src/os/linux/vm/os_linux.cpp
author iveresov
Tue May 10 12:26:10 2011 -0700 (2 years ago)
changeset 2455 97b64f73103b
parent 2415188c9a5d6a6d
permissions -rw-r--r--
7043564: compile warning and copyright fixes
Summary: Fixed the warning, also fixed copyrights in a bunch of files.
Reviewed-by: johnc, kvn
        1 /*
        2  * Copyright (c) 1999, 2011, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
        3  * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
        4  *
        5  * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
        6  * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
        7  * published by the Free Software Foundation.
        8  *
        9  * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
       10  * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
       11  * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License
       12  * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
       13  * accompanied this code).
       14  *
       15  * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
       16  * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
       17  * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
       18  *
       19  * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA
       20  * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any
       21  * questions.
       22  *
       23  */
       24 
       25 # define __STDC_FORMAT_MACROS
       26 
       27 // no precompiled headers
       28 #include "classfile/classLoader.hpp"
       29 #include "classfile/systemDictionary.hpp"
       30 #include "classfile/vmSymbols.hpp"
       31 #include "code/icBuffer.hpp"
       32 #include "code/vtableStubs.hpp"
       33 #include "compiler/compileBroker.hpp"
       34 #include "interpreter/interpreter.hpp"
       35 #include "jvm_linux.h"
       36 #include "memory/allocation.inline.hpp"
       37 #include "memory/filemap.hpp"
       38 #include "mutex_linux.inline.hpp"
       39 #include "oops/oop.inline.hpp"
       40 #include "os_share_linux.hpp"
       41 #include "prims/jniFastGetField.hpp"
       42 #include "prims/jvm.h"
       43 #include "prims/jvm_misc.hpp"
       44 #include "runtime/arguments.hpp"
       45 #include "runtime/extendedPC.hpp"
       46 #include "runtime/globals.hpp"
       47 #include "runtime/interfaceSupport.hpp"
       48 #include "runtime/java.hpp"
       49 #include "runtime/javaCalls.hpp"
       50 #include "runtime/mutexLocker.hpp"
       51 #include "runtime/objectMonitor.hpp"
       52 #include "runtime/osThread.hpp"
       53 #include "runtime/perfMemory.hpp"
       54 #include "runtime/sharedRuntime.hpp"
       55 #include "runtime/statSampler.hpp"
       56 #include "runtime/stubRoutines.hpp"
       57 #include "runtime/threadCritical.hpp"
       58 #include "runtime/timer.hpp"
       59 #include "services/attachListener.hpp"
       60 #include "services/runtimeService.hpp"
       61 #include "thread_linux.inline.hpp"
       62 #include "utilities/decoder.hpp"
       63 #include "utilities/defaultStream.hpp"
       64 #include "utilities/events.hpp"
       65 #include "utilities/growableArray.hpp"
       66 #include "utilities/vmError.hpp"
       67 #ifdef TARGET_ARCH_x86
       68 # include "assembler_x86.inline.hpp"
       69 # include "nativeInst_x86.hpp"
       70 #endif
       71 #ifdef TARGET_ARCH_sparc
       72 # include "assembler_sparc.inline.hpp"
       73 # include "nativeInst_sparc.hpp"
       74 #endif
       75 #ifdef TARGET_ARCH_zero
       76 # include "assembler_zero.inline.hpp"
       77 # include "nativeInst_zero.hpp"
       78 #endif
       79 #ifdef TARGET_ARCH_arm
       80 # include "assembler_arm.inline.hpp"
       81 # include "nativeInst_arm.hpp"
       82 #endif
       83 #ifdef TARGET_ARCH_ppc
       84 # include "assembler_ppc.inline.hpp"
       85 # include "nativeInst_ppc.hpp"
       86 #endif
       87 #ifdef COMPILER1
       88 #include "c1/c1_Runtime1.hpp"
       89 #endif
       90 #ifdef COMPILER2
       91 #include "opto/runtime.hpp"
       92 #endif
       93 
       94 // put OS-includes here
       95 # include <sys/types.h>
       96 # include <sys/mman.h>
       97 # include <sys/stat.h>
       98 # include <sys/select.h>
       99 # include <pthread.h>
      100 # include <signal.h>
      101 # include <errno.h>
      102 # include <dlfcn.h>
      103 # include <stdio.h>
      104 # include <unistd.h>
      105 # include <sys/resource.h>
      106 # include <pthread.h>
      107 # include <sys/stat.h>
      108 # include <sys/time.h>
      109 # include <sys/times.h>
      110 # include <sys/utsname.h>
      111 # include <sys/socket.h>
      112 # include <sys/wait.h>
      113 # include <pwd.h>
      114 # include <poll.h>
      115 # include <semaphore.h>
      116 # include <fcntl.h>
      117 # include <string.h>
      118 # include <syscall.h>
      119 # include <sys/sysinfo.h>
      120 # include <gnu/libc-version.h>
      121 # include <sys/ipc.h>
      122 # include <sys/shm.h>
      123 # include <link.h>
      124 # include <stdint.h>
      125 # include <inttypes.h>
      126 # include <sys/ioctl.h>
      127 
      128 #define MAX_PATH    (2 * K)
      129 
      130 // for timer info max values which include all bits
      131 #define ALL_64_BITS CONST64(0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF)
      132 #define SEC_IN_NANOSECS  1000000000LL
      133 
      134 #define LARGEPAGES_BIT (1 << 6)
      135 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
      136 // global variables
      137 julong os::Linux::_physical_memory = 0;
      138 
      139 address   os::Linux::_initial_thread_stack_bottom = NULL;
      140 uintptr_t os::Linux::_initial_thread_stack_size   = 0;
      141 
      142 int (*os::Linux::_clock_gettime)(clockid_t, struct timespec *) = NULL;
      143 int (*os::Linux::_pthread_getcpuclockid)(pthread_t, clockid_t *) = NULL;
      144 Mutex* os::Linux::_createThread_lock = NULL;
      145 pthread_t os::Linux::_main_thread;
      146 int os::Linux::_page_size = -1;
      147 bool os::Linux::_is_floating_stack = false;
      148 bool os::Linux::_is_NPTL = false;
      149 bool os::Linux::_supports_fast_thread_cpu_time = false;
      150 const char * os::Linux::_glibc_version = NULL;
      151 const char * os::Linux::_libpthread_version = NULL;
      152 
      153 static jlong initial_time_count=0;
      154 
      155 static int clock_tics_per_sec = 100;
      156 
      157 // For diagnostics to print a message once. see run_periodic_checks
      158 static sigset_t check_signal_done;
      159 static bool check_signals = true;;
      160 
      161 static pid_t _initial_pid = 0;
      162 
      163 /* Signal number used to suspend/resume a thread */
      164 
      165 /* do not use any signal number less than SIGSEGV, see 4355769 */
      166 static int SR_signum = SIGUSR2;
      167 sigset_t SR_sigset;
      168 
      169 /* Used to protect dlsym() calls */
      170 static pthread_mutex_t dl_mutex;
      171 
      172 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
      173 // utility functions
      174 
      175 static int SR_initialize();
      176 static int SR_finalize();
      177 
      178 julong os::available_memory() {
      179   return Linux::available_memory();
      180 }
      181 
      182 julong os::Linux::available_memory() {
      183   // values in struct sysinfo are "unsigned long"
      184   struct sysinfo si;
      185   sysinfo(&si);
      186 
      187   return (julong)si.freeram * si.mem_unit;
      188 }
      189 
      190 julong os::physical_memory() {
      191   return Linux::physical_memory();
      192 }
      193 
      194 julong os::allocatable_physical_memory(julong size) {
      195 #ifdef _LP64
      196   return size;
      197 #else
      198   julong result = MIN2(size, (julong)3800*M);
      199    if (!is_allocatable(result)) {
      200      // See comments under solaris for alignment considerations
      201      julong reasonable_size = (julong)2*G - 2 * os::vm_page_size();
      202      result =  MIN2(size, reasonable_size);
      203    }
      204    return result;
      205 #endif // _LP64
      206 }
      207 
      208 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
      209 // environment support
      210 
      211 bool os::getenv(const char* name, char* buf, int len) {
      212   const char* val = ::getenv(name);
      213   if (val != NULL && strlen(val) < (size_t)len) {
      214     strcpy(buf, val);
      215     return true;
      216   }
      217   if (len > 0) buf[0] = 0;  // return a null string
      218   return false;
      219 }
      220 
      221 
      222 // Return true if user is running as root.
