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2006-01-28remove UDEVD_UEVENT_INITSENDKay Sievers
Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2006-01-24increase kernel uevent buffer sizeKay Sievers
Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2006-01-09replace libsysfsKay Sievers
We never used any of the libsysfs convenience features. Here we replace it completely with 300 lines of code, which are much simpler and a bit faster cause udev(d) does not open any syfs file for a simple event which does not need any parent device information. Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-11-16remove "udev_db" option from config fileKay Sievers
All udev state is kept in /$udev_root/.udev/ now. No option to configure that anymore, it will always be there. Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-11-16udevd: track exit status of event processKay Sievers
Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-11-07never queue events with TIMEOUT setKay Sievers
With removing the event reorder queue, we can fix the TIMEOUT events like firmware loading proper, and never delay any of these events. Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-11-07udevd: depend on netlink and remove all sequence reorder logicKay Sievers
Netlink will never get out-of-order and we just depend on it from now on. Udevsend messages will have no effect if they contain a sequence number (SEQNUM). Thanks to Bastian Blank <waldi@debian.org>, for the debugging session which identified a bug where the timeouts are not working if inotify was not available. All the timeout handling is removed now and this issue should be solved. Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-10-27move rules parsing into daemonKay Sievers
The rules files are parsed only once at daemon startup. Every udev event process will be fork()'d from udevd without exec()'ing the udev binary. The in-memory rules will be inherited from the daemon itself. If inotify is available, udevd will reload all rules if any change in /etc/udev/rules.d/ happens. Otherwise -HUP or "udevcontrol reload_rules" can be used. Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-08-01add udevmonitor, to debug netlink+udev events at the same timeKay Sievers
This rule: RUN+="socket:/org/kernel/udev/monitor" send the event to the running monitor. Running udevstart give a nice monitor output. Also the delay between the kernel uevent and the udev udev event can be investigated: pim:/home/kay/src/udev-kay # ./udevmonitor UEVENT[1122920113] add@/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.1/usb2/2-1 UEVENT[1122920113] add@/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.1/usb2/2-1/2-1:1.0 UEVENT[1122920113] add@/class/scsi_host/host12 UEVENT[1122920113] add@/class/usb_device/usbdev2.99 UEVENT[1122920113] add@/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.1/usb2/2-1/2-1:1.0/host12/target12:0:0/12:0:0:0 UDEV [1122920113] add@/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.1/usb2/2-1 UEVENT[1122920113] add@/block/sda UEVENT[1122920113] add@/class/scsi_generic/sg0 UEVENT[1122920113] add@/class/scsi_device/12:0:0:0 UDEV [1122920113] add@/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.1/usb2/2-1/2-1:1.0 UDEV [1122920113] add@/class/scsi_host/host12 UDEV [1122920113] add@/class/usb_device/usbdev2.99 UDEV [1122920113] add@/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.1/usb2/2-1/2-1:1.0/host12/target12:0:0/12:0:0:0 UDEV [1122920113] add@/block/sda UDEV [1122920113] add@/class/scsi_generic/sg0 UDEV [1122920113] add@/class/scsi_device/12:0:0:0 UEVENT[1122920115] add@/block/sda/sda1 UDEV [1122920115] add@/block/sda/sda1 pim:/home/kay/src/udev-kay # ./udevmonitor --env UDEV [1122920185] add@/block/sda/sda1 ACTION=add DEVPATH=/block/sda/sda1 SUBSYSTEM=block SEQNUM=2159 MINOR=1 MAJOR=8 PHYSDEVPATH=/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.1/usb2/2-1/2-1:1.0/host13/target13:0:0/13:0:0:0 PHYSDEVBUS=scsi PHYSDEVDRIVER=sd UDEVD_EVENT=1 UDEV_LOG=3 ID_VENDOR=IBM ID_MODEL=Memory_Key ID_REVISION=3.04 ID_SERIAL=IBM_Memory_Key_0218B301030027E8 ID_TYPE=disk ID_BUS=usb ID_PATH=usb-0218B301030027E8:0:0:0 ID_FS_USAGE=filesystem ID_FS_TYPE=vfat ID_FS_VERSION=FAT16 ID_FS_UUID=42D8-9E02 ID_FS_LABEL_SAFE=s_p_c DEVNAME=/dev/sda1 Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-07-22move code to its own filesKay Sievers
Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-07-06udevd: optimize env-key parsingKay Sievers
Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-06-16udevd: control log-priority of the running daemon with udevcontrolKay Sievers
Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-06-14udevinitsend: handle replay messages correctlyKay Sievers
Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-06-05udevd: improve timeout handlingKay Sievers
Allow to override some parameters by environment keys. Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-06-05udevd: add udevcontrolKay Sievers
Controls the behavior of the running daemon. Currently only stopping and starting of the execution queue is supported. Signed-off-by: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
2005-04-26[PATCH] udevd: don't delay events with TIMEOUT in the environmentkay.sievers@vrfy.org
On Tue, 2005-03-15 at 09:25 +0100, Hannes Reinecke wrote: > The current implementation of the firmware class breaks a fundamental > assumption in udevd: that the physical device can be initialised fully > prior to executing the next event for that device. Thanks to Hannes for the patch.
