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go/src/runtime/os_netbsd.go

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// Copyright 2014 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different. This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing results on the stack, after the arguments. [Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't know where on the stack the arguments end.] By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that function or which languages it calls. This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go. This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the conversion. Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten. Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on the less used systems like openbsd. These were found by go vet and have been corrected too. If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems. Tested on: darwin/386 darwin/amd64 linux/arm linux/386 linux/amd64 If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested by the combination of the above systems. LGTM=dvyukov, iant R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package runtime
import (
"runtime/internal/atomic"
"unsafe"
)
const (
_SS_DISABLE = 4
_SIG_BLOCK = 1
_SIG_UNBLOCK = 2
_SIG_SETMASK = 3
_NSIG = 33
_SI_USER = 0
// From NetBSD's <sys/ucontext.h>
_UC_SIGMASK = 0x01
_UC_CPU = 0x04
_EAGAIN = 35
)
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different. This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing results on the stack, after the arguments. [Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't know where on the stack the arguments end.] By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that function or which languages it calls. This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go. This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the conversion. Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten. Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on the less used systems like openbsd. These were found by go vet and have been corrected too. If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems. Tested on: darwin/386 darwin/amd64 linux/arm linux/386 linux/amd64 If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested by the combination of the above systems. LGTM=dvyukov, iant R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
type mOS struct {
waitsemacount uint32
}
//go:noescape
func setitimer(mode int32, new, old *itimerval)
//go:noescape
func sigaction(sig int32, new, old *sigactiont)
//go:noescape
func sigaltstack(new, old *sigaltstackt)
//go:noescape
func sigprocmask(mode int32, new, old *sigset)
//go:noescape
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different. This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing results on the stack, after the arguments. [Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't know where on the stack the arguments end.] By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that function or which languages it calls. This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go. This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the conversion. Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten. Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on the less used systems like openbsd. These were found by go vet and have been corrected too. If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems. Tested on: darwin/386 darwin/amd64 linux/arm linux/386 linux/amd64 If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested by the combination of the above systems. LGTM=dvyukov, iant R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
func sysctl(mib *uint32, miblen uint32, out *byte, size *uintptr, dst *byte, ndst uintptr) int32
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different. This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing results on the stack, after the arguments. [Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't know where on the stack the arguments end.] By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that function or which languages it calls. This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go. This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the conversion. Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten. Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on the less used systems like openbsd. These were found by go vet and have been corrected too. If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems. Tested on: darwin/386 darwin/amd64 linux/arm linux/386 linux/amd64 If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested by the combination of the above systems. LGTM=dvyukov, iant R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
func lwp_tramp()
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different. This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing results on the stack, after the arguments. [Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't know where on the stack the arguments end.] By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that function or which languages it calls. This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go. This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the conversion. Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten. Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on the less used systems like openbsd. These were found by go vet and have been corrected too. If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems. Tested on: darwin/386 darwin/amd64 linux/arm linux/386 linux/amd64 If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested by the combination of the above systems. LGTM=dvyukov, iant R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
func raise(sig int32)
func raiseproc(sig int32)
//go:noescape
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different. This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing results on the stack, after the arguments. [Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't know where on the stack the arguments end.] By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that function or which languages it calls. This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go. This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the conversion. Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten. Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on the less used systems like openbsd. These were found by go vet and have been corrected too. If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems. Tested on: darwin/386 darwin/amd64 linux/arm linux/386 linux/amd64 If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested by the combination of the above systems. LGTM=dvyukov, iant R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