      223 
      224 bool os::have_special_privileges() {
      225   static bool init = false;
      226   static bool privileges = false;
      227   if (!init) {
      228     privileges = (getuid() != geteuid()) || (getgid() != getegid());
      229     init = true;
      230   }
      231   return privileges;
      232 }
      233 
      234 
      235 #ifndef SYS_gettid
      236 // i386: 224, ia64: 1105, amd64: 186, sparc 143
      237 #ifdef __ia64__
      238 #define SYS_gettid 1105
      239 #elif __i386__
      240 #define SYS_gettid 224
      241 #elif __amd64__
      242 #define SYS_gettid 186
      243 #elif __sparc__
      244 #define SYS_gettid 143
      245 #else
      246 #error define gettid for the arch
      247 #endif
      248 #endif
      249 
      250 // Cpu architecture string
      251 #if   defined(ZERO)
      252 static char cpu_arch[] = ZERO_LIBARCH;
      253 #elif defined(IA64)
      254 static char cpu_arch[] = "ia64";
      255 #elif defined(IA32)
      256 static char cpu_arch[] = "i386";
      257 #elif defined(AMD64)
      258 static char cpu_arch[] = "amd64";
      259 #elif defined(ARM)
      260 static char cpu_arch[] = "arm";
      261 #elif defined(PPC)
      262 static char cpu_arch[] = "ppc";
      263 #elif defined(SPARC)
      264 #  ifdef _LP64
      265 static char cpu_arch[] = "sparcv9";
      266 #  else
      267 static char cpu_arch[] = "sparc";
      268 #  endif
      269 #else
      270 #error Add appropriate cpu_arch setting
      271 #endif
      272 
      273 
      274 // pid_t gettid()
      275 //
      276 // Returns the kernel thread id of the currently running thread. Kernel
      277 // thread id is used to access /proc.
      278 //
      279 // (Note that getpid() on LinuxThreads returns kernel thread id too; but
      280 // on NPTL, it returns the same pid for all threads, as required by POSIX.)
      281 //
      282 pid_t os::Linux::gettid() {
      283   int rslt = syscall(SYS_gettid);
      284   if (rslt == -1) {
      285      // old kernel, no NPTL support
      286      return getpid();
      287   } else {
      288      return (pid_t)rslt;
      289   }
      290 }
      291 
      292 // Most versions of linux have a bug where the number of processors are
      293 // determined by looking at the /proc file system.  In a chroot environment,
      294 // the system call returns 1.  This causes the VM to act as if it is
      295 // a single processor and elide locking (see is_MP() call).
      296 static bool unsafe_chroot_detected = false;
      297 static const char *unstable_chroot_error = "/proc file system not found.\n"
      298                      "Java may be unstable running multithreaded in a chroot "
      299                      "environment on Linux when /proc filesystem is not mounted.";
      300 
      301 void os::Linux::initialize_system_info() {
      302   set_processor_count(sysconf(_SC_NPROCESSORS_CONF));
      303   if (processor_count() == 1) {
      304     pid_t pid = os::Linux::gettid();
      305     char fname[32];
      306     jio_snprintf(fname, sizeof(fname), "/proc/%d", pid);
      307     FILE *fp = fopen(fname, "r");
      308     if (fp == NULL) {
      309       unsafe_chroot_detected = true;
      310     } else {
      311       fclose(fp);
      312     }
      313   }
      314   _physical_memory = (julong)sysconf(_SC_PHYS_PAGES) * (julong)sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE);
      315   assert(processor_count() > 0, "linux error");
      316 }
      317 
      318 void os::init_system_properties_values() {
      319 //  char arch[12];
      320 //  sysinfo(SI_ARCHITECTURE, arch, sizeof(arch));
      321 
      322   // The next steps are taken in the product version:
      323   //
      324   // Obtain the JAVA_HOME value from the location of libjvm[_g].so.
      325   // This library should be located at:
      326   // <JAVA_HOME>/jre/lib/<arch>/{client|server}/libjvm[_g].so.
      327   //
      328   // If "/jre/lib/" appears at the right place in the path, then we
      329   // assume libjvm[_g].so is installed in a JDK and we use this path.
      330   //
      331   // Otherwise exit with message: "Could not create the Java virtual machine."
      332   //
      333   // The following extra steps are taken in the debugging version:
      334   //
      335   // If "/jre/lib/" does NOT appear at the right place in the path
      336   // instead of exit check for $JAVA_HOME environment variable.
      337   //
      338   // If it is defined and we are able to locate $JAVA_HOME/jre/lib/<arch>,
      339   // then we append a fake suffix "hotspot/libjvm[_g].so" to this path so
      340   // it looks like libjvm[_g].so is installed there
      341   // <JAVA_HOME>/jre/lib/<arch>/hotspot/libjvm[_g].so.
      342   //
      343   // Otherwise exit.
      344   //
      345   // Important note: if the location of libjvm.so changes this
      346   // code needs to be changed accordingly.
