nuttx/sched/wqueue/kwork_inherit.c
Gregory Nutt f92dba212d sched/sched/sched.h: Make naming of all internal names consistent:
1. Add internal scheduler functions should begin with nxsched_, not sched_
2. Follow the consistent naming patter of https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/NUTTX/Naming+of+OS+Internal+Functions
2020-05-09 16:58:42 -03:00

395 lines
13 KiB
C

/****************************************************************************
* sched/work/work_inherit.c
*
* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
* contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
* this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. The
* ASF licenses this file to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
* "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the
* License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
* License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
* under the License.
*
****************************************************************************/
/****************************************************************************
* Included Files
****************************************************************************/
#include <nuttx/config.h>
#include <sched.h>
#include <nuttx/irq.h>
#include <nuttx/wqueue.h>
#include "sched/sched.h"
#include "wqueue/wqueue.h"
#if defined(CONFIG_SCHED_WORKQUEUE) && defined(CONFIG_SCHED_LPWORK) && \
defined(CONFIG_PRIORITY_INHERITANCE)
/****************************************************************************
* Private Functions
****************************************************************************/
/****************************************************************************
* Name: lpwork_boostworker
*
* Description:
* Called by the work queue client to assure that the priority of the low-
* priority worker thread is at least at the requested level, reqprio. This
* function would normally be called just before calling work_queue().
*
* Input Parameters:
* reqprio - Requested minimum worker thread priority
*
* Returned Value:
* None
*
****************************************************************************/
static void lpwork_boostworker(pid_t wpid, uint8_t reqprio)
{
FAR struct tcb_s *wtcb;
/* Get the TCB of the low priority worker thread from the process ID. */
wtcb = nxsched_get_tcb(wpid);
DEBUGASSERT(wtcb);
#if CONFIG_SEM_NNESTPRIO > 0
/* If the priority of the client thread that is greater than the base
* priority of the worker thread, then we may need to adjust the worker
* thread's priority now or later to that priority.
*/
if (reqprio > wtcb->base_priority)
{
/* If the new priority is greater than the current, possibly already
* boosted priority of the worker thread, then we will have to raise
* the worker thread's priority now.
*/
if (reqprio > wtcb->sched_priority)
{
/* If the current priority of worker thread has already been
* boosted, then add the boost priority to the list of restoration
* priorities. When the higher priority waiter thread gets its
* count, then we need to revert the worker thread to this saved
* priority (not to its base priority).
*/
if (wtcb->sched_priority > wtcb->base_priority)
{
/* Save the current, boosted priority of the worker thread. */
if (wtcb->npend_reprio < CONFIG_SEM_NNESTPRIO)
{
wtcb->pend_reprios[wtcb->npend_reprio] =
wtcb->sched_priority;
wtcb->npend_reprio++;
}
else
{
serr("ERROR: CONFIG_SEM_NNESTPRIO exceeded\n");
DEBUGASSERT(wtcb->npend_reprio < CONFIG_SEM_NNESTPRIO);
}
}
/* Raise the priority of the worker. This cannot cause a context
* switch because we have preemption disabled. The worker thread
* may be marked "pending" and the switch may occur during
* sched_unblock() processing.
*/
nxsched_set_priority(wtcb, reqprio);
}
else
{
/* The new priority is above the base priority of the worker,
* but not as high as its current working priority. Just put it
* in the list of pending restoration priorities so that when the
* higher priority thread gets its count, we can revert to this
* saved priority and not to the base priority.
*/
if (wtcb->npend_reprio < CONFIG_SEM_NNESTPRIO)
{
wtcb->pend_reprios[wtcb->npend_reprio] = reqprio;
wtcb->npend_reprio++;
}
else
{
serr("ERROR: CONFIG_SEM_NNESTPRIO exceeded\n");
DEBUGASSERT(wtcb->npend_reprio < CONFIG_SEM_NNESTPRIO);
}
}
}
#else
/* If the priority of the client thread that is less than of equal to the
* priority of the worker thread, then do nothing because the thread is
* already running at a sufficient priority.
*/
if (reqprio > wtcb->sched_priority)
{
/* Raise the priority of the worker thread. This cannot cause
* context switch because we have preemption disabled. The task
* will be marked "pending" and the switch will occur during
* sched_unlock() processing.
*/
nxsched_set_priority(wtcb, reqprio);
}
#endif
}
/****************************************************************************
* Name: lpwork_restoreworker
*
* Description:
* This function is called to restore the priority after it was previously
* boosted. This is often done by client logic on the worker thread when
* the scheduled work completes. It will check if we need to drop the
* priority of the worker thread.
*
* Input Parameters:
* reqprio - Previously requested minimum worker thread priority to be
* "unboosted"
*
* Returned Value:
* None
*
****************************************************************************/
static void lpwork_restoreworker(pid_t wpid, uint8_t reqprio)
{
FAR struct tcb_s *wtcb;
#if CONFIG_SEM_NNESTPRIO > 0
uint8_t wpriority;
int index;
int selected;
#endif
/* Get the TCB of the low priority worker thread from the process ID. */
wtcb = nxsched_get_tcb(wpid);
DEBUGASSERT(wtcb);
/* Was the priority of the worker thread boosted? If so, then drop its
* priority back to the correct level. What is the correct level?
