Date: Mon, 07 Jan 2013 22:33:58 -0800 From: Richard Sharpe <rsharpe@richardsharpe.com> To: David Xu <davidxu@freebsd.org> Cc: freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Is it possible to block pending queued RealTime signals (AIO originating)? Message-ID: <1357626838.6752.27.camel@localhost.localdomain> In-Reply-To: <50EB888A.2030802@freebsd.org> References: <1357608470.6752.22.camel@localhost.localdomain> <50EB888A.2030802@freebsd.org>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On Tue, 2013-01-08 at 10:46 +0800, David Xu wrote: > On 2013/01/08 09:27, Richard Sharpe wrote: > > Hi folks, > > > > I am running into a problem with AIO in Samba 3.6.x under FreeBSD 8.0 > > and I want to check if the assumptions made by the original coder are > > correct. > > > > Essentially, the code queues a number of AIO requests (up to 100) and > > specifies an RT signal to be sent upon completion with siginfo_t. > > > > These are placed into an array. > > > > The code assumes that when handling one of these signals, if it has > > already received N such siginfo_t structures, it can BLOCK further > > instances of the signal while these structures are drained by the main > > code in Samba. > > > > However, my debugging suggests that if a bunch of signals have already > > been queued, you cannot block those undelivered but already queued > > signals. > > > > I am certain that they are all being delivered to the main thread and > > that they keep coming despite the code trying to stop them at 64 (they > > get all the way up to the 100 that were queued.) > > > > Can someone confirm whether I have this correct or not? > > > > I am curious that how the code BLOCKs the signal in its signal handler ? > AFAIK, after signal handler returned, original signal mask is restored, > and re-enables the signal delivering, unless you change it in > ucontext.uc_sigmask. It does try to block the signals in the signal handler using the following code (in the signal handler): if (count+1 == TEVENT_SA_INFO_QUEUE_COUNT) { /* we've filled the info array - block this signal until these ones are delivered */ sigset_t set; sigemptyset(&set); sigaddset(&set, signum); sigprocmask(SIG_BLOCK, &set, NULL); However, I also added pthread_sigmask with the same parameters to see if that made any difference and it seemed not to.
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?1357626838.6752.27.camel>