      347 
      348   // The next few definitions allow the code to be verbatim:
      349 #define malloc(n) (char*)NEW_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char, (n))
      350 #define getenv(n) ::getenv(n)
      351 
      352 /*
      353  * See ld(1):
      354  *      The linker uses the following search paths to locate required
      355  *      shared libraries:
      356  *        1: ...
      357  *        ...
      358  *        7: The default directories, normally /lib and /usr/lib.
      359  */
      360 #if defined(AMD64) || defined(_LP64) && (defined(SPARC) || defined(PPC) || defined(S390))
      361 #define DEFAULT_LIBPATH "/usr/lib64:/lib64:/lib:/usr/lib"
      362 #else
      363 #define DEFAULT_LIBPATH "/lib:/usr/lib"
      364 #endif
      365 
      366 #define EXTENSIONS_DIR  "/lib/ext"
      367 #define ENDORSED_DIR    "/lib/endorsed"
      368 #define REG_DIR         "/usr/java/packages"
      369 
      370   {
      371     /* sysclasspath, java_home, dll_dir */
      372     {
      373         char *home_path;
      374         char *dll_path;
      375         char *pslash;
      376         char buf[MAXPATHLEN];
      377         os::jvm_path(buf, sizeof(buf));
      378 
      379         // Found the full path to libjvm.so.
      380         // Now cut the path to <java_home>/jre if we can.
      381         *(strrchr(buf, '/')) = '\0';  /* get rid of /libjvm.so */
      382         pslash = strrchr(buf, '/');
      383         if (pslash != NULL)
      384             *pslash = '\0';           /* get rid of /{client|server|hotspot} */
      385         dll_path = malloc(strlen(buf) + 1);
      386         if (dll_path == NULL)
      387             return;
      388         strcpy(dll_path, buf);
      389         Arguments::set_dll_dir(dll_path);
      390 
      391         if (pslash != NULL) {
      392             pslash = strrchr(buf, '/');
      393             if (pslash != NULL) {
      394                 *pslash = '\0';       /* get rid of /<arch> */
      395                 pslash = strrchr(buf, '/');
      396                 if (pslash != NULL)
      397                     *pslash = '\0';   /* get rid of /lib */
      398             }
      399         }
      400 
      401         home_path = malloc(strlen(buf) + 1);
      402         if (home_path == NULL)
      403             return;
      404         strcpy(home_path, buf);
      405         Arguments::set_java_home(home_path);
      406 
      407         if (!set_boot_path('/', ':'))
      408             return;
      409     }
      410 
      411     /*
      412      * Where to look for native libraries
      413      *
      414      * Note: Due to a legacy implementation, most of the library path
      415      * is set in the launcher.  This was to accomodate linking restrictions
      416      * on legacy Linux implementations (which are no longer supported).
      417      * Eventually, all the library path setting will be done here.
      418      *
      419      * However, to prevent the proliferation of improperly built native
      420      * libraries, the new path component /usr/java/packages is added here.
      421      * Eventually, all the library path setting will be done here.
      422      */
      423     {
      424         char *ld_library_path;
      425 
      426         /*
      427          * Construct the invariant part of ld_library_path. Note that the
      428          * space for the colon and the trailing null are provided by the
      429          * nulls included by the sizeof operator (so actually we allocate
      430          * a byte more than necessary).
      431          */
      432         ld_library_path = (char *) malloc(sizeof(REG_DIR) + sizeof("/lib/") +
      433             strlen(cpu_arch) + sizeof(DEFAULT_LIBPATH));
      434         sprintf(ld_library_path, REG_DIR "/lib/%s:" DEFAULT_LIBPATH, cpu_arch);
      435 
      436         /*
      437          * Get the user setting of LD_LIBRARY_PATH, and prepended it.  It
      438          * should always exist (until the legacy problem cited above is
      439          * addressed).
      440          */
      441         char *v = getenv("LD_LIBRARY_PATH");
      442         if (v != NULL) {
      443             char *t = ld_library_path;
      444             /* That's +1 for the colon and +1 for the trailing '\0' */
      445             ld_library_path = (char *) malloc(strlen(v) + 1 + strlen(t) + 1);
      446             sprintf(ld_library_path, "%s:%s", v, t);
      447         }
      448         Arguments::set_library_path(ld_library_path);
      449     }
      450 
      451     /*
      452      * Extensions directories.
      453      *
      454      * Note that the space for the colon and the trailing null are provided
      455      * by the nulls included by the sizeof operator (so actually one byte more
      456      * than necessary is allocated).
      457      */
      458     {
      459         char *buf = malloc(strlen(Arguments::get_java_home()) +
      460             sizeof(EXTENSIONS_DIR) + sizeof(REG_DIR) + sizeof(EXTENSIONS_DIR));
      461         sprintf(buf, "%s" EXTENSIONS_DIR ":" REG_DIR EXTENSIONS_DIR,
      462             Arguments::get_java_home());
      463         Arguments::set_ext_dirs(buf);
      464     }
      465 
      466     /* Endorsed standards default directory. */
      467     {
      468         char * buf;
      469         buf = malloc(strlen(Arguments::get_java_home()) + sizeof(ENDORSED_DIR));
      470         sprintf(buf, "%s" ENDORSED_DIR, Arguments::get_java_home());
      471         Arguments::set_endorsed_dirs(buf);
      472     }
      473   }
      474 
      475 #undef malloc
      476 #undef getenv
      477 #undef EXTENSIONS_DIR
      478 #undef ENDORSED_DIR
      479 
      480   // Done
      481   return;
      482 }
      483 
      484 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
      485 // breakpoint support
      486 
      487 void os::breakpoint() {
      488   BREAKPOINT;
      489 }
      490 
      491 extern "C" void breakpoint() {
      492   // use debugger to set breakpoint here
      493 }
      494 
      495 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
      496 // signal support
      497 
      498 debug_only(static bool signal_sets_initialized = false);
      499 static sigset_t unblocked_sigs, vm_sigs, allowdebug_blocked_sigs;
      500 
      501 bool os::Linux::is_sig_ignored(int sig) {
      502       struct sigaction oact;
      503       sigaction(sig, (struct sigaction*)NULL, &oact);
      504       void* ohlr = oact.sa_sigaction ? CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*,  oact.sa_sigaction)
      505                                      : CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*,  oact.sa_handler);
      506       if (ohlr == CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, SIG_IGN))
      507            return true;
      508       else
      509            return false;
      510 }
      511 
      512 void os::Linux::signal_sets_init() {
      513   // Should also have an assertion stating we are still single-threaded.
      514   assert(!signal_sets_initialized, "Already initialized");
      515   // Fill in signals that are necessarily unblocked for all threads in
      516   // the VM. Currently, we unblock the following signals:
      517   // SHUTDOWN{1,2,3}_SIGNAL: for shutdown hooks support (unless over-ridden
      518   //                         by -Xrs (=ReduceSignalUsage));
      519   // BREAK_SIGNAL which is unblocked only by the VM thread and blocked by all
      520   // other threads. The "ReduceSignalUsage" boolean tells us not to alter
      521   // the dispositions or masks wrt these signals.
