 1600 1601 // meminfo 1602 st->print("\n/proc/meminfo:\n"); 1603 _print_ascii_file("/proc/meminfo", st); 1604 st->cr(); 1605} 1606 1607// Taken from /usr/include/bits/siginfo.h Supposed to be architecture specific 1608// but they're the same for all the bsd arch that we support 1609// and they're the same for solaris but there's no common place to put this. 1610const char *ill_names[] = { "ILL0", "ILL_ILLOPC", "ILL_ILLOPN", "ILL_ILLADR", 1611 "ILL_ILLTRP", "ILL_PRVOPC", "ILL_PRVREG", 1612 "ILL_COPROC", "ILL_BADSTK" }; 1613 1614const char *fpe_names[] = { "FPE0", "FPE_INTDIV", "FPE_INTOVF", "FPE_FLTDIV", 1615 "FPE_FLTOVF", "FPE_FLTUND", "FPE_FLTRES", 1616 "FPE_FLTINV", "FPE_FLTSUB", "FPE_FLTDEN" }; 1617 1618const char *segv_names[] = { "SEGV0", "SEGV_MAPERR", "SEGV_ACCERR" }; 1619 1620const char *bus_names[] = { "BUS0", "BUS_ADRALN", "BUS_ADRERR", "BUS_OBJERR" }; 1621 1622void os::print_siginfo(outputStream* st, void* siginfo) { 1623 st->print("siginfo:"); 1624 1625 const int buflen = 100; 1626 char buf[buflen]; 1627 siginfo_t *si = (siginfo_t*)siginfo; 1628 st->print("si_signo=%s: ", os::exception_name(si->si_signo, buf, buflen)); 1629 if (si->si_errno != 0 && strerror_r(si->si_errno, buf, buflen) == 0) { 1630 st->print("si_errno=%s", buf); 1631 } else { 1632 st->print("si_errno=%d", si->si_errno); 1633 } 1634 const int c = si->si_code; 1635 assert(c > 0, "unexpected si_code"); 1636 switch (si->si_signo) { 1637 case SIGILL: 1638 st->print(", si_code=%d (%s)", c, c > 8 ? "" : ill_names[c]); 1639 st->print(", si_addr=" PTR_FORMAT, si->si_addr); 1640 break; 1641 case SIGFPE: 1642 st->print(", si_code=%d (%s)", c, c > 9 ? "" : fpe_names[c]); 1643 st->print(", si_addr=" PTR_FORMAT, si->si_addr); 1644 break; 1645 case SIGSEGV: 1646 st->print(", si_code=%d (%s)", c, c > 2 ? "" : segv_names[c]); 1647 st->print(", si_addr=" PTR_FORMAT, si->si_addr); 1648 break; 1649 case SIGBUS: 1650 st->print(", si_code=%d (%s)", c, c > 3 ? "" : bus_names[c]); 1651 st->print(", si_addr=" PTR_FORMAT, si->si_addr); 1652 break; 1653 default: 1654 st->print(", si_code=%d", si->si_code); 1655 // no si_addr 1656 } 1657 1658 if ((si->si_signo == SIGBUS || si->si_signo == SIGSEGV) && 1659 UseSharedSpaces) { 1660 FileMapInfo* mapinfo = FileMapInfo::current_info(); 1661 if (mapinfo->is_in_shared_space(si->si_addr)) { 1662 st->print("\n\nError accessing class data sharing archive." \ 1663 " Mapped file inaccessible during execution, " \ 1664 " possible disk/network problem."); 1665 } 1666 } 1667 st->cr(); 1668} 1669 1670 1671static void print_signal_handler(outputStream* st, int sig, 1672 char* buf, size_t buflen); 1673 1674void os::print_signal_handlers(outputStream* st, char* buf, size_t buflen) { 1675 st->print_cr("Signal Handlers:"); 1676 print_signal_handler(st, SIGSEGV, buf, buflen); 1677 print_signal_handler(st, SIGBUS , buf, buflen); 1678 print_signal_handler(st, SIGFPE , buf, buflen); 1679 print_signal_handler(st, SIGPIPE, buf, buflen); 1680 print_signal_handler(st, SIGXFSZ, buf, buflen); 1681 print_signal_handler(st, SIGILL , buf, buflen); 1682 print_signal_handler(st, INTERRUPT_SIGNAL, buf, buflen); 1683 print_signal_handler(st, SR_signum, buf, buflen); 1684 print_signal_handler(st, SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL, buf, buflen); 1685 print_signal_handler(st, SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL , buf, buflen); 1686 print_signal_handler(st, SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL , buf, buflen); 1687 print_signal_handler(st, BREAK_SIGNAL, buf, buflen); 1688} 1689 1690static char saved_jvm_path[MAXPATHLEN] = {0}; 1691 1692// Find the full path to the current module, libjvm or libjvm_g 1693void os::jvm_path(char *buf, jint buflen) { 1694 // Error checking. 1695 if (buflen < MAXPATHLEN) { 1696 assert(false, "must use a large-enough buffer"); 1697 buf[0] = '\0'; 1698 return; 1699 } 1700 // Lazy resolve the path to current module. 1701 if (saved_jvm_path[0] != 0) { 1702 strcpy(buf, saved_jvm_path); 1703 return; 1704 } 1705 1706 char dli_fname[MAXPATHLEN]; 1707 bool ret = dll_address_to_library_name( 1708 CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, os::jvm_path), 1709 dli_fname, sizeof(dli_fname), NULL); 1710 assert(ret != 0, "cannot locate libjvm"); 1711 char *rp = realpath(dli_fname, buf); 1712 if (rp == NULL) 1713 return; 1714 1715 if (Arguments::created_by_gamma_launcher()) { 1716 // Support for the gamma launcher. Typical value for buf is 1717 // "<JAVA_HOME>/jre/lib/<arch>/<vmtype>/libjvm". If "/jre/lib/" appears at 1718 // the right place in the string, then assume we are installed in a JDK and 1719 // we're done. Otherwise, check for a JAVA_HOME environment variable and 1720 // construct a path to the JVM being overridden. 1721 1722 const char *p = buf + strlen(buf) - 1; 1723 for (int count = 0; p > buf && count < 5; ++count) { 1724 for (--p; p > buf && *p != '/'; --p) 1725 /* empty */ ; 1726 } 1727 1728 if (strncmp(p, "/jre/lib/", 9) != 0) { 1729 // Look for JAVA_HOME in the environment. 1730 char* java_home_var = ::getenv("JAVA_HOME"); 1731 if (java_home_var != NULL && java_home_var[0] != 0) { 1732 char* jrelib_p; 1733 int len; 1734 1735 // Check the current module name "libjvm" or "libjvm_g". 1736 p = strrchr(buf, '/'); 1737 assert(strstr(p, "/libjvm") == p, "invalid library name"); 1738 p = strstr(p, "_g") ? "_g" : ""; 1739 1740 rp = realpath(java_home_var, buf); 1741 if (rp == NULL) 1742 return; 1743 1744 // determine if this is a legacy image or modules image 1745 // modules image doesn't have "jre" subdirectory 1746 len = strlen(buf); 1747 jrelib_p = buf + len; 1748 1749 // Add the appropriate library subdir 1750 snprintf(jrelib_p, buflen-len, "/jre/lib"); 1751 if (0 != access(buf, F_OK)) { 1752 snprintf(jrelib_p, buflen-len, "/lib"); 1753 } 1754 1755 // Add the appropriate client or server subdir 1756 len = strlen(buf); 1757 jrelib_p = buf + len; 1758 snprintf(jrelib_p, buflen-len, "/%s", COMPILER_VARIANT); 1759 if (0 != access(buf, F_OK)) { 1760 snprintf(jrelib_p, buflen-len, ""); 1761 } 1762 1763 // If the path exists within JAVA_HOME, add the JVM library name 1764 // to complete the path to JVM being overridden. Otherwise fallback 1765 // to the path to the current library. 1766 if (0 == access(buf, F_OK)) { 1767 // Use current module name "libjvm[_g]" instead of 1768 // "libjvm"debug_only("_g")"" since for fastdebug version 1769 // we should have "libjvm" but debug_only("_g") adds "_g"! 1770 len = strlen(buf); 1771 snprintf(buf + len, buflen-len, "/libjvm%s%s", p, JNI_LIB_SUFFIX); 1772 } else { 1773 // Fall back to path of current library 1774 rp = realpath(dli_fname, buf); 1775 if (rp == NULL) 1776 return; 1777 } 1778 } 1779 } 1780 } 1781 1782 strcpy(saved_jvm_path, buf); 1783} 1784 1785void os::print_jni_name_prefix_on(outputStream* st, int args_size) { 1786 // no prefix required, not even "_" 1787} 1788 1789void os::print_jni_name_suffix_on(outputStream* st, int args_size) { 1790 // no suffix required 1791} 1792 1793//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 1794// sun.misc.Signal support 1795 1796static volatile jint sigint_count = 0; 1797 1798static void 1799UserHandler(int sig, void *siginfo, void *context) { 1800 // 4511530 - sem_post is serialized and handled by the manager thread. When 1801 // the program is interrupted by Ctrl-C, SIGINT is sent to every thread. We 1802 // don't want to flood the manager thread with sem_post requests. 1803 if (sig == SIGINT && Atomic::add(1, &sigint_count) > 1) 1804 return; 1805 1806 // Ctrl-C is pressed during error reporting, likely because the error 1807 // handler fails to abort. Let VM die immediately. 1808 if (sig == SIGINT && is_error_reported()) { 1809 os::die(); 1810 } 1811 1812 os::signal_notify(sig); 1813} 1814 1815void* os::user_handler() { 1816 return CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, UserHandler); 1817} 1818 1819extern "C" { 1820 typedef void (*sa_handler_t)(int); 1821 typedef void (*sa_sigaction_t)(int, siginfo_t *, void *); 1822} 1823 1824void* os::signal(int signal_number, void* handler) { 1825 struct sigaction sigAct, oldSigAct; 1826 1827 sigfillset(&(sigAct.sa_mask)); 1828 sigAct.sa_flags = SA_RESTART|SA_SIGINFO; 1829 sigAct.sa_handler = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(sa_handler_t, handler); 1830 1831 if (sigaction(signal_number, &sigAct, &oldSigAct)) { 1832 // -1 means registration failed 1833 return (void *)-1; 1834 } 1835 1836 return CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, oldSigAct.sa_handler); 1837} 1838 1839void os::signal_raise(int signal_number) { 1840 ::raise(signal_number); 1841} 1842 1843/* 1844 * The following code is moved from os.cpp for making this 1845 * code platform specific, which it is by its very nature. 1846 */ 1847 1848// Will be modified when max signal is changed to be dynamic 1849int os::sigexitnum_pd() { 1850 return NSIG; 1851} 1852 1853// a counter for each possible signal value 1854static volatile jint pending_signals[NSIG+1] = { 0 }; 1855 1856// Bsd(POSIX) specific hand shaking semaphore. 1857#ifdef __APPLE__ 1858static semaphore_t sig_sem; 1859#define SEM_INIT(sem, value) semaphore_create(mach_task_self(), &sem, SYNC_POLICY_FIFO, value) 1860#define SEM_WAIT(sem) semaphore_wait(sem); 1861#define SEM_POST(sem) semaphore_signal(sem); 1862#else 1863static sem_t sig_sem; 1864#define SEM_INIT(sem, value) sem_init(&sem, 0, value) 1865#define SEM_WAIT(sem) sem_wait(&sem); 1866#define SEM_POST(sem) sem_post(&sem); 1867#endif 1868 1869void os::signal_init_pd() { 1870 // Initialize signal structures 1871 ::memset((void*)pending_signals, 0, sizeof(pending_signals)); 1872 1873 // Initialize signal semaphore 1874 ::SEM_INIT(sig_sem, 0); 1875} 1876 1877void os::signal_notify(int sig) { 1878 Atomic::inc(&pending_signals[sig]); 1879 ::SEM_POST(sig_sem); 1880} 1881 1882static int check_pending_signals(bool wait) { 1883 Atomic::store(0, &sigint_count); 1884 for (;;) { 1885 for (int i = 0; i < NSIG + 1; i++) { 1886 jint n = pending_signals[i]; 1887 if (n > 0 && n == Atomic::cmpxchg(n - 1, &pending_signals[i], n)) { 1888 return i; 1889 } 1890 } 1891 if (!wait) { 1892 return -1; 1893 } 1894 JavaThread *thread = JavaThread::current(); 1895 ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(thread); 1896 1897 bool threadIsSuspended; 1898 do { 1899 thread->set_suspend_equivalent(); 1900 // cleared by handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition() or java_suspend_self() 1901 ::SEM_WAIT(sig_sem); 1902 1903 // were we externally suspended while we were waiting? 1904 threadIsSuspended = thread->handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition(); 1905 if (threadIsSuspended) { 1906 // 1907 // The semaphore has been incremented, but while we were waiting 1908 // another thread suspended us. We don't want to continue running 1909 // while suspended because that would surprise the thread that 1910 // suspended us. 1911 // 1912 ::SEM_POST(sig_sem); 1913 1914 thread->java_suspend_self(); 1915 } 1916 } while (threadIsSuspended); 1917 } 1918} 1919 1920int os::signal_lookup() { 1921 return check_pending_signals(false); 1922} 1923 1924int os::signal_wait() { 1925 return check_pending_signals(true); 1926} 1927 1928//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 1929// Virtual Memory 1930 1931int os::vm_page_size() { 1932 // Seems redundant as all get out 1933 assert(os::Bsd::page_size() != -1, "must call os::init"); 1934 return os::Bsd::page_size(); 1935} 1936 1937// Solaris allocates memory by pages. 1938int os::vm_allocation_granularity() { 1939 assert(os::Bsd::page_size() != -1, "must call os::init"); 1940 return os::Bsd::page_size(); 1941} 1942 1943// Rationale behind this function: 1944// current (Mon Apr 25 20:12:18 MSD 2005) oprofile drops samples without executable 1945// mapping for address (see lookup_dcookie() in the kernel module), thus we cannot get 1946// samples for JITted code. Here we create private executable mapping over the code cache 1947// and then we can use standard (well, almost, as mapping can change) way to provide 1948// info for the reporting script by storing timestamp and location of symbol 1949void bsd_wrap_code(char* base, size_t size) { 1950 static volatile jint cnt = 0; 1951 1952 if (!UseOprofile) { 1953 return; 1954 } 1955 1956 char buf[PATH_MAX + 1]; 1957 int num = Atomic::add(1, &cnt); 1958 1959 snprintf(buf, PATH_MAX + 1, "%s/hs-vm-%d-%d", 1960 os::get_temp_directory(), os::current_process_id(), num); 1961 unlink(buf); 1962 1963 int fd = ::open(buf, O_CREAT | O_RDWR, S_IRWXU); 1964 1965 if (fd != -1) { 1966 off_t rv = ::lseek(fd, size-2, SEEK_SET); 1967 if (rv != (off_t)-1) { 1968 if (::write(fd, "", 1) == 1) { 1969 mmap(base, size, 1970 PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC, 1971 MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_FIXED|MAP_NORESERVE, fd, 0); 1972 } 1973 } 1974 ::close(fd); 1975 unlink(buf); 1976 } 1977} 1978 1979// NOTE: Bsd kernel does not really reserve the pages for us. 1980// All it does is to check if there are enough free pages 1981// left at the time of mmap(). This could be a potential 1982// problem. 