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/* Packet queues
Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Written by Miles Bader <miles@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at
your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#include <malloc.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stddef.h>
#include "pq.h"
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* Create a new packet queue, returning it in PQ. The only possible error is
ENOMEM. */
error_t
pq_create (struct pq **pq)
{
*pq = malloc (sizeof (struct pq));
if (! *pq)
return ENOMEM;
(*pq)->head = (*pq)->tail = 0;
(*pq)->free = 0;
return 0;
}
/* Free every packet (and its contents) in the linked list rooted at HEAD. */
static void
free_packets (struct packet *head)
{
if (head)
{
struct packet *next = head->next;
if (head->ports)
free (head->ports);
if (head->buf_len > 0)
{
if (head->buf_vm_alloced)
vm_deallocate (mach_task_self (),
(vm_address_t)head->buf, head->buf_len);
else
free (head->buf);
}
free (head);
free_packets (next);
}
}
/* Frees PQ and any resources it holds, including deallocating any ports in
packets left in the queue. */
void
pq_free (struct pq *pq)
{
pq_drain (pq);
free_packets (pq->free);
free (pq);
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* Remove the first packet (if any) in PQ, deallocating any resources it
holds. True is returned if a packet was found, false otherwise. */
int
pq_dequeue (struct pq *pq)
{
extern void pipe_dealloc_addr (void *addr);
struct packet *packet = pq->head;
if (! packet)
return 0;
/* Deallocate any resource in PACKET. */
if (packet->num_ports)
packet_dealloc_ports (packet);
if (packet->source)
pipe_dealloc_addr (packet->source);
pq->head = packet->next;
packet->next = pq->free;
pq->free = packet;
if (pq->head)
pq->head->prev = 0;
else
pq->tail = 0;
return 1;
}
/* Empties out PQ. This *will* deallocate any ports in any of the packets. */
void
pq_drain (struct pq *pq)
{
while (pq_dequeue (pq))
;
}
/* Pushes a new packet of type TYPE and source SOURCE onto the tail of the
queue, and returns it, or 0 if there was an allocation error. */
struct packet *
pq_queue (struct pq *pq, unsigned type, void *source)
{
struct packet *packet = pq->free;
if (!packet)
{
packet = malloc (sizeof (struct packet));
if (!packet)
return 0;
packet->buf = 0;
packet->buf_len = 0;
packet->ports = 0;
packet->num_ports = packet->ports_alloced = 0;
packet->buf_start = packet->buf_end = packet->buf;
packet->buf_vm_alloced = 0;
}
else
pq->free = packet->next;
packet->type = type;
packet->source = source;
packet->next = 0;
packet->prev = pq->tail;
if (pq->tail)
pq->tail->next = packet;
pq->tail = packet;
if (!pq->head)
pq->head = packet;
return packet;
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* Returns a legal size to which PACKET can be set allowing enough room for
EXTRA bytes more than what's already in it, and perhaps more. */
size_t
packet_new_size (struct packet *packet, size_t extra)
{
size_t new_len = (packet->buf_end - packet->buf) + extra;
if (packet->buf_vm_alloced || new_len >= PACKET_SIZE_LARGE)
/* Round NEW_LEN up to a page boundary (OLD_LEN should already be). */
return round_page (new_len);
else
/* Otherwise, just round up to a multiple of 512 bytes. */
return (new_len + 511) & ~511;
}
/* Try to extend PACKET to be NEW_LEN bytes long, which should be greater
than the current packet size. This should be a valid length -- i.e., if
it's greater than PACKET_SIZE_LARGE, it should be a mulitple of
VM_PAGE_SIZE. If PACKET cannot be extended for some reason, false is
returned, otherwise true. */
int
packet_extend (struct packet *packet, size_t new_len)
{
size_t old_len = packet->buf_len;
if (old_len == 0)
/* No existing buffer to extend. */
return 0;
if (packet->buf_vm_alloced)
/* A vm_alloc'd packet. */
{
char *extension = packet->buf + old_len;
/* Try to allocate memory at the end of our current buffer. */
if (vm_allocate (mach_task_self (),
(vm_address_t *)&extension, new_len - old_len, 0) != 0)
return 0;
}
else
/* A malloc'd packet. */
{
char *new_buf;
char *old_buf = packet->buf;
if (new_len >= PACKET_SIZE_LARGE)
/* The old packet length is malloc'd, but we want to vm_allocate the
new length, so we'd have to copy the old contents. */
return 0;
new_buf = realloc (old_buf, new_len);
if (! new_buf)
return 0;
packet->buf = new_buf;
packet->buf_start = new_buf + (packet->buf_start - old_buf);
packet->buf_end = new_buf + (packet->buf_end - old_buf);
}
packet->buf_len = new_len;
return 1;
}
/* Reallocate PACKET to have NEW_LEN bytes of buffer space, which should be
greater than the current packet size. This should be a valid length --
i.e., if it's greater than PACKET_SIZE_LARGE, it should be a multiple of
VM_PAGE_SIZE. If an error occurs, PACKET is not modified and the error is
returned. */
error_t
packet_realloc (struct packet *packet, size_t new_len)
{
error_t err;
char *new_buf;
char *old_buf = packet->buf;
int vm_alloc = (new_len >= PACKET_SIZE_LARGE);
/* Make a new buffer. */
if (vm_alloc)
err =
vm_allocate (mach_task_self (), (vm_address_t *)&new_buf, new_len, 1);
else
{
new_buf = malloc (new_len);
err = (new_buf ? 0 : ENOMEM);
}
if (! err)
{
size_t old_len = packet->buf_len;
char *start = packet->buf_start, *end = packet->buf_end;
/* Copy what we must. */
if (end != start)
/* If there was an operation like vm_move, we could use that in the
case where both the old and the new buffers were vm_alloced (on
the assumption that creating COW pages is somewhat more costly).