      522   // Programs embedding the VM that want to use the above signals for their
      523   // own purposes must, at this time, use the "-Xrs" option to prevent
      524   // interference with shutdown hooks and BREAK_SIGNAL thread dumping.
      525   // (See bug 4345157, and other related bugs).
      526   // In reality, though, unblocking these signals is really a nop, since
      527   // these signals are not blocked by default.
      528   sigemptyset(&unblocked_sigs);
      529   sigemptyset(&allowdebug_blocked_sigs);
      530   sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SIGILL);
      531   sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SIGSEGV);
      532   sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SIGBUS);
      533   sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SIGFPE);
      534   sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SR_signum);
      535 
      536   if (!ReduceSignalUsage) {
      537    if (!os::Linux::is_sig_ignored(SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL)) {
      538       sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL);
      539       sigaddset(&allowdebug_blocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL);
      540    }
      541    if (!os::Linux::is_sig_ignored(SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL)) {
      542       sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL);
      543       sigaddset(&allowdebug_blocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL);
      544    }
      545    if (!os::Linux::is_sig_ignored(SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL)) {
      546       sigaddset(&unblocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL);
      547       sigaddset(&allowdebug_blocked_sigs, SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL);
      548    }
      549   }
      550   // Fill in signals that are blocked by all but the VM thread.
      551   sigemptyset(&vm_sigs);
      552   if (!ReduceSignalUsage)
      553     sigaddset(&vm_sigs, BREAK_SIGNAL);
      554   debug_only(signal_sets_initialized = true);
      555 
      556 }
      557 
      558 // These are signals that are unblocked while a thread is running Java.
      559 // (For some reason, they get blocked by default.)
      560 sigset_t* os::Linux::unblocked_signals() {
      561   assert(signal_sets_initialized, "Not initialized");
      562   return &unblocked_sigs;
      563 }
      564 
      565 // These are the signals that are blocked while a (non-VM) thread is
      566 // running Java. Only the VM thread handles these signals.
      567 sigset_t* os::Linux::vm_signals() {
      568   assert(signal_sets_initialized, "Not initialized");
      569   return &vm_sigs;
      570 }
      571 
      572 // These are signals that are blocked during cond_wait to allow debugger in
      573 sigset_t* os::Linux::allowdebug_blocked_signals() {
      574   assert(signal_sets_initialized, "Not initialized");
      575   return &allowdebug_blocked_sigs;
      576 }
      577 
      578 void os::Linux::hotspot_sigmask(Thread* thread) {
      579 
      580   //Save caller's signal mask before setting VM signal mask
      581   sigset_t caller_sigmask;
      582   pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, NULL, &caller_sigmask);
      583 
      584   OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread();
      585   osthread->set_caller_sigmask(caller_sigmask);
      586 
      587   pthread_sigmask(SIG_UNBLOCK, os::Linux::unblocked_signals(), NULL);
      588 
      589   if (!ReduceSignalUsage) {
      590     if (thread->is_VM_thread()) {
      591       // Only the VM thread handles BREAK_SIGNAL ...
      592       pthread_sigmask(SIG_UNBLOCK, vm_signals(), NULL);
      593     } else {
      594       // ... all other threads block BREAK_SIGNAL
      595       pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, vm_signals(), NULL);
      596     }
      597   }
      598 }
      599 
      600 //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
      601 // detecting pthread library
      602 
      603 void os::Linux::libpthread_init() {
      604   // Save glibc and pthread version strings. Note that _CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION
      605   // and _CS_GNU_LIBPTHREAD_VERSION are supported in glibc >= 2.3.2. Use a
      606   // generic name for earlier versions.
      607   // Define macros here so we can build HotSpot on old systems.
      608 # ifndef _CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION
      609 # define _CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION 2
      610 # endif
      611 # ifndef _CS_GNU_LIBPTHREAD_VERSION
      612 # define _CS_GNU_LIBPTHREAD_VERSION 3
      613 # endif
      614 
      615   size_t n = confstr(_CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION, NULL, 0);
      616   if (n > 0) {
      617      char *str = (char *)malloc(n);
      618      confstr(_CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION, str, n);
      619      os::Linux::set_glibc_version(str);
      620   } else {
      621      // _CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION is not supported, try gnu_get_libc_version()
      622      static char _gnu_libc_version[32];
      623      jio_snprintf(_gnu_libc_version, sizeof(_gnu_libc_version),
      624               "glibc %s %s", gnu_get_libc_version(), gnu_get_libc_release());
      625      os::Linux::set_glibc_version(_gnu_libc_version);
      626   }
      627 
      628   n = confstr(_CS_GNU_LIBPTHREAD_VERSION, NULL, 0);
      629   if (n > 0) {
      630      char *str = (char *)malloc(n);
      631      confstr(_CS_GNU_LIBPTHREAD_VERSION, str, n);
      632      // Vanilla RH-9 (glibc 2.3.2) has a bug that confstr() always tells
      633      // us "NPTL-0.29" even we are running with LinuxThreads. Check if this
      634      // is the case. LinuxThreads has a hard limit on max number of threads.
      635      // So sysconf(_SC_THREAD_THREADS_MAX) will return a positive value.
      636      // On the other hand, NPTL does not have such a limit, sysconf()
      637      // will return -1 and errno is not changed. Check if it is really NPTL.
      638      if (strcmp(os::Linux::glibc_version(), "glibc 2.3.2") == 0 &&
      639          strstr(str, "NPTL") &&
      640          sysconf(_SC_THREAD_THREADS_MAX) > 0) {
      641        free(str);
      642        os::Linux::set_libpthread_version("linuxthreads");
      643      } else {
      644        os::Linux::set_libpthread_version(str);
      645      }
      646   } else {
      647     // glibc before 2.3.2 only has LinuxThreads.
      648     os::Linux::set_libpthread_version("linuxthreads");
      649   }
      650 
      651   if (strstr(libpthread_version(), "NPTL")) {
      652      os::Linux::set_is_NPTL();
      653   } else {
      654      os::Linux::set_is_LinuxThreads();
      655   }
      656 
      657   // LinuxThreads have two flavors: floating-stack mode, which allows variable
      658   // stack size; and fixed-stack mode. NPTL is always floating-stack.
      659   if (os::Linux::is_NPTL() || os::Linux::supports_variable_stack_size()) {
      660      os::Linux::set_is_floating_stack();
      661   }
      662 }
      663 
      664 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
      665 // thread stack
      666 
      667 // Force Linux kernel to expand current thread stack. If "bottom" is close
      668 // to the stack guard, caller should block all signals.
