diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'net/tipc/socket.c')
-rw-r--r-- | net/tipc/socket.c | 48 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 47 deletions
diff --git a/net/tipc/socket.c b/net/tipc/socket.c index f9f5f3c..db32777 100644 --- a/net/tipc/socket.c +++ b/net/tipc/socket.c @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ /* * net/tipc/socket.c: TIPC socket API * - * Copyright (c) 2001-2007, 2012-2015, Ericsson AB + * Copyright (c) 2001-2007, 2012-2016, Ericsson AB * Copyright (c) 2004-2008, 2010-2013, Wind River Systems * All rights reserved. * @@ -129,54 +129,8 @@ static const struct proto_ops packet_ops; static const struct proto_ops stream_ops; static const struct proto_ops msg_ops; static struct proto tipc_proto; - static const struct rhashtable_params tsk_rht_params; -/* - * Revised TIPC socket locking policy: - * - * Most socket operations take the standard socket lock when they start - * and hold it until they finish (or until they need to sleep). Acquiring - * this lock grants the owner exclusive access to the fields of the socket - * data structures, with the exception of the backlog queue. A few socket - * operations can be done without taking the socket lock because they only - * read socket information that never changes during the life of the socket. - * - * Socket operations may acquire the lock for the associated TIPC port if they - * need to perform an operation on the port. If any routine needs to acquire - * both the socket lock and the port lock it must take the socket lock first - * to avoid the risk of deadlock. - * - * The dispatcher handling incoming messages cannot grab the socket lock in - * the standard fashion, since invoked it runs at the BH level and cannot block. - * Instead, it checks to see if the socket lock is currently owned by someone, - * and either handles the message itself or adds it to the socket's backlog - * queue; in the latter case the queued message is processed once the process - * owning the socket lock releases it. - * - * NOTE: Releasing the socket lock while an operation is sleeping overcomes - * the problem of a blocked socket operation preventing any other operations - * from occurring. However, applications must be careful if they have - * multiple threads trying to send (or receive) on the same socket, as these - * operations might interfere with each other. For example, doing a connect - * and a receive at the same time might allow the receive to consume the - * ACK message meant for the connect. While additional work could be done - * to try and overcome this, it doesn't seem to be worthwhile at the present. - * - * NOTE: Releasing the socket lock while an operation is sleeping also ensures - * that another operation that must be performed in a non-blocking manner is - * not delayed for very long because the lock has already been taken. - * - * NOTE: This code assumes that certain fields of a port/socket pair are - * constant over its lifetime; such fields can be examined without taking - * the socket lock and/or port lock, and do not need to be re-read even - * after resuming processing after waiting. These fields include: - * - socket type - * - pointer to socket sk structure (aka tipc_sock structure) - * - pointer to port structure - * - port reference - */ - static u32 tsk_own_node(struct tipc_sock *tsk) { return msg_prevnode(&tsk->phdr); |