// Copyright (c) 2013-2014 Sandstorm Development Group, Inc. and contributors // Licensed under the MIT License: // // Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy // of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal // in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights // to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell // copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is // furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: // // The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in // all copies or substantial portions of the Software. // // THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR // IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, // FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE // AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER // LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, // OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN // THE SOFTWARE. #ifndef KJ_ASYNC_UNIX_H_ #define KJ_ASYNC_UNIX_H_ #if _WIN32 #error "This file is Unix-specific. On Windows, include async-win32.h instead." #endif #if defined(__GNUC__) && !KJ_HEADER_WARNINGS #pragma GCC system_header #endif #include "async.h" #include "time.h" #include "vector.h" #include "io.h" #include <signal.h> #if __linux__ && !__BIONIC__ && !defined(KJ_USE_EPOLL) // Default to epoll on Linux, except on Bionic (Android) which doesn't have signalfd.h. #define KJ_USE_EPOLL 1 #endif namespace kj { class UnixEventPort: public EventPort { // An EventPort implementation which can wait for events on file descriptors as well as signals. // This API only makes sense on Unix. // // The implementation uses `poll()` or possibly a platform-specific API (e.g. epoll, kqueue). // To also wait on signals without race conditions, the implementation may block signals until // just before `poll()` while using a signal handler which `siglongjmp()`s back to just before // the signal was unblocked, or it may use a nicer platform-specific API like signalfd. // // The implementation reserves a signal for internal use. By default, it uses SIGUSR1. If you // need to use SIGUSR1 for something else, you must offer a different signal by calling // setReservedSignal() at startup. // // WARNING: A UnixEventPort can only be used in the thread and process that created it. In // particular, note that after a fork(), a UnixEventPort created in the parent process will // not work correctly in the child, even if the parent ceases to use its copy. In particular // note that this means that server processes which daemonize themselves at startup must wait // until after daemonization to create a UnixEventPort. public: UnixEventPort(); ~UnixEventPort() noexcept(false); class FdObserver; // Class that watches an fd for readability or writability. See definition below. Promise<siginfo_t> onSignal(int signum); // When the given signal is delivered to this thread, return the corresponding siginfo_t. // The signal must have been captured using `captureSignal()`. // // If `onSignal()` has not been called, the signal will remain blocked in this thread. // Therefore, a signal which arrives before `onSignal()` was called will not be "missed" -- the // next call to 'onSignal()' will receive it. Also, you can control which thread receives a // process-wide signal by only calling `onSignal()` on that thread's event loop. // // The result of waiting on the same signal twice at once is undefined. static void captureSignal(int signum); // Arranges for the given signal to be captured and handled via UnixEventPort, so that you may // then pass it to `onSignal()`. This method is static because it registers a signal handler // which applies process-wide. If any other threads exist in the process when `captureSignal()` // is called, you *must* set the signal mask in those threads to block this signal, otherwise // terrible things will happen if the signal happens to be delivered to those threads. If at // all possible, call `captureSignal()` *before* creating threads, so that threads you create in // the future will inherit the proper signal mask. // // To un-capture a signal, simply install a different signal handler and then un-block it from // the signal mask. static void setReservedSignal(int signum); // Sets the signal number which `UnixEventPort` reserves for internal use. If your application // needs to use SIGUSR1, call this at startup (before any calls to `captureSignal()` and before // constructing an `UnixEventPort`) to offer a different signal. Timer& getTimer() { return timerImpl; } // implements EventPort ------------------------------------------------------ bool wait() override; bool poll() override; void wake() const override; private: struct TimerSet; // Defined in source file to avoid STL include. class TimerPromiseAdapter; class SignalPromiseAdapter; TimerImpl timerImpl; SignalPromiseAdapter* signalHead = nullptr; SignalPromiseAdapter** signalTail = &signalHead; TimePoint readClock(); void gotSignal(const siginfo_t& siginfo); friend class TimerPromiseAdapter; #if KJ_USE_EPOLL AutoCloseFd epollFd; AutoCloseFd signalFd; AutoCloseFd eventFd; // Used for cross-thread wakeups. sigset_t signalFdSigset; // Signal mask as currently set on the signalFd. Tracked so we can detect whether or not it // needs updating. bool doEpollWait(int timeout); #else class PollContext; FdObserver* observersHead = nullptr; FdObserver** observersTail = &observersHead; unsigned long long threadId; // actually pthread_t #endif }; class UnixEventPort::FdObserver { // Object which watches a file descriptor to determine when it is readable or writable. // // For listen sockets, "readable" means that there is a connection to accept(). For everything // else, it means