      669 //
      670 // MAP_GROWSDOWN:
      671 //   A special mmap() flag that is used to implement thread stacks. It tells
      672 //   kernel that the memory region should extend downwards when needed. This
      673 //   allows early versions of LinuxThreads to only mmap the first few pages
      674 //   when creating a new thread. Linux kernel will automatically expand thread
      675 //   stack as needed (on page faults).
      676 //
      677 //   However, because the memory region of a MAP_GROWSDOWN stack can grow on
      678 //   demand, if a page fault happens outside an already mapped MAP_GROWSDOWN
      679 //   region, it's hard to tell if the fault is due to a legitimate stack
      680 //   access or because of reading/writing non-exist memory (e.g. buffer
      681 //   overrun). As a rule, if the fault happens below current stack pointer,
      682 //   Linux kernel does not expand stack, instead a SIGSEGV is sent to the
      683 //   application (see Linux kernel fault.c).
      684 //
      685 //   This Linux feature can cause SIGSEGV when VM bangs thread stack for
      686 //   stack overflow detection.
      687 //
      688 //   Newer version of LinuxThreads (since glibc-2.2, or, RH-7.x) and NPTL do
      689 //   not use this flag. However, the stack of initial thread is not created
      690 //   by pthread, it is still MAP_GROWSDOWN. Also it's possible (though
      691 //   unlikely) that user code can create a thread with MAP_GROWSDOWN stack
      692 //   and then attach the thread to JVM.
      693 //
      694 // To get around the problem and allow stack banging on Linux, we need to
      695 // manually expand thread stack after receiving the SIGSEGV.
      696 //
      697 // There are two ways to expand thread stack to address "bottom", we used
      698 // both of them in JVM before 1.5:
      699 //   1. adjust stack pointer first so that it is below "bottom", and then
      700 //      touch "bottom"
      701 //   2. mmap() the page in question
      702 //
      703 // Now alternate signal stack is gone, it's harder to use 2. For instance,
      704 // if current sp is already near the lower end of page 101, and we need to
      705 // call mmap() to map page 100, it is possible that part of the mmap() frame
      706 // will be placed in page 100. When page 100 is mapped, it is zero-filled.
      707 // That will destroy the mmap() frame and cause VM to crash.
      708 //
      709 // The following code works by adjusting sp first, then accessing the "bottom"
      710 // page to force a page fault. Linux kernel will then automatically expand the
      711 // stack mapping.
      712 //
      713 // _expand_stack_to() assumes its frame size is less than page size, which
      714 // should always be true if the function is not inlined.
      715 
      716 #if __GNUC__ < 3    // gcc 2.x does not support noinline attribute
      717 #define NOINLINE
      718 #else
      719 #define NOINLINE __attribute__ ((noinline))
      720 #endif
      721 
      722 static void _expand_stack_to(address bottom) NOINLINE;
      723 
      724 static void _expand_stack_to(address bottom) {
      725   address sp;
      726   size_t size;
      727   volatile char *p;
      728 
      729   // Adjust bottom to point to the largest address within the same page, it
      730   // gives us a one-page buffer if alloca() allocates slightly more memory.
      731   bottom = (address)align_size_down((uintptr_t)bottom, os::Linux::page_size());
      732   bottom += os::Linux::page_size() - 1;
      733 
      734   // sp might be slightly above current stack pointer; if that's the case, we
      735   // will alloca() a little more space than necessary, which is OK. Don't use
      736   // os::current_stack_pointer(), as its result can be slightly below current
      737   // stack pointer, causing us to not alloca enough to reach "bottom".
      738   sp = (address)&sp;
      739 
      740   if (sp > bottom) {
      741     size = sp - bottom;
      742     p = (volatile char *)alloca(size);
      743     assert(p != NULL && p <= (volatile char *)bottom, "alloca problem?");
      744     p[0] = '\0';
      745   }
      746 }
      747 
      748 bool os::Linux::manually_expand_stack(JavaThread * t, address addr) {
      749   assert(t!=NULL, "just checking");
      750   assert(t->osthread()->expanding_stack(), "expand should be set");
      751   assert(t->stack_base() != NULL, "stack_base was not initialized");
      752 
      753   if (addr <  t->stack_base() && addr >= t->stack_yellow_zone_base()) {
      754     sigset_t mask_all, old_sigset;
      755     sigfillset(&mask_all);
      756     pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, &mask_all, &old_sigset);
      757     _expand_stack_to(addr);
      758     pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, &old_sigset, NULL);
      759     return true;
      760   }
      761   return false;
      762 }
      763 
      764 //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
      765 // create new thread
      766 
      767 static address highest_vm_reserved_address();
      768 
      769 // check if it's safe to start a new thread
      770 static bool _thread_safety_check(Thread* thread) {
      771   if (os::Linux::is_LinuxThreads() && !os::Linux::is_floating_stack()) {
      772     // Fixed stack LinuxThreads (SuSE Linux/x86, and some versions of Redhat)
      773     //   Heap is mmap'ed at lower end of memory space. Thread stacks are
      774     //   allocated (MAP_FIXED) from high address space. Every thread stack
      775     //   occupies a fixed size slot (usually 2Mbytes, but user can change
      776     //   it to other values if they rebuild LinuxThreads).
      777     //
      778     // Problem with MAP_FIXED is that mmap() can still succeed even part of
      779     // the memory region has already been mmap'ed. That means if we have too
      780     // many threads and/or very large heap, eventually thread stack will
      781     // collide with heap.
      782     //
      783     // Here we try to prevent heap/stack collision by comparing current
      784     // stack bottom with the highest address that has been mmap'ed by JVM
      785     // plus a safety margin for memory maps created by native code.
      786     //
      787     // This feature can be disabled by setting ThreadSafetyMargin to 0
      788     //
      789     if (ThreadSafetyMargin > 0) {
      790       address stack_bottom = os::current_stack_base() - os::current_stack_size();
      791 
      792       // not safe if our stack extends below the safety margin
      793       return stack_bottom - ThreadSafetyMargin >= highest_vm_reserved_address();
      794     } else {
      795       return true;
      796     }
      797   } else {
      798     // Floating stack LinuxThreads or NPTL:
      799     //   Unlike fixed stack LinuxThreads, thread stacks are not MAP_FIXED. When
      800     //   there's not enough space left, pthread_create() will fail. If we come
      801     //   here, that means enough space has been reserved for stack.
      802     return true;
      803   }
      804 }
      805 
      806 // Thread start routine for all newly created threads
      807 static void *java_start(Thread *thread) {
      808   // Try to randomize the cache line index of hot stack frames.
      809   // This helps when threads of the same stack traces evict each other's
      810   // cache lines. The threads can be either from the same JVM instance, or
      811   // from different JVM instances. The benefit is especially true for
      812   // processors with hyperthreading technology.
