source: trunk/doc/Fork.os2@ 1279

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1$Id: Fork.os2 1279 2004-02-25 03:26:45Z bird $
2
3Fork Design Draft
4--------------------
5
61.0 Intro
7----------
8
9blah.
10
11
121.1 The SuS fork() Description
13------------------------------
14
15NAME
16
17 fork - create a new process
18
19SYNOPSIS
20
21 #include <unistd.h>
22
23 pid_t fork(void);
24
25DESCRIPTION
26
27 The fork() function shall create a new process. The new process (child process) shall be an exact copy of the calling process (parent process) except as detailed below:
28
29 * The child process shall have a unique process ID.
30 * The child process ID also shall not match any active process
31 group ID.
32 * The child process shall have a different parent process ID,
33 which shall be the process ID of the calling process.
34 * The child process shall have its own copy of the parent's file
35 descriptors. Each of the child's file descriptors shall refer
36 to the same open file description with the corresponding file
37 descriptor of the parent.
38 * The child process shall have its own copy of the parent's open
39 directory streams. Each open directory stream in the child process
40 may share directory stream positioning with the corresponding
41 directory stream of the parent.
42 * [XSI] The child process shall have its own copy of the parent's
43 message catalog descriptors.
44 * The child process' values of tms_utime, tms_stime, tms_cutime, and
45 tms_cstime shall be set to 0.
46 * The time left until an alarm clock signal shall be reset to zero,
47 and the alarm, if any, shall be canceled; see alarm() .
48 * [XSI] All semadj values shall be cleared.
49 * File locks set by the parent process shall not be inherited by
50 the child process.
51 * The set of signals pending for the child process shall be
52 initialized to the empty set.
53 * [XSI] Interval timers shall be reset in the child process.
54 * [SEM] Any semaphores that are open in the parent process shall
55 also be open in the child process.
56 * [ML] The child process shall not inherit any address space memory
57 locks established by the parent process via calls to mlockall()
58 or mlock().
59 * [MF|SHM] Memory mappings created in the parent shall be retained
60 in the child process. MAP_PRIVATE mappings inherited from the
61 parent shall also be MAP_PRIVATE mappings in the child, and any
62 modifications to the data in these mappings made by the parent
63 prior to calling fork() shall be visible to the child. Any
64 modifications to the data in MAP_PRIVATE mappings made by the
65 parent after fork() returns shall be visible only to the parent.
66 Modifications to the data in MAP_PRIVATE mappings made by the
67 child shall be visible only to the child.
68 * [PS] For the SCHED_FIFO and SCHED_RR scheduling policies, the
69 child process shall inherit the policy and priority settings
70 of the parent process during a fork() function. For other s
71 cheduling policies, the policy and priority settings on fork()
72 are implementation-defined.
73 * [TMR] Per-process timers created by the parent shall not be
74 inherited by the child process.
75 * [MSG] The child process shall have its own copy of the message
76 queue descriptors of the parent. Each of the message descriptors
77 of the child shall refer to the same open message queue
78 description as the corresponding message descriptor of the parent.
79 * [AIO] No asynchronous input or asynchronous output operations
80 shall be inherited by the child process.
81 * A process shall be created with a single thread. If a
82 multi-threaded process calls fork(), the new process shall contain
83 a replica of the calling thread and its entire address space,
84 possibly including the states of mutexes and other resources.
85 Consequently, to avoid errors, the child process may only execute
86 async-signal-safe operations until such time as one of the exec
87 functions is called. [THR] Fork handlers may be established by
88 means of the pthread_atfork() function in order to maintain
89 application invariants across fork() calls.
90
91 When the application calls fork() from a signal handler and any of
92 the fork handlers registered by pthread_atfork() calls a function
93 that is not asynch-signal-safe, the behavior is undefined.
94 * [TRC TRI] If the Trace option and the Trace Inherit option are
95 both supported:
96 If the calling process was being traced in a trace stream that
97 had its inheritance policy set to POSIX_TRACE_INHERITED, the
98 child process shall be traced into that trace stream, and the
99 child process shall inherit the parent's mapping of trace event
100 names to trace event type identifiers. If the trace stream in
101 which the calling process was being traced had its inheritance
102 policy set to POSIX_TRACE_CLOSE_FOR_CHILD, the child process
103 shall not be traced into that trace stream. The inheritance
104 policy is set by a call to the posix_trace_attr_setinherited()
105 function.
106 * [TRC] If the Trace option is supported, but the Trace Inherit
107 option is not supported:
108 The child process shall not be traced into any of the trace
109 streams of its parent process.
110 * [TRC] If the Trace option is supported, the child process of
111 a trace controller process shall not control the trace streams
112 controlled by its parent process.