that read() (or recv()) will return data. // // The presence of out-of-band data should NOT fire this event. However, the event may // occasionally fire spuriously (when there is actually no data to read), and one thing that can // cause such spurious events is the arrival of OOB data on certain platforms whose event // interfaces fail to distinguish between regular and OOB data (e.g. Mac OSX). // // WARNING: The exact behavior of this class differs across systems, since event interfaces // vary wildly. Be sure to read the documentation carefully and avoid depending on unspecified // behavior. If at all possible, use the higher-level AsyncInputStream interface instead. public: enum Flags { OBSERVE_READ = 1, OBSERVE_WRITE = 2, OBSERVE_URGENT = 4, OBSERVE_READ_WRITE = OBSERVE_READ | OBSERVE_WRITE }; FdObserver(UnixEventPort& eventPort, int fd, uint flags); // Begin watching the given file descriptor for readability. Only one ReadObserver may exist // for a given file descriptor at a time. ~FdObserver() noexcept(false); KJ_DISALLOW_COPY(FdObserver); Promise<void> whenBecomesReadable(); // Resolves the next time the file descriptor transitions from having no data to read to having // some data to read. // // KJ uses "edge-triggered" event notification whenever possible. As a result, it is an error // to call this method when there is already data in the read buffer which has been there since // prior to the last turn of the event loop or prior to creation FdWatcher. In this case, it is // unspecified whether the promise will ever resolve -- it depends on the underlying event // mechanism being used. // // In order to avoid this problem, make sure that you only call `whenBecomesReadable()` // only at times when you know the buffer is empty. You know this for sure when one of the // following happens: // * read() or recv() fails with EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK. (You MUST have non-blocking mode // enabled on the fd!) // * The file descriptor is a regular byte-oriented object (like a socket or pipe), // read() or recv() returns fewer than the number of bytes requested, and `atEndHint()` // returns false. This can only happen if the buffer is empty but EOF is not reached. (Note, // though, that for record-oriented file descriptors like Linux's inotify interface, this // rule does not hold, because it could simply be that the next record did not fit into the // space available.) // // It is an error to call `whenBecomesReadable()` again when the promise returned previously // has not yet resolved. If you do this, the previous promise may throw an exception. inline Maybe<bool> atEndHint() { return atEnd; } // Returns true if the event system has indicated that EOF has been received. There may still // be data in the read buffer, but once that is gone, there's nothing left. // // Returns false if the event system has indicated that EOF had NOT been received as of the // last turn of the event loop. // // Returns nullptr if the event system does not know whether EOF has been reached. In this // case, the only way to know for sure is to call read() or recv() and check if it returns // zero. // // This hint may be useful as an optimization to avoid an unnecessary system call. Promise<void> whenBecomesWritable(); // Resolves the next time the file descriptor transitions from having no space available in the // write buffer to having some space available. // // KJ uses "edge-triggered" event notification whenever possible. As a result, it is an error // to call this method when there is already space in the write buffer which has been there // since prior to the last turn of the event loop or prior to creation FdWatcher. In this case, // it is unspecified whether the promise will ever resolve -- it depends on the underlying // event mechanism being used. // // In order to avoid this problem, make sure that you only call `whenBecomesWritable()` // only at times when you know the buffer is full. You know this for sure when one of the // following happens: // * write() or send() fails with EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK. (You MUST have non-blocking mode // enabled on the fd!) // * write() or send() succeeds but accepts fewer than the number of bytes provided. This can // only happen if the buffer is full. // // It is an error to call `whenBecomesWritable()` again when the promise returned previously // has not yet resolved. If you do this, the previous promise may throw an exception. Promise<void> whenUrgentDataAvailable(); // Resolves the next time the file descriptor's read buffer contains "urgent" data. // // The conditions for availability of urgent data are specific to the file descriptor's // underlying implementation. // // It is an error to call `whenUrgentDataAvailable()` again when the promise returned previously // has not yet resolved. If you do this, the previous promise may throw an exception. // // WARNING: This has some known weird behavior on macOS. See // https://github.com/sandstorm-io/capnproto/issues/374. private: UnixEventPort& eventPort; int fd; uint flags; kj::Maybe<Own<PromiseFulfiller<void>>> readFulfiller; kj::Maybe<Own<PromiseFulfiller<void>>> writeFulfiller; kj::Maybe<Own<PromiseFulfiller<void>>> urgentFulfiller; // Replaced each time `whenBecomesReadable()` or `whenBecomesWritable()` is called. Reverted to // null every time an event is fired. Maybe<bool> atEnd; void fire(short events); #if !KJ_USE_EPOLL FdObserver* next; FdObserver** prev; // Linked list of observers which currently have a non-null readFulfiller or writeFulfiller. // If `prev` is null then the observer is not currently in the list. short getEventMask(); #endif friend class UnixEventPort; }; } // namespace kj #endif // KJ_ASYNC_UNIX_H_