To determine whether a signal is real-time signal or standard signal, the POSIX standard https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/signal.7.html defines a real-time signal between SIGRTMIN and SIGRTMAX , which can store multiple copies, otherwise only one can be retained.
Signed-off-by: xinhaiteng <xinhaiteng@xiaomi.com>
Refer to issue #8867 for details and rational.
Convert sigset_t to an array type so that more than 32 signals can be supported.
Why not use a uin64_t?
- Using a uin32_t is more flexible if we decide to increase the number of signals beyound 64.
- 64-bit accesses are not atomic, at least not on 32-bit ARMv7-M and similar
- Keeping the base type as uint32_t does not introduce additional overhead due to padding to achieve 64-bit alignment of uin64_t
- Some architectures still supported by NuttX do not support uin64_t
types,
Increased the number of signals to 64. This matches Linux. This will support all xsignals defined by Linux and also 32 real time signals (also like Linux).
This is is a work in progress; a draft PR that you are encouraged to comment on.
The _unmasked_ signal action was never added if the task is in system call
and waiting for (a different) signal.
This fixes deliver especially for default signal actions / unmaskable
signals, like SIGTERM.
As far as I can interpret how signal delivery should work when the signal
is blocked, it should still be sent to the pending queue even if the signal
is masked. When the sigmask changes it will be delivered.
The original implementation did not add the pending signal action, if
stcb->task_state == TSTATE_WAIT_SIG is true.
An attempt to patch this was made in #8563 but it is insufficient as it
creates an issue when the task is not waiting for a signal, but is in
syscall, in this case the signal is incorrectly queued twice.
For some reason the signal action was never performed if the receiveing
task was within a system call, the pending queue inser was simply missing.
This fixes the issue.
When the signal sent by the sender is blocked in the target task,
if the target task has an action registered with sa_flags SA_KENELHAND,
it will directly respond to the action in the context of the sender.
When the action is executed, it will have the parameters set by the
target task with sigaction:sa_user.
Signed-off-by: dongjiuzhu1 <dongjiuzhu1@xiaomi.com>
It takes about 10 cycles to obtain the task list according to the task
status. In most cases, we know the task status, so we can directly
delete the task from the specified task list to reduce time consuming.
There one ways can caused this:
mq_timedreceive
TIMER IRQ do wd_timer -> wd_func1 mq_send
-> wd_func2 nxmq_rcvtimeout -> crash
Resolve:
Stop the watchdog when mq_send
Signed-off-by: ligd <liguiding1@xiaomi.com>
Otherwise, long-sleeping system calls using nxsig_timedwait
are not actually interrupted.
Tested with "ntpcstop" using lm3s6965-ek:qemu-protected config.
Follow the POSIX description.
SIGTSTP should be sent when the Ctrl-Z characters is encountered, not SIGSTP.
Testing:
Built with hifive1-revb:nsh (CONFIG_SERIAL_TERMIOS=y, CONFIG_SIG_DEFAULT=y and CONFIG_TTY_SIGTSTP=y)
Squashed commit of the following:
Add procfs support to show stopped tasks. Add nxsig_action() to solve a chicken and egg problem: We needed to use sigaction to set default actions, but sigaction() would refuse to set actions if the default actions could not be caught or ignored.
sched/signal: Add configuration option to selectively enabled/disable default signal actions for SIGSTOP/SIGSTP/SIGCONT and SIGKILL/SIGINT. Fix some compilation issues.
sched/sched: Okay.. I figured out a way to handle state changes that may occur while they were stopped. If a task/thread was already blocked when SIGSTOP/SIGSTP was received, it will restart in the running state. I will appear that to the task/thread that the blocked condition was interrupt by a signal and returns the EINTR error.
sched/group and sched/sched: Finish framework for continue/resume logic.
sched/signal: Roughing out basic structure to support task suspend/resume
Fix signal handing for smp
* sched/signal: Remove SMP related logic in sig_dispatch.c
This change prevents from a deadlock in up_schedulesigaction.c
where inter-CPU signal handling is actually implemented.
Signed-off-by: Masayuki Ishikawa <Masayuki.Ishikawa@jp.sony.com>
* arch/arm/src/armv7-m: Fix signal handling for SMP
In previous implementation, signal handling for SMP was incorrect.
Thus, for example, if an inter-CPU signal happened an incorret tcb
was signaled and caused ASSERT().
This change fixes the issues and works for both inter-CPU signal
handling and signal handling on the same CPU.
Signed-off-by: Masayuki Ishikawa <Masayuki.Ishikawa@jp.sony.com>
Approved-by: Gregory Nutt <gnutt@nuttx.org>
sched/mqueue: Rename all private static functions for use the nxmq_ vs. mq_ naming.
sched/mqueue: Rename all OS internal functions declared in sched/mqueue/mqueue.h to begin with nxmq_ vs. mq_. The mq_ prefix is reserved for standard application interfaces.
This is analogous to similar renaming that was done previously for semaphores.
Squashed commit of the following:
sched/signal: Fix a few compile warnings introduced by naming changes.
sched/signal: Rename all private, internal signl functions to use the nxsig_ prefix.
sched/signal: Rename sig_removependingsignal, sig_unmaskpendingsignal, and sig_mqnotempty to nxsig_remove_pendingsignal, nxsig_unmask_pendingsignal, and nxsig_mqnotempty to make it clear that these are OS internal interfaces.
sched/signal: Rename sig_findaction and sig_lowest to nxsig_find_action and nxsig_lowest to make it clear that these are OS internal interfaces.
sched/signal: Rename sig_allocatepingsigaction and sig_deliver to nxsig_alloc_pendingsigaction and nxsig_deliver to make it clear that these are OS internal interfaces.
sched/signal: Rename sig_cleanup, sig_release, sig_releasependingaction, and sig_releasependingsignal to nxsig_cleanup, nxsig_release, nxsig_release_pendingaction, and nxsig_release_pendingsignal to make it clear that these are OS internal interfaces.
sched/signal: Rename sig_tcbdispatch and sig_dispatch to nxsig_tcbdispatch and nxsig_dispatch to make it clear that these are OS internal interfaces.
sched/signal: Rename sig_releaseaction and sig_pendingset to nxsig_release_action and nxsig_pendingset to make it clear that these are OS internal interfaces.
sched/signal: Rename sig_initialize and sig_allocateactionblock to nxsig_initialize and nxsig_alloc_actionblock to make it clear that these are OS internal interfaces.
libc/semaphore: Add nxsem_getvalue() which is identical to sem_getvalue() except that it never modifies the errno variable. Changed all references to sem_getvalue in the OS to nxsem_getvalue().
sched/semaphore: Rename all internal private functions from sem_xyz to nxsem_xyz. The sem_ prefix is (will be) reserved only for the application semaphore interfaces.
libc/semaphore: Add nxsem_init() which is identical to sem_init() except that it never modifies the errno variable. Changed all references to sem_init in the OS to nxsem_init().
sched/semaphore: Rename sem_tickwait() to nxsem_tickwait() so that it is clear this is an internal OS function.
sched/semaphoate: Rename sem_reset() to nxsem_reset() so that it is clear this is an internal OS function.
The three fixes are to handle cases in the SMP configuration where one CPU does need to make modifications to TCB and data structures on a task that could be running running on another CPU. Those three cases are task_delete(), task_restart(), and execution of signal handles. In all three cases the solutions is basically the same: (1) Call sched_cpu_pause(tcb) to pause the CPU on which the task is running, (2) perform the necessary operations, then (3) call up_cpu_resume() to restart the paused CPU.