1983bool os::pd_commit_memory(char* addr, size_t size, bool exec) { 1984 int prot = exec ? PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC : PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE; 1985#ifdef __OpenBSD__ 1986 // XXX: Work-around mmap/MAP_FIXED bug temporarily on OpenBSD 1987 return ::mprotect(addr, size, prot) == 0; 1988#else 1989 uintptr_t res = (uintptr_t) ::mmap(addr, size, prot, 1990 MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_FIXED|MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0); 1991 return res != (uintptr_t) MAP_FAILED; 1992#endif 1993} 1994 1995 1996bool os::pd_commit_memory(char* addr, size_t size, size_t alignment_hint, 1997 bool exec) { 1998 return commit_memory(addr, size, exec); 1999} 2000 2001void os::pd_realign_memory(char *addr, size_t bytes, size_t alignment_hint) { 2002} 2003 2004void os::pd_free_memory(char *addr, size_t bytes, size_t alignment_hint) { 2005 ::madvise(addr, bytes, MADV_DONTNEED); 2006} 2007 2008void os::numa_make_global(char *addr, size_t bytes) { 2009} 2010 2011void os::numa_make_local(char *addr, size_t bytes, int lgrp_hint) { 2012} 2013 2014bool os::numa_topology_changed() { return false; } 2015 2016size_t os::numa_get_groups_num() { 2017 return 1; 2018} 2019 2020int os::numa_get_group_id() { 2021 return 0; 2022} 2023 2024size_t os::numa_get_leaf_groups(int *ids, size_t size) { 2025 if (size > 0) { 2026 ids[0] = 0; 2027 return 1; 2028 } 2029 return 0; 2030} 2031 2032bool os::get_page_info(char *start, page_info* info) { 2033 return false; 2034} 2035 2036char *os::scan_pages(char *start, char* end, page_info* page_expected, page_info* page_found) { 2037 return end; 2038} 2039 2040 2041bool os::pd_uncommit_memory(char* addr, size_t size) { 2042#ifdef __OpenBSD__ 2043 // XXX: Work-around mmap/MAP_FIXED bug temporarily on OpenBSD 2044 return ::mprotect(addr, size, PROT_NONE) == 0; 2045#else 2046 uintptr_t res = (uintptr_t) ::mmap(addr, size, PROT_NONE, 2047 MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_FIXED|MAP_NORESERVE|MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0); 2048 return res != (uintptr_t) MAP_FAILED; 2049#endif 2050} 2051 2052bool os::pd_create_stack_guard_pages(char* addr, size_t size) { 2053 return os::commit_memory(addr, size); 2054} 2055 2056// If this is a growable mapping, remove the guard pages entirely by 2057// munmap()ping them. If not, just call uncommit_memory(). 2058bool os::remove_stack_guard_pages(char* addr, size_t size) { 2059 return os::uncommit_memory(addr, size); 2060} 2061 2062static address _highest_vm_reserved_address = NULL; 2063 2064// If 'fixed' is true, anon_mmap() will attempt to reserve anonymous memory 2065// at 'requested_addr'. If there are existing memory mappings at the same 2066// location, however, they will be overwritten. If 'fixed' is false, 2067// 'requested_addr' is only treated as a hint, the return value may or 2068// may not start from the requested address. Unlike Bsd mmap(), this 2069// function returns NULL to indicate failure. 2070static char* anon_mmap(char* requested_addr, size_t bytes, bool fixed) { 2071 char * addr; 2072 int flags; 2073 2074 flags = MAP_PRIVATE | MAP_NORESERVE | MAP_ANONYMOUS; 2075 if (fixed) { 2076 assert((uintptr_t)requested_addr % os::Bsd::page_size() == 0, "unaligned address"); 2077 flags |= MAP_FIXED; 2078 } 2079 2080 // Map uncommitted pages PROT_READ and PROT_WRITE, change access 2081 // to PROT_EXEC if executable when we commit the page. 2082 addr = (char*)::mmap(requested_addr, bytes, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, 2083 flags, -1, 0); 2084 2085 if (addr != MAP_FAILED) { 2086 // anon_mmap() should only get called during VM initialization, 2087 // don't need lock (actually we can skip locking even it can be called 2088 // from multiple threads, because _highest_vm_reserved_address is just a 2089 // hint about the upper limit of non-stack memory regions.) 2090 if ((address)addr + bytes > _highest_vm_reserved_address) { 2091 _highest_vm_reserved_address = (address)addr + bytes; 2092 } 2093 } 2094 2095 return addr == MAP_FAILED ? NULL : addr; 2096} 2097 2098// Don't update _highest_vm_reserved_address, because there might be memory 2099// regions above addr + size. If so, releasing a memory region only creates 2100// a hole in the address space, it doesn't help prevent heap-stack collision. 2101// 2102static int anon_munmap(char * addr, size_t size) { 2103 return ::munmap(addr, size) == 0; 2104} 2105 2106char* os::pd_reserve_memory(size_t bytes, char* requested_addr, 2107 size_t alignment_hint) { 2108 return anon_mmap(requested_addr, bytes, (requested_addr != NULL)); 2109} 2110 2111bool os::pd_release_memory(char* addr, size_t size) { 2112 return anon_munmap(addr, size); 2113} 2114 2115static address highest_vm_reserved_address() { 2116 return _highest_vm_reserved_address; 2117} 2118 2119static bool bsd_mprotect(char* addr, size_t size, int prot) { 2120 // Bsd wants the mprotect address argument to be page aligned. 2121 char* bottom = (char*)align_size_down((intptr_t)addr, os::Bsd::page_size()); 2122 2123 // According to SUSv3, mprotect() should only be used with mappings 2124 // established by mmap(), and mmap() always maps whole pages. Unaligned 2125 // 'addr' likely indicates problem in the VM (e.g. trying to change 2126 // protection of malloc'ed or statically allocated memory). Check the 2127 // caller if you hit this assert. 2128 assert(addr == bottom, "sanity check"); 2129 2130 size = align_size_up(pointer_delta(addr, bottom, 1) + size, os::Bsd::page_size()); 2131 return ::mprotect(bottom, size, prot) == 0; 2132} 2133 2134// Set protections specified 2135bool os::protect_memory(char* addr, size_t bytes, ProtType prot, 2136 bool is_committed) { 2137 unsigned int p = 0; 2138 switch (prot) { 2139 case MEM_PROT_NONE: p = PROT_NONE; break; 2140 case MEM_PROT_READ: p = PROT_READ; break; 2141 case MEM_PROT_RW: p = PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE; break; 2142 case MEM_PROT_RWX: p = PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC; break; 2143 default: 2144 ShouldNotReachHere(); 2145 } 2146 // is_committed is unused. 2147 return bsd_mprotect(addr, bytes, p); 2148} 2149 2150bool os::guard_memory(char* addr, size_t size) { 2151 return bsd_mprotect(addr, size, PROT_NONE); 2152} 2153 2154bool os::unguard_memory(char* addr, size_t size) { 2155 return bsd_mprotect(addr, size, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE); 2156} 2157 2158bool os::Bsd::hugetlbfs_sanity_check(bool warn, size_t page_size) { 2159 return false; 2160} 2161 2162/* 2163* Set the coredump_filter bits to include largepages in core dump (bit 6) 2164* 2165* From the coredump_filter documentation: 2166* 2167* - (bit 0) anonymous private memory 2168* - (bit 1) anonymous shared memory 2169* - (bit 2) file-backed private memory 2170* - (bit 3) file-backed shared memory 2171* - (bit 4) ELF header pages in file-backed private memory areas (it is 2172* effective only if the bit 2 is cleared) 2173* - (bit 5) hugetlb private memory 2174* - (bit 6) hugetlb shared memory 2175*/ 2176static void set_coredump_filter(void) { 2177 FILE *f; 2178 long cdm; 2179 2180 if ((f = fopen("/proc/self/coredump_filter", "r+")) == NULL) { 2181 return; 2182 } 2183 2184 if (fscanf(f, "%lx", &cdm) != 1) { 2185 fclose(f); 2186 return; 2187 } 2188 2189 rewind(f); 2190 2191 if ((cdm & LARGEPAGES_BIT) == 0) { 2192 cdm |= LARGEPAGES_BIT; 2193 fprintf(f, "%#lx", cdm); 2194 } 2195 2196 fclose(f); 2197} 2198 2199// Large page support 2200 2201static size_t _large_page_size = 0; 2202 2203void os::large_page_init() { 2204} 2205 2206 2207char* os::reserve_memory_special(size_t bytes, char* req_addr, bool exec) { 2208 // "exec" is passed in but not used. Creating the shared image for 2209 // the code cache doesn't have an SHM_X executable permission to check. 2210 assert(UseLargePages && UseSHM, "only for SHM large pages"); 2211 2212 key_t key = IPC_PRIVATE; 2213 char *addr; 2214 2215 bool warn_on_failure = UseLargePages && 2216 (!FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(UseLargePages) || 2217 !FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(LargePageSizeInBytes) 2218 ); 2219 char msg[128]; 2220 2221 // Create a large shared memory region to attach to based on size. 2222 // Currently, size is the total size of the heap 2223 int shmid = shmget(key, bytes, IPC_CREAT|SHM_R|SHM_W); 2224 if (shmid == -1) { 2225 // Possible reasons for shmget failure: 2226 // 1. shmmax is too small for Java heap. 2227 // > check shmmax value: cat /proc/sys/kernel/shmmax 2228 // > increase shmmax value: echo "0xffffffff" > /proc/sys/kernel/shmmax 2229 // 2. not enough large page memory. 2230 // > check available large pages: cat /proc/meminfo 2231 // > increase amount of large pages: 2232 // echo new_value > /proc/sys/vm/nr_hugepages 2233 // Note 1: different Bsd may use different name for this property, 2234 // e.g. on Redhat AS-3 it is "hugetlb_pool". 2235 // Note 2: it's possible there's enough physical memory available but 2236 // they are so fragmented after a long run that they can't 2237 // coalesce into large pages. Try to reserve large pages when 2238 // the system is still "fresh". 2239 if (warn_on_failure) { 2240 jio_snprintf(msg, sizeof(msg), "Failed to reserve shared memory (errno = %d).", errno); 2241 warning(msg); 2242 } 2243 return NULL; 2244 } 2245 2246 // attach to the region 2247 addr = (char*)shmat(shmid, req_addr, 0); 2248 int err = errno; 2249 2250 // Remove shmid. If shmat() is successful, the actual shared memory segment 2251 // will be deleted when it's detached by shmdt() or when the process 2252 // terminates. If shmat() is not successful this will remove the shared 2253 // segment immediately. 2254 shmctl(shmid, IPC_RMID, NULL); 2255 2256 if ((intptr_t)addr == -1) { 2257 if (warn_on_failure) { 2258 jio_snprintf(msg, sizeof(msg), "Failed to attach shared memory (errno = %d).", err); 2259 warning(msg); 2260 } 2261 return NULL; 2262 } 2263 2264 return addr; 2265} 2266 2267bool os::release_memory_special(char* base, size_t bytes) { 2268 // detaching the SHM segment will also delete it, see reserve_memory_special() 2269 int rslt = shmdt(base); 2270 return rslt == 0; 2271} 2272 2273size_t os::large_page_size() { 2274 return _large_page_size; 2275} 2276 2277// HugeTLBFS allows application to commit large page memory on demand; 2278// with SysV SHM the entire memory region must be allocated as shared 2279// memory. 2280bool os::can_commit_large_page_memory() { 2281 return UseHugeTLBFS; 2282} 2283 2284bool os::can_execute_large_page_memory() { 2285 return UseHugeTLBFS; 2286} 2287 2288// Reserve memory at an arbitrary address, only if that area is 2289// available (and not reserved for something else). 2290 2291char* os::pd_attempt_reserve_memory_at(size_t bytes, char* requested_addr) { 2292 const int max_tries = 10; 2293 char* base[max_tries]; 2294 size_t size[max_tries]; 2295 const size_t gap = 0x000000; 2296 2297 // Assert only that the size is a multiple of the page size, since 2298 // that's all that mmap requires, and since that's all we really know 2299 // about at this low abstraction level. If we need higher alignment, 2300 // we can either pass an alignment to this method or verify alignment 2301 // in one of the methods further up the call chain. See bug 5044738. 2302 assert(bytes % os::vm_page_size() == 0, "reserving unexpected size block"); 2303 2304 // Repeatedly allocate blocks until the block is allocated at the 2305 // right spot. Give up after max_tries. Note that reserve_memory() will 2306 // automatically update _highest_vm_reserved_address if the call is 2307 // successful. The variable tracks the highest memory address every reserved 2308 // by JVM. It is used to detect heap-stack collision if running with 2309 // fixed-stack BsdThreads. Because here we may attempt to reserve more 2310 // space than needed, it could confuse the collision detecting code. To 2311 // solve the problem, save current _highest_vm_reserved_address and 2312 // calculate the correct value before return. 2313 address old_highest = _highest_vm_reserved_address; 2314 2315 // Bsd mmap allows caller to pass an address as hint; give it a try first, 2316 // if kernel honors the hint then we can return immediately. 2317 char * addr = anon_mmap(requested_addr, bytes, false); 2318 if (addr == requested_addr) { 2319 return requested_addr; 2320 } 2321 2322 if (addr != NULL) { 2323 // mmap() is successful but it fails to reserve at the requested address 2324 anon_munmap(addr, bytes); 2325 } 2326 2327 int i; 2328 for (i = 0; i < max_tries; ++i) { 2329 base[i] = reserve_memory(bytes); 2330 2331 if (base[i] != NULL) { 2332 // Is this the block we wanted? 2333 if (base[i] == requested_addr) { 2334 size[i] = bytes; 2335 break; 2336 } 2337 2338 // Does this overlap the block we wanted? Give back the overlapped 2339 // parts and try again. 