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1 /* Background I/O service for Redis.
2 *
3 * This file implements operations that we need to perform in the background.
4 * Currently there is only a single operation, that is a background close(2)
5 * system call. This is needed as when the process is the last owner of a
6 * reference to a file closing it means unlinking it, and the deletion of the
7 * file is slow, blocking the server.
8 *
9 * In the future we'll either continue implementing new things we need or
10 * we'll switch to libeio. However there are probably long term uses for this
11 * file as we may want to put here Redis specific background tasks (for instance
12 * it is not impossible that we'll need a non blocking FLUSHDB/FLUSHALL
13 * implementation).
14 *
15 * DESIGN
16 * ------
17 *
18 * The design is trivial, we have a structure representing a job to perform
19 * and a different thread and job queue for every job type.
20 * Every thread wait for new jobs in its queue, and process every job
21 * sequentially.
22 *
23 * Jobs of the same type are guaranteed to be processed from the least
24 * recently inserted to the most recently inserted (older jobs processed
25 * first).
26 *
27 * Currently there is no way for the creator of the job to be notified about
28 * the completion of the operation, this will only be added when/if needed.
29 */
30
31 #include "redis.h"
32 #include "bio.h"
33
34 static pthread_mutex_t bio_mutex[REDIS_BIO_NUM_OPS];
35 static pthread_cond_t bio_condvar[REDIS_BIO_NUM_OPS];
36 static list *bio_jobs[REDIS_BIO_NUM_OPS];
37 /* The following array is used to hold the number of pending jobs for every
38 * OP type. This allows us to export the bioPendingJobsOfType() API that is
39 * useful when the main thread wants to perform some operation that may involve
40 * objects shared with the background thread. The main thread will just wait
41 * that there are no longer jobs of this type to be executed before performing
42 * the sensible operation. This data is also useful for reporting. */
43 static unsigned long long bio_pending[REDIS_BIO_NUM_OPS];
44
45 /* This structure represents a background Job. It is only used locally to this
46 * file as the API deos not expose the internals at all. */
47 struct bio_job {
48 time_t time; /* Time at which the job was created. */
49 /* Job specific arguments pointers. If we need to pass more than three
50 * arguments we can just pass a pointer to a structure or alike. */
51 void *arg1, *arg2, *arg3;
52 };
53
54 void *bioProcessBackgroundJobs(void *arg);
55
56 /* Make sure we have enough stack to perform all the things we do in the
57 * main thread. */
58 #define REDIS_THREAD_STACK_SIZE (1024*1024*4)
59
60 /* Initialize the background system, spawning the thread. */
61 void bioInit(void) {
62 pthread_attr_t attr;
63 pthread_t thread;
64 size_t stacksize;
65 int j;
66
67 /* Initialization of state vars and objects */
68 for (j = 0; j < REDIS_BIO_NUM_OPS; j++) {
69 pthread_mutex_init(&bio_mutex[j],NULL);
70 pthread_cond_init(&bio_condvar[j],NULL);
71 bio_jobs[j] = listCreate();
72 bio_pending[j] = 0;
73 }
74
75 /* Set the stack size as by default it may be small in some system */
76 pthread_attr_init(&attr);
77 pthread_attr_getstacksize(&attr,&stacksize);
78 if (!stacksize) stacksize = 1; /* The world is full of Solaris Fixes */
79 while (stacksize < REDIS_THREAD_STACK_SIZE) stacksize *= 2;
80 pthread_attr_setstacksize(&attr, stacksize);
81
82 /* Ready to spawn our threads. We use the single argument the thread
83 * function accepts in order to pass the job ID the thread is
84 * responsible of. */
85 for (j = 0; j < REDIS_BIO_NUM_OPS; j++) {
86 void *arg = (void*)(unsigned long) j;
87 if (pthread_create(&thread,&attr,bioProcessBackgroundJobs,arg) != 0) {
88 redisLog(REDIS_WARNING,"Fatal: Can't initialize Background Jobs.");
89 exit(1);
90 }
91 }
92 }
93
94 void bioCreateBackgroundJob(int type, void *arg1, void *arg2, void *arg3) {
95 struct bio_job *job = zmalloc(sizeof(*job));