113 * [CPT] The initial value of the CPU-time clock of the child
114 process shall be set to zero.
115 * [TCT] The initial value of the CPU-time clock of the single
116 thread of the child process shall be set to zero.
117
118 All other process characteristics defined by IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 shall
119 be the same in the parent and child processes. The inheritance of
120 process characteristics not defined by IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 is
121 unspecified by IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.
122
123 After fork(), both the parent and the child processes shall be capable
124 of executing independently before either one terminates.
125
126RETURN VALUE
127
128 Upon successful completion, fork() shall return 0 to the child process
129 and shall return the process ID of the child process to the parent
130 process. Both processes shall continue to execute from the fork()
131 function. Otherwise, -1 shall be returned to the parent process, no
132 child process shall be created, and errno shall be set to indicate
133 the error.
134
135ERRORS
136
137 The fork() function shall fail if:
138
139 [EAGAIN]
140 The system lacked the necessary resources to create another
141 process, or the system-imposed limit on the total number of
142 processes under execution system-wide or by a single user
143 {CHILD_MAX} would be exceeded.
144
145 The fork() function may fail if:
146
147 [ENOMEM]
148 Insufficient storage space is available.
149
150
151
152
1532.0 Requirements and Assumptions Of The Implementation
154------------------------------------------------------
155
156The Innotek LIBC fork() implementation will require the following features
157in LIBC to work:
158 1. A shared process management internal to LIBC for communication to the
159 child that a fork() is in progress.
160 2. A very generalized and varied set of fork helper functions to archive
161 maximum flexibility of the implementation.
162 3. Extended versions of some memory related OS/2 APIs must be implemented.
163
164The implemenetation will further make the following assumption about the
165operation of OS/2:
166 1. DosExecPgm will not return till all DLLs are initated successfully.
167
168
169
1703.0 The Shared Process Management
171---------------------------------
172
173The fork() implementation requires a method of telling the child process
174that it's being forked and must take a very different startup route. For
175some other LIBC apis there is need for parent -> child and child -> parent
176information exchange. More specifically, the inheritance of sockets,
177signals, the different scheduler actions of a posix_spawn[p]() call, and
178possibly some process group stuff related to posix_spawn too if we get it
179figured out eventually. All this was parent -> child during spawn/fork. A
180need exist also for child -> parent notification and possibly exchange for
181process termination. It might be necessary to reimplement the different
182wait apis and implement SIGCHLD, it's likely that those tasks will make
183such demands.
184
185The choice is now whether or not to make this shared process management
186specific to each LIBC version or try to make it survive normal LIBC updates.
187Making is specific have advantages in code size and memory footprint (no
188reserved field), however it have certain disadvantages when LIBC is updated.
189The other option is to use a named shared memory object, defining the
190content with reserved space for later extensions so several versions of
191LIBC with more or less features implemented can co use the memory space.
192
193The latter option is prefered since it allows more applications to
194interoperate, it causes less shared memory waste, the shared memory
195can be located in high memory and it would be possible to fork
196processes using multiple versions of LIBC.
197
198The shared memory must be named \SHAREMEM\INNOTEKLIBC.V01, the version
199number being the one of the shared memory layout and contents, it will
200only be increased when incompatible changes are made.
201
202The shared memory will be protected by an standard OS/2 mutex semaphore.
203It will not use any fast R3 semaphore since the the usage frequency is low
204and the result of a messup may be disastrous. Care must be take for
205avoiding creation races and owner died scenarios.
206
207The memory will have a fixed size, since adding segments is very hard.
208Thus the size must be large enough to cope with a great deal of
209processes, but bearing in mind that OS/2 normally doesn't support more
210than a 1000 processes, with a theoritical max of some 4000 (being the
211max thread count). A very simplistic allocation scheme will be
212implemented. Practically speaking a fixed block size pool would do fine
213for the process structure, while for the misc structures like socket
214lists a linked list based heap would do fine.
215
216The process blocks will be rounded up to in size adding a reasonable
217amount of space resevered for future extensions. Reserved space must be
218all zeroed.
219
220The fork() specific members of the process block will be a pointer to
221the shared memory object for the fork operation (the fork handle) and
222list of forkable modules. The fork handle will it self contain
223information indicating whether or not another LIBC version have already
224started fork() handling in the child. The presense of the fork handle
225means that the child is being forked and normal dll init and startup
226will not be executed, but a registered callback will be called to do
227the forking of each module. (more details in section 4.0)
228
229The parent will before spawn, fork and exec (essentially before DosExecPgm
230or DosStartSession) create a process block for the child to be born and
231link it into an embryo list in the shared memory block. The child will
232find the process block by looking searching an embryo list using the
233parent pid as key. All DosExecPgm and DosStartSession calls are
234serialized within one LIBC version. (If some empty headed programmer
235manages to link together a program which may end up using two or more
236LIBC versions and having two or more thread doing DosExecPgm at the
237very same time, well then he really deserves what ever trouble he gets!