2340 2341 size_t top_overlap = requested_addr + (bytes + gap) - base[i]; 2342 if (top_overlap >= 0 && top_overlap < bytes) { 2343 unmap_memory(base[i], top_overlap); 2344 base[i] += top_overlap; 2345 size[i] = bytes - top_overlap; 2346 } else { 2347 size_t bottom_overlap = base[i] + bytes - requested_addr; 2348 if (bottom_overlap >= 0 && bottom_overlap < bytes) { 2349 unmap_memory(requested_addr, bottom_overlap); 2350 size[i] = bytes - bottom_overlap; 2351 } else { 2352 size[i] = bytes; 2353 } 2354 } 2355 } 2356 } 2357 2358 // Give back the unused reserved pieces. 2359 2360 for (int j = 0; j < i; ++j) { 2361 if (base[j] != NULL) { 2362 unmap_memory(base[j], size[j]); 2363 } 2364 } 2365 2366 if (i < max_tries) { 2367 _highest_vm_reserved_address = MAX2(old_highest, (address)requested_addr + bytes); 2368 return requested_addr; 2369 } else { 2370 _highest_vm_reserved_address = old_highest; 2371 return NULL; 2372 } 2373} 2374 2375size_t os::read(int fd, void *buf, unsigned int nBytes) { 2376 RESTARTABLE_RETURN_INT(::read(fd, buf, nBytes)); 2377} 2378 2379// TODO-FIXME: reconcile Solaris' os::sleep with the bsd variation. 2380// Solaris uses poll(), bsd uses park(). 2381// Poll() is likely a better choice, assuming that Thread.interrupt() 2382// generates a SIGUSRx signal. Note that SIGUSR1 can interfere with 2383// SIGSEGV, see 4355769. 2384 2385int os::sleep(Thread* thread, jlong millis, bool interruptible) { 2386 assert(thread == Thread::current(), "thread consistency check"); 2387 2388 ParkEvent * const slp = thread->_SleepEvent ; 2389 slp->reset() ; 2390 OrderAccess::fence() ; 2391 2392 if (interruptible) { 2393 jlong prevtime = javaTimeNanos(); 2394 2395 for (;;) { 2396 if (os::is_interrupted(thread, true)) { 2397 return OS_INTRPT; 2398 } 2399 2400 jlong newtime = javaTimeNanos(); 2401 2402 if (newtime - prevtime < 0) { 2403 // time moving backwards, should only happen if no monotonic clock 2404 // not a guarantee() because JVM should not abort on kernel/glibc bugs 2405 assert(!Bsd::supports_monotonic_clock(), "time moving backwards"); 2406 } else { 2407 millis -= (newtime - prevtime) / NANOSECS_PER_MILLISEC; 2408 } 2409 2410 if(millis <= 0) { 2411 return OS_OK; 2412 } 2413 2414 prevtime = newtime; 2415 2416 { 2417 assert(thread->is_Java_thread(), "sanity check"); 2418 JavaThread *jt = (JavaThread *) thread; 2419 ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(jt); 2420 OSThreadWaitState osts(jt->osthread(), false /* not Object.wait() */); 2421 2422 jt->set_suspend_equivalent(); 2423 // cleared by handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition() or 2424 // java_suspend_self() via check_and_wait_while_suspended() 2425 2426 slp->park(millis); 2427 2428 // were we externally suspended while we were waiting? 2429 jt->check_and_wait_while_suspended(); 2430 } 2431 } 2432 } else { 2433 OSThreadWaitState osts(thread->osthread(), false /* not Object.wait() */); 2434 jlong prevtime = javaTimeNanos(); 2435 2436 for (;;) { 2437 // It'd be nice to avoid the back-to-back javaTimeNanos() calls on 2438 // the 1st iteration ... 2439 jlong newtime = javaTimeNanos(); 2440 2441 if (newtime - prevtime < 0) { 2442 // time moving backwards, should only happen if no monotonic clock 2443 // not a guarantee() because JVM should not abort on kernel/glibc bugs 2444 assert(!Bsd::supports_monotonic_clock(), "time moving backwards"); 2445 } else { 2446 millis -= (newtime - prevtime) / NANOSECS_PER_MILLISEC; 2447 } 2448 2449 if(millis <= 0) break ; 2450 2451 prevtime = newtime; 2452 slp->park(millis); 2453 } 2454 return OS_OK ; 2455 } 2456} 2457 2458int os::naked_sleep() { 2459 // %% make the sleep time an integer flag. for now use 1 millisec. 2460 return os::sleep(Thread::current(), 1, false); 2461} 2462 2463// Sleep forever; naked call to OS-specific sleep; use with CAUTION 2464void os::infinite_sleep() { 2465 while (true) { // sleep forever ... 2466 ::sleep(100); // ... 100 seconds at a time 2467 } 2468} 2469 2470// Used to convert frequent JVM_Yield() to nops 2471bool os::dont_yield() { 2472 return DontYieldALot; 2473} 2474 2475void os::yield() { 2476 sched_yield(); 2477} 2478 2479os::YieldResult os::NakedYield() { sched_yield(); return os::YIELD_UNKNOWN ;} 2480 2481void os::yield_all(int attempts) { 2482 // Yields to all threads, including threads with lower priorities 2483 // Threads on Bsd are all with same priority. The Solaris style 2484 // os::yield_all() with nanosleep(1ms) is not necessary. 2485 sched_yield(); 2486} 2487 2488// Called from the tight loops to possibly influence time-sharing heuristics 2489void os::loop_breaker(int attempts) { 2490 os::yield_all(attempts); 2491} 2492 2493//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 2494// thread priority support 2495 2496// Note: Normal Bsd applications are run with SCHED_OTHER policy. SCHED_OTHER 2497// only supports dynamic priority, static priority must be zero. For real-time 2498// applications, Bsd supports SCHED_RR which allows static priority (1-99). 2499// However, for large multi-threaded applications, SCHED_RR is not only slower 2500// than SCHED_OTHER, but also very unstable (my volano tests hang hard 4 out 2501// of 5 runs - Sep 2005). 2502// 2503// The following code actually changes the niceness of kernel-thread/LWP. It 2504// has an assumption that setpriority() only modifies one kernel-thread/LWP, 2505// not the entire user process, and user level threads are 1:1 mapped to kernel 2506// threads. It has always been the case, but could change in the future. For 2507// this reason, the code should not be used as default (ThreadPriorityPolicy=0). 2508// It is only used when ThreadPriorityPolicy=1 and requires root privilege. 2509 2510#if !defined(__APPLE__) 2511int os::java_to_os_priority[CriticalPriority + 1] = { 2512 19, // 0 Entry should never be used 2513 2514 0, // 1 MinPriority 2515 3, // 2 2516 6, // 3 2517 2518 10, // 4 2519 15, // 5 NormPriority 2520 18, // 6 2521 2522 21, // 7 2523 25, // 8 2524 28, // 9 NearMaxPriority 2525 2526 31, // 10 MaxPriority 2527 2528 31 // 11 CriticalPriority 2529}; 2530#else 2531/* Using Mach high-level priority assignments */ 2532int os::java_to_os_priority[CriticalPriority + 1] = { 2533 0, // 0 Entry should never be used (MINPRI_USER) 2534 2535 27, // 1 MinPriority 2536 28, // 2 2537 29, // 3 2538 2539 30, // 4 2540 31, // 5 NormPriority (BASEPRI_DEFAULT) 2541 32, // 6 2542 2543 33, // 7 2544 34, // 8 2545 35, // 9 NearMaxPriority 2546 2547 36, // 10 MaxPriority 2548 2549 36 // 11 CriticalPriority 2550}; 2551#endif 2552 2553static int prio_init() { 2554 if (ThreadPriorityPolicy == 1) { 2555 // Only root can raise thread priority. Don't allow ThreadPriorityPolicy=1 2556 // if effective uid is not root. Perhaps, a more elegant way of doing 2557 // this is to test CAP_SYS_NICE capability, but that will require libcap.so 2558 if (geteuid() != 0) { 2559 if (!FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(ThreadPriorityPolicy)) { 2560 warning("-XX:ThreadPriorityPolicy requires root privilege on Bsd"); 2561 } 2562 ThreadPriorityPolicy = 0; 2563 } 2564 } 2565 if (UseCriticalJavaThreadPriority) { 2566 os::java_to_os_priority[MaxPriority] = os::java_to_os_priority[CriticalPriority]; 2567 } 2568 return 0; 2569} 2570 2571OSReturn os::set_native_priority(Thread* thread, int newpri) { 2572 if ( !UseThreadPriorities || ThreadPriorityPolicy == 0 ) return OS_OK; 2573 2574#ifdef __OpenBSD__ 2575 // OpenBSD pthread_setprio starves low priority threads 2576 return OS_OK; 2577#elif defined(__FreeBSD__) 2578 int ret = pthread_setprio(thread->osthread()->pthread_id(), newpri); 2579#elif defined(__APPLE__) || defined(__NetBSD__) 2580 struct sched_param sp; 2581 int policy; 2582 pthread_t self = pthread_self(); 2583 2584 if (pthread_getschedparam(self, &policy, &sp) != 0) 2585 return OS_ERR; 2586 2587 sp.sched_priority = newpri; 2588 if (pthread_setschedparam(self, policy, &sp) != 0) 2589 return OS_ERR; 2590 2591 return OS_OK; 2592#else 2593 int ret = setpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, thread->osthread()->thread_id(), newpri); 2594 return (ret == 0) ? OS_OK : OS_ERR; 2595#endif 2596} 2597 2598OSReturn os::get_native_priority(const Thread* const thread, int *priority_ptr) { 2599 if ( !UseThreadPriorities || ThreadPriorityPolicy == 0 ) { 2600 *priority_ptr = java_to_os_priority[NormPriority]; 2601 return OS_OK; 2602 } 2603 2604 errno = 0; 2605#if defined(__OpenBSD__) || defined(__FreeBSD__) 2606 *priority_ptr = pthread_getprio(thread->osthread()->pthread_id()); 2607#elif defined(__APPLE__) || defined(__NetBSD__) 2608 int policy; 2609 struct sched_param sp; 2610 2611 pthread_getschedparam(pthread_self(), &policy, &sp); 2612 *priority_ptr = sp.sched_priority; 2613#else 2614 *priority_ptr = getpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, thread->osthread()->thread_id()); 2615#endif 2616 return (*priority_ptr != -1 || errno == 0 ? OS_OK : OS_ERR); 2617} 2618 2619// Hint to the underlying OS that a task switch would not be good. 2620// Void return because it's a hint and can fail. 2621void os::hint_no_preempt() {} 2622 2623//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 2624// suspend/resume support 2625 2626// the low-level signal-based suspend/resume support is a remnant from the 2627// old VM-suspension that used to be for java-suspension, safepoints etc, 2628// within hotspot. Now there is a single use-case for this: 2629// - calling get_thread_pc() on the VMThread by the flat-profiler task 2630// that runs in the watcher thread. 2631// The remaining code is greatly simplified from the more general suspension 2632// code that used to be used. 2633// 2634// The protocol is quite simple: 2635// - suspend: 2636// - sends a signal to the target thread 2637// - polls the suspend state of the osthread using a yield loop 2638// - target thread signal handler (SR_handler) sets suspend state 2639// and blocks in sigsuspend until continued 2640// - resume: 2641// - sets target osthread state to continue 2642// - sends signal to end the sigsuspend loop in the SR_handler 2643// 2644// Note that the SR_lock plays no role in this suspend/resume protocol. 2645// 2646 2647static void resume_clear_context(OSThread *osthread) { 2648 osthread->set_ucontext(NULL); 2649 osthread->set_siginfo(NULL); 2650 2651 // notify the suspend action is completed, we have now resumed 2652 osthread->sr.clear_suspended(); 2653} 2654 2655static void suspend_save_context(OSThread *osthread, siginfo_t* siginfo, ucontext_t* context) { 2656 osthread->set_ucontext(context); 2657 osthread->set_siginfo(siginfo); 2658} 2659 2660// 2661// Handler function invoked when a thread's execution is suspended or 2662// resumed. We have to be careful that only async-safe functions are 2663// called here (Note: most pthread functions are not async safe and 2664// should be avoided.) 2665// 2666// Note: sigwait() is a more natural fit than sigsuspend() from an 2667// interface point of view, but sigwait() prevents the signal hander 2668// from being run. libpthread would get very confused by not having 2669// its signal handlers run and prevents sigwait()'s use with the 2670// mutex granting granting signal. 2671// 2672// Currently only ever called on the VMThread 2673// 2674static void SR_handler(int sig, siginfo_t* siginfo, ucontext_t* context) { 2675 // Save and restore errno to avoid confusing native code with EINTR 2676 // after sigsuspend. 2677 int old_errno = errno; 2678 2679 Thread* thread = Thread::current(); 2680 OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread(); 2681 assert(thread->is_VM_thread(), "Must be VMThread"); 2682 // read current suspend action 2683 int action = osthread->sr.suspend_action(); 2684 if (action == SR_SUSPEND) { 2685 suspend_save_context(osthread, siginfo, context); 2686 2687 // Notify the suspend action is about to be completed. do_suspend() 2688 // waits until SR_SUSPENDED is set and then returns. We will wait 2689 // here for a resume signal and that completes the suspend-other 2690 // action. do_suspend/do_resume is always called as a pair from 2691 // the same thread - so there are no races 2692 2693 // notify the caller 2694 osthread->sr.set_suspended(); 2695 2696 sigset_t suspend_set; // signals for sigsuspend() 2697 2698 // get current set of blocked signals and unblock resume signal 2699 pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, NULL, &suspend_set); 2700 sigdelset(&suspend_set, SR_signum); 2701 2702 // wait here until we are resumed 2703 do { 2704 sigsuspend(&suspend_set); 2705 // ignore all returns until we get a resume signal 2706 } while (osthread->sr.suspend_action() != SR_CONTINUE); 2707 2708 resume_clear_context(osthread); 2709 2710 } else { 2711 assert(action == SR_CONTINUE, "unexpected sr action"); 2712 // nothing special to do - just leave the handler 2713 } 2714 2715 errno = old_errno; 2716} 2717 2718 2719static int SR_initialize() { 2720 struct sigaction act; 2721 char *s; 2722 /* Get signal number to use for suspend/resume */ 2723 if ((s = ::getenv("_JAVA_SR_SIGNUM")) != 0) { 2724 int sig = ::strtol(s, 0, 10); 2725 if (sig > 0 || sig < NSIG) { 2726 SR_signum = sig; 2727 } 2728 } 2729 2730 assert(SR_signum > SIGSEGV && SR_signum > SIGBUS, 2731 "SR_signum must be greater than max(SIGSEGV, SIGBUS), see 4355769"); 2732 2733 sigemptyset(&SR_sigset); 2734 sigaddset(&SR_sigset, SR_signum); 2735 2736 /* Set up signal handler for suspend/resume */ 2737 act.sa_flags = SA_RESTART|SA_SIGINFO; 2738 act.sa_handler = (void (*)(int)) SR_handler; 2739 2740 // SR_signum is blocked by default. 