Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alexander Boettcher
c2d3543e62 base: replace obj_by_* by lookup_and_lock
Add functionality to lookup an object and lock it. Additional the case is
handled that a object may be already in-destruction and the lookup will deny
returning the object.

The object_pool generalize the lookup and lock functionality of the rpc_server
and serve as base for following up patches to fix dangling pointer issues.
2013-01-10 11:13:13 +01:00
Norman Feske
de69ee2e66 Linux: cleanup system-call bindings
This patch simplifies the system call bindings. The common syscall
bindings in 'src/platform/' have been reduced to the syscalls needed by
non-core programs. The additional syscalls that are needed solely by
core have been moved to 'src/core/include/core_linux_syscalls.h'.
Furthermore, the resource path is not used outside of core anymore.
Hence, we could get rid of the rpath library. The resource-path code has
been moved to 'src/core/include/resource_path.h'. The IPC-related parts
of 'src/platform' have been moved to the IPC library. So there is now a
clean separation between low-level syscall bindings (in 'src/platform')
and higher-level code.

The code for the socket-descriptor registry is now located in the
'src/base/ipc/socket_descriptor_registry.h' header. The interface is
separated from 'ipc.cc' because core needs to access the registry from
outside the ipc library.
2012-11-05 17:31:04 +01:00
Norman Feske
aee0a2061b Create entrypoint sockets in core only
This patch alleviates the need for any non-core process to create Unix
domain sockets locally. All sockets used for RPC communication are
created by core and subsequently passed to the other processes via RPC
or the parent interface. The immediate benefit is that no process other
than core needs to access the 'rpath' directory in order to communicate.
However, access to 'rpath' is still needed for accessing dataspaces.

Core creates one socket pair per thread on demand on the first call of
the 'Linux_cpu_session::server_sd()' or 'Linux_cpu_session::client_sd()'
functions. 'Linux_cpu_session' is a Linux-specific extension to the CPU
session interface. In addition to the socket accessors, the extension
provides a mechanism to register the PID/TID of a thread. Those
information were formerly propagated into core along with the thread
name as argument to 'create_thread()'.

Because core creates socket pairs for entrypoints, it needs to know all
threads that are potential entrypoints. For lx_hybrid programs, we
hadn't had propagated any thread information into core, yet. Hence, this
patch also contains the code for registering threads of hybrid
applications at core.
2012-11-05 17:31:04 +01:00