source: mainline/uspace/lib/c/generic/async_sess.c@ 8a1fb09

lfn serial ticket/834-toolchain-update topic/msim-upgrade topic/simplify-dev-export
Last change on this file since 8a1fb09 was d161715, checked in by Martin Decky <martin@…>, 14 years ago

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1/*
2 * Copyright (c) 2010 Jakub Jermar
3 * All rights reserved.
4 *
5 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
7 * are met:
8 *
9 * - Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
10 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
11 * - Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
12 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
13 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
14 * - The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
15 * derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
16 *
17 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
18 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
19 * OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
20 * IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
21 * INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
22 * NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
23 * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
24 * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
25 * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
26 * THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
27 */
28
29/** @addtogroup libc
30 * @{
31 */
32/** @file
33 */
34
35/**
36 * This file implements simple session support for the async framework.
37 *
38 * By the term 'session', we mean a logical data path between a client and a
39 * server over which the client can perform multiple concurrent exchanges.
40 * Each exchange consists of one or more requests (IPC calls) which can
41 * be potentially blocking.
42 *
43 * Clients and servers are naturally connected using IPC phones, thus an IPC
44 * phone represents a session between a client and a server. In one
45 * session, there can be many outstanding exchanges. In the current
46 * implementation each concurrent exchanges takes place over a different
47 * connection (there can be at most one active exchage per connection).
48 *
49 * Sessions make it useful for a client or client API to support concurrent
50 * requests, independent of the actual implementation. Sessions provide
51 * an abstract interface to concurrent IPC communication. This is especially
52 * useful for client API stubs that aim to be reentrant (i.e. that allow
53 * themselves to be called from different fibrils and threads concurrently).
54 *
55 * There are several possible implementations of sessions. This implementation
56 * uses additional phones to represent sessions. Using phones both for the
57 * session and also for its exchages/connections has several advantages:
58 *
59 * - to make a series of exchanges over a session, the client can continue to
60 * use the existing async framework APIs
61 * - the server supports sessions by the virtue of spawning a new connection
62 * fibril, just as it does for every new connection even without sessions
63 * - the implementation is pretty straightforward; a very naive implementation
64 * would be to make each exchage using a fresh phone (that is what we
65 * have done in the past); a slightly better approach would be to cache
66 * connections so that they can be reused by a later exchange within
67 * the same session (that is what this implementation does)
68 *
69 * The main disadvantages of using phones to represent sessions are:
70 *
71 * - if there are too many exchanges (even cached ones), the task may hit its
72 * limit on the maximum number of connected phones, which could prevent the
73 * task from making new IPC connections to other tasks
74 * - if there are too many IPC connections already, it may be impossible to
75 * create an exchange by connecting a new phone thanks to the task's limit on
76 * the maximum number of connected phones
77 *
78 * These problems can be alleviated by increasing the limit on the maximum
79 * number of connected phones to some reasonable value and by limiting the number
80 * of cached connections to some fraction of this limit.
81 *
82 * The cache itself has a mechanism to close some number of unused phones if a
83 * new phone cannot be connected, but the outer world currently does not have a
84 * way to ask the phone cache to shrink.
85 *
86 * To minimize the confusion stemming from the fact that we use phones for two
87 * things (the session itself and also one for each data connection), this file
88 * makes the distinction by using the term 'session phone' for the former and
89 * 'data phone' for the latter. Under the hood, all phones remain equal,
90 * of course.
91 *
92 * There is a small inefficiency in that the cache repeatedly allocates and
93 * deallocates the conn_node_t structures when in fact it could keep the
94 * allocated structures around and reuse them later. But such a solution would
95 * be effectively implementing a poor man's slab allocator while it would be
96 * better to have the slab allocator ported to uspace so that everyone could
97 * benefit from it.
98 */
99
100#include <async_sess.h>
101#include <fibril_synch.h>
102#include <adt/list.h>
103#include <adt/hash_table.h>
104#include <malloc.h>
105#include <errno.h>
106#include <assert.h>
107#include <async.h>
108#include "private/async_sess.h"
109
110/** An inactive open connection. */
111typedef struct {
112 link_t sess_link; /**< Link for the session list of inactive connections. */
113 link_t global_link; /**< Link for the global list of inactive connections. */
114 int data_phone; /**< Connected data phone. */
115} conn_node_t;
116
117/**
118 * Mutex protecting the inactive_conn_head list, the session list and the
119 * avail_phone condition variable.
120 */
121static fibril_mutex_t async_sess_mutex;
122
123/**
124 * List of all currently inactive connections.
125 */
126static LIST_INITIALIZE(inactive_conn_head);
127
128/**
129 * List of all open sessions.
130 */
131static LIST_INITIALIZE(session_list_head);
132
133/**
134 * Condition variable used to wait for a phone to become available.
135 */
136static FIBRIL_CONDVAR_INITIALIZE(avail_phone_cv);
137
138/** Initialize the async_sess subsystem.
139 *
140 * Needs to be called prior to any other interface in this file.
141 *
142 */
143void __async_sess_init(void)
144{
145 fibril_mutex_initialize(&async_sess_mutex);
146 list_initialize(&inactive_conn_head);
147 list_initialize(&session_list_head);
148}
149
150/** Create a session.