*/
if (wtcb->sched_priority != wtcb->base_priority)
{
#if CONFIG_SEM_NNESTPRIO > 0
/* Are there other, pending priority levels to revert to? */
if (wtcb->npend_reprio < 1)
{
/* No... the worker thread has only been boosted once.
* npend_reprio should be 0 and the boosted priority should be the
* priority of the client task (reqprio)
*
* That latter assumption may not be true if the client's priority
* was also boosted so that it no longer matches the wtcb's
* sched_priority. Or if CONFIG_SEM_NNESTPRIO is too small (so
* that we do not have a proper record of the reprioritizations).
*/
DEBUGASSERT(/* wtcb->sched_priority == reqprio && */
wtcb->npend_reprio == 0);
/* Reset the worker's priority back to the base priority. */
nxsched_reprioritize(wtcb, wtcb->base_priority);
}
/* There are multiple pending priority levels. The worker thread's
* "boosted" priority could greater than or equal to "reqprio" (it
* could be greater if its priority we boosted because it also holds
* some semaphore).
*/
else if (wtcb->sched_priority <= reqprio)
{
/* The worker thread has been boosted to the same priority as the
* waiter thread that just received the count. We will simply
* reprioritize to the next highest pending priority.
*/
/* Find the highest pending priority and remove it from the list */
for (index = 1, selected = 0; index < wtcb->npend_reprio; index++)
{
if (wtcb->pend_reprios[index] > wtcb->pend_reprios[selected])
{
selected = index;
}
}
/* Remove the highest priority pending priority from the list */
wpriority = wtcb->pend_reprios[selected];
index = wtcb->npend_reprio - 1;
if (index > 0)
{
wtcb->pend_reprios[selected] = wtcb->pend_reprios[index];
}
wtcb->npend_reprio = index;
/* And apply that priority to the thread (while retaining the
* base_priority)
*/
nxsched_set_priority(wtcb, wpriority);
}
else
{
/* The worker thread has been boosted to a higher priority than the
* waiter task. The pending priority should be in the list (unless
* it was lost because of list overflow or because the worker was
* reprioritized again unbeknownst to the priority inheritance
* logic).
*
* Search the list for the matching priority.
*/
for (index = 0; index < wtcb->npend_reprio; index++)
{
/* Does this pending priority match the priority of the thread
* that just received the count?
*/
if (wtcb->pend_reprios[index] == reqprio)
{
/* Yes, remove it from the list */
selected = wtcb->npend_reprio - 1;
if (selected > 0)
{
wtcb->pend_reprios[index] =
wtcb->pend_reprios[selected];
}
wtcb->npend_reprio = selected;
break;
}
}
}
#else
/* There is no alternative restore priorities, drop the priority
* of the worker thread all the way back to the threads "base"
* priority.
*/
nxsched_reprioritize(wtcb, wtcb->base_priority);
#endif
}
}
/****************************************************************************
* Public Functions
****************************************************************************/
/****************************************************************************
* Name: lpwork_boostpriority
*
* Description:
* Called by the work queue client to assure that the priority of the low-
* priority worker thread is at least at the requested level, reqprio. This
* function would normally be called just before calling work_queue().
*
* Input Parameters:
* reqprio - Requested minimum worker thread priority
*
* Returned Value:
* None
*
****************************************************************************/
void lpwork_boostpriority(uint8_t reqprio)
{
irqstate_t flags;
int wndx;
/* Clip to the configured maximum priority */
if (reqprio > CONFIG_SCHED_LPWORKPRIOMAX)
{
reqprio = CONFIG_SCHED_LPWORKPRIOMAX;
}
/* Prevent context switches until we get the priorities right */
flags = enter_critical_section();
sched_lock();
/* Adjust the priority of every worker thread */
for (wndx = 0; wndx < CONFIG_SCHED_LPNTHREADS; wndx++)
{
lpwork_boostworker(g_lpwork.worker[wndx].pid, reqprio);
}
sched_unlock();
leave_critical_section(flags);
}
/****************************************************************************
* Name: lpwork_restorepriority
*
* Description:
* This function is called to restore the priority after it was previously
* boosted. This is often done by client logic on the worker thread when
* the scheduled work completes. It will check if we need to drop the
* priority of the worker thread.
*
* Input Parameters:
* reqprio - Previously requested minimum worker thread priority to be
* "unboosted"
*
* Returned Value:
* None
*
****************************************************************************/
void lpwork_restorepriority(uint8_t reqprio)
{
irqstate_t flags;
int wndx;
/* Clip to the configured maximum priority */
if (reqprio > CONFIG_SCHED_LPWORKPRIOMAX)
{
reqprio = CONFIG_SCHED_LPWORKPRIOMAX;
}
/* Prevent context switches until we get the priorities right */
flags = enter_critical_section();
sched_lock();
/* Adjust the priority of every worker thread */
for (wndx = 0; wndx < CONFIG_SCHED_LPNTHREADS; wndx++)
{
lpwork_restoreworker(g_lpwork.worker[wndx].pid, reqprio);
}
sched_unlock();
leave_critical_section(flags);
}
#endif /* CONFIG_SCHED_WORKQUEUE && CONFIG_SCHED_LPWORK && \
* CONFIG_PRIORITY_INHERITANCE */