func getcontext(ctxt unsafe.Pointer)
//go:noescape
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different. This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing results on the stack, after the arguments. [Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't know where on the stack the arguments end.] By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that function or which languages it calls. This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go. This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the conversion. Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten. Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on the less used systems like openbsd. These were found by go vet and have been corrected too. If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems. Tested on: darwin/386 darwin/amd64 linux/arm linux/386 linux/amd64 If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested by the combination of the above systems. LGTM=dvyukov, iant R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
func lwp_create(ctxt unsafe.Pointer, flags uintptr, lwpid unsafe.Pointer) int32
//go:noescape
func lwp_park(abstime *timespec, unpark int32, hint, unparkhint unsafe.Pointer) int32
//go:noescape
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different. This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing results on the stack, after the arguments. [Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't know where on the stack the arguments end.] By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that function or which languages it calls. This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go. This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the conversion. Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten. Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on the less used systems like openbsd. These were found by go vet and have been corrected too. If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems. Tested on: darwin/386 darwin/amd64 linux/arm linux/386 linux/amd64 If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested by the combination of the above systems. LGTM=dvyukov, iant R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
func lwp_unpark(lwp int32, hint unsafe.Pointer) int32
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different. This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing results on the stack, after the arguments. [Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't know where on the stack the arguments end.] By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that function or which languages it calls. This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go. This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the conversion. Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten. Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on the less used systems like openbsd. These were found by go vet and have been corrected too. If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems. Tested on: darwin/386 darwin/amd64 linux/arm linux/386 linux/amd64 If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested by the combination of the above systems. LGTM=dvyukov, iant R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
func lwp_self() int32
func osyield()
const (
_ESRCH = 3
_ETIMEDOUT = 60
// From NetBSD's <sys/time.h>
_CLOCK_REALTIME = 0
_CLOCK_VIRTUAL = 1
_CLOCK_PROF = 2
_CLOCK_MONOTONIC = 3
)
var sigset_all = sigset{[4]uint32{^uint32(0), ^uint32(0), ^uint32(0), ^uint32(0)}}
// From NetBSD's <sys/sysctl.h>
const (
_CTL_HW = 6
_HW_NCPU = 3
_HW_PAGESIZE = 7
)
func getncpu() int32 {
mib := [2]uint32{_CTL_HW, _HW_NCPU}
out := uint32(0)
nout := unsafe.Sizeof(out)
ret := sysctl(&mib[0], 2, (*byte)(unsafe.Pointer(&out)), &nout, nil, 0)
if ret >= 0 {
return int32(out)
}
return 1
}
func getPageSize() uintptr {
mib := [2]uint32{_CTL_HW, _HW_PAGESIZE}
out := uint32(0)
nout := unsafe.Sizeof(out)
ret := sysctl(&mib[0], 2, (*byte)(unsafe.Pointer(&out)), &nout, nil, 0)
if ret >= 0 {
return uintptr(out)
}
return 0
}
//go:nosplit
func semacreate(mp *m) {
}
//go:nosplit
func semasleep(ns int64) int32 {
_g_ := getg()
// Compute sleep deadline.
var tsp *timespec
if ns >= 0 {
var ts timespec
var nsec int32
ns += nanotime()
ts.set_sec(timediv(ns, 1000000000, &nsec))
ts.set_nsec(nsec)
tsp = &ts
}
for {
v := atomic.Load(&_g_.m.waitsemacount)
if v > 0 {
if atomic.Cas(&_g_.m.waitsemacount, v, v-1) {
return 0 // semaphore acquired
}
continue
}
// Sleep until unparked by semawakeup or timeout.
ret := lwp_park(tsp, 0, unsafe.Pointer(&_g_.m.waitsemacount), nil)
if ret == _ETIMEDOUT {
return -1
}
}
}
//go:nosplit
func semawakeup(mp *m) {
atomic.Xadd(&mp.waitsemacount, 1)
// From NetBSD's _lwp_unpark(2) manual:
// "If the target LWP is not currently waiting, it will return
// immediately upon the next call to _lwp_park()."
ret := lwp_unpark(int32(mp.procid), unsafe.Pointer(&mp.waitsemacount))
if ret != 0 && ret != _ESRCH {
// semawakeup can be called on signal stack.
systemstack(func() {
print("thrwakeup addr=", &mp.waitsemacount, " sem=", mp.waitsemacount, " ret=", ret, "\n")
})
}
}
// May run with m.p==nil, so write barriers are not allowed.
//go:nowritebarrier
func newosproc(mp *m, stk unsafe.Pointer) {
if false {
print("newosproc stk=", stk, " m=", mp, " g=", mp.g0, " id=", mp.id, " ostk=", &mp, "\n")
}
var uc ucontextt
getcontext(unsafe.Pointer(&uc))
uc.uc_flags = _UC_SIGMASK | _UC_CPU
uc.uc_link = nil
uc.uc_sigmask = sigset_all
lwp_mcontext_init(&uc.uc_mcontext, stk, mp, mp.g0, funcPC(netbsdMstart))
ret := lwp_create(unsafe.Pointer(&uc), 0, unsafe.Pointer(&mp.procid))
if ret < 0 {
print("runtime: failed to create new OS thread (have ", mcount()-1, " already; errno=", -ret, ")\n")
if ret == -_EAGAIN {
println("runtime: may need to increase max user processes (ulimit -p)")
}
throw("runtime.newosproc")
}
}
// netbsdMStart is the function call that starts executing a newly
// created thread. On NetBSD, a new thread inherits the signal stack
// of the creating thread. That confuses minit, so we remove that
// signal stack here before calling the regular mstart. It's a bit
// baroque to remove a signal stack here only to add one in minit, but
// it's a simple change that keeps NetBSD working like other OS's.