2741 // 4528190 - We also need to block pthread restart signal (32 on all 2742 // supported Bsd platforms). Note that BsdThreads need to block 2743 // this signal for all threads to work properly. So we don't have 2744 // to use hard-coded signal number when setting up the mask. 2745 pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, NULL, &act.sa_mask); 2746 2747 if (sigaction(SR_signum, &act, 0) == -1) { 2748 return -1; 2749 } 2750 2751 // Save signal flag 2752 os::Bsd::set_our_sigflags(SR_signum, act.sa_flags); 2753 return 0; 2754} 2755 2756static int SR_finalize() { 2757 return 0; 2758} 2759 2760 2761// returns true on success and false on error - really an error is fatal 2762// but this seems the normal response to library errors 2763static bool do_suspend(OSThread* osthread) { 2764 // mark as suspended and send signal 2765 osthread->sr.set_suspend_action(SR_SUSPEND); 2766 int status = pthread_kill(osthread->pthread_id(), SR_signum); 2767 assert_status(status == 0, status, "pthread_kill"); 2768 2769 // check status and wait until notified of suspension 2770 if (status == 0) { 2771 for (int i = 0; !osthread->sr.is_suspended(); i++) { 2772 os::yield_all(i); 2773 } 2774 osthread->sr.set_suspend_action(SR_NONE); 2775 return true; 2776 } 2777 else { 2778 osthread->sr.set_suspend_action(SR_NONE); 2779 return false; 2780 } 2781} 2782 2783static void do_resume(OSThread* osthread) { 2784 assert(osthread->sr.is_suspended(), "thread should be suspended"); 2785 osthread->sr.set_suspend_action(SR_CONTINUE); 2786 2787 int status = pthread_kill(osthread->pthread_id(), SR_signum); 2788 assert_status(status == 0, status, "pthread_kill"); 2789 // check status and wait unit notified of resumption 2790 if (status == 0) { 2791 for (int i = 0; osthread->sr.is_suspended(); i++) { 2792 os::yield_all(i); 2793 } 2794 } 2795 osthread->sr.set_suspend_action(SR_NONE); 2796} 2797 2798//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 2799// interrupt support 2800 2801void os::interrupt(Thread* thread) { 2802 assert(Thread::current() == thread || Threads_lock->owned_by_self(), 2803 "possibility of dangling Thread pointer"); 2804 2805 OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread(); 2806 2807 if (!osthread->interrupted()) { 2808 osthread->set_interrupted(true); 2809 // More than one thread can get here with the same value of osthread, 2810 // resulting in multiple notifications. We do, however, want the store 2811 // to interrupted() to be visible to other threads before we execute unpark(). 2812 OrderAccess::fence(); 2813 ParkEvent * const slp = thread->_SleepEvent ; 2814 if (slp != NULL) slp->unpark() ; 2815 } 2816 2817 // For JSR166. Unpark even if interrupt status already was set 2818 if (thread->is_Java_thread()) 2819 ((JavaThread*)thread)->parker()->unpark(); 2820 2821 ParkEvent * ev = thread->_ParkEvent ; 2822 if (ev != NULL) ev->unpark() ; 2823 2824} 2825 2826bool os::is_interrupted(Thread* thread, bool clear_interrupted) { 2827 assert(Thread::current() == thread || Threads_lock->owned_by_self(), 2828 "possibility of dangling Thread pointer"); 2829 2830 OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread(); 2831 2832 bool interrupted = osthread->interrupted(); 2833 2834 if (interrupted && clear_interrupted) { 2835 osthread->set_interrupted(false); 2836 // consider thread->_SleepEvent->reset() ... optional optimization 2837 } 2838 2839 return interrupted; 2840} 2841 2842/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 2843// signal handling (except suspend/resume) 2844 2845// This routine may be used by user applications as a "hook" to catch signals. 2846// The user-defined signal handler must pass unrecognized signals to this 2847// routine, and if it returns true (non-zero), then the signal handler must 2848// return immediately. If the flag "abort_if_unrecognized" is true, then this 2849// routine will never retun false (zero), but instead will execute a VM panic 2850// routine kill the process. 2851// 2852// If this routine returns false, it is OK to call it again. This allows 2853// the user-defined signal handler to perform checks either before or after 2854// the VM performs its own checks. Naturally, the user code would be making 2855// a serious error if it tried to handle an exception (such as a null check 2856// or breakpoint) that the VM was generating for its own correct operation. 2857// 2858// This routine may recognize any of the following kinds of signals: 2859// SIGBUS, SIGSEGV, SIGILL, SIGFPE, SIGQUIT, SIGPIPE, SIGXFSZ, SIGUSR1. 2860// It should be consulted by handlers for any of those signals. 2861// 2862// The caller of this routine must pass in the three arguments supplied 2863// to the function referred to in the "sa_sigaction" (not the "sa_handler") 2864// field of the structure passed to sigaction(). This routine assumes that 2865// the sa_flags field passed to sigaction() includes SA_SIGINFO and SA_RESTART. 2866// 2867// Note that the VM will print warnings if it detects conflicting signal 2868// handlers, unless invoked with the option "-XX:+AllowUserSignalHandlers". 2869// 2870extern "C" JNIEXPORT int 2871JVM_handle_bsd_signal(int signo, siginfo_t* siginfo, 2872 void* ucontext, int abort_if_unrecognized); 2873 2874void signalHandler(int sig, siginfo_t* info, void* uc) { 2875 assert(info != NULL && uc != NULL, "it must be old kernel"); 2876 JVM_handle_bsd_signal(sig, info, uc, true); 2877} 2878 2879 2880// This boolean allows users to forward their own non-matching signals 2881// to JVM_handle_bsd_signal, harmlessly. 2882bool os::Bsd::signal_handlers_are_installed = false; 2883 2884// For signal-chaining 2885struct sigaction os::Bsd::sigact[MAXSIGNUM]; 2886unsigned int os::Bsd::sigs = 0; 2887bool os::Bsd::libjsig_is_loaded = false; 2888typedef struct sigaction *(*get_signal_t)(int); 2889get_signal_t os::Bsd::get_signal_action = NULL; 2890 2891struct sigaction* os::Bsd::get_chained_signal_action(int sig) { 2892 struct sigaction *actp = NULL; 2893 2894 if (libjsig_is_loaded) { 2895 // Retrieve the old signal handler from libjsig 2896 actp = (*get_signal_action)(sig); 2897 } 2898 if (actp == NULL) { 2899 // Retrieve the preinstalled signal handler from jvm 2900 actp = get_preinstalled_handler(sig); 2901 } 2902 2903 return actp; 2904} 2905 2906static bool call_chained_handler(struct sigaction *actp, int sig, 2907 siginfo_t *siginfo, void *context) { 2908 // Call the old signal handler 2909 if (actp->sa_handler == SIG_DFL) { 2910 // It's more reasonable to let jvm treat it as an unexpected exception 2911 // instead of taking the default action. 2912 return false; 2913 } else if (actp->sa_handler != SIG_IGN) { 2914 if ((actp->sa_flags & SA_NODEFER) == 0) { 2915 // automaticlly block the signal 2916 sigaddset(&(actp->sa_mask), sig); 2917 } 2918 2919 sa_handler_t hand; 2920 sa_sigaction_t sa; 2921 bool siginfo_flag_set = (actp->sa_flags & SA_SIGINFO) != 0; 2922 // retrieve the chained handler 2923 if (siginfo_flag_set) { 2924 sa = actp->sa_sigaction; 2925 } else { 2926 hand = actp->sa_handler; 2927 } 2928 2929 if ((actp->sa_flags & SA_RESETHAND) != 0) { 2930 actp->sa_handler = SIG_DFL; 2931 } 2932 2933 // try to honor the signal mask 2934 sigset_t oset; 2935 pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, &(actp->sa_mask), &oset); 2936 2937 // call into the chained handler 2938 if (siginfo_flag_set) { 2939 (*sa)(sig, siginfo, context); 2940 } else { 2941 (*hand)(sig); 2942 } 2943 2944 // restore the signal mask 2945 pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, &oset, 0); 2946 } 2947 // Tell jvm's signal handler the signal is taken care of. 2948 return true; 2949} 2950 2951bool os::Bsd::chained_handler(int sig, siginfo_t* siginfo, void* context) { 2952 bool chained = false; 2953 // signal-chaining 2954 if (UseSignalChaining) { 2955 struct sigaction *actp = get_chained_signal_action(sig); 2956 if (actp != NULL) { 2957 chained = call_chained_handler(actp, sig, siginfo, context); 2958 } 2959 } 2960 return chained; 2961} 2962 2963struct sigaction* os::Bsd::get_preinstalled_handler(int sig) { 2964 if ((( (unsigned int)1 << sig ) & sigs) != 0) { 2965 return &sigact[sig]; 2966 } 2967 return NULL; 2968} 2969 2970void os::Bsd::save_preinstalled_handler(int sig, struct sigaction& oldAct) { 2971 assert(sig > 0 && sig < MAXSIGNUM, "vm signal out of expected range"); 2972 sigact[sig] = oldAct; 2973 sigs |= (unsigned int)1 << sig; 2974} 2975 2976// for diagnostic 2977int os::Bsd::sigflags[MAXSIGNUM]; 2978 2979int os::Bsd::get_our_sigflags(int sig) { 2980 assert(sig > 0 && sig < MAXSIGNUM, "vm signal out of expected range"); 2981 return sigflags[sig]; 2982} 2983 2984void os::Bsd::set_our_sigflags(int sig, int flags) { 2985 assert(sig > 0 && sig < MAXSIGNUM, "vm signal out of expected range"); 2986 sigflags[sig] = flags; 2987} 2988 2989void os::Bsd::set_signal_handler(int sig, bool set_installed) { 2990 // Check for overwrite. 2991 struct sigaction oldAct; 2992 sigaction(sig, (struct sigaction*)NULL, &oldAct); 2993 2994 void* oldhand = oldAct.sa_sigaction 2995 ? CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, oldAct.sa_sigaction) 2996 : CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, oldAct.sa_handler); 2997 if (oldhand != CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, SIG_DFL) && 2998 oldhand != CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, SIG_IGN) && 2999 oldhand != CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, (sa_sigaction_t)signalHandler)) { 3000 if (AllowUserSignalHandlers || !set_installed) { 3001 // Do not overwrite; user takes responsibility to forward to us. 3002 return; 3003 } else if (UseSignalChaining) { 3004 // save the old handler in jvm 3005 save_preinstalled_handler(sig, oldAct); 3006 // libjsig also interposes the sigaction() call below and saves the 3007 // old sigaction on it own. 3008 } else { 3009 fatal(err_msg("Encountered unexpected pre-existing sigaction handler " 3010 "%#lx for signal %d.", (long)oldhand, sig)); 3011 } 3012 } 3013 3014 struct sigaction sigAct; 3015 sigfillset(&(sigAct.sa_mask)); 3016 sigAct.sa_handler = SIG_DFL; 3017 if (!set_installed) { 3018 sigAct.sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO|SA_RESTART; 3019 } else { 3020 sigAct.sa_sigaction = signalHandler; 3021 sigAct.sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO|SA_RESTART; 3022 } 3023 // Save flags, which are set by ours 3024 assert(sig > 0 && sig < MAXSIGNUM, "vm signal out of expected range"); 3025 sigflags[sig] = sigAct.sa_flags; 3026 3027 int ret = sigaction(sig, &sigAct, &oldAct); 3028 assert(ret == 0, "check"); 3029 3030 void* oldhand2 = oldAct.sa_sigaction 3031 ? CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, oldAct.sa_sigaction) 3032 : CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, oldAct.sa_handler); 3033 assert(oldhand2 == oldhand, "no concurrent signal handler installation"); 3034} 3035 3036// install signal handlers for signals that HotSpot needs to 3037// handle in order to support Java-level exception handling. 3038 3039void os::Bsd::install_signal_handlers() { 3040 if (!signal_handlers_are_installed) { 3041 signal_handlers_are_installed = true; 3042 3043 // signal-chaining 3044 typedef void (*signal_setting_t)(); 3045 signal_setting_t begin_signal_setting = NULL; 3046 signal_setting_t end_signal_setting = NULL; 3047 begin_signal_setting = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(signal_setting_t, 3048 dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "JVM_begin_signal_setting")); 3049 if (begin_signal_setting != NULL) { 3050 end_signal_setting = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(signal_setting_t, 3051 dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "JVM_end_signal_setting")); 3052 get_signal_action = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(get_signal_t, 3053 dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "JVM_get_signal_action")); 3054 libjsig_is_loaded = true; 3055 assert(UseSignalChaining, "should enable signal-chaining"); 3056 } 3057 if (libjsig_is_loaded) { 3058 // Tell libjsig jvm is setting signal handlers 3059 (*begin_signal_setting)(); 3060 } 3061 3062 set_signal_handler(SIGSEGV, true); 3063 set_signal_handler(SIGPIPE, true); 3064 set_signal_handler(SIGBUS, true); 3065 set_signal_handler(SIGILL, true); 3066 set_signal_handler(SIGFPE, true); 3067 set_signal_handler(SIGXFSZ, true); 3068 3069#if defined(__APPLE__) 3070 // In Mac OS X 10.4, CrashReporter will write a crash log for all 'fatal' signals, including 3071 // signals caught and handled by the JVM. To work around this, we reset the mach task 3072 // signal handler that's placed on our process by CrashReporter. This disables 3073 // CrashReporter-based reporting. 