view src/os/unix/ngx_gcc_atomic_x86.h @ 9270:3d455e37abf8

Core: PID file writing synchronization. Now, ngx_daemon() does not call exit() in the parent process immediately, but instead waits for the child process to signal it actually started (and wrote the PID file if configured to). This ensures that the PID file already exists when the parent process exits. To make sure that signal handlers won't cause unexpected logging in the parent process if the child process dies (for example, due to errors when writing the PID file), ngx_init_signals() is moved to the child process. This resolves "PID file ... not readable (yet?) after start" and "Failed to parse PID from file..." errors as observed with systemd. Note that the errors observed are considered to be a bug in systemd, which isn't able to work properly with traditional Unix daemons. Still, the workaround is implemented to make sure there will be no OS vendor patches trying to address this.
author Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru>
date Mon, 13 May 2024 06:13:22 +0300
parents d620f497c50f
children
line wrap: on
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/*
 * Copyright (C) Igor Sysoev
 * Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc.
 */


#if (NGX_SMP)
#define NGX_SMP_LOCK  "lock;"
#else
#define NGX_SMP_LOCK
#endif


/*
 * "cmpxchgl  r, [m]":
 *
 *     if (eax == [m]) {
 *         zf = 1;
 *         [m] = r;
 *     } else {
 *         zf = 0;
 *         eax = [m];
 *     }
 *
 *
 * The "r" means the general register.
 * The "=a" and "a" are the %eax register.
 * Although we can return result in any register, we use "a" because it is
 * used in cmpxchgl anyway.  The result is actually in %al but not in %eax,
 * however, as the code is inlined gcc can test %al as well as %eax,
 * and icc adds "movzbl %al, %eax" by itself.
 *
 * The "cc" means that flags were changed.
 */

static ngx_inline ngx_atomic_uint_t
ngx_atomic_cmp_set(ngx_atomic_t *lock, ngx_atomic_uint_t old,
    ngx_atomic_uint_t set)
{
    u_char  res;

    __asm__ volatile (

         NGX_SMP_LOCK
    "    cmpxchgl  %3, %1;   "
    "    sete      %0;       "

    : "=a" (res) : "m" (*lock), "a" (old), "r" (set) : "cc", "memory");

    return res;
}


/*
 * "xaddl  r, [m]":
 *
 *     temp = [m];
 *     [m] += r;
 *     r = temp;
 *
 *
 * The "+r" means the general register.
 * The "cc" means that flags were changed.
 */


#if !(( __GNUC__ == 2 && __GNUC_MINOR__ <= 7 ) || ( __INTEL_COMPILER >= 800 ))

/*
 * icc 8.1 and 9.0 compile broken code with -march=pentium4 option:
 * ngx_atomic_fetch_add() always return the input "add" value,
 * so we use the gcc 2.7 version.
 *
 * icc 8.1 and 9.0 with -march=pentiumpro option or icc 7.1 compile
 * correct code.
 */

static ngx_inline ngx_atomic_int_t
ngx_atomic_fetch_add(ngx_atomic_t *value, ngx_atomic_int_t add)
{
    __asm__ volatile (

         NGX_SMP_LOCK
    "    xaddl  %0, %1;   "

    : "+r" (add) : "m" (*value) : "cc", "memory");

    return add;
}


#else

/*
 * gcc 2.7 does not support "+r", so we have to use the fixed
 * %eax ("=a" and "a") and this adds two superfluous instructions in the end
 * of code, something like this: "mov %eax, %edx / mov %edx, %eax".
 */

static ngx_inline ngx_atomic_int_t
ngx_atomic_fetch_add(ngx_atomic_t *value, ngx_atomic_int_t add)
{
    ngx_atomic_uint_t  old;

    __asm__ volatile (

         NGX_SMP_LOCK
    "    xaddl  %2, %1;   "

    : "=a" (old) : "m" (*value), "a" (add) : "cc", "memory");

    return old;
}

#endif


/*
 * on x86 the write operations go in a program order, so we need only
 * to disable the gcc reorder optimizations
 */

#define ngx_memory_barrier()    __asm__ volatile ("" ::: "memory")

/* old "as" does not support "pause" opcode */
#define ngx_cpu_pause()         __asm__ (".byte 0xf3, 0x90")