But there's not, and bcopy will do vm_copy where it can. Will we
still takes faults on the new copy, even though we've deallocated
the old one??? XXX */
bcopy (start, new_buf, end - start);
/* And get rid of the old buffer. */
if (old_len > 0)
{
if (packet->buf_vm_alloced)
vm_deallocate (mach_task_self (), (vm_address_t)old_buf, old_len);
else
free (old_buf);
}
packet->buf = new_buf;
packet->buf_len = new_len;
packet->buf_vm_alloced = vm_alloc;
packet->buf_start = new_buf;
packet->buf_end = new_buf + (end - start);
}
return err;
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* If PACKET has any ports, deallocates them. */
void
packet_dealloc_ports (struct packet *packet)
{
unsigned i;
for (i = 0; i < packet->num_ports; i++)
{
mach_port_t port = packet->ports[i];
if (port != MACH_PORT_NULL)
mach_port_deallocate (mach_task_self (), port);
}
}
/* Sets PACKET's ports to be PORTS, of length NUM_PORTS. ENOMEM is returned
if a memory allocation error occurred, otherwise, 0. */
error_t
packet_set_ports (struct packet *packet,
mach_port_t *ports, size_t num_ports)
{
if (packet->num_ports > 0)
packet_dealloc_ports (packet);
if (num_ports > packet->ports_alloced)
{
mach_port_t *new_ports = malloc (sizeof (mach_port_t *) * num_ports);
if (! new_ports)
return ENOMEM;
free (packet->ports);
packet->ports_alloced = num_ports;
}
bcopy (ports, packet->ports, sizeof (mach_port_t *) * num_ports);
packet->num_ports = num_ports;
return 0;
}
/* Returns any ports in PACKET in PORTS and NUM_PORTS, and removes them from
PACKET. */
error_t
packet_read_ports (struct packet *packet,
mach_port_t **ports, size_t *num_ports)
{
int length = packet->num_ports * sizeof (mach_port_t *);
if (*num_ports < packet->num_ports)
{
error_t err =
vm_allocate (mach_task_self (), (vm_address_t *)ports, length, 1);
if (err)
return err;
}
*num_ports = packet->num_ports;
bcopy (packet->ports, *ports, length);
packet->num_ports = 0;
return 0;
}
/* Append the bytes in DATA, of length DATA_LEN, to what's already in PACKET,
and return the amount appended in AMOUNT. */
error_t
packet_write (struct packet *packet,
char *data, size_t data_len, size_t *amount)
{
error_t err = packet_ensure (packet, data_len);
if (err)
return err;
/* Add the new data. */
bcopy (data, packet->buf_end, data_len);
packet->buf_end += data_len;
*amount = data_len;
return 0;
}
/* Removes up to AMOUNT bytes from the beginning of the data in PACKET, and
puts it into *DATA, and the amount read into DATA_LEN. If more than the
original *DATA_LEN bytes are available, new memory is vm_allocated, and
the address and length of this array put into DATA and DATA_LEN. */
error_t
packet_read (struct packet *packet,
char **data, size_t *data_len, size_t amount)
{
char *start = packet->buf_start;
char *end = packet->buf_end;
if (amount > end - start)
amount = end - start;
if (amount > 0)
{
char *buf = packet->buf;
if (packet->buf_vm_alloced && amount >= vm_page_size)
/* We can return memory from BUF directly without copying. */
{
if (buf + vm_page_size <= start)
/* BUF_START has been advanced past the start of the buffer
(perhaps by a series of small reads); as we're going to assume
everything before START is gone, make sure we deallocate any
memory on pages before those we return to the user. */
vm_deallocate (mach_task_self (),
(vm_address_t)buf,
trunc_page (start) - (vm_address_t)buf);
*data = start; /* Return the buffer directly. */
start += amount; /* Advance the read point. */
if (start < end)
/* Since returning a partial page actually means returning the
whole page, we have to be careful not to grab past the page
boundary before the end of the data we want. */
{
char *non_aligned_start = start;
start = (char *)trunc_page (start);
amount -= non_aligned_start - start;
}
else
/* This read will be up to the end of the buffer, so we can just
consume any space on the page following BUF_END (vm_alloced
buffers are always allocated in whole pages). */
{
start = (char *)round_page (start);
packet->buf_end = start; /* Ensure BUF_START <= BUF_END. */
}
/* We've actually consumed the memory at the start of BUF. */
packet->buf = start;
packet->buf_start = start;
packet->buf_len -= start - buf;
}
else
/* Just copy the data the old fashioned way.... */
{
if (*data_len < amount)
vm_allocate (mach_task_self (), (vm_address_t *)data, amount, 1);
bcopy (start, *data, amount);
start += amount;
if (start - buf > 2 * PACKET_SIZE_LARGE)
/* Get rid of unused space at the beginning of the buffer -- we
know it's vm_alloced because of the size, and this will allow
the buffer to just slide through memory. Because we wait for
a relatively large amount of free space before doing this, and
packet_write() would have gotten rid the free space if it
didn't require copying much data, it's unlikely that this will
happen if it would have been cheaper to just move the packet
contents around to make space for the next write. */
{
vm_size_t dealloc = trunc_page (start) - (vm_address_t)buf;
vm_deallocate (mach_task_self (), (vm_address_t)buf, dealloc);
packet->buf = buf + dealloc;
packet->buf_len -= dealloc;
}
packet->buf_start = start;
}
}
*data_len = amount;
return 0;
}
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