96
97 job->time = time(NULL);
98 job->arg1 = arg1;
99 job->arg2 = arg2;
100 job->arg3 = arg3;
101 pthread_mutex_lock(&bio_mutex[type]);
102 listAddNodeTail(bio_jobs[type],job);
103 bio_pending[type]++;
104 pthread_cond_signal(&bio_condvar[type]);
105 pthread_mutex_unlock(&bio_mutex[type]);
106 }
107
108 void *bioProcessBackgroundJobs(void *arg) {
109 struct bio_job *job;
110 unsigned long type = (unsigned long) arg;
111 sigset_t sigset;
112
113 pthread_detach(pthread_self());
114 pthread_mutex_lock(&bio_mutex[type]);
115 /* Block SIGALRM so we are sure that only the main thread will
116 * receive the watchdog signal. */
117 sigemptyset(&sigset);
118 sigaddset(&sigset, SIGALRM);
119 if (pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, &sigset, NULL))
120 redisLog(REDIS_WARNING,
121 "Warning: can't mask SIGALRM in bio.c thread: %s", strerror(errno));
122
123 while(1) {
124 listNode *ln;
125
126 /* The loop always starts with the lock hold. */
127 if (listLength(bio_jobs[type]) == 0) {
128 pthread_cond_wait(&bio_condvar[type],&bio_mutex[type]);
129 continue;
130 }
131 /* Pop the job from the queue. */
132 ln = listFirst(bio_jobs[type]);
133 job = ln->value;
134 /* It is now possible to unlock the background system as we know have
135 * a stand alone job structure to process.*/
136 pthread_mutex_unlock(&bio_mutex[type]);
137
138 /* Process the job accordingly to its type. */
139 if (type == REDIS_BIO_CLOSE_FILE) {
140 close((long)job->arg1);
141 } else if (type == REDIS_BIO_AOF_FSYNC) {
142 aof_fsync((long)job->arg1);
143 } else {
144 redisPanic("Wrong job type in bioProcessBackgroundJobs().");
145 }
146 zfree(job);
147
148 /* Lock again before reiterating the loop, if there are no longer
149 * jobs to process we'll block again in pthread_cond_wait(). */
150 pthread_mutex_lock(&bio_mutex[type]);
151 listDelNode(bio_jobs[type],ln);
152 bio_pending[type]--;
153 }
154 }
155
156 /* Return the number of pending jobs of the specified type. */
157 unsigned long long bioPendingJobsOfType(int type) {
158 unsigned long long val;
159 pthread_mutex_lock(&bio_mutex[type]);
160 val = bio_pending[type];
161 pthread_mutex_unlock(&bio_mutex[type]);
162 return val;
163 }
164
165 #if 0 /* We don't use the following code for now, and bioWaitPendingJobsLE
166 probably needs a rewrite using conditional variables instead of the
167 current implementation. */
168
169
170 /* Wait until the number of pending jobs of the specified type are
171 * less or equal to the specified number.
172 *
173 * This function may block for long time, it should only be used to perform
174 * the following tasks:
175 *
176 * 1) To avoid that the main thread is pushing jobs of a given time so fast
177 * that the background thread can't process them at the same speed.
178 * So before creating a new job of a given type the main thread should
179 * call something like: bioWaitPendingJobsLE(job_type,10000);
180 * 2) In order to perform special operations that make it necessary to be sure
181 * no one is touching shared resourced in the background.
182 */
183 void bioWaitPendingJobsLE(int type, unsigned long long num) {
184 unsigned long long iteration = 0;
185
186 /* We poll the jobs queue aggressively to start, and gradually relax
187 * the polling speed if it is going to take too much time. */
188 while(1) {
189 iteration++;
190 if (iteration > 1000 && iteration <= 10000) {
191 usleep(100);
192 } else if (iteration > 10000) {
193 usleep(1000);
194 }
195 if (bioPendingJobsOfType(type) <= num) break;
196 }
197 }
198
199 /* Return the older job of the specified type. */
200 time_t bioOlderJobOfType(int type) {
201 time_t time;
202 listNode *ln;
203 struct bio_job *job;
204
205 pthread_mutex_lock(&bio_mutex[type]);
206 ln = listFirst(bio_jobs[type]);
207 if (ln == NULL) {
208 pthread_mutex_unlock(&bio_mutex[type]);
209 return 0;
210 }
211 job = ln->value;
212 time = job->time;
213 pthread_mutex_unlock(&bio_mutex[type]);
214 return time;
215 }
216
217 #endif