      813   static int counter = 0;
      814   int pid = os::current_process_id();
      815   alloca(((pid ^ counter++) & 7) * 128);
      816 
      817   ThreadLocalStorage::set_thread(thread);
      818 
      819   OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread();
      820   Monitor* sync = osthread->startThread_lock();
      821 
      822   // non floating stack LinuxThreads needs extra check, see above
      823   if (!_thread_safety_check(thread)) {
      824     // notify parent thread
      825     MutexLockerEx ml(sync, Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag);
      826     osthread->set_state(ZOMBIE);
      827     sync->notify_all();
      828     return NULL;
      829   }
      830 
      831   // thread_id is kernel thread id (similar to Solaris LWP id)
      832   osthread->set_thread_id(os::Linux::gettid());
      833 
      834   if (UseNUMA) {
      835     int lgrp_id = os::numa_get_group_id();
      836     if (lgrp_id != -1) {
      837       thread->set_lgrp_id(lgrp_id);
      838     }
      839   }
      840   // initialize signal mask for this thread
      841   os::Linux::hotspot_sigmask(thread);
      842 
      843   // initialize floating point control register
      844   os::Linux::init_thread_fpu_state();
      845 
      846   // handshaking with parent thread
      847   {
      848     MutexLockerEx ml(sync, Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag);
      849 
      850     // notify parent thread
      851     osthread->set_state(INITIALIZED);
      852     sync->notify_all();
      853 
      854     // wait until os::start_thread()
      855     while (osthread->get_state() == INITIALIZED) {
      856       sync->wait(Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag);
      857     }
      858   }
      859 
      860   // call one more level start routine
      861   thread->run();
      862 
      863   return 0;
      864 }
      865 
      866 bool os::create_thread(Thread* thread, ThreadType thr_type, size_t stack_size) {
      867   assert(thread->osthread() == NULL, "caller responsible");
      868 
      869   // Allocate the OSThread object
      870   OSThread* osthread = new OSThread(NULL, NULL);
      871   if (osthread == NULL) {
      872     return false;
      873   }
      874 
      875   // set the correct thread state
      876   osthread->set_thread_type(thr_type);
      877 
      878   // Initial state is ALLOCATED but not INITIALIZED
      879   osthread->set_state(ALLOCATED);
      880 
      881   thread->set_osthread(osthread);
      882 
      883   // init thread attributes
      884   pthread_attr_t attr;
      885   pthread_attr_init(&attr);
      886   pthread_attr_setdetachstate(&attr, PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED);
      887 
      888   // stack size
      889   if (os::Linux::supports_variable_stack_size()) {
      890     // calculate stack size if it's not specified by caller
      891     if (stack_size == 0) {
      892       stack_size = os::Linux::default_stack_size(thr_type);
      893 
      894       switch (thr_type) {
      895       case os::java_thread:
      896         // Java threads use ThreadStackSize which default value can be
      897         // changed with the flag -Xss
      898         assert (JavaThread::stack_size_at_create() > 0, "this should be set");
      899         stack_size = JavaThread::stack_size_at_create();
      900         break;
      901       case os::compiler_thread:
      902         if (CompilerThreadStackSize > 0) {
      903           stack_size = (size_t)(CompilerThreadStackSize * K);
      904           break;
      905         } // else fall through:
      906           // use VMThreadStackSize if CompilerThreadStackSize is not defined
      907       case os::vm_thread:
      908       case os::pgc_thread:
      909       case os::cgc_thread:
      910       case os::watcher_thread:
      911         if (VMThreadStackSize > 0) stack_size = (size_t)(VMThreadStackSize * K);
      912         break;
      913       }
      914     }
      915 
      916     stack_size = MAX2(stack_size, os::Linux::min_stack_allowed);
      917     pthread_attr_setstacksize(&attr, stack_size);
      918   } else {
      919     // let pthread_create() pick the default value.
      920   }
      921 
      922   // glibc guard page
      923   pthread_attr_setguardsize(&attr, os::Linux::default_guard_size(thr_type));
      924 
      925   ThreadState state;
      926 
      927   {
      928     // Serialize thread creation if we are running with fixed stack LinuxThreads
      929     bool lock = os::Linux::is_LinuxThreads() && !os::Linux::is_floating_stack();
      930     if (lock) {
      931       os::Linux::createThread_lock()->lock_without_safepoint_check();
      932     }
      933 
      934     pthread_t tid;
      935     int ret = pthread_create(&tid, &attr, (void* (*)(void*)) java_start, thread);
      936 
      937     pthread_attr_destroy(&attr);
      938 
      939     if (ret != 0) {
      940       if (PrintMiscellaneous && (Verbose || WizardMode)) {
      941         perror("pthread_create()");
      942       }
      943       // Need to clean up stuff we've allocated so far
      944       thread->set_osthread(NULL);
      945       delete osthread;
      946       if (lock) os::Linux::createThread_lock()->unlock();
      947       return false;
      948     }
      949 
      950     // Store pthread info into the OSThread
      951     osthread->set_pthread_id(tid);
      952 
      953     // Wait until child thread is either initialized or aborted
      954     {
      955       Monitor* sync_with_child = osthread->startThread_lock();
      956       MutexLockerEx ml(sync_with_child, Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag);
      957       while ((state = osthread->get_state()) == ALLOCATED) {
      958         sync_with_child->wait(Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag);
      959       }
      960     }
      961 
      962     if (lock) {
      963       os::Linux::createThread_lock()->unlock();
      964     }
      965   }
      966 
      967   // Aborted due to thread limit being reached
      968   if (state == ZOMBIE) {
      969       thread->set_osthread(NULL);
      970       delete osthread;
      971       return false;
      972   }
      973 
      974   // The thread is returned suspended (in state INITIALIZED),
      975   // and is started higher up in the call chain
      976   assert(state == INITIALIZED, "race condition");
      977   return true;
      978 }
      979 
      980 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
      981 // attach existing thread
      982 
      983 // bootstrap the main thread
      984 bool os::create_main_thread(JavaThread* thread) {
      985   assert(os::Linux::_main_thread == pthread_self(), "should be called inside main thread");
      986   return create_attached_thread(thread);
      987 }
      988 
      989 bool os::create_attached_thread(JavaThread* thread) {
      990 #ifdef ASSERT
      991     thread->verify_not_published();
      992 #endif
      993 
      994   // Allocate the OSThread object
      995   OSThread* osthread = new OSThread(NULL, NULL);
      996 
      997   if (osthread == NULL) {
      998     return false;
      999   }
     1000 
     1001   // Store pthread info into the OSThread
     1002   osthread->set_thread_id(os::Linux::gettid());
     1003   osthread->set_pthread_id(::pthread_self());
     1004 
     1005   // initialize floating point control register
     1006   os::Linux::init_thread_fpu_state();
     1007 
     1008   // Initial thread state is RUNNABLE
     1009   osthread->set_state(RUNNABLE);
     1010 
     1011   thread->set_osthread(osthread);
     1012 
     1013   if (UseNUMA) {
     1014     int lgrp_id = os::numa_get_group_id();
     1015     if (lgrp_id != -1) {
     1016       thread->set_lgrp_id(lgrp_id);
     1017     }
     1018   }
     1019 
     1020   if (os::Linux::is_initial_thread()) {
     1021     // If current thread is initial thread, its stack is mapped on demand,
     1022     // see notes about MAP_GROWSDOWN. Here we try to force kernel to map
     1023     // the entire stack region to avoid SEGV in stack banging.
