CONDVAR(9F) Kernel Functions for Drivers CONDVAR(9F)
NAME
condvar, cv_init, cv_destroy, cv_wait, cv_signal, cv_broadcast,
cv_wait_sig, cv_timedwait, cv_timedwait_sig - condition variable
routines
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/ksynch.h>
void cv_init(
kcondvar_t *cvp,
char *name,
kcv_type_t type,
void *arg);
void cv_destroy(
kcondvar_t *cvp);
void cv_wait(
kcondvar_t *cvp,
kmutex_t *mp);
void cv_signal(
kcondvar_t *cvp);
void cv_broadcast(
kcondvar_t *cvp);
int cv_wait_sig(
kcondvar_t *cvp,
kmutex_t *mp);
clock_t cv_timedwait(
kcondvar_t *cvp,
kmutex_t *mp,
clock_t timeout);
clock_t cv_timedwait_sig(
kcondvar_t *cvp,
kmutex_t *mp,
clock_t timeout);
clock_t cv_reltimedwait(
kcondvar_t *cvp,
kmutex_t *mp,
clock_t delta,
time_res_t res);
clock_t cv_reltimedwait_sig(
kcondvar_t *cvp,
kmutex_t *mp,
clock_t delta,
time_res_t res);
INTERFACE LEVEL
illumos DDI specific (illumos DDI).
PARAMETERS
cvp A pointer to an abstract data type
kcondvar_t.
mp A pointer to a mutual exclusion lock (
kmutex_t),
initialized by
mutex_init(9F) and held by the caller.
name Descriptive string. This is obsolete and should be
NULL.
(Non-
NULL strings are legal, but they're a waste of kernel
memory.)
type The constant
CV_DRIVER.
arg A type-specific argument, drivers should pass arg as
NULL.
timeout A time, in absolute ticks since boot, when
cv_timedwait() or
cv_timedwait_sig() should return.
delta A time, in ticks, to indicate how long
cv_reltimedwait() or
cv_reltimedwait_sig() should wait before returning.
Drivers should use
drv_usectohz(9F) to determine this
value.
res A value which describes the requested accuracy of the
timeout argument. The system may anticipate or defer the
timeout based on the requested accuracy to prevent
unnecessary wakeups. The following identifiers are valid
arguments for this type:
TR_NANOSEC Nanosecond granularity
TR_MICROSEC Microsecond granularity
TR_MILLISEC Millisecond granularity
TR_SEC Second granularity
TR_CLOCK_TICK Granularity of a kernel clock tick,
commonly 100 or 1000 Hz.
Note that the granularity of these functions is in clock
ticks, therefore the only values which will have an effect
are:
TR_SEC and
TR_CLOCK_TICK .DESCRIPTION
Condition variables are a standard form of thread synchronization.
They are designed to be used with mutual exclusion locks (mutexes).
The associated mutex is used to ensure that a condition can be
checked atomically and that the thread can block on the associated
condition variable without missing either a change to the condition
or a signal that the condition has changed. Condition variables must
be initialized by calling
cv_init(), and must be deallocated by
calling
cv_destroy().
The usual use of condition variables is to check a condition (for
example, device state, data structure reference count, etc.) while
holding a mutex which keeps other threads from changing the
condition. If the condition is such that the thread should block,
cv_wait() is called with a related condition variable and the mutex.
At some later point in time, another thread would acquire the mutex,
set the condition such that the previous thread can be unblocked,
unblock the previous thread with
cv_signal() or
cv_broadcast(), and
then release the mutex.
cv_wait() suspends the calling thread and exits the mutex atomically
so that another thread which holds the mutex cannot signal on the
condition variable until the blocking thread is blocked. Before
returning, the mutex is reacquired.
cv_signal() signals the condition and wakes one blocked thread. All
blocked threads can be unblocked by calling
cv_broadcast().
cv_signal() and
cv_broadcast() can be called by a thread even if it
does not hold the mutex passed into
cv_wait(), though holding the
mutex is necessary to ensure predictable scheduling.
The function
cv_wait_sig() is similar to
cv_wait() but returns
0 if a
signal (for example, by
kill(2)) is sent to the thread. In any case,
the mutex is reacquired before returning.
The function
cv_timedwait() is similar to
cv_wait(), except that it
returns
-1 without the condition being signaled after the timeout
time has been reached.
The function
cv_timedwait_sig() is similar to
cv_timedwait() and
cv_wait_sig(), except that it returns
-1 without the condition being
signaled after the timeout time has been reached, or
0 if a signal
(for example, by
kill(2)) is sent to the thread.