3074 // 3075 // This work-around is not necessary for 10.5+, as CrashReporter no longer intercedes 3076 // on caught fatal signals. 3077 // 3078 // Additionally, gdb installs both standard BSD signal handlers, and mach exception 3079 // handlers. By replacing the existing task exception handler, we disable gdb's mach 3080 // exception handling, while leaving the standard BSD signal handlers functional. 3081 kern_return_t kr; 3082 kr = task_set_exception_ports(mach_task_self(), 3083 EXC_MASK_BAD_ACCESS | EXC_MASK_ARITHMETIC, 3084 MACH_PORT_NULL, 3085 EXCEPTION_STATE_IDENTITY, 3086 MACHINE_THREAD_STATE); 3087 3088 assert(kr == KERN_SUCCESS, "could not set mach task signal handler"); 3089#endif 3090 3091 if (libjsig_is_loaded) { 3092 // Tell libjsig jvm finishes setting signal handlers 3093 (*end_signal_setting)(); 3094 } 3095 3096 // We don't activate signal checker if libjsig is in place, we trust ourselves 3097 // and if UserSignalHandler is installed all bets are off 3098 if (CheckJNICalls) { 3099 if (libjsig_is_loaded) { 3100 tty->print_cr("Info: libjsig is activated, all active signal checking is disabled"); 3101 check_signals = false; 3102 } 3103 if (AllowUserSignalHandlers) { 3104 tty->print_cr("Info: AllowUserSignalHandlers is activated, all active signal checking is disabled"); 3105 check_signals = false; 3106 } 3107 } 3108 } 3109} 3110 3111 3112///// 3113// glibc on Bsd platform uses non-documented flag 3114// to indicate, that some special sort of signal 3115// trampoline is used. 3116// We will never set this flag, and we should 3117// ignore this flag in our diagnostic 3118#ifdef SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK 3119#undef SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK 3120#endif 3121#define SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK (~0x04000000) 3122 3123static const char* get_signal_handler_name(address handler, 3124 char* buf, int buflen) { 3125 int offset; 3126 bool found = os::dll_address_to_library_name(handler, buf, buflen, &offset); 3127 if (found) { 3128 // skip directory names 3129 const char *p1, *p2; 3130 p1 = buf; 3131 size_t len = strlen(os::file_separator()); 3132 while ((p2 = strstr(p1, os::file_separator())) != NULL) p1 = p2 + len; 3133 jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, "%s+0x%x", p1, offset); 3134 } else { 3135 jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, PTR_FORMAT, handler); 3136 } 3137 return buf; 3138} 3139 3140static void print_signal_handler(outputStream* st, int sig, 3141 char* buf, size_t buflen) { 3142 struct sigaction sa; 3143 3144 sigaction(sig, NULL, &sa); 3145 3146 // See comment for SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK define 3147 sa.sa_flags &= SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK; 3148 3149 st->print("%s: ", os::exception_name(sig, buf, buflen)); 3150 3151 address handler = (sa.sa_flags & SA_SIGINFO) 3152 ? CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, sa.sa_sigaction) 3153 : CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, sa.sa_handler); 3154 3155 if (handler == CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, SIG_DFL)) { 3156 st->print("SIG_DFL"); 3157 } else if (handler == CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, SIG_IGN)) { 3158 st->print("SIG_IGN"); 3159 } else { 3160 st->print("[%s]", get_signal_handler_name(handler, buf, buflen)); 3161 } 3162 3163 st->print(", sa_mask[0]=" PTR32_FORMAT, *(uint32_t*)&sa.sa_mask); 3164 3165 address rh = VMError::get_resetted_sighandler(sig); 3166 // May be, handler was resetted by VMError? 3167 if(rh != NULL) { 3168 handler = rh; 3169 sa.sa_flags = VMError::get_resetted_sigflags(sig) & SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK; 3170 } 3171 3172 st->print(", sa_flags=" PTR32_FORMAT, sa.sa_flags); 3173 3174 // Check: is it our handler? 3175 if(handler == CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, (sa_sigaction_t)signalHandler) || 3176 handler == CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, (sa_sigaction_t)SR_handler)) { 3177 // It is our signal handler 3178 // check for flags, reset system-used one! 3179 if((int)sa.sa_flags != os::Bsd::get_our_sigflags(sig)) { 3180 st->print( 3181 ", flags was changed from " PTR32_FORMAT ", consider using jsig library", 3182 os::Bsd::get_our_sigflags(sig)); 3183 } 3184 } 3185 st->cr(); 3186} 3187 3188 3189#define DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(sig) \ 3190 if (!sigismember(&check_signal_done, sig)) \ 3191 os::Bsd::check_signal_handler(sig) 3192 3193// This method is a periodic task to check for misbehaving JNI applications 3194// under CheckJNI, we can add any periodic checks here 3195 3196void os::run_periodic_checks() { 3197 3198 if (check_signals == false) return; 3199 3200 // SEGV and BUS if overridden could potentially prevent 3201 // generation of hs*.log in the event of a crash, debugging 3202 // such a case can be very challenging, so we absolutely 3203 // check the following for a good measure: 3204 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGSEGV); 3205 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGILL); 3206 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGFPE); 3207 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGBUS); 3208 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGPIPE); 3209 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGXFSZ); 3210 3211 3212 // ReduceSignalUsage allows the user to override these handlers 3213 // see comments at the very top and jvm_solaris.h 3214 if (!ReduceSignalUsage) { 3215 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL); 3216 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL); 3217 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL); 3218 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(BREAK_SIGNAL); 3219 } 3220 3221 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SR_signum); 3222 DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(INTERRUPT_SIGNAL); 3223} 3224 3225typedef int (*os_sigaction_t)(int, const struct sigaction *, struct sigaction *); 3226 3227static os_sigaction_t os_sigaction = NULL; 3228 3229void os::Bsd::check_signal_handler(int sig) { 3230 char buf[O_BUFLEN]; 3231 address jvmHandler = NULL; 3232 3233 3234 struct sigaction act; 3235 if (os_sigaction == NULL) { 3236 // only trust the default sigaction, in case it has been interposed 3237 os_sigaction = (os_sigaction_t)dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "sigaction"); 3238 if (os_sigaction == NULL) return; 3239 } 3240 3241 os_sigaction(sig, (struct sigaction*)NULL, &act); 3242 3243 3244 act.sa_flags &= SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK; 3245 3246 address thisHandler = (act.sa_flags & SA_SIGINFO) 3247 ? CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, act.sa_sigaction) 3248 : CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, act.sa_handler) ; 3249 3250 3251 switch(sig) { 3252 case SIGSEGV: 3253 case SIGBUS: 3254 case SIGFPE: 3255 case SIGPIPE: 3256 case SIGILL: 3257 case SIGXFSZ: 3258 jvmHandler = CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, (sa_sigaction_t)signalHandler); 3259 break; 3260 3261 case SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL: 3262 case SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL: 3263 case SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL: 3264 case BREAK_SIGNAL: 3265 jvmHandler = (address)user_handler(); 3266 break; 3267 3268 case INTERRUPT_SIGNAL: 3269 jvmHandler = CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, SIG_DFL); 3270 break; 3271 3272 default: 3273 if (sig == SR_signum) { 3274 jvmHandler = CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, (sa_sigaction_t)SR_handler); 3275 } else { 3276 return; 3277 } 3278 break; 3279 } 3280 3281 if (thisHandler != jvmHandler) { 3282 tty->print("Warning: %s handler ", exception_name(sig, buf, O_BUFLEN)); 3283 tty->print("expected:%s", get_signal_handler_name(jvmHandler, buf, O_BUFLEN)); 3284 tty->print_cr(" found:%s", get_signal_handler_name(thisHandler, buf, O_BUFLEN)); 3285 // No need to check this sig any longer 3286 sigaddset(&check_signal_done, sig); 3287 } else if(os::Bsd::get_our_sigflags(sig) != 0 && (int)act.sa_flags != os::Bsd::get_our_sigflags(sig)) { 3288 tty->print("Warning: %s handler flags ", exception_name(sig, buf, O_BUFLEN)); 3289 tty->print("expected:" PTR32_FORMAT, os::Bsd::get_our_sigflags(sig)); 3290 tty->print_cr(" found:" PTR32_FORMAT, act.sa_flags); 3291 // No need to check this sig any longer 3292 sigaddset(&check_signal_done, sig); 3293 } 3294 3295 // Dump all the signal 3296 if (sigismember(&check_signal_done, sig)) { 3297 print_signal_handlers(tty, buf, O_BUFLEN); 3298 } 3299} 3300 3301extern void report_error(char* file_name, int line_no, char* title, char* format, ...); 3302 3303extern bool signal_name(int signo, char* buf, size_t len); 3304 3305const char* os::exception_name(int exception_code, char* buf, size_t size) { 3306 if (0 < exception_code && exception_code <= SIGRTMAX) { 3307 // signal 3308 if (!signal_name(exception_code, buf, size)) { 3309 jio_snprintf(buf, size, "SIG%d", exception_code); 3310 } 3311 return buf; 3312 } else { 3313 return NULL; 3314 } 3315} 3316 3317// this is called _before_ the most of global arguments have been parsed 3318void os::init(void) { 3319 char dummy; /* used to get a guess on initial stack address */ 3320// first_hrtime = gethrtime(); 3321 3322 // With BsdThreads the JavaMain thread pid (primordial thread) 3323 // is different than the pid of the java launcher thread. 3324 // So, on Bsd, the launcher thread pid is passed to the VM 3325 // via the sun.java.launcher.pid property. 3326 // Use this property instead of getpid() if it was correctly passed. 3327 // See bug 6351349. 3328 pid_t java_launcher_pid = (pid_t) Arguments::sun_java_launcher_pid(); 3329 3330 _initial_pid = (java_launcher_pid > 0) ? java_launcher_pid : getpid(); 3331 3332 clock_tics_per_sec = CLK_TCK; 3333 3334 init_random(1234567); 3335 3336 ThreadCritical::initialize(); 3337 3338 Bsd::set_page_size(getpagesize()); 3339 if (Bsd::page_size() == -1) { 3340 fatal(err_msg("os_bsd.cpp: os::init: sysconf failed (%s)", 3341 strerror(errno))); 3342 } 3343 init_page_sizes((size_t) Bsd::page_size()); 3344 3345 Bsd::initialize_system_info(); 3346 3347 // main_thread points to the aboriginal thread 3348 Bsd::_main_thread = pthread_self(); 3349 3350 Bsd::clock_init(); 3351 initial_time_count = os::elapsed_counter(); 3352 3353#ifdef __APPLE__ 3354 // XXXDARWIN 3355 // Work around the unaligned VM callbacks in hotspot's 3356 // sharedRuntime. The callbacks don't use SSE2 instructions, and work on 3357 // Linux, Solaris, and FreeBSD. On Mac OS X, dyld (rightly so) enforces 3358 // alignment when doing symbol lookup. To work around this, we force early 3359 // binding of all symbols now, thus binding when alignment is known-good. 3360 _dyld_bind_fully_image_containing_address((const void *) &os::init); 3361#endif 3362} 3363 3364// To install functions for atexit system call 3365extern "C" { 3366 static void perfMemory_exit_helper() { 3367 perfMemory_exit(); 3368 } 3369} 3370 3371// this is called _after_ the global arguments have been parsed 3372jint os::init_2(void) 3373{ 3374 // Allocate a single page and mark it as readable for safepoint polling 3375 address polling_page = (address) ::mmap(NULL, Bsd::page_size(), PROT_READ, MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0); 3376 guarantee( polling_page != MAP_FAILED, "os::init_2: failed to allocate polling page" ); 3377 3378 os::set_polling_page( polling_page ); 3379 3380#ifndef PRODUCT 3381 if(Verbose && PrintMiscellaneous) 3382 tty->print("[SafePoint Polling address: " INTPTR_FORMAT "]\n", (intptr_t)polling_page); 3383#endif 3384 3385 if (!UseMembar) { 3386 address mem_serialize_page = (address) ::mmap(NULL, Bsd::page_size(), PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0); 3387 guarantee( mem_serialize_page != NULL, "mmap Failed for memory serialize page"); 3388 os::set_memory_serialize_page( mem_serialize_page ); 3389 3390#ifndef PRODUCT 3391 if(Verbose && PrintMiscellaneous) 3392 tty->print("[Memory Serialize Page address: " INTPTR_FORMAT "]\n", (intptr_t)mem_serialize_page); 3393#endif 3394 } 3395 3396 os::large_page_init(); 3397 3398 // initialize suspend/resume support - must do this before signal_sets_init() 3399 if (SR_initialize() != 0) { 3400 perror("SR_initialize failed"); 3401 return JNI_ERR; 3402 } 3403 3404 Bsd::signal_sets_init(); 3405 Bsd::install_signal_handlers(); 3406 3407 // Check minimum allowable stack size for thread creation and to initialize 3408 // the java system classes, including StackOverflowError - depends on page 3409 // size. Add a page for compiler2 recursion in main thread. 