     1024     // It is also useful to get around the heap-stack-gap problem on SuSE
     1025     // kernel (see 4821821 for details). We first expand stack to the top
     1026     // of yellow zone, then enable stack yellow zone (order is significant,
     1027     // enabling yellow zone first will crash JVM on SuSE Linux), so there
     1028     // is no gap between the last two virtual memory regions.
     1029 
     1030     JavaThread *jt = (JavaThread *)thread;
     1031     address addr = jt->stack_yellow_zone_base();
     1032     assert(addr != NULL, "initialization problem?");
     1033     assert(jt->stack_available(addr) > 0, "stack guard should not be enabled");
     1034 
     1035     osthread->set_expanding_stack();
     1036     os::Linux::manually_expand_stack(jt, addr);
     1037     osthread->clear_expanding_stack();
     1038   }
     1039 
     1040   // initialize signal mask for this thread
     1041   // and save the caller's signal mask
     1042   os::Linux::hotspot_sigmask(thread);
     1043 
     1044   return true;
     1045 }
     1046 
     1047 void os::pd_start_thread(Thread* thread) {
     1048   OSThread * osthread = thread->osthread();
     1049   assert(osthread->get_state() != INITIALIZED, "just checking");
     1050   Monitor* sync_with_child = osthread->startThread_lock();
     1051   MutexLockerEx ml(sync_with_child, Mutex::_no_safepoint_check_flag);
     1052   sync_with_child->notify();
     1053 }
     1054 
     1055 // Free Linux resources related to the OSThread
     1056 void os::free_thread(OSThread* osthread) {
     1057   assert(osthread != NULL, "osthread not set");
     1058 
     1059   if (Thread::current()->osthread() == osthread) {
     1060     // Restore caller's signal mask
     1061     sigset_t sigmask = osthread->caller_sigmask();
     1062     pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, &sigmask, NULL);
     1063    }
     1064 
     1065   delete osthread;
     1066 }
     1067 
     1068 //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     1069 // thread local storage
     1070 
     1071 int os::allocate_thread_local_storage() {
     1072   pthread_key_t key;
     1073   int rslt = pthread_key_create(&key, NULL);
     1074   assert(rslt == 0, "cannot allocate thread local storage");
     1075   return (int)key;
     1076 }
     1077 
     1078 // Note: This is currently not used by VM, as we don't destroy TLS key
     1079 // on VM exit.
     1080 void os::free_thread_local_storage(int index) {
     1081   int rslt = pthread_key_delete((pthread_key_t)index);
     1082   assert(rslt == 0, "invalid index");
     1083 }
     1084 
     1085 void os::thread_local_storage_at_put(int index, void* value) {
     1086   int rslt = pthread_setspecific((pthread_key_t)index, value);
     1087   assert(rslt == 0, "pthread_setspecific failed");
     1088 }
     1089 
     1090 extern "C" Thread* get_thread() {
     1091   return ThreadLocalStorage::thread();
     1092 }
     1093 
     1094 //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     1095 // initial thread
     1096 
     1097 // Check if current thread is the initial thread, similar to Solaris thr_main.
     1098 bool os::Linux::is_initial_thread(void) {
     1099   char dummy;
     1100   // If called before init complete, thread stack bottom will be null.
     1101   // Can be called if fatal error occurs before initialization.
     1102   if (initial_thread_stack_bottom() == NULL) return false;
     1103   assert(initial_thread_stack_bottom() != NULL &&
     1104          initial_thread_stack_size()   != 0,
     1105          "os::init did not locate initial thread's stack region");
     1106   if ((address)&dummy >= initial_thread_stack_bottom() &&
     1107       (address)&dummy < initial_thread_stack_bottom() + initial_thread_stack_size())
     1108        return true;
     1109   else return false;
     1110 }
     1111 
     1112 // Find the virtual memory area that contains addr
     1113 static bool find_vma(address addr, address* vma_low, address* vma_high) {
     1114   FILE *fp = fopen("/proc/self/maps", "r");
     1115   if (fp) {
     1116     address low, high;
     1117     while (!feof(fp)) {
     1118       if (fscanf(fp, "%p-%p", &low, &high) == 2) {
     1119         if (low <= addr && addr < high) {
     1120            if (vma_low)  *vma_low  = low;
     1121            if (vma_high) *vma_high = high;
     1122            fclose (fp);
     1123            return true;
     1124         }
     1125       }
     1126       for (;;) {
     1127         int ch = fgetc(fp);
     1128         if (ch == EOF || ch == (int)'\n') break;
     1129       }
     1130     }
     1131     fclose(fp);
     1132   }
     1133   return false;
     1134 }
     1135 
     1136 // Locate initial thread stack. This special handling of initial thread stack
     1137 // is needed because pthread_getattr_np() on most (all?) Linux distros returns
     1138 // bogus value for initial thread.
     1139 void os::Linux::capture_initial_stack(size_t max_size) {
     1140   // stack size is the easy part, get it from RLIMIT_STACK
     1141   size_t stack_size;
     1142   struct rlimit rlim;
     1143   getrlimit(RLIMIT_STACK, &rlim);
     1144   stack_size = rlim.rlim_cur;
     1145 
     1146   // 6308388: a bug in ld.so will relocate its own .data section to the
     1147   //   lower end of primordial stack; reduce ulimit -s value a little bit
     1148   //   so we won't install guard page on ld.so's data section.
     1149   stack_size -= 2 * page_size();
     1150 
     1151   // 4441425: avoid crash with "unlimited" stack size on SuSE 7.1 or Redhat
     1152   //   7.1, in both cases we will get 2G in return value.
     1153   // 4466587: glibc 2.2.x compiled w/o "--enable-kernel=2.4.0" (RH 7.0,
     1154   //   SuSE 7.2, Debian) can not handle alternate signal stack correctly
     1155   //   for initial thread if its stack size exceeds 6M. Cap it at 2M,
     1156   //   in case other parts in glibc still assumes 2M max stack size.
     1157   // FIXME: alt signal stack is gone, maybe we can relax this constraint?
