* Daniel Eischen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [011204 12:32] wrote: > Alfred Perlstein wrote: > > > > * Dan Eischen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [011204 06:26] wrote: > > > > > > There are already cancellation tests when resuming threads > > > whose contexts are not saved as a result of a signal interrupt > > > (ctxtype != CTX_UC). You shouldn't test for cancellation when > > > ctxtype == CTX_UC because you are running on the scheduler > > > stack, not the threads stack. > > > > That makes sense, but why? > > Because when a thread gets cancelled, pthread_exit gets called > which then calls the scheduler again. It is also possible to > get interrupted during this process and the threads context > (which is operating on the scheduler stack) could get saved. > The scheduler could get entered again, and if the thread > gets resumed, it'll longjmp to the saved context which is the > scheduler stack (and which was just trashed by entering the > scheduler again). > > It is too confusing to try to handle conditions like this, and > the threads library doesn't need to get any more confusing ;-) > Once the scheduler is entered, no pthread routines should > be called and the scheduler should not be recursively > entered. The only way out of the scheduler should be a > longjmp or sigreturn to a saved threads context.
Ok, for the sake of beating a clue into me... in uthread_kern.c:_thread_kern_sched /* Save the state of the current thread: */ if (_setjmp(curthread->ctx.jb) == 0) { /* Flag the jump buffer was the last state saved: */ curthread->ctxtype = CTX_JB_NOSIG; curthread->longjmp_val = 1; } else { DBG_MSG("Returned from ___longjmp, thread %p\n", curthread); /* * This point is reached when a longjmp() is called * to restore the state of a thread. * * This is the normal way out of the scheduler. */ _thread_kern_in_sched = 0; if (curthread->sig_defer_count == 0) { if (((curthread->cancelflags & PTHREAD_AT_CANCEL_POINT) == 0) && ((curthread->cancelflags & PTHREAD_CANCEL_ASYNCHRONOUS) != 0)) /* * Cancellations override signals. * * Stick a cancellation point at the * start of each async-cancellable * thread's resumption. * * We allow threads woken at cancel * points to do their own checks. */ pthread_testcancel(); } Why isn't this "working", shouldn't it be doing the right thing? What if curthread->sig_defer_count wasn't tested? Maybe this should be a test against curthread->sig_defer_count <= 1? I'll play with this some more when I get back to my box at home, it just seems bizarro to me. -- -Alfred Perlstein [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 'Instead of asking why a piece of software is using "1970s technology," start asking why software is ignoring 30 years of accumulated wisdom.' http://www.morons.org/rants/gpl-harmful.php3 To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message