2005-04-26[PATCH] trivial rename of some variableskay.sievers@vrfy.org
2005-04-26[PATCH] udevd: throttle the forking of processeskay.sievers@vrfy.org
If the system reaches a defined limit of processes in running state, udevd starts to count its own processes in running state from its session (all forked hotplug child processes, subprocesses and callouts) and throttles further process forking if the limit is reached. This should help setups with hundreds of events emitted hotplug events in parallel with hundreds of processes in "R" state. which makes the machine unresponsible. I placed a 100% cpu time consuming program in /etc/hotplug.d/ which runs for 5 seconds. With this patch I can load "scsi_debug add_host=100" without any major problem. Without the patch the box is completly unresponsible for many minutes.
2005-04-26[PATCH] limit the initial timeout of the udevd event handlingkay.sievers@vrfy.org
Define an inititialization phase, where we delay the events only for a short time to eventually recollect the event sequence instead of delaying the very first events for 10 seconds, which breaks the firmware loader.
2005-04-26[PATCH] udevd: serialization of the event sequence of a chain of deviceskay.sievers@vrfy.org
Currently udevd delays only events for the same DEVPATH. Example of an "add" event sequence: /block/sda /block/sda/sda1 With this change, we make sure, that the udev process handling /block/sda has finished its work (waited for all attributes, created the node) before we fork the udev event for /block/sda/sda1. This way the event for sda1 can be sure, that the node for the main device is already created (may be useful for disk labels). It will not affect any parallel device handling, only the sequence of the devices directory chain is serialized. The 10.000 disks plugged in will still run as parallel events. :) The main motivation to do this is the program execution of the dev.d/ and hotplug.d/ directory. If we don't wait for the parent event to exit, we can't be sure that the executed scripts are run in the right order. On Thu, Dec 09, 2004 at 09:18:28AM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote: > On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 19:07 -0800, David Brownell wrote: > > Could that argument apply to the underlying hardware, too? > We now make sure that the sequence of events for a device > is serialized for every device chain and the class/block > devices which have a "device" link to a physical device are > handled after the physical device is fully populated and > notified to userspace. It will only work this way on kernels > later than 2.6.10-rc1 cause it depends on the PHYSDEVPATH > value in the hotplug environment.
2005-04-26[PATCH] add MANAGED_EVENT to the forked udev environmentkay.sievers@vrfy.org
This will prevent a loop, if udev sends events back into the daemon.
2005-04-26[PATCH] pass the whole event environment to udevdkay.sievers@vrfy.org
Make _all_ hotplug variables available to the forked udev, the udev callouts and the udev dev.d/ scripts. We put the whole environment into a buffer and send it over the udevd socket. udevd recreates *envp[] and passes it to the exec().
2005-04-26[PATCH] cleanup udevd/udevstartkay.sievers@vrfy.org
Change to the same timeout loop we use in the rest of the code. Change some comments and names to be more descriptive. I'm mostly finished with the overall cleanup. I will post a new patch for the udevd-nofork experiment, which will be much smaller now.
