Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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each invocation
We can determine the list entry type via the typeof() gcc construct, and
so we should to make the macros much shorter to use.
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Since the invention of read-only memory, write-only memory has been
considered deprecated. Where appropriate, either make use of the
value, or avoid writing it, to make it clear that it is not used.
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src/machine/machined-dbus.c:237:13: warning: Branch condition evaluates to a garbage value
if (m)
^
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This extends 62678ded 'efi: never call qsort on potentially
NULL arrays' to all other places where qsort is used and it
is not obvious that the count is non-zero.
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InterfacesAdded/InterfacesRemoved signals of ObjectManager
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array to a message
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signatures
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One day sd-bus.h should become a public header file. We generally try to
be conservative in language features we use in public headers (much
unlike in private code), hence don't make use of anonymous unions in
structs for the vtable definitions.
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right thing automatically
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method in a vtable
Also, allow specifiying NULL as signature in vtables equivalent to ""
for empty parameter lists.
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serialization on Get()
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with no payload
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event source
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In addition, the states "UNMUTED" and "MUTED" become "ON" and "OFF".
This has the benefit that a possible value of this field is not
identical to its name, thus minimizing confusion.
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Quit handlers are executed when an event loop is terminated via
sd_event_request_quit(). They are in a way atexit() handlers that are
executed in a well-defined environment, time and thread: from the event
loop thread when the event loop finishes.
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fork()
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In order to improve energy consumption we should minimize our wake-ups
when handling timers. Hence, for each timer take an accuracy value and
schedule the actual wake-up time somewhere between the specified time
and the specified timer plus the accuracy.
The specified time of timer event sources hence becomes the time the
handler is called the *earliest*, and the specified time plus the accuracy
the time by which it is called the *latest*, leaving the library the
freedom to schedule the wake-up somewhere inbetween.
If the accuracy is specified as 0 the default of 250ms will be used.
When scheduling timeouts we will now try to elapse them at the same
point within each second, across the entire system. We do this by using
a fixed perturbation value keyed off the boot id. If this point within a
second is not in the acceptable range, we try again with a fixed time
within each 250ms time step. If that doesn't work either, we wake up at
the last possible time.
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Testing for y > x is the same as testing for x < y.
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So far we tried to use epoll directly wherever we needed an event loop.
However, that has various shortcomings, such as the inability to handle
larger amounts of timers (since each timerfd costs one fd, which is a
very limited resource, usually bounded to 1024), and inability to do
priorisation between multiple queued events.
Let's add a minimal event loop API around epoll that is suitable for
implementation of our own daemons and maybe one day can become public
API for those who desire it.
This loop is part of libsystemd-bus, but may be used independently of
it.
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objects on the bus
This adds a lightweight scheme how to define interfaces in static fixed
arrays which then can be easily registered on a bus connection. This
makes it much easier to write bus services.
This automatically handles implementation of the Properties,
ObjectManager, and Introspection bus interfaces.
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- for now, comment out munmap() check to enable memfd passing
- print tab-separated values and header
- add memcpy() to fill the memfd, to produce real-world results
$ ./test-bus-kernel-benchmark
SIZE COPY MEMFD
4194304 370 370
2097152 810 810
1048576 2130 2130
524288 4090 4090
262144 7080 7080
131072 11380 11380
65536 17140 17140
98304 13930 13930
114688 12890 12890
122880 12350 12350
126976 12150 12150
129024 12170 12170
130048 12040 12040
130560 12080 12080
130816 12010 12010
130944 12020 12020
131008 12040 12040
131040 12050 12050
131056 12010 12010
131064 12060 12060
131068 12040 12040
131070 11310 11310
131069 11420 11420
Copying/memfd are equally fast at 131068 bytes
$ ./test-bus-kernel-benchmark chart
SIZE COPY MEMFD
1 35570 23690
2 36470 23680
4 36160 23520
8 36600 22220
16 33900 20830
32 33990 21360
64 33480 21280
128 34050 20910
256 32950 21750
512 34730 21900
1024 33810 22890
2048 36280 23110
4096 30790 21610
8192 29380 21100
16384 26880 19820
32768 22510 17980
65536 17270 15180
131072 11400 11420
262144 7140 8270
524288 4090 5050
1048576 2110 2780
2097152 800 1140
4194304 350 580
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finishes more quickly
To get useful results you should however specify a much longer time on
the command line.
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transaction
This way the measurements are not skewed by twoo short total measurement
times, and results become stabler.
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