Now that clock_t is an unsigned value, we can also allow the system
uptime to wrap. Essentially, instead of using (a <= b) to see if time
a occurs no later than time b, we use (b - a <= CLOCK_MAX / 2). The
latter value does not exist, so instead we add TMRDIFF_MAX for that
purpose.
We must therefore also avoid using values like 0 and LONG_MAX as
special values for absolute times. This patch extends the libtimers
interface so that it no longer uses 0 to indicate "no timeout".
Similarly, TMR_NEVER is now used as special value only when
otherwise a relative time difference would be used. A minix_timer
structure is now considered in use when it has a watchdog function set,
rather than when the absolute expiry time is not TMR_NEVER. A few new
macros in <minix/timers.h> help with timer comparison and obtaining
properties from a minix_timer structure.
This patch also eliminates the union of timer arguments, instead using
the only union element that is only used (the integer). This prevents
potential problems with e.g. live update. The watchdog function
prototype is changed to pass in the argument value rather than a
pointer to the timer structure, since obtaining the argument value was
the only current use of the timer structure anyway. The result is a
somewhat friendlier timers API.
The VFS select code required a few more invasive changes to restrict
the timer value to the new maximum, effectively matching the timer
code in PM. As a side effect, select(2) has been changed to reject
invalid timeout values. That required a change to the test set, which
relied on the previous, erroneous behavior.
Finally, while we're rewriting significant chunks of the timer code
anyway, also covert it to KNF and add a few more explanatory comments.
Change-Id: Id43165c3fbb140b32b90be2cca7f68dd646ea72e
Some select queries require a response from device drivers. If a
select call is nonblocking (with a zero timeout), the response to
the caller may have to be deferred until all involved drivers have
responded to the initial query. This is handled just fine.
However, if the select call has a timeout that is so short that it
triggers before all the involved drivers have responded, the
resulting alarm would be discarded, possibly resulting in the call
blocking forever. This fix changes the alarm handler such that if
the alarm triggers too early, the select call is further handled
as though it was nonblocking.
This fix resolves a test77 deadlock on really slow systems.
Change-Id: Ib487c8fe436802c3e11c57355ae0c8480721f06e
The remapping from /dev/tty to the real controlling terminal in the
device code was confusing the select code. The latter is now aware
of this case and should handle it properly, at the cost of one extra
field in the filp structure.
There is a nasty, hopefully sufficiently rare case of /dev/tty being
kept open while controlling terminals are changing, that we are still
not handling. Doing so would require more than just a few changes,
but the code should at least detect and cleanly fail on this case.
Test77 now has a basic test set for selecting on /dev/tty.
Change-Id: Iaedea449cdb728d0e66a9de8faacdfd9638dfe92