2005-04-26[PATCH] switch udev's seqnum to u64kay.sievers@vrfy.org
The kernel will use a u64 for the sequence number, so we want the same.
2005-04-26[PATCH] pass SEQNUM trough udevdkay.sievers@vrfy.org
here we change udevd to pass the SEQNUM from the hotplug environment to udev and the dev.d/ scripts. We need this for HAL to match the hotplug event with the dev.d/ events. It also changes the type from int to long to match the kernel.
2005-04-26[PATCH] increase udevd event timeoutkay.sievers@vrfy.org
I have a very slow Bluetooth adapter hotplug event call, so we need to increase the event timeout to something larger than 6 seconds. Apr 1 02:54:08 pim udevsend[12119]: main: DEVPATH = '/class/tty/ttyUB0' Apr 1 02:54:08 pim udevsend[12119]: main: SEQNUM = '340' Apr 1 02:54:08 pim udevsend[12120]: main: DEVPATH = '/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.2/usb4/4-1' Apr 1 02:54:08 pim udevsend[12120]: main: SEQNUM = '344' Apr 1 02:54:09 pim udevsend[12133]: main: DEVPATH = '/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.2/usb4/4-1/4-1:1.1' Apr 1 02:54:09 pim udevsend[12133]: main: SEQNUM = '342' Apr 1 02:54:10 pim udevsend[12136]: main: DEVPATH = '/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.2/usb4/4-1/4-1:1.2' Apr 1 02:54:10 pim udevsend[12136]: main: SEQNUM = '343' Apr 1 02:54:13 pim udevsend[12141]: main: DEVPATH = '/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.2/usb4/4-1/4-1:1.0' Apr 1 02:54:13 pim udevsend[12141]: main: SEQNUM = '341'
2005-04-26[PATCH] udevd race conditions and performance, assorted cleanups - take 2kay.sievers@vrfy.org
here is a patch on top of your nice improvements. I fixed the whitespace and it hopefully fixes the stupid timestamp bug in udevd. Some stupid OS sets the hwclock to localtime and linux changes it to UTC while starting. If any events are pending they may be delayed by the users time distance from UTC :) So we use the uptime seconds now.
2005-04-26[PATCH] udev - safer string handling - part threekay.sievers@vrfy.org
Here we truncate our input strings from the environment to our defined limit. It's a bit theroretical but better check for it. It cleans up some magic length definitions and removes the code duplication in udev, udevtest and udevsend. udevd needs to be killed after installation, cause the message size is changed with this patch. Should we do this with the 'make install', like we do with the '.udevdb'?
2005-04-26[PATCH] udevd - switch socket path to abstract namespacekay.sievers@vrfy.org
As Chris Friesen <chris_friesen@sympatico.ca> suggested, here we switch the unix domains socket path to abstract namespace and get rid of the socket file in the filesystem. Hey, this was new to me today. So here a few words: Linux supports a abstract namespace for sockets. We don't need a physical file on the filesystem but only a unique string magically starting with the '\0' character. strace with real file: connect(3, {sa_family=AF_UNIX, path="/udev/.udevd.sock"}, 110) strace with abstract namespace: connect(3, {sa_family=AF_UNIX, path=@udevd}, 110)
2005-04-26[PATCH] udevd - config cleanupkay.sievers@vrfy.org
> Here is a small cleanup and better Makefile integration. > udevd and udevsender are now installed. Just switch HOTPLUG_EXEC from ROOT > to SENDER before install and udevsend will be called. > > We may add the location of the socket and lock file to the config, > if this is needed. Same patch with a fix for the stack size setting.