3410 // Add in 2*BytesPerWord times page size to account for VM stack during 3411 // class initialization depending on 32 or 64 bit VM. 3412 os::Bsd::min_stack_allowed = MAX2(os::Bsd::min_stack_allowed, 3413 (size_t)(StackYellowPages+StackRedPages+StackShadowPages+ 3414 2*BytesPerWord COMPILER2_PRESENT(+1)) * Bsd::page_size()); 3415 3416 size_t threadStackSizeInBytes = ThreadStackSize * K; 3417 if (threadStackSizeInBytes != 0 && 3418 threadStackSizeInBytes < os::Bsd::min_stack_allowed) { 3419 tty->print_cr("\nThe stack size specified is too small, " 3420 "Specify at least %dk", 3421 os::Bsd::min_stack_allowed/ K); 3422 return JNI_ERR; 3423 } 3424 3425 // Make the stack size a multiple of the page size so that 3426 // the yellow/red zones can be guarded. 3427 JavaThread::set_stack_size_at_create(round_to(threadStackSizeInBytes, 3428 vm_page_size())); 3429 3430 if (MaxFDLimit) { 3431 // set the number of file descriptors to max. print out error 3432 // if getrlimit/setrlimit fails but continue regardless. 3433 struct rlimit nbr_files; 3434 int status = getrlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE, &nbr_files); 3435 if (status != 0) { 3436 if (PrintMiscellaneous && (Verbose || WizardMode)) 3437 perror("os::init_2 getrlimit failed"); 3438 } else { 3439 nbr_files.rlim_cur = nbr_files.rlim_max; 3440 3441#ifdef __APPLE__ 3442 // Darwin returns RLIM_INFINITY for rlim_max, but fails with EINVAL if 3443 // you attempt to use RLIM_INFINITY. As per setrlimit(2), OPEN_MAX must 3444 // be used instead 3445 nbr_files.rlim_cur = MIN(OPEN_MAX, nbr_files.rlim_cur); 3446#endif 3447 3448 status = setrlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE, &nbr_files); 3449 if (status != 0) { 3450 if (PrintMiscellaneous && (Verbose || WizardMode)) 3451 perror("os::init_2 setrlimit failed"); 3452 } 3453 } 3454 } 3455 3456 // at-exit methods are called in the reverse order of their registration. 3457 // atexit functions are called on return from main or as a result of a 3458 // call to exit(3C). There can be only 32 of these functions registered 3459 // and atexit() does not set errno. 3460 3461 if (PerfAllowAtExitRegistration) { 3462 // only register atexit functions if PerfAllowAtExitRegistration is set. 3463 // atexit functions can be delayed until process exit time, which 3464 // can be problematic for embedded VM situations. Embedded VMs should 3465 // call DestroyJavaVM() to assure that VM resources are released. 3466 3467 // note: perfMemory_exit_helper atexit function may be removed in 3468 // the future if the appropriate cleanup code can be added to the 3469 // VM_Exit VMOperation's doit method. 3470 if (atexit(perfMemory_exit_helper) != 0) { 3471 warning("os::init2 atexit(perfMemory_exit_helper) failed"); 3472 } 3473 } 3474 3475 // initialize thread priority policy 3476 prio_init(); 3477 3478#ifdef __APPLE__ 3479 // dynamically link to objective c gc registration 3480 void *handleLibObjc = dlopen(OBJC_LIB, RTLD_LAZY); 3481 if (handleLibObjc != NULL) { 3482 objc_registerThreadWithCollectorFunction = (objc_registerThreadWithCollector_t) dlsym(handleLibObjc, OBJC_GCREGISTER); 3483 } 3484#endif 3485 3486 return JNI_OK; 3487} 3488 3489// this is called at the end of vm_initialization 3490void os::init_3(void) { } 3491 3492// Mark the polling page as unreadable 3493void os::make_polling_page_unreadable(void) { 3494 if( !guard_memory((char*)_polling_page, Bsd::page_size()) ) 3495 fatal("Could not disable polling page"); 3496}; 3497 3498// Mark the polling page as readable 3499void os::make_polling_page_readable(void) { 3500 if( !bsd_mprotect((char *)_polling_page, Bsd::page_size(), PROT_READ)) { 3501 fatal("Could not enable polling page"); 3502 } 3503}; 3504 3505int os::active_processor_count() { 3506 return _processor_count; 3507} 3508 3509void os::set_native_thread_name(const char *name) { 3510#if defined(__APPLE__) && MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED > MAC_OS_X_VERSION_10_5 3511 // This is only supported in Snow Leopard and beyond 3512 if (name != NULL) { 3513 // Add a "Java: " prefix to the name 3514 char buf[MAXTHREADNAMESIZE]; 3515 snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "Java: %s", name); 3516 pthread_setname_np(buf); 3517 } 3518#endif 3519} 3520 3521bool os::distribute_processes(uint length, uint* distribution) { 3522 // Not yet implemented. 3523 return false; 3524} 3525 3526bool os::bind_to_processor(uint processor_id) { 3527 // Not yet implemented. 3528 return false; 3529} 3530 3531/// 3532 3533// Suspends the target using the signal mechanism and then grabs the PC before 3534// resuming the target. Used by the flat-profiler only 3535ExtendedPC os::get_thread_pc(Thread* thread) { 3536 // Make sure that it is called by the watcher for the VMThread 3537 assert(Thread::current()->is_Watcher_thread(), "Must be watcher"); 3538 assert(thread->is_VM_thread(), "Can only be called for VMThread"); 3539 3540 ExtendedPC epc; 3541 3542 OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread(); 3543 if (do_suspend(osthread)) { 3544 if (osthread->ucontext() != NULL) { 3545 epc = os::Bsd::ucontext_get_pc(osthread->ucontext()); 3546 } else { 3547 // NULL context is unexpected, double-check this is the VMThread 3548 guarantee(thread->is_VM_thread(), "can only be called for VMThread"); 3549 } 3550 do_resume(osthread); 3551 } 3552 // failure means pthread_kill failed for some reason - arguably this is 3553 // a fatal problem, but such problems are ignored elsewhere 3554 3555 return epc; 3556} 3557 3558int os::Bsd::safe_cond_timedwait(pthread_cond_t *_cond, pthread_mutex_t *_mutex, const struct timespec *_abstime) 3559{ 3560 return pthread_cond_timedwait(_cond, _mutex, _abstime); 3561} 3562 3563//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 3564// debug support 3565 3566static address same_page(address x, address y) { 3567 int page_bits = -os::vm_page_size(); 3568 if ((intptr_t(x) & page_bits) == (intptr_t(y) & page_bits)) 3569 return x; 3570 else if (x > y) 3571 return (address)(intptr_t(y) | ~page_bits) + 1; 3572 else 3573 return (address)(intptr_t(y) & page_bits); 3574} 3575 3576bool os::find(address addr, outputStream* st) { 3577 Dl_info dlinfo; 3578 memset(&dlinfo, 0, sizeof(dlinfo)); 3579 if (dladdr(addr, &dlinfo)) { 3580 st->print(PTR_FORMAT ": ", addr); 3581 if (dlinfo.dli_sname != NULL) { 3582 st->print("%s+%#x", dlinfo.dli_sname, 3583 addr - (intptr_t)dlinfo.dli_saddr); 3584 } else if (dlinfo.dli_fname) { 3585 st->print("<offset %#x>", addr - (intptr_t)dlinfo.dli_fbase); 3586 } else { 3587 st->print("<absolute address>"); 3588 } 3589 if (dlinfo.dli_fname) { 3590 st->print(" in %s", dlinfo.dli_fname); 3591 } 3592 if (dlinfo.dli_fbase) { 3593 st->print(" at " PTR_FORMAT, dlinfo.dli_fbase); 3594 } 3595 st->cr(); 3596 3597 if (Verbose) { 3598 // decode some bytes around the PC 3599 address begin = same_page(addr-40, addr); 3600 address end = same_page(addr+40, addr); 3601 address lowest = (address) dlinfo.dli_sname; 3602 if (!lowest) lowest = (address) dlinfo.dli_fbase; 3603 if (begin < lowest) begin = lowest; 3604 Dl_info dlinfo2; 3605 if (dladdr(end, &dlinfo2) && dlinfo2.dli_saddr != dlinfo.dli_saddr 3606 && end > dlinfo2.dli_saddr && dlinfo2.dli_saddr > begin) 3607 end = (address) dlinfo2.dli_saddr; 3608 Disassembler::decode(begin, end, st); 3609 } 3610 return true; 3611 } 3612 return false; 3613} 3614 3615//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 3616// misc 3617 3618// This does not do anything on Bsd. This is basically a hook for being 3619// able to use structured exception handling (thread-local exception filters) 3620// on, e.g., Win32. 3621void 3622os::os_exception_wrapper(java_call_t f, JavaValue* value, methodHandle* method, 3623 JavaCallArguments* args, Thread* thread) { 3624 f(value, method, args, thread); 3625} 3626 3627void os::print_statistics() { 3628} 3629 3630int os::message_box(const char* title, const char* message) { 3631 int i; 3632 fdStream err(defaultStream::error_fd()); 3633 for (i = 0; i < 78; i++) err.print_raw("="); 3634 err.cr(); 3635 err.print_raw_cr(title); 3636 for (i = 0; i < 78; i++) err.print_raw("-"); 3637 err.cr(); 3638 err.print_raw_cr(message); 3639 for (i = 0; i < 78; i++) err.print_raw("="); 3640 err.cr(); 3641 3642 char buf[16]; 3643 // Prevent process from exiting upon "read error" without consuming all CPU 3644 while (::read(0, buf, sizeof(buf)) <= 0) { ::sleep(100); } 3645 3646 return buf[0] == 'y' || buf[0] == 'Y'; 3647} 3648 3649int os::stat(const char *path, struct stat *sbuf) { 3650 char pathbuf[MAX_PATH]; 3651 if (strlen(path) > MAX_PATH - 1) { 3652 errno = ENAMETOOLONG; 3653 return -1; 3654 } 3655 os::native_path(strcpy(pathbuf, path)); 3656 return ::stat(pathbuf, sbuf); 3657} 3658 3659bool os::check_heap(bool force) { 3660 return true; 3661} 3662 3663int local_vsnprintf(char* buf, size_t count, const char* format, va_list args) { 3664 return ::vsnprintf(buf, count, format, args); 3665} 3666 3667// Is a (classpath) directory empty? 3668bool os::dir_is_empty(const char* path) { 3669 DIR *dir = NULL; 3670 struct dirent *ptr; 3671 3672 dir = opendir(path); 3673 if (dir == NULL) return true; 3674 3675 /* Scan the directory */ 3676 bool result = true; 3677 char buf[sizeof(struct dirent) + MAX_PATH]; 3678 while (result && (ptr = ::readdir(dir)) != NULL) { 3679 if (strcmp(ptr->d_name, ".") != 0 && strcmp(ptr->d_name, "..") != 0) { 3680 result = false; 3681 } 3682 } 3683 closedir(dir); 3684 return result; 3685} 3686 3687// This code originates from JDK's sysOpen and open64_w 3688// from src/solaris/hpi/src/system_md.c 3689 3690#ifndef O_DELETE 3691#define O_DELETE 0x10000 3692#endif 3693 3694// Open a file. Unlink the file immediately after open returns 3695// if the specified oflag has the O_DELETE flag set. 3696// O_DELETE is used only in j2se/src/share/native/java/util/zip/ZipFile.c 3697 3698int os::open(const char *path, int oflag, int mode) { 3699 3700 if (strlen(path) > MAX_PATH - 1) { 3701 errno = ENAMETOOLONG; 3702 return -1; 3703 } 3704 int fd; 3705 int o_delete = (oflag & O_DELETE); 3706 oflag = oflag & ~O_DELETE; 3707 3708 fd = ::open(path, oflag, mode); 3709 if (fd == -1) return -1; 3710 3711 //If the open succeeded, the file might still be a directory 3712 { 3713 struct stat buf; 3714 int ret = ::fstat(fd, &buf); 3715 int st_mode = buf.st_mode; 3716 3717 if (ret != -1) { 3718 if ((st_mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFDIR) { 3719 errno = EISDIR; 3720 ::close(fd); 3721 return -1; 3722 } 3723 } else { 3724 ::close(fd); 3725 return -1; 3726 } 3727 } 3728 3729 /* 3730 * All file descriptors that are opened in the JVM and not 3731 * specifically destined for a subprocess should have the 3732 * close-on-exec flag set. If we don't set it, then careless 3rd 3733 * party native code might fork and exec without closing all 3734 * appropriate file descriptors (e.g. as we do in closeDescriptors in 3735 * UNIXProcess.c), and this in turn might: 3736 * 3737 * - cause end-of-file to fail to be detected on some file 3738 * descriptors, resulting in mysterious hangs, or 3739 * 3740 * - might cause an fopen in the subprocess to fail on a system 3741 * suffering from bug 1085341. 3742 * 3743 * (Yes, the default setting of the close-on-exec flag is a Unix 3744 * design flaw) 3745 * 3746 * See: 3747 * 1085341: 32-bit stdio routines should support file descriptors >255 3748 * 4843136: (process) pipe file descriptor from Runtime.exec not being closed 3749 * 6339493: (process) Runtime.exec does not close all file descriptors on Solaris 9 3750 */ 3751#ifdef FD_CLOEXEC 3752 { 3753 int flags = ::fcntl(fd, F_GETFD); 3754 if (flags != -1) 3755 ::fcntl(fd, F_SETFD, flags | FD_CLOEXEC); 3756 } 3757#endif 3758 3759 if (o_delete != 0) { 3760 ::unlink(path); 3761 } 3762 return fd; 3763} 3764 3765 3766// create binary file, rewriting existing file if required 3767int os::create_binary_file(const char* path, bool rewrite_existing) { 3768 int oflags = O_WRONLY | O_CREAT; 3769 if (!rewrite_existing) { 3770 oflags |= O_EXCL; 3771 } 3772 return ::open(path, oflags, S_IREAD | S_IWRITE); 3773} 3774 3775// return current position of file pointer 3776jlong os::current_file_offset(int fd) { 3777 return (jlong)::lseek(fd, (off_t)0, SEEK_CUR); 3778} 3779 3780// move file pointer to the specified offset 3781jlong os::seek_to_file_offset(int fd, jlong offset) { 3782 return (jlong)::lseek(fd, (off_t)offset, SEEK_SET); 3783} 3784 3785// This code originates from JDK's sysAvailable 3786// from src/solaris/hpi/src/native_threads/src/sys_api_td.c 3787 3788int os::available(int fd, jlong *bytes) { 3789 jlong cur, end; 3790 int mode; 3791 struct stat buf; 3792 3793 if (::fstat(fd, &buf) >= 0) { 3794 mode = buf.st_mode; 3795 if (S_ISCHR(mode) || S_ISFIFO(mode) || S_ISSOCK(mode)) { 3796 /* 3797 * XXX: is the following call interruptible? If so, this might 3798 * need to go through the INTERRUPT_IO() wrapper as for other 3799 * blocking, interruptible calls in this file. 3800 */ 3801 int n; 3802 if (::ioctl(fd, FIONREAD, &n) >= 0) { 3803 *bytes = n; 3804 return 1; 3805 } 3806 } 3807 } 3808 if ((cur = ::lseek(fd, 0L, SEEK_CUR)) == -1) { 3809 return 0; 3810 } else if ((end = ::lseek(fd, 0L, SEEK_END)) == -1) { 3811 return 0; 3812 } else if (::lseek(fd, cur, SEEK_SET) == -1) { 3813 return 0; 3814 } 3815 *bytes = end - cur; 3816 return 1; 3817} 3818 3819int os::socket_available(int fd, jint *pbytes) { 3820 if (fd < 0) 3821 return OS_OK; 3822 3823 int ret; 3824 3825 RESTARTABLE(::ioctl(fd, FIONREAD, pbytes), ret); 3826 3827 //%% note ioctl can return 0 when successful, JVM_SocketAvailable 3828 // is expected to return 0 on failure and 1 on success to the jdk. 3829 3830 return (ret == OS_ERR) ? 