qemu-patch-raspberry4/include/block/coroutine.h
Stefan Hajnoczi 28f0824696 coroutine: use AioContext for CoQueue BH
CoQueue uses a BH to awake coroutines that were made ready to run again
using qemu_co_queue_next() or qemu_co_queue_restart_all().  The BH
currently runs in the iothread AioContext and would break coroutines
that run in a different AioContext.

This is a slightly tricky problem because the lifetime of the BH exceeds
that of the CoQueue.  This means coroutines can be awoken after CoQueue
itself has been freed.  Also, there is no qemu_co_queue_destroy()
function which we could use to handle freeing resources.

Introducing qemu_co_queue_destroy() has a ripple effect of requiring us
to also add qemu_co_mutex_destroy() and qemu_co_rwlock_destroy(), as
well as updating all callers.  Avoid doing that.

We also cannot switch from BH to GIdle function because aio_poll() does
not dispatch GIdle functions.  (GIdle functions make memory management
slightly easier because they free themselves.)

Finally, I don't want to move unlock_queue and unlock_bh into
AioContext.  That would break encapsulation - AioContext isn't supposed
to know about CoQueue.

This patch implements a different solution: each qemu_co_queue_next() or
qemu_co_queue_restart_all() call creates a new BH and list of coroutines
to wake up.  Callers tend to invoke qemu_co_queue_next() and
qemu_co_queue_restart_all() occasionally after blocking I/O, so creating
a new BH for each call shouldn't be massively inefficient.

Note that this patch does not add an interface for specifying the
AioContext.  That is left to future patches which will convert CoQueue,
CoMutex, and CoRwlock to expose AioContext.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
2013-03-15 16:07:51 +01:00

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5.6 KiB
C

/*
* QEMU coroutine implementation
*
* Copyright IBM, Corp. 2011
*
* Authors:
* Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
* Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com>
*
* This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU LGPL, version 2 or later.
* See the COPYING.LIB file in the top-level directory.
*
*/
#ifndef QEMU_COROUTINE_H
#define QEMU_COROUTINE_H
#include <stdbool.h>
#include "qemu/queue.h"
#include "qemu/timer.h"
/**
* Coroutines are a mechanism for stack switching and can be used for
* cooperative userspace threading. These functions provide a simple but
* useful flavor of coroutines that is suitable for writing sequential code,
* rather than callbacks, for operations that need to give up control while
* waiting for events to complete.
*
* These functions are re-entrant and may be used outside the global mutex.
*/
/**
* Mark a function that executes in coroutine context
*
* Functions that execute in coroutine context cannot be called directly from
* normal functions. In the future it would be nice to enable compiler or
* static checker support for catching such errors. This annotation might make
* it possible and in the meantime it serves as documentation.
*
* For example:
*
* static void coroutine_fn foo(void) {
* ....
* }
*/
#define coroutine_fn
typedef struct Coroutine Coroutine;
/**
* Coroutine entry point
*
* When the coroutine is entered for the first time, opaque is passed in as an
* argument.
*
* When this function returns, the coroutine is destroyed automatically and
* execution continues in the caller who last entered the coroutine.
*/
typedef void coroutine_fn CoroutineEntry(void *opaque);
/**
* Create a new coroutine
*
* Use qemu_coroutine_enter() to actually transfer control to the coroutine.
*/
Coroutine *qemu_coroutine_create(CoroutineEntry *entry);
/**
* Transfer control to a coroutine
*
* The opaque argument is passed as the argument to the entry point when
* entering the coroutine for the first time. It is subsequently ignored.
*/
void qemu_coroutine_enter(Coroutine *coroutine, void *opaque);
/**
* Transfer control back to a coroutine's caller
*
* This function does not return until the coroutine is re-entered using
* qemu_coroutine_enter().
*/
void coroutine_fn qemu_coroutine_yield(void);
/**
* Get the currently executing coroutine
*/
Coroutine *coroutine_fn qemu_coroutine_self(void);
/**
* Return whether or not currently inside a coroutine
*
* This can be used to write functions that work both when in coroutine context
* and when not in coroutine context. Note that such functions cannot use the
* coroutine_fn annotation since they work outside coroutine context.
*/
bool qemu_in_coroutine(void);
/**
* CoQueues are a mechanism to queue coroutines in order to continue executing
* them later. They provide the fundamental primitives on which coroutine locks
* are built.
*/
typedef struct CoQueue {
QTAILQ_HEAD(, Coroutine) entries;
AioContext *ctx;
} CoQueue;
/**
* Initialise a CoQueue. This must be called before any other operation is used
* on the CoQueue.
*/
void qemu_co_queue_init(CoQueue *queue);
/**
* Adds the current coroutine to the CoQueue and transfers control to the
* caller of the coroutine.
*/
void coroutine_fn qemu_co_queue_wait(CoQueue *queue);
/**
* Adds the current coroutine to the head of the CoQueue and transfers control to the
* caller of the coroutine.
*/
void coroutine_fn qemu_co_queue_wait_insert_head(CoQueue *queue);
/**
* Restarts the next coroutine in the CoQueue and removes it from the queue.
*
* Returns true if a coroutine was restarted, false if the queue is empty.
*/
bool qemu_co_queue_next(CoQueue *queue);
/**
* Restarts all coroutines in the CoQueue and leaves the queue empty.
*/
void qemu_co_queue_restart_all(CoQueue *queue);
/**
* Checks if the CoQueue is empty.
*/
bool qemu_co_queue_empty(CoQueue *queue);
/**
* Provides a mutex that can be used to synchronise coroutines
*/
typedef struct CoMutex {
bool locked;
CoQueue queue;
} CoMutex;
/**
* Initialises a CoMutex. This must be called before any other operation is used
* on the CoMutex.
*/
void qemu_co_mutex_init(CoMutex *mutex);
/**
* Locks the mutex. If the lock cannot be taken immediately, control is
* transferred to the caller of the current coroutine.
*/
void coroutine_fn qemu_co_mutex_lock(CoMutex *mutex);
/**
* Unlocks the mutex and schedules the next coroutine that was waiting for this
* lock to be run.
*/
void coroutine_fn qemu_co_mutex_unlock(CoMutex *mutex);
typedef struct CoRwlock {
bool writer;
int reader;
CoQueue queue;
} CoRwlock;
/**
* Initialises a CoRwlock. This must be called before any other operation
* is used on the CoRwlock
*/
void qemu_co_rwlock_init(CoRwlock *lock);
/**
* Read locks the CoRwlock. If the lock cannot be taken immediately because
* of a parallel writer, control is transferred to the caller of the current
* coroutine.
*/
void qemu_co_rwlock_rdlock(CoRwlock *lock);
/**
* Write Locks the mutex. If the lock cannot be taken immediately because
* of a parallel reader, control is transferred to the caller of the current
* coroutine.
*/
void qemu_co_rwlock_wrlock(CoRwlock *lock);
/**
* Unlocks the read/write lock and schedules the next coroutine that was
* waiting for this lock to be run.
*/
void qemu_co_rwlock_unlock(CoRwlock *lock);
/**
* Yield the coroutine for a given duration
*
* Note this function uses timers and hence only works when a main loop is in
* use. See main-loop.h and do not use from qemu-tool programs.
*/
void coroutine_fn co_sleep_ns(QEMUClock *clock, int64_t ns);
#endif /* QEMU_COROUTINE_H */