2005-04-26[PATCH] udevd - cleanup and better timeout handlingkay.sievers@vrfy.org
On Thu, Jan 29, 2004 at 04:55:11PM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote: > On Thu, Jan 29, 2004 at 02:56:25AM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 28, 2004 at 10:47:36PM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote: > > > Oh, couldn't resist to try threads. > > > It's a multithreaded udevd that communicates through a localhost socket. > > > The message includes a magic with the udev version, so we don't accept > > > older udevsend's. > > > > > > No need for locking, cause we can't bind two sockets on the same address. > > > The daemon tries to connect and if it fails it starts the daemon. > > > > > > We create a thread for every incoming connection, handle over the socket, > > > sort the messages in the global message queue and exit the thread. > > > Huh, that was easy with threads :) > > > > > > With the addition of a message we wakeup the queue manager thread and > > > handle timeouts or move the message to the global exec list. This wakes > > > up the exec list manager who looks if a process is already running for this > > > device path. > > > If yes, the exec is delayed otherwise we create a thread that execs udev. > > > n the background. With the return of udev we free the message and wakeup > > > the exec list manager to look if something is pending. > > > > > > It is just a quick shot, cause I couldn't solve the problems with fork an > > > scheduling and I wanted to see if I'm to stupid :) > > > But if anybody with a better idea or more experience with I/O scheduling > > > we may go another way. The remaining problem is that klibc doesn't support > > > threads. > > > > > > By now, we don't exec anything, it's just a sleep 3 for every exec, > > > but you can see the queue management by watching syslog and do: > > > > > > DEVPATH=/abc ACTION=add SEQNUM=0 ./udevsend /abc > > Next version, switched to unix domain sockets. Next cleaned up version. Hey, nobody wants to try it :) Works for me, It's funny if I connect/disconnect my 4in1-usb-flash-reader every two seconds. The 2.6 usb rocks! I can connect/diconnect a hub with 3 devices plugged in every second and don't run into any problem but a _very_ big udevd queue.
2005-04-26[PATCH] udevd - next round of fixeskay.sievers@vrfy.org
Here is the next round. We have three queues now. All incoming messages are queued in msg_list and if nothing is missing we move it to the running_list and exec in the background. If the exec comes back, it removes the message from the running_list and frees the message. Before we exec, we check the running_list if there is a udev running on the same device path. If yes, we move the message to the delay_list. If the former exec comes back, we move the message to the running_list and exec it. The very first event is delayed now to catch possible earlier sequences, every following event is executed without delay if no sequence is missing. The daemon doesn't exit by itself any longer, cause we don't want to delay every first exec. I've put a $(PWD) for now in the Makefile for testing this beast. Only the local binaries are executed, not the /sbin/udev. We can change it if we are ready for real testing. And SIGKILL can't be cought, so I removed it from the handler :) 06:58:36 sig_handler: caught signal 15 06:58:36 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:37 message is still in the ipc queue, starting daemon... 06:58:37 work: received sequence 3, expected sequence 0 06:58:37 msg_dump_queue: sequence 3 in queue 06:58:37 set_timeout: set timeout in 1 seconds 06:58:37 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:37 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:37 work: received sequence 1, expected sequence 1 06:58:37 msg_dump_queue: sequence 1 in queue 06:58:37 msg_dump_queue: sequence 3 in queue 06:58:37 msg_dump: sequence 1, 'add', '/block/sda', 'block' 06:58:37 msg_exec: child [8038] created 06:58:37 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 1 [8038] to running queue '/block/sda' 06:58:37 set_timeout: set timeout in 5 seconds 06:58:37 work: received sequence 2, expected sequence 2 06:58:37 msg_dump_queue: sequence 2 in queue 06:58:37 msg_dump_queue: sequence 3 in queue 06:58:37 msg_dump: sequence 2, 'add', '/block/sdb', 'block' 06:58:37 msg_exec: child [8039] created 06:58:37 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 2 [8039] to running queue '/block/sdb' 06:58:37 msg_dump: sequence 3, 'add', '/block/sdc', 'block' 06:58:37 msg_exec: child [8040] created 06:58:37 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 3 [8040] to running queue '/block/sdc' 06:58:37 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:37 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:37 work: received sequence 4, expected sequence 4 06:58:37 msg_dump_queue: sequence 4 in queue 06:58:37 msg_dump: sequence 4, 'remove', '/block/sdc', 'block' 06:58:37 msg_exec: delay exec of sequence 4, [8040] already working on '/block/sdc' 06:58:37 