0 : 1; 3831} 3832 3833// Map a block of memory. 3834char* os::pd_map_memory(int fd, const char* file_name, size_t file_offset, 3835 char *addr, size_t bytes, bool read_only, 3836 bool allow_exec) { 3837 int prot; 3838 int flags; 3839 3840 if (read_only) { 3841 prot = PROT_READ; 3842 flags = MAP_SHARED; 3843 } else { 3844 prot = PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE; 3845 flags = MAP_PRIVATE; 3846 } 3847 3848 if (allow_exec) { 3849 prot |= PROT_EXEC; 3850 } 3851 3852 if (addr != NULL) { 3853 flags |= MAP_FIXED; 3854 } 3855 3856 char* mapped_address = (char*)mmap(addr, (size_t)bytes, prot, flags, 3857 fd, file_offset); 3858 if (mapped_address == MAP_FAILED) { 3859 return NULL; 3860 } 3861 return mapped_address; 3862} 3863 3864 3865// Remap a block of memory. 3866char* os::pd_remap_memory(int fd, const char* file_name, size_t file_offset, 3867 char *addr, size_t bytes, bool read_only, 3868 bool allow_exec) { 3869 // same as map_memory() on this OS 3870 return os::map_memory(fd, file_name, file_offset, addr, bytes, read_only, 3871 allow_exec); 3872} 3873 3874 3875// Unmap a block of memory. 3876bool os::pd_unmap_memory(char* addr, size_t bytes) { 3877 return munmap(addr, bytes) == 0; 3878} 3879 3880// current_thread_cpu_time(bool) and thread_cpu_time(Thread*, bool) 3881// are used by JVM M&M and JVMTI to get user+sys or user CPU time 3882// of a thread. 3883// 3884// current_thread_cpu_time() and thread_cpu_time(Thread*) returns 3885// the fast estimate available on the platform. 3886 3887jlong os::current_thread_cpu_time() { 3888#ifdef __APPLE__ 3889 return os::thread_cpu_time(Thread::current(), true /* user + sys */); 3890#endif 3891} 3892 3893jlong os::thread_cpu_time(Thread* thread) { 3894} 3895 3896jlong os::current_thread_cpu_time(bool user_sys_cpu_time) { 3897#ifdef __APPLE__ 3898 return os::thread_cpu_time(Thread::current(), user_sys_cpu_time); 3899#endif 3900} 3901 3902jlong os::thread_cpu_time(Thread *thread, bool user_sys_cpu_time) { 3903#ifdef __APPLE__ 3904 struct thread_basic_info tinfo; 3905 mach_msg_type_number_t tcount = THREAD_INFO_MAX; 3906 kern_return_t kr; 3907 thread_t mach_thread; 3908 3909 mach_thread = thread->osthread()->thread_id(); 3910 kr = thread_info(mach_thread, THREAD_BASIC_INFO, (thread_info_t)&tinfo, &tcount); 3911 if (kr != KERN_SUCCESS) 3912 return -1; 3913 3914 if (user_sys_cpu_time) { 3915 jlong nanos; 3916 nanos = ((jlong) tinfo.system_time.seconds + tinfo.user_time.seconds) * (jlong)1000000000; 3917 nanos += ((jlong) tinfo.system_time.microseconds + (jlong) tinfo.user_time.microseconds) * (jlong)1000; 3918 return nanos; 3919 } else { 3920 return ((jlong)tinfo.user_time.seconds * 1000000000) + ((jlong)tinfo.user_time.microseconds * (jlong)1000); 3921 } 3922#endif 3923} 3924 3925 3926void os::current_thread_cpu_time_info(jvmtiTimerInfo *info_ptr) { 3927 info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS; // will not wrap in less than 64 bits 3928 info_ptr->may_skip_backward = false; // elapsed time not wall time 3929 info_ptr->may_skip_forward = false; // elapsed time not wall time 3930 info_ptr->kind = JVMTI_TIMER_TOTAL_CPU; // user+system time is returned 3931} 3932 3933void os::thread_cpu_time_info(jvmtiTimerInfo *info_ptr) { 3934 info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS; // will not wrap in less than 64 bits 3935 info_ptr->may_skip_backward = false; // elapsed time not wall time 3936 info_ptr->may_skip_forward = false; // elapsed time not wall time 3937 info_ptr->kind = JVMTI_TIMER_TOTAL_CPU; // user+system time is returned 3938} 3939 3940bool os::is_thread_cpu_time_supported() { 3941#ifdef __APPLE__ 3942 return true; 3943#else 3944 return false; 3945#endif 3946} 3947 3948// System loadavg support. Returns -1 if load average cannot be obtained. 3949// Bsd doesn't yet have a (official) notion of processor sets, 3950// so just return the system wide load average. 3951int os::loadavg(double loadavg[], int nelem) { 3952 return ::getloadavg(loadavg, nelem); 3953} 3954 3955void os::pause() { 3956 char filename[MAX_PATH]; 3957 if (PauseAtStartupFile && PauseAtStartupFile[0]) { 3958 jio_snprintf(filename, MAX_PATH, PauseAtStartupFile); 3959 } else { 3960 jio_snprintf(filename, MAX_PATH, "./vm.paused.%d", current_process_id()); 3961 } 3962 3963 int fd = ::open(filename, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC, 0666); 3964 if (fd != -1) { 3965 struct stat buf; 3966 ::close(fd); 3967 while (::stat(filename, &buf) == 0) { 3968 (void)::poll(NULL, 0, 100); 3969 } 3970 } else { 3971 jio_fprintf(stderr, 3972 "Could not open pause file '%s', continuing immediately.\n", filename); 3973 } 3974} 3975 3976 3977// Refer to the comments in os_solaris.cpp park-unpark. 3978// 3979// Beware -- Some versions of NPTL embody a flaw where pthread_cond_timedwait() can 3980// hang indefinitely. For instance NPTL 0.60 on 2.4.21-4ELsmp is vulnerable. 3981// For specifics regarding the bug see GLIBC BUGID 261237 : 3982// http://www.mail-archive.com/debian-glibc@lists.debian.org/msg10837.html. 3983// Briefly, pthread_cond_timedwait() calls with an expiry time that's not in the future 3984// will either hang or corrupt the condvar, resulting in subsequent hangs if the condvar 3985// is used. (The simple C test-case provided in the GLIBC bug report manifests the 3986// hang). The JVM is vulernable via sleep(), Object.wait(timo), LockSupport.parkNanos() 3987// and monitorenter when we're using 1-0 locking. All those operations may result in 3988// calls to pthread_cond_timedwait(). Using LD_ASSUME_KERNEL to use an older version 3989// of libpthread avoids the problem, but isn't practical. 3990// 3991// Possible remedies: 3992// 3993// 1. Establish a minimum relative wait time. 50 to 100 msecs seems to work. 3994// This is palliative and probabilistic, however. If the thread is preempted 3995// between the call to compute_abstime() and pthread_cond_timedwait(), more 3996// than the minimum period may have passed, and the abstime may be stale (in the 3997// past) resultin in a hang. Using this technique reduces the odds of a hang 3998// but the JVM is still vulnerable, particularly on heavily loaded systems. 3999// 4000// 2. Modify park-unpark to use per-thread (per ParkEvent) pipe-pairs instead 4001// of the usual flag-condvar-mutex idiom. The write side of the pipe is set 4002// NDELAY. unpark() reduces to write(), park() reduces to read() and park(timo) 4003// reduces to poll()+read(). This works well, but consumes 2 FDs per extant 4004// thread. 4005// 4006// 3. Embargo pthread_cond_timedwait() and implement a native "chron" thread 4007// that manages timeouts. We'd emulate pthread_cond_timedwait() by enqueuing 4008// a timeout request to the chron thread and then blocking via pthread_cond_wait(). 4009// This also works well. In fact it avoids kernel-level scalability impediments 4010// on certain platforms that don't handle lots of active pthread_cond_timedwait() 4011// timers in a graceful fashion. 4012// 4013// 4. When the abstime value is in the past it appears that control returns 4014// correctly from pthread_cond_timedwait(), but the condvar is left corrupt. 4015// Subsequent timedwait/wait calls may hang indefinitely. Given that, we 4016// can avoid the problem by reinitializing the condvar -- by cond_destroy() 4017// followed by cond_init() -- after all calls to pthread_cond_timedwait(). 4018// It may be possible to avoid reinitialization by checking the return 4019// value from pthread_cond_timedwait(). In addition to reinitializing the 4020// condvar we must establish the invariant that cond_signal() is only called 4021// within critical sections protected by the adjunct mutex. This prevents 4022// cond_signal() from "seeing" a condvar that's in the midst of being 4023// reinitialized or that is corrupt. Sadly, this invariant obviates the 4024// desirable signal-after-unlock optimization that avoids futile context switching. 4025// 4026// I'm also concerned that some versions of NTPL might allocate an auxilliary 4027// structure when a condvar is used or initialized. cond_destroy() would 4028// release the helper structure. Our reinitialize-after-timedwait fix 4029// put excessive stress on malloc/free and locks protecting the c-heap. 4030// 4031// We currently use (4). See the WorkAroundNTPLTimedWaitHang flag. 4032// It may be possible to refine (4) by checking the kernel and NTPL verisons 4033// and only enabling the work-around for vulnerable environments. 4034 4035// utility to compute the abstime argument to timedwait: 4036// millis is the relative timeout time 4037// abstime will be the absolute timeout time 4038// TODO: replace compute_abstime() with unpackTime() 4039 4040static struct timespec* compute_abstime(struct timespec* abstime, jlong millis) { 4041 if (millis < 0) millis = 0; 4042 struct timeval now; 4043 int status = gettimeofday(&now, NULL); 4044 assert(status == 0, "gettimeofday"); 4045 jlong seconds = millis / 1000; 4046 millis %= 1000; 4047 if (seconds > 50000000) { // see man cond_timedwait(3T) 4048 seconds = 50000000; 4049 } 4050 abstime->tv_sec = now.tv_sec + seconds; 4051 long usec = now.tv_usec + millis * 1000; 4052 if (usec >= 1000000) { 4053 abstime->tv_sec += 1; 4054 usec -= 1000000; 4055 } 4056 abstime->tv_nsec = usec * 1000; 4057 return abstime; 4058} 4059 4060 4061// Test-and-clear _Event, always leaves _Event set to 0, returns immediately. 4062// Conceptually TryPark() should be equivalent to park(0). 4063 4064int os::PlatformEvent::TryPark() { 4065 for (;;) { 4066 const int v = _Event ; 4067 guarantee ((v == 0) || (v == 1), "invariant") ; 4068 if (Atomic::cmpxchg (0, &_Event, v) == v) return v ; 4069 } 4070} 4071 4072void os::PlatformEvent::park() { // AKA "down()" 4073 // Invariant: Only the thread associated with the Event/PlatformEvent 4074 // may call park(). 4075 // TODO: assert that _Assoc != NULL or _Assoc == Self 4076 int v ; 4077 for (;;) { 4078 v = _Event ; 4079 if (Atomic::cmpxchg (v-1, &_Event, v) == v) break ; 4080 } 4081 guarantee (v >= 0, "invariant") ; 4082 if (v == 0) { 4083 // Do this the hard way by blocking ... 4084 int status = pthread_mutex_lock(_mutex); 4085 assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_lock"); 4086 guarantee (_nParked == 0, "invariant") ; 4087 ++ _nParked ; 4088 while (_Event < 0) { 4089 status = pthread_cond_wait(_cond, _mutex); 4090 // for some reason, under 2.7 lwp_cond_wait() may return ETIME ... 4091 // Treat this the same as if the wait was interrupted 4092 if (status == ETIMEDOUT) { status = EINTR; } 4093 assert_status(status == 0 || status == EINTR, status, "cond_wait"); 4094 } 4095 -- _nParked ; 4096 4097 // In theory we could move the ST of 0 into _Event past the unlock(), 4098 // but then we'd need a MEMBAR after the ST. 4099 _Event = 0 ; 4100 status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex); 4101 assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_unlock"); 4102 } 4103 guarantee (_Event >= 0, "invariant") ; 4104} 4105 4106int os::PlatformEvent::park(jlong millis) { 4107 guarantee (_nParked == 0, "invariant") ; 4108 4109 int v ; 4110 for (;;) { 4111 v = _Event ; 4112 if (Atomic::cmpxchg (v-1, &_Event, v) == v) break ; 4113 } 4114 guarantee (v >= 0, "invariant") ; 4115 if (v != 0) return OS_OK ; 4116 4117 // We do this the hard way, by blocking the thread. 4118 // Consider enforcing a minimum timeout value. 4119 struct timespec abst; 4120 compute_abstime(&abst, millis); 4121 4122 int ret = OS_TIMEOUT; 4123 int status = pthread_mutex_lock(_mutex); 4124 assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_lock"); 4125 guarantee (_nParked == 0, "invariant") ; 4126 ++_nParked ; 4127 4128 // Object.wait(timo) will return because of 4129 // (a) notification 4130 // (b) timeout 4131 // (c) thread.interrupt 4132 // 4133 // Thread.interrupt and object.notify{All} both call Event::set. 4134 // That is, we treat thread.interrupt as a special case of notification. 4135 // The underlying Solaris implementation, cond_timedwait, admits 4136 // spurious/premature wakeups, but the JLS/JVM spec prevents the 4137 // JVM from making those visible to Java code. As such, we must 4138 // filter out spurious wakeups. We assume all ETIME returns are valid. 4139 // 4140 // TODO: properly differentiate simultaneous notify+interrupt. 4141 // In that case, we should propagate the notify to another waiter. 4142 4143 while (_Event < 0) { 4144 status = os::Bsd::safe_cond_timedwait(_cond, _mutex, &abst); 4145 if (status != 0 && WorkAroundNPTLTimedWaitHang) { 4146 pthread_cond_destroy (_cond); 4147 pthread_cond_init (_cond, NULL) ; 4148 } 4149 assert_status(status == 0 || status == EINTR || 4150 status == ETIMEDOUT, 4151 status, "cond_timedwait"); 4152 if (!FilterSpuriousWakeups) break ; // previous semantics 4153 if (status == ETIMEDOUT) break ; 4154 // We consume and ignore EINTR and spurious wakeups. 