For both
cv_timedwait() and
cv_timedwait_sig(), time is in absolute
clock ticks since the last system reboot. The current time may be
found by calling
ddi_get_lbolt(9F).
The functions
cv_reltimedwait() and
cv_reltimedwait_sig() behave
similarly to
cv_timedwait() and cv_timedwait_sig() respectively,
except instead of taking a time in absolute clock ticks, they take a
relative number of clock ticks to wait. In addition, both functions
take an additional argument
res, which specifies the desired
granularity that the system should default to, generally the value
TR_CLOCK_TICK .RETURN VALUES
0 For
cv_wait_sig(),
cv_timedwait_sig(), and
cv_reltimedwait_sig() indicates that the condition was not
necessarily signaled and the function returned because a
signal (as in
kill(2)) was pending.
-1 For
cv_timedwait(),
cv_timedwait_sig(),
cv_reltimedwait(),
and
cv_reltimedwait_sig(), indicates that the condition was
not necessarily signaled and the function returned because
the timeout time was reached.
>0 For
cv_wait_sig(),
cv_timedwait(),
cv_timedwait_sig(),
cv_reltimedwait(), and
cv_reltimedwait_sig(), indicates that
the condition was met and the function returned due to a
call to
cv_signal() or
cv_broadcast(), or due to a premature
wakeup (see NOTES).
CONTEXT
These functions can be called from user, kernel or interrupt context.
In most cases, however,
cv_wait(),
cv_timedwait(),
cv_wait_sig(),
cv_timedwait_sig(),
cv_reltimedwait(), and
cv_reltimedwait_sig(),
should not be called from interrupt context, and cannot be called
from a high-level interrupt context.
If
cv_wait(),
cv_timedwait(),
cv_wait_sig(),
cv_timedwait_sig(),
cv_reltimedwait(), or
cv_reltimedwait_sig(), are used from interrupt
context, lower-priority interrupts will not be serviced during the
wait. This means that if the thread that will eventually perform the
wakeup becomes blocked on anything that requires the lower-priority
interrupt, the system will hang.
For example, the thread that will perform the wakeup may need to
first allocate memory. This memory allocation may require waiting for
paging
I/O to complete, which may require a lower-priority disk or
network interrupt to be serviced. In general, situations like this
are hard to predict, so it is advisable to avoid waiting on condition
variables or semaphores in an interrupt context.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Waiting for a Flag Value in a Driver's Unit
Here the condition being waited for is a flag value in a driver's
unit structure. The condition variable is also in the unit structure,
and the flag word is protected by a mutex in the unit structure.
mutex_enter(&un->un_lock);
while (un->un_flag & UNIT_BUSY)
cv_wait(&un->un_cv, &un->un_lock);
un->un_flag |= UNIT_BUSY;
mutex_exit(&un->un_lock);
Example 2: Unblocking Threads Blocked by the Code in Example 1
At some later point in time, another thread would execute the
following to unblock any threads blocked by the above code.
mutex_enter(&un->un_lock);
un->un_flag &= ~UNIT_BUSY;
cv_broadcast(&un->un_cv);
mutex_exit(&un->un_lock);
NOTES
It is possible for
cv_wait(),
cv_wait_sig(),
cv_timedwait(),
cv_timedwait_sig(),
cv_reltimedwait(), and
cv_reltimedwait_sig() to
return prematurely, that is, not due to a call to
cv_signal() or
cv_broadcast(). This occurs most commonly in the case of
cv_wait_sig() and
cv_timedwait_sig() when the thread is stopped and
restarted by job control signals or by a debugger, but can happen in
other cases as well, even for
cv_wait(). Code that calls these
functions must always recheck the reason for blocking and call again
if the reason for blocking is still true.
If your driver needs to wait on behalf of processes that have real-
time constraints, use
cv_timedwait() rather than
delay(9F). The
delay() function calls
timeout(9F), which can be subject to priority
inversions.
Not all threads can receive signals from user level processes. In
cases where such reception is impossible (such as during execution of
close(9E) due to
exit(2)),
cv_wait_sig() behaves as
cv_wait(),
cv_timedwait_sig() behaves as
cv_timedwait(), and
cv_reltimedwait_sig() behaves as
cv_reltimedwait(). To avoid
unkillable processes, users of these functions may need to protect
against waiting indefinitely for events that might not occur. The
ddi_can_receive_sig(9F) function is provided to detect when signal
reception is possible.
SEE ALSO
kill(2),
ddi_can_receive_sig(9F),
ddi_get_lbolt(9F),
drv_usectohz(9F) mutex(9F),
mutex_init(9F),
Writing Device Drivers March 29, 2016 CONDVAR(9F)