delayed_moveto_queue: move event to delayed queue '/block/sdc' 06:58:37 msg_exec: child [8043] created 06:58:37 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 4 [8043] to running queue '/block/sdc' 06:58:37 work: received sequence 5, expected sequence 5 06:58:37 msg_dump_queue: sequence 5 in queue 06:58:37 msg_dump: sequence 5, 'remove', '/block/sdb', 'block' 06:58:37 msg_exec: delay exec of sequence 5, [8039] already working on '/block/sdb' 06:58:37 delayed_moveto_queue: move event to delayed queue '/block/sdb' 06:58:37 msg_exec: child [8044] created 06:58:37 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 5 [8044] to running queue '/block/sdb' 06:58:37 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:37 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:37 work: received sequence 8, expected sequence 6 06:58:37 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:37 set_timeout: set timeout in 5 seconds 06:58:37 work: received sequence 6, expected sequence 6 06:58:37 msg_dump_queue: sequence 6 in queue 06:58:37 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:37 msg_dump: sequence 6, 'remove', '/block/sda', 'block' 06:58:37 msg_exec: delay exec of sequence 6, [8038] already working on '/block/sda' 06:58:37 delayed_moveto_queue: move event to delayed queue '/block/sda' 06:58:37 msg_exec: child [8047] created 06:58:37 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 6 [8047] to running queue '/block/sda' 06:58:37 set_timeout: set timeout in 5 seconds 06:58:38 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:38 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8038 06:58:38 set_timeout: set timeout in 4 seconds 06:58:38 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:38 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:38 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8039 06:58:38 set_timeout: set timeout in 4 seconds 06:58:38 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:38 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:38 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8040 06:58:38 set_timeout: set timeout in 4 seconds 06:58:38 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:38 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:38 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8043 06:58:38 set_timeout: set timeout in 4 seconds 06:58:38 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:38 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:38 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8044 06:58:38 set_timeout: set timeout in 4 seconds 06:58:38 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:38 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:38 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8047 06:58:38 set_timeout: set timeout in 4 seconds 06:58:38 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:39 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:39 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:39 work: received sequence 9, expected sequence 7 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 9 in queue 06:58:39 set_timeout: set timeout in 3 seconds 06:58:39 work: received sequence 11, expected sequence 7 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 9 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 11 in queue 06:58:39 set_timeout: set timeout in 3 seconds 06:58:39 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:39 work: received sequence 10, expected sequence 7 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 9 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 10 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 11 in queue 06:58:39 set_timeout: set timeout in 3 seconds 06:58:39 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:39 work: received sequence 13, expected sequence 7 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 9 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 10 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 11 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 13 in queue 06:58:39 set_timeout: set timeout in 3 seconds 06:58:39 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:39 work: received sequence 14, expected sequence 7 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 9 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 10 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 11 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 13 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 14 in queue 06:58:39 set_timeout: set timeout in 3 seconds 06:58:39 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:39 work: received sequence 15, expected sequence 7 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 9 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 10 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 11 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 13 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 14 in queue 06:58:39 msg_dump_queue: sequence 15 in queue 06:58:39 set_timeout: set timeout in 3 