151 *
152 * Session is a logical datapath from a client task to a server task.
153 * One session can accomodate multiple concurrent exchanges. Here
154 * @a phone is a phone connected to the desired server task.
155 *
156 * This function always succeeds.
157 *
158 * @param sess Session structure provided by caller, will be filled in.
159 * @param phone Phone connected to the desired server task.
160 * @param arg1 Value to pass as first argument upon creating a new
161 * connection. Typical use is to identify a resource within
162 * the server that the caller wants to access (port ID,
163 * interface ID, device ID, etc.).
164 */
165void async_session_create(async_sess_t *sess, int phone, sysarg_t arg1)
166{
167 sess->sess_phone = phone;
168 sess->connect_arg1 = arg1;
169 list_initialize(&sess->conn_head);
170
171 /* Add to list of sessions. */
172 fibril_mutex_lock(&async_sess_mutex);
173 list_append(&sess->sess_link, &session_list_head);
174 fibril_mutex_unlock(&async_sess_mutex);
175}
176
177/** Destroy a session.
178 *
179 * Dismantle session structure @a sess and release any resources (connections)
180 * held by the session.
181 *
182 * @param sess Session to destroy.
183 */
184void async_session_destroy(async_sess_t *sess)
185{
186 conn_node_t *conn;
187
188 /* Remove from list of sessions. */
189 fibril_mutex_lock(&async_sess_mutex);
190 list_remove(&sess->sess_link);
191 fibril_mutex_unlock(&async_sess_mutex);
192
193 /* We did not connect the phone so we do not hang it up either. */
194 sess->sess_phone = -1;
195
196 /* Tear down all data connections. */
197 while (!list_empty(&sess->conn_head)) {
198 conn = list_get_instance(sess->conn_head.next, conn_node_t,
199 sess_link);
200
201 list_remove(&conn->sess_link);
202 list_remove(&conn->global_link);
203
204 async_hangup(conn->data_phone);
205 free(conn);
206 }
207
208 fibril_condvar_broadcast(&avail_phone_cv);
209}
210
211static void conn_node_initialize(conn_node_t *conn)
212{
213 link_initialize(&conn->sess_link);
214 link_initialize(&conn->global_link);
215 conn->data_phone = -1;
216}
217
218/** Start new exchange in a session.
219 *
220 * @param sess_phone Session.
221 * @return Phone representing the new exchange or a negative error
222 * code.
223 */
224int async_exchange_begin(async_sess_t *sess)
225{
226 conn_node_t *conn;
227 int data_phone;
228
229 fibril_mutex_lock(&async_sess_mutex);
230
231 if (!list_empty(&sess->conn_head)) {
232 /*
233 * There are inactive connections in the session.
234 */
235 conn = list_get_instance(sess->conn_head.next, conn_node_t,
236 sess_link);
237 list_remove(&conn->sess_link);
238 list_remove(&conn->global_link);
239
240 data_phone = conn->data_phone;
241 free(conn);
242 } else {
243 /*
244 * There are no available connections in the session.
245 * Make a one-time attempt to connect a new data phone.
246 */
247retry:
248 data_phone = async_connect_me_to(sess->sess_phone,
249 sess->connect_arg1, 0, 0);
250 if (data_phone >= 0) {
251 /* success, do nothing */
252 } else if (!list_empty(&inactive_conn_head)) {
253 /*
254 * We did not manage to connect a new phone. But we can
255 * try to close some of the currently inactive
256 * connections in other sessions and try again.
257 */
258 conn = list_get_instance(inactive_conn_head.next,
259 conn_node_t, global_link);
260 list_remove(&conn->global_link);
261 list_remove(&conn->sess_link);
262 data_phone = conn->data_phone;
263 free(conn);
264 async_hangup(data_phone);
265 goto retry;
266 } else {
267 /*
268 * Wait for a phone to become available.
269 */
270 fibril_condvar_wait(&avail_phone_cv, &async_sess_mutex);
271 goto retry;
272 }
273 }
274
275 fibril_mutex_unlock(&async_sess_mutex);
276 return data_phone;
277}
278
279/** Finish an exchange.
280 *
281 * @param sess Session.
282 * @param data_phone Phone representing the exchange within the session.
283 */
284void async_exchange_end(async_sess_t *sess, int data_phone)
285{
286 conn_node_t *conn;
287
288 fibril_mutex_lock(&async_sess_mutex);
289 fibril_condvar_signal(&avail_phone_cv);
290 conn = (conn_node_t *) malloc(sizeof(conn_node_t));
291 if (!conn) {
292 /*
293 * Being unable to remember the connected data phone here
294 * means that we simply hang up.
295 */
296 async_hangup(data_phone);
297 fibril_mutex_unlock(&async_sess_mutex);
298 return;
299 }
300
301 conn_node_initialize(conn);
302 conn->data_phone = data_phone;
303 list_append(&conn->sess_link, &sess->conn_head);
304 list_append(&conn->global_link, &inactive_conn_head);
305 fibril_mutex_unlock(&async_sess_mutex);
306}
307
308/** @}
309 */
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