238At least don't blame me!)
239
240Process blocks will have to stay around after the process terminated
241(for child -> parent term exchange), a cleanup mechanism will be invoked
242whenever a free memory threshold is reached. All processes will register
243exit list handlers to mark the process block as zombie (and later
244perhaps setting error codes and notifying waiters/child-listeners).
245
246
247
2484.0 The fork() Implementation
249-----------------------------
250
251
252The implementation will be based on a fork handle and a set of primitives.
253The fork handle is a pointer to an shared memory object allocated for the
254occation and which will be freed before fork() returns. The primitives
255all operates on this handle and will be provided using a callback table
256in order to fully support multiple LIBC versions.
257
258
2594.1 Forkable Executable and DLLs
260--------------------------------
261
262The support for fork() is an optional feature of LIBC. The default
263executable produced with LIBC and GCC will not be forkable. The fork
264support will be based on registration of the DLLs and EXEs in their
265LIBC supplied startup code (crt0/dll0). A set of fork versions of these
266modules will be made.
267
268The big differnece between the ordinary crt0/dll0 and the forkable
269crt0/dll0 is a per module structure, a call to register this, and the
270handling of the return code of that call.
271
272The structure will contain these fields:
273 - chain pointer.
274 - data segment base address.
275 - data segment end address.
276 - fork callback function.
277
278The fork callback function is called _atfork_callback, it takes the fork
279handle, module structure, and an operation enum as arguments. LIBC will
280contain a default implementation of _atfork_callback() which simply
281duplicates the data segment.
282
283The register call, __libc_ForkRegisterModule(), will return:
284 - 0 if normal process startup. no forking.
285 - 1 if fork() is in progress. The crt0/dll0 code will then
286 not call any standard initiation code, but let the
287 _atfork_callback() do all necessary stuff.
288
289
2904.2 Fork Primitives
291-------------------
292
293These primitives are provided by the fork implementation in the fork
294handle structure. We will define a set of these primitives now, if
295later new ones are added the users of these must check that they are
296actually present.
297
298Example:
299 rc = pForkHandle->pOps->pfnDuplicatePages(pModule->pvDataBase, pModule->pvDataEnd, __LIBC_FORK_ONLY_DIRTY);
300 if (rc)
301 return rc; /* failure */
302
303Prototypes:
304 /**
305 * Duplicating a number of pages from pvStart to pvEnd.
306 * @returns 0 on success.
307 * @returns appropriate non-zero error code on failure.
308 * @param pForkHandle Handle of the current fork operation.
309 * @param pvStart Pointer to start of the pages. Rounded down.
310 * @param pvEnd Pointer to end of the pages. Rounded up.
311 * @param fFlags __LIBC_FORK_ONLY_DIRTY means checking whether the
312 * pages are actually dirty before bothering touching
313 * and copying them. (Using the partically broken
314 * DosQueryMemState() API.)
315 * __LIBC_FORK_ALL means not to bother checking, but
316 * just go ahead copying all the pages.
317 */
318 int pfnDuplicatePages(__LIBC_FORKHANDLE *pForkHandle, void *pvStart, void *pvEnd, unsigned fFlags);
319
320 /**
321 * Invoke a function in the child process giving it an chunk of input.
322 * The function is invoked the next time the fork buffer is flushed,
323 * call pfnFlush() if the return code is desired.
324 *
325 * @returns 0 on success.
326 * @returns appropriate non-zero error code on failure.
327 * @param pForkHandle Handle of the current fork operation.
328 * @param pfn Pointer to the function to invoke in the child.
329 * The function gets the fork handle, pointer to
330 * the argument memory chunk and the size of that.
331 * The function must return 0 on success, and non-zero
332 * on failure.
333 * @param pvArg Pointer to a block of memory of size cbArg containing
334 * input to be copied to the child and given to pfn upon
335 * invocation.
336 */
337 int pfnInvoke(int *(pfn)(__LIBC_FORKHANDLE *pForkHandle, void *pvArg, size_t cbArg), void *pvArg, size_t cbArg);
338
339 /**
340 * Flush the fork() buffer. Meaning taking what ever is in the fork buffer
341 * and let the child process it.
342 * This might be desired to get the result of a pfnInvoke() in a near
343 * synchornous way.
344 * @returns 0 on success.
345 * @returns appropriate non-zero error code on failure.
346 * @param pForkHandle Handle of the current fork operation.
347 */
348 int pfnFlush(__LIBC_FORKHANDLE *pForkHandle);
349 ...
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