Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This is not certain to be likely.
Lennart says: a frequent usecase is invoking some function regularly in intervals
in such a case every single iteration we'll have to rearm
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Rather than recalculating the next timeout on every loop, we only do it when something changed.
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This requires a very recent kernel (3.15), so care should be taken
when using this functionality.
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event source to work
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A call to sd_event_source_set_io_events() skipps calling into the kernel
if the new event-mask matches the old one. This is safe for
level-triggered sources as the kernel moves them onto the ready-list
automatically if events change. However, edge-triggered sources might not
be on the ready-list even though events are present.
A call to sd_event_source_set_io_events() with EPOLLET set might thus be
used to just move the io-source onto the ready-list so the next poll
will return it again. This is very useful to avoid starvation in
priority-based event queues.
Imagine a read() loop on an edge-triggered fd. If we cannot read data fast
enough to drain the receive queue, we might decide to skip reading for now
and schedule it for later. On edge-triggered io-sources we have to make
sure it's put on the ready-list so the next dispatch-round will return it
again if it's still the highest priority task. We could make sd-event
handle edge-triggered sources directly and allow marking them ready again.
However, it's much simpler to let the kernel do that for now via
EPOLL_CTL_MOD.
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Same story as for sd-bus and sd-event: allow passing NULL to store query
in in which case the query is freed automatically.
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These are the counterpart of "floating" bus slots, i.e. event sources
that are bound to the lifetime of the event object itself, and thus
don't require an explicit reference to be kept.
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By passing a NULL callback provide a simple way to make event loops exit
on SIGTERM and other signals.
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That way, we don't forget to initialize it when the watchdog is
initialized before all event sources.
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safe_close_pair() is more like safe_close(), except that it handles
pairs of fds, and doesn't make and misleading allusion, as it works
similarly well for socketpairs() as for pipe()s...
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CLOCK_BOOTTIME_ALARM, too
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safe_close() automatically becomes a NOP when a negative fd is passed,
and returns -1 unconditionally. This makes it easy to write lines like
this:
fd = safe_close(fd);
Which will close an fd if it is open, and reset the fd variable
correctly.
By making use of this new scheme we can drop a > 200 lines of code that
was required to test for non-negative fds or to reset the closed fd
variable afterwards.
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As pointed-out by clang -Wunreachable-code.
No behaviour changes.
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This new event source is triggered by the dispatching of any non-post
event source. It can thus be used to do clean-up or recheck work,
triggered by any other event source having been executed.
This is different from "defer" event source which are unconditionally
triggered as long as they are enabled. A "defer" event source that does
nothing will result in the event loop busy looping unless it is turned
off eventually. This is different for "post" event sources that will be
only triggered when some other non-post ran, and will thus not keep the
event loop busy on its own.
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There was a copy-paste error introduced in commit c2ba3ad6604ef2e189d7e0a36d6911116e84d3ab
which causes the following error when using timer units:
Assertion '(x->type == SOURCE_MONOTONIC && y->type == SOURCE_MONOTONIC) || (x->type == SOURCE_REALTIME && y->type == SOURCE_REALTIME)'
failed at src/libsystemd/sd-event/sd-event.c:264, function latest_time_prioq_compare(). Aborting.
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first (or second)
Previously the returned object of constructor functions where sometimes
returned as last, sometimes as first and sometimes as second parameter.
Let's clean this up a bit. Here are the new rules:
1. The object the new object is derived from is put first, if there is any
2. The object we are creating will be returned in the next arguments
3. This is followed by any additional arguments
Rationale:
For functions that operate on an object we always put that object first.
Constructors should probably not be too different in this regard. Also,
if the additional parameters might want to use varargs which suggests to
put them last.
Note that this new scheme only applies to constructor functions, not to
all other functions. We do give a lot of freedom for those.
Note that this commit only changes the order of the new functions we
added, for old ones we accept the wrong order and leave it like that.
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If -flto is used then gcc will generate a lot more warnings than before,
among them a number of use-without-initialization warnings. Most of them
without are false positives, but let's make them go away, because it
doesn't really matter.
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Setting a child-source state to anything but SD_EVENT_OFF currently does
nothing. The condition logic is flawed. Move the state update *below* the
test for the previous state.
Fixes a crash if you call:
sd_event_source_set_enabled(source, SD_EVENT_ON);
sd_event_source_unref(source);
on a child-source in its own callback.
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We still only produce on .so, but let's keep the sources separate to make things a bit
less messy.
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