seconds 06:58:41 main: using ipc queue 0x2d548 06:58:41 work: received sequence 12, expected sequence 7 06:58:41 msg_dump_queue: sequence 8 in queue 06:58:41 msg_dump_queue: sequence 9 in queue 06:58:41 msg_dump_queue: sequence 10 in queue 06:58:41 msg_dump_queue: sequence 11 in queue 06:58:41 msg_dump_queue: sequence 12 in queue 06:58:41 msg_dump_queue: sequence 13 in queue 06:58:41 msg_dump_queue: sequence 14 in queue 06:58:41 msg_dump_queue: sequence 15 in queue 06:58:41 set_timeout: set timeout in 1 seconds 06:58:42 sig_handler: caught signal 14 06:58:42 sig_handler: event timeout reached 06:58:42 event 8, age 5 seconds, skip event 7-7 06:58:42 msg_dump: sequence 8, 'add', '/block/sdb', 'block' 06:58:42 msg_exec: child [8057] created 06:58:42 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 8 [8057] to running queue '/block/sdb' 06:58:42 msg_dump: sequence 9, 'add', '/block/sdc', 'block' 06:58:42 msg_exec: child [8058] created 06:58:42 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 9 [8058] to running queue '/block/sdc' 06:58:42 msg_dump: sequence 10, 'remove', '/block/sdc', 'block' 06:58:42 msg_exec: delay exec of sequence 10, [8058] already working on '/block/sdc' 06:58:42 delayed_moveto_queue: move event to delayed queue '/block/sdc' 06:58:42 msg_exec: child [8059] created 06:58:42 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 10 [8059] to running queue '/block/sdc' 06:58:42 msg_dump: sequence 11, 'remove', '/block/sdb', 'block' 06:58:42 msg_exec: delay exec of sequence 11, [8057] already working on '/block/sdb' 06:58:42 delayed_moveto_queue: move event to delayed queue '/block/sdb' 06:58:42 msg_exec: child [8060] created 06:58:42 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 11 [8060] to running queue '/block/sdb' 06:58:42 msg_dump: sequence 12, 'remove', '/block/sda', 'block' 06:58:42 msg_exec: child [8061] created 06:58:42 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 12 [8061] to running queue '/block/sda' 06:58:42 msg_dump: sequence 13, 'add', '/block/sda', 'block' 06:58:42 msg_exec: delay exec of sequence 13, [8061] already working on '/block/sda' 06:58:42 delayed_moveto_queue: move event to delayed queue '/block/sda' 06:58:42 msg_exec: child [8062] created 06:58:42 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 13 [8062] to running queue '/block/sda' 06:58:42 msg_dump: sequence 14, 'add', '/block/sdb', 'block' 06:58:42 msg_exec: delay exec of sequence 14, [8057] already working on '/block/sdb' 06:58:42 delayed_moveto_queue: move event to delayed queue '/block/sdb' 06:58:42 msg_exec: child [8063] created 06:58:42 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 14 [8063] to running queue '/block/sdb' 06:58:42 msg_dump: sequence 15, 'add', '/block/sdc', 'block' 06:58:42 msg_exec: delay exec of sequence 15, [8058] already working on '/block/sdc' 06:58:42 delayed_moveto_queue: move event to delayed queue '/block/sdc' 06:58:42 msg_exec: child [8064] created 06:58:42 running_moveto_queue: move sequence 15 [8064] to running queue '/block/sdc' 06:58:43 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:43 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8057 06:58:43 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8058 06:58:43 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:43 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8059 06:58:43 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:43 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8060 06:58:43 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8061 06:58:43 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:43 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8062 06:58:43 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:43 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8063 06:58:43 sig_handler: caught signal 17 06:58:43 sig_handler: exec finished, pid 8064
2005-04-26[PATCH] udevd - cleanup and better timeout handlingkay.sievers@vrfy.org
Here is the next revision for udevd: o Small cleanups all over the place. o Swich to the usual linked list format "list.h". o Better timeout handling. We store a timestamp in in every queued event, so we don't wait longer than the timeout specified, if the hole in the list is not shrinking. o ignore udevd target if klibc is used
2005-04-26[PATCH] udev - next round of udev event order daemonkay.sievers@vrfy.org