// At this point all signals are blocked, so there is no race.
//go:nosplit
func netbsdMstart() {
signalstack(nil)
mstart()
}
func osinit() {
ncpu = getncpu()
physPageSize = getPageSize()
}
var urandom_dev = []byte("/dev/urandom\x00")
//go:nosplit
func getRandomData(r []byte) {
fd := open(&urandom_dev[0], 0 /* O_RDONLY */, 0)
n := read(fd, unsafe.Pointer(&r[0]), int32(len(r)))
closefd(fd)
extendRandom(r, int(n))
}
func goenvs() {
goenvs_unix()
}
// Called to initialize a new m (including the bootstrap m).
// Called on the parent thread (main thread in case of bootstrap), can allocate memory.
func mpreinit(mp *m) {
mp.gsignal = malg(32 * 1024)
mp.gsignal.m = mp
}
//go:nosplit
func msigsave(mp *m) {
sigprocmask(_SIG_SETMASK, nil, &mp.sigmask)
}
//go:nosplit
func msigrestore(sigmask sigset) {
sigprocmask(_SIG_SETMASK, &sigmask, nil)
}
//go:nosplit
func sigblock() {
sigprocmask(_SIG_SETMASK, &sigset_all, nil)
}
// Called to initialize a new m (including the bootstrap m).
// Called on the new thread, cannot allocate memory.
func minit() {
_g_ := getg()
_g_.m.procid = uint64(lwp_self())
// Initialize signal handling.
// On NetBSD a thread created by pthread_create inherits the
// signal stack of the creating thread. We always create a
// new signal stack here, to avoid having two Go threads using
// the same signal stack. This breaks the case of a thread
// created in C that calls sigaltstack and then calls a Go
// function, because we will lose track of the C code's
// sigaltstack, but it's the best we can do.
signalstack(&_g_.m.gsignal.stack)
_g_.m.newSigstack = true
// restore signal mask from m.sigmask and unblock essential signals
nmask := _g_.m.sigmask
for i := range sigtable {
if sigtable[i].flags&_SigUnblock != 0 {
nmask.__bits[(i-1)/32] &^= 1 << ((uint32(i) - 1) & 31)
}
}
sigprocmask(_SIG_SETMASK, &nmask, nil)
}
// Called from dropm to undo the effect of an minit.
//go:nosplit
func unminit() {
if getg().m.newSigstack {
signalstack(nil)
}
}
func memlimit() uintptr {
return 0
}
func sigtramp()
type sigactiont struct {
sa_sigaction uintptr
sa_mask sigset
sa_flags int32
}
//go:nosplit
//go:nowritebarrierrec
func setsig(i int32, fn uintptr, restart bool) {
var sa sigactiont
sa.sa_flags = _SA_SIGINFO | _SA_ONSTACK
if restart {
sa.sa_flags |= _SA_RESTART
}
sa.sa_mask = sigset_all
if fn == funcPC(sighandler) {
fn = funcPC(sigtramp)
}
sa.sa_sigaction = fn
sigaction(i, &sa, nil)
}
//go:nosplit
//go:nowritebarrierrec
func setsigstack(i int32) {
throw("setsigstack")
}
//go:nosplit
//go:nowritebarrierrec
func getsig(i int32) uintptr {
var sa sigactiont
sigaction(i, nil, &sa)
if sa.sa_sigaction == funcPC(sigtramp) {
return funcPC(sighandler)
}
return sa.sa_sigaction
}
//go:nosplit
func signalstack(s *stack) {
var st sigaltstackt
if s == nil {
st.ss_flags = _SS_DISABLE
} else {
st.ss_sp = s.lo
st.ss_size = s.hi - s.lo
st.ss_flags = 0
}
sigaltstack(&st, nil)
}
//go:nosplit
//go:nowritebarrierrec
func updatesigmask(m sigmask) {
var mask sigset
copy(mask.__bits[:], m[:])
sigprocmask(_SIG_SETMASK, &mask, nil)
}
func unblocksig(sig int32) {
var mask sigset
mask.__bits[(sig-1)/32] |= 1 << ((uint32(sig) - 1) & 31)
sigprocmask(_SIG_UNBLOCK, &mask, nil)
}