4155 } 4156 --_nParked ; 4157 if (_Event >= 0) { 4158 ret = OS_OK; 4159 } 4160 _Event = 0 ; 4161 status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex); 4162 assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_unlock"); 4163 assert (_nParked == 0, "invariant") ; 4164 return ret; 4165} 4166 4167void os::PlatformEvent::unpark() { 4168 int v, AnyWaiters ; 4169 for (;;) { 4170 v = _Event ; 4171 if (v > 0) { 4172 // The LD of _Event could have reordered or be satisfied 4173 // by a read-aside from this processor's write buffer. 4174 // To avoid problems execute a barrier and then 4175 // ratify the value. 4176 OrderAccess::fence() ; 4177 if (_Event == v) return ; 4178 continue ; 4179 } 4180 if (Atomic::cmpxchg (v+1, &_Event, v) == v) break ; 4181 } 4182 if (v < 0) { 4183 // Wait for the thread associated with the event to vacate 4184 int status = pthread_mutex_lock(_mutex); 4185 assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_lock"); 4186 AnyWaiters = _nParked ; 4187 assert (AnyWaiters == 0 || AnyWaiters == 1, "invariant") ; 4188 if (AnyWaiters != 0 && WorkAroundNPTLTimedWaitHang) { 4189 AnyWaiters = 0 ; 4190 pthread_cond_signal (_cond); 4191 } 4192 status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex); 4193 assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_unlock"); 4194 if (AnyWaiters != 0) { 4195 status = pthread_cond_signal(_cond); 4196 assert_status(status == 0, status, "cond_signal"); 4197 } 4198 } 4199 4200 // Note that we signal() _after dropping the lock for "immortal" Events. 4201 // This is safe and avoids a common class of futile wakeups. In rare 4202 // circumstances this can cause a thread to return prematurely from 4203 // cond_{timed}wait() but the spurious wakeup is benign and the victim will 4204 // simply re-test the condition and re-park itself. 4205} 4206 4207 4208// JSR166 4209// ------------------------------------------------------- 4210 4211/* 4212 * The solaris and bsd implementations of park/unpark are fairly 4213 * conservative for now, but can be improved. They currently use a 4214 * mutex/condvar pair, plus a a count. 4215 * Park decrements count if > 0, else does a condvar wait. Unpark 4216 * sets count to 1 and signals condvar. Only one thread ever waits 4217 * on the condvar. Contention seen when trying to park implies that someone 4218 * is unparking you, so don't wait. And spurious returns are fine, so there 4219 * is no need to track notifications. 4220 */ 4221 4222#define MAX_SECS 100000000 4223/* 4224 * This code is common to bsd and solaris and will be moved to a 4225 * common place in dolphin. 4226 * 4227 * The passed in time value is either a relative time in nanoseconds 4228 * or an absolute time in milliseconds. Either way it has to be unpacked 4229 * into suitable seconds and nanoseconds components and stored in the 4230 * given timespec structure. 4231 * Given time is a 64-bit value and the time_t used in the timespec is only 4232 * a signed-32-bit value (except on 64-bit Bsd) we have to watch for 4233 * overflow if times way in the future are given. Further on Solaris versions 4234 * prior to 10 there is a restriction (see cond_timedwait) that the specified 4235 * number of seconds, in abstime, is less than current_time + 100,000,000. 4236 * As it will be 28 years before "now + 100000000" will overflow we can 4237 * ignore overflow and just impose a hard-limit on seconds using the value 4238 * of "now + 100,000,000". This places a limit on the timeout of about 3.17 4239 * years from "now". 4240 */ 4241 4242static void unpackTime(struct timespec* absTime, bool isAbsolute, jlong time) { 4243 assert (time > 0, "convertTime"); 4244 4245 struct timeval now; 4246 int status = gettimeofday(&now, NULL); 4247 assert(status == 0, "gettimeofday"); 4248 4249 time_t max_secs = now.tv_sec + MAX_SECS; 4250 4251 if (isAbsolute) { 4252 jlong secs = time / 1000; 4253 if (secs > max_secs) { 4254 absTime->tv_sec = max_secs; 4255 } 4256 else { 4257 absTime->tv_sec = secs; 4258 } 4259 absTime->tv_nsec = (time % 1000) * NANOSECS_PER_MILLISEC; 4260 } 4261 else { 4262 jlong secs = time / NANOSECS_PER_SEC; 4263 if (secs >= MAX_SECS) { 4264 absTime->tv_sec = max_secs; 4265 absTime->tv_nsec = 0; 4266 } 4267 else { 4268 absTime->tv_sec = now.tv_sec + secs; 4269 absTime->tv_nsec = (time % NANOSECS_PER_SEC) + now.tv_usec*1000; 4270 if (absTime->tv_nsec >= NANOSECS_PER_SEC) { 4271 absTime->tv_nsec -= NANOSECS_PER_SEC; 4272 ++absTime->tv_sec; // note: this must be <= max_secs 4273 } 4274 } 4275 } 4276 assert(absTime->tv_sec >= 0, "tv_sec < 0"); 4277 assert(absTime->tv_sec <= max_secs, "tv_sec > max_secs"); 4278 assert(absTime->tv_nsec >= 0, "tv_nsec < 0"); 4279 assert(absTime->tv_nsec < NANOSECS_PER_SEC, "tv_nsec >= nanos_per_sec"); 4280} 4281 4282void Parker::park(bool isAbsolute, jlong time) { 4283 // Optional fast-path check: 4284 // Return immediately if a permit is available. 4285 if (_counter > 0) { 4286 _counter = 0 ; 4287 OrderAccess::fence(); 4288 return ; 4289 } 4290 4291 Thread* thread = Thread::current(); 4292 assert(thread->is_Java_thread(), "Must be JavaThread"); 4293 JavaThread *jt = (JavaThread *)thread; 4294 4295 // Optional optimization -- avoid state transitions if there's an interrupt pending. 4296 // Check interrupt before trying to wait 4297 if (Thread::is_interrupted(thread, false)) { 4298 return; 4299 } 4300 4301 // Next, demultiplex/decode time arguments 4302 struct timespec absTime; 4303 if (time < 0 || (isAbsolute && time == 0) ) { // don't wait at all 4304 return; 4305 } 4306 if (time > 0) { 4307 unpackTime(&absTime, isAbsolute, time); 4308 } 4309 4310 4311 // Enter safepoint region 4312 // Beware of deadlocks such as 6317397. 4313 // The per-thread Parker:: mutex is a classic leaf-lock. 4314 // In particular a thread must never block on the Threads_lock while 4315 // holding the Parker:: mutex. If safepoints are pending both the 4316 // the ThreadBlockInVM() CTOR and DTOR may grab Threads_lock. 4317 ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(jt); 4318 4319 // Don't wait if cannot get lock since interference arises from 4320 // unblocking. Also. check interrupt before trying wait 4321 if (Thread::is_interrupted(thread, false) || pthread_mutex_trylock(_mutex) != 0) { 4322 return; 4323 } 4324 4325 int status ; 4326 if (_counter > 0) { // no wait needed 4327 _counter = 0; 4328 status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex); 4329 assert (status == 0, "invariant") ; 4330 OrderAccess::fence(); 4331 return; 4332 } 4333 4334#ifdef ASSERT 4335 // Don't catch signals while blocked; let the running threads have the signals. 4336 // (This allows a debugger to break into the running thread.) 4337 sigset_t oldsigs; 4338 sigset_t* allowdebug_blocked = os::Bsd::allowdebug_blocked_signals(); 4339 pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, allowdebug_blocked, &oldsigs); 4340#endif 4341 4342 OSThreadWaitState osts(thread->osthread(), false /* not Object.wait() */); 4343 jt->set_suspend_equivalent(); 4344 // cleared by handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition() or java_suspend_self() 4345 4346 if (time == 0) { 4347 status = pthread_cond_wait (_cond, _mutex) ; 4348 } else { 4349 status = os::Bsd::safe_cond_timedwait (_cond, _mutex, &absTime) ; 4350 if (status != 0 && WorkAroundNPTLTimedWaitHang) { 4351 pthread_cond_destroy (_cond) ; 4352 pthread_cond_init (_cond, NULL); 4353 } 4354 } 4355 assert_status(status == 0 || status == EINTR || 4356 status == ETIMEDOUT, 4357 status, "cond_timedwait"); 4358 4359#ifdef ASSERT 4360 pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, &oldsigs, NULL); 4361#endif 4362 4363 _counter = 0 ; 4364 status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex) ; 4365 assert_status(status == 0, status, "invariant") ; 4366 // If externally suspended while waiting, re-suspend 4367 if (jt->handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition()) { 4368 jt->java_suspend_self(); 4369 } 4370 4371 OrderAccess::fence(); 4372} 4373 4374void Parker::unpark() { 4375 int s, status ; 4376 status = pthread_mutex_lock(_mutex); 4377 assert (status == 0, "invariant") ; 4378 s = _counter; 4379 _counter = 1; 4380 if (s < 1) { 4381 if (WorkAroundNPTLTimedWaitHang) { 4382 status = pthread_cond_signal (_cond) ; 4383 assert (status == 0, "invariant") ; 4384 status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex); 4385 assert (status == 0, "invariant") ; 4386 } else { 4387 status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex); 4388 assert (status == 0, "invariant") ; 4389 status = pthread_cond_signal (_cond) ; 4390 assert (status == 0, "invariant") ; 4391 } 4392 } else { 4393 pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex); 4394 assert (status == 0, "invariant") ; 4395 } 4396} 4397 4398 4399/* Darwin has no "environ" in a dynamic library. */ 4400#ifdef __APPLE__ 4401#include <crt_externs.h> 4402#define environ (*_NSGetEnviron()) 4403#else 4404extern char** environ; 4405#endif 4406 4407// Run the specified command in a separate process. Return its exit value, 4408// or -1 on failure (e.g. can't fork a new process). 4409// Unlike system(), this function can be called from signal handler. It 4410// doesn't block SIGINT et al. 4411int os::fork_and_exec(char* cmd) { 4412 const char * argv[4] = {"sh", "-c", cmd, NULL}; 4413 4414 // fork() in BsdThreads/NPTL is not async-safe. It needs to run 4415 // pthread_atfork handlers and reset pthread library. All we need is a 4416 // separate process to execve. Make a direct syscall to fork process. 4417 // On IA64 there's no fork syscall, we have to use fork() and hope for 4418 // the best... 4419 pid_t pid = fork(); 4420 4421 if (pid < 0) { 4422 // fork failed 4423 return -1; 4424 4425 } else if (pid == 0) { 4426 // child process 4427 4428 // execve() in BsdThreads will call pthread_kill_other_threads_np() 4429 // first to kill every thread on the thread list. Because this list is 4430 // not reset by fork() (see notes above), execve() will instead kill 4431 // every thread in the parent process. We know this is the only thread 4432 // in the new process, so make a system call directly. 4433 // IA64 should use normal execve() from glibc to match the glibc fork() 4434 // above. 4435 execve("/bin/sh", (char* const*)argv, environ); 4436 4437 // execve failed 4438 _exit(-1); 4439 4440 } else { 4441 // copied from J2SE ..._waitForProcessExit() in UNIXProcess_md.c; we don't 4442 // care about the actual exit code, for now. 4443 4444 int status; 4445 4446 // Wait for the child process to exit. This returns immediately if 4447 // the child has already exited. */ 4448 while (waitpid(pid, &status, 0) < 0) { 4449 switch (errno) { 4450 case ECHILD: return 0; 4451 case EINTR: break; 4452 default: return -1; 4453 } 4454 } 4455 4456 if (WIFEXITED(status)) { 4457 // The child exited normally; get its exit code. 4458 return WEXITSTATUS(status); 4459 } else if (WIFSIGNALED(status)) { 4460 // The child exited because of a signal 4461 // The best value to return is 0x80 + signal number, 4462 // because that is what all Unix shells do, and because 4463 // it allows callers to distinguish between process exit and 4464 // process death by signal. 4465 return 0x80 + WTERMSIG(status); 4466 } else { 4467 // Unknown exit code; pass it through 4468 return status; 4469 } 4470 } 4471} 4472 4473// is_headless_jre() 4474// 4475// Test for the existence of xawt/libmawt.so or libawt_xawt.so 4476// in order to report if we are running in a headless jre 4477// 4478// Since JDK8 xawt/libmawt.so was moved into the same directory 4479// as libawt.so, and renamed libawt_xawt.so 4480// 4481bool os::is_headless_jre() { 4482 struct stat statbuf; 4483 char buf[MAXPATHLEN]; 4484 char libmawtpath[MAXPATHLEN]; 4485 const char *xawtstr = "/xawt/libmawt" JNI_LIB_SUFFIX; 4486 const char *new_xawtstr = "/libawt_xawt" JNI_LIB_SUFFIX; 4487 char *p; 4488 4489 // Get path to libjvm.so 4490 os::jvm_path(buf, sizeof(buf)); 4491 4492 // Get rid of libjvm.so 4493 p = strrchr(buf, '/'); 4494 if (p == NULL) return false; 4495 else *p = '\0'; 4496 4497 // Get rid of client or server 4498 p = strrchr(buf, '/'); 4499 if (p == NULL) return false; 4500 else *p = '\0'; 4501 4502 // check xawt/libmawt.so 4503 strcpy(libmawtpath, buf); 4504 strcat(libmawtpath, xawtstr); 4505 if (::stat(libmawtpath, &statbuf) == 0) return false; 4506 4507 // check libawt_xawt.so 4508 strcpy(libmawtpath, buf); 4509 strcat(libmawtpath, new_xawtstr); 4510 if (::stat(libmawtpath, &statbuf) == 0) return false; 4511 4512 return true; 4513} 4514 4515// Get the default path to the core file 4516// Returns the length of the string 4517int os::get_core_path(char* buffer, size_t bufferSize) { 4518 int n = jio_snprintf(buffer, bufferSize, "/cores"); 4519 4520 // Truncate if theoretical string was longer than bufferSize 4521 n = MIN2(n, (int)bufferSize); 4522 4523 return n; 4524} 4525