Here is the next round of udevd/udevsend: udevsend - If the IPC message we send is not catched by a receiver we fork the udevd daemon to process this and the following events udevd - We reorder the events we receive and execute our current udev for every event. If one or more events are missing, we wait 10 seconds and then go ahead in the queue. If the queue is empty and we don't receive any event for the next 30 seconds, the daemon exits. The next incoming event will fork the daemon again. config - The path's to the executable are specified in udevd.h Now they are pointing to the current directory only. I don't like daemons hiding secrets (and mem leaks :)) inside, so I want to try this model. It should be enough logic to get all possible hotplug events executed in the right order. If no event, then no daemon! So everybody should be happy :) Here we see: 1. the daemon fork, 2. the udev work, 3. the 10 sec timeout and the skipped events, 4. the udev work, ..., 5. and the 30 sec timeout and exit. EVENTS: pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# test/udevd_test.sh pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=15 ./udevsend block pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=16 ./udevsend block pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=17 ./udevsend block pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=18 ./udevsend block pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=20 ./udevsend block pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=21 ./udevsend block LOG: Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11795]: message is still in the ipc queue, starting daemon... Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11799]: configured rule in '/etc/udev/udev.rules' at line 19 applied, 'sda' becomes '%k-flash' Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11799]: creating device node '/udev/sda-flash' Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11800]: creating device node '/udev/sdb' Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11804]: creating device node '/udev/sdc' Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11805]: removing device node '/udev/sda-flash' Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11808]: removing device node '/udev/sdb' Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11809]: removing device node '/udev/sdc' Jan 23 15:35:45 pim udev[11797]: timeout reached, skip events 7 - 7 Jan 23 15:35:45 pim udev[11811]: creating device node '/udev/sdb' Jan 23 15:35:45 pim udev[11812]: creating device node '/udev/sdc' Jan 23 15:36:01 pim udev[11797]: timeout reached, skip events 10 - 14 Jan 23 15:36:01 pim udev[11814]: creating device node '/udev/sdc' Jan 23 15:36:04 pim udev[11816]: creating device node '/udev/sdc' Jan 23 15:36:12 pim udev[11818]: creating device node '/udev/sdc' Jan 23 15:36:16 pim udev[11820]: creating device node '/udev/sdc' Jan 23 15:36:38 pim udev[11797]: timeout reached, skip events 19 - 19 Jan 23 15:36:38 pim udev[11823]: creating device node '/udev/sdc' Jan 23 15:36:38 pim udev[11824]: creating device node '/udev/sdc' Jan 23 15:37:08 pim udev[11797]: we have nothing to do, so daemon exits...
2005-04-26[PATCH] spilt udev into pieceskay.sievers@vrfy.org
On Thu, Jan 22, 2004 at 01:27:45AM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote: > On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 02:38:25PM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote: > > On Thu, Jan 15, 2004 at 01:45:10PM -0800, Greg KH wrote: > > > On Thu, Jan 15, 2004 at 10:36:25PM +0800, Ling, Xiaofeng wrote: > > > > Hi, Greg > > > > I wrote a simple implementation for the two pieces > > > > of send and receive hotplug event, > > > > use a message queue and a list for the out of order > > > > hotplug event. It also has a timeout timer of 3 seconds. > > > > They are now separate program. the file nseq is the test script. > > > > Could you have a look to see wether it is feasible? > > > > If so, I'll continue to merge with udev. > > > > > > Yes, very nice start. Please continue on. > > > > > > One minor comment, please stick with the kernel coding style when you > > > are writing new code for udev. > > > > I took the code from Xiaofeng, cleaned the whitespace, renamed some bits, > > tweaked the debugging, added the udev exec and created a patch for the current tree. > > > > It seems functional now, by simply executing our current udev (dirty hack). > > It reorders the incoming events and if one is missing it delays the > > execution of the following ones up to a maximum of 10 seconds. > > > > Test script is included, but you can't mix hotplug sequence numbers and > > test script numbers, it will result in waiting for the missing numbers :) > > Hey, nobody want's to play with me? > So here I'm chatting with myself :) > > This is the next version with signal handling for resetting the expected > signal number. I changed the behaviour of the timeout to skip all > missing events at once and to proceed with the next event in the queue. > > So it's now possible to use the test script at any time, cause it resets > the daemon, if real hotplug event coming in later all missing nimbers will > be skipped after a timeout of 10 seconds and the queued events are applied. Here is the next updated updated version to apply to the lastet udev. I've added infrastructure for getting the state of the IPC queue in the sender and set the program to exec by the daemon. Also the magic key id is replaced by the usual key generation by path/nr. It looks promising, I use it on my machine and my 4in1 USB-flash-reader connect/disconnect emits the events "randomly" but udevd is able to reorder it and calls our normal udev in the right order.