     1158 #ifndef IA64
     1159   if (stack_size > 2 * K * K) stack_size = 2 * K * K;
     1160 #else
     1161   // Problem still exists RH7.2 (IA64 anyway) but 2MB is a little small
     1162   if (stack_size > 4 * K * K) stack_size = 4 * K * K;
     1163 #endif
     1164 
     1165   // Try to figure out where the stack base (top) is. This is harder.
     1166   //
     1167   // When an application is started, glibc saves the initial stack pointer in
     1168   // a global variable "__libc_stack_end", which is then used by system
     1169   // libraries. __libc_stack_end should be pretty close to stack top. The
     1170   // variable is available since the very early days. However, because it is
     1171   // a private interface, it could disappear in the future.
     1172   //
     1173   // Linux kernel saves start_stack information in /proc/<pid>/stat. Similar
     1174   // to __libc_stack_end, it is very close to stack top, but isn't the real
     1175   // stack top. Note that /proc may not exist if VM is running as a chroot
     1176   // program, so reading /proc/<pid>/stat could fail. Also the contents of
     1177   // /proc/<pid>/stat could change in the future (though unlikely).
     1178   //
     1179   // We try __libc_stack_end first. If that doesn't work, look for
     1180   // /proc/<pid>/stat. If neither of them works, we use current stack pointer
     1181   // as a hint, which should work well in most cases.
     1182 
     1183   uintptr_t stack_start;
     1184 
     1185   // try __libc_stack_end first
     1186   uintptr_t *p = (uintptr_t *)dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "__libc_stack_end");
     1187   if (p && *p) {
     1188     stack_start = *p;
     1189   } else {
     1190     // see if we can get the start_stack field from /proc/self/stat
     1191     FILE *fp;
     1192     int pid;
     1193     char state;
     1194     int ppid;
     1195     int pgrp;
     1196     int session;
     1197     int nr;
     1198     int tpgrp;
     1199     unsigned long flags;
     1200     unsigned long minflt;
     1201     unsigned long cminflt;
     1202     unsigned long majflt;
     1203     unsigned long cmajflt;
     1204     unsigned long utime;
     1205     unsigned long stime;
     1206     long cutime;
     1207     long cstime;
     1208     long prio;
     1209     long nice;
     1210     long junk;
     1211     long it_real;
     1212     uintptr_t start;
     1213     uintptr_t vsize;
     1214     intptr_t rss;
     1215     uintptr_t rsslim;
     1216     uintptr_t scodes;
     1217     uintptr_t ecode;
     1218     int i;
     1219 
     1220     // Figure what the primordial thread stack base is. Code is inspired
     1221     // by email from Hans Boehm. /proc/self/stat begins with current pid,
     1222     // followed by command name surrounded by parentheses, state, etc.
     1223     char stat[2048];
     1224     int statlen;
     1225 
     1226     fp = fopen("/proc/self/stat", "r");
     1227     if (fp) {
     1228       statlen = fread(stat, 1, 2047, fp);
     1229       stat[statlen] = '\0';
     1230       fclose(fp);
     1231 
     1232       // Skip pid and the command string. Note that we could be dealing with
     1233       // weird command names, e.g. user could decide to rename java launcher
     1234       // to "java 1.4.2 :)", then the stat file would look like
     1235       //                1234 (java 1.4.2 :)) R ... ...
     1236       // We don't really need to know the command string, just find the last
     1237       // occurrence of ")" and then start parsing from there. See bug 4726580.
     1238       char * s = strrchr(stat, ')');
     1239 
     1240       i = 0;
     1241       if (s) {
     1242         // Skip blank chars
     1243         do s++; while (isspace(*s));
     1244 
     1245 #define _UFM UINTX_FORMAT
     1246 #define _DFM INTX_FORMAT
     1247 
     1248         /*                                     1   1   1   1   1   1   1   1   1   1   2   2    2    2    2    2    2    2    2 */
     1249         /*              3  4  5  6  7  8   9   0   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   0   1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8 */
     1250         i = sscanf(s, "%c %d %d %d %d %d %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %ld %ld %ld %ld %ld %ld " _UFM _UFM _DFM _UFM _UFM _UFM _UFM,
     1251              &state,          /* 3  %c  */
     1252              &ppid,           /* 4  %d  */
     1253              &pgrp,           /* 5  %d  */
     1254              &session,        /* 6  %d  */
     1255              &nr,             /* 7  %d  */
     1256              &tpgrp,          /* 8  %d  */
     1257              &flags,          /* 9  %lu  */
     1258              &minflt,         /* 10 %lu  */
     1259              &cminflt,        /* 11 %lu  */
     1260              &majflt,         /* 12 %lu  */
     1261              &cmajflt,        /* 13 %lu  */
     1262              &utime,          /* 14 %lu  */
     1263              &stime,          /* 15 %lu  */
     1264              &cutime,         /* 16 %ld  */
     1265              &cstime,         /* 17 %ld  */
     1266              &prio,           /* 18 %ld  */
     1267              &nice,           /* 19 %ld  */
     1268              &junk,           /* 20 %ld  */
     1269              &it_real,        /* 21 %ld  */
     1270              &start,          /* 22 UINTX_FORMAT */
     1271              &vsize,          /* 23 UINTX_FORMAT */
     1272              &rss,            /* 24 INTX_FORMAT  */
     1273              &rsslim,         /* 25 UINTX_FORMAT */
     1274              &scodes,         /* 26 UINTX_FORMAT */
     1275              &ecode,          /* 27 UINTX_FORMAT */
     1276              &stack_start);   /* 28 UINTX_FORMAT */
     1277       }
     1278 
     1279 #undef _UFM
     1280 #undef _DFM
     1281 
     1282       if (i != 28 - 2) {
     1283          assert(false, "Bad conversion from /proc/self/stat");
     1284          // product mode - assume we are the initial thread, good luck in the
     1285          // embedded case.
     1286          warning("Can't detect initial thread stack location - bad conversion");
     1287          stack_start = (uintptr_t) &rlim;
     1288       }
     1289     } else {
     1290       // For some reason we can't open /proc/self/stat (for example, running on
     1291       // FreeBSD with a Linux emulator, or inside chroot), this should work for
     1292       // most cases, so don't abort:
     1293       warning("Can't detect initial thread stack location - no /proc/self/stat");
     1294       stack_start = (uintptr_t) &rlim;
     1295     }
     1296   }
     1297 
     1298   // Now we have a pointer (stack_start) very close to the stack top, the
     1299   // next thing to do is to figure out the exact location of stack top. We
     1300   // can find out the virtual memory area that contains stack_start by
     1301   // reading /proc/self/maps, it should be the last vma in /proc/self/maps,
     1302   // and its upper limit is the real stack top. (again, this would fail if
     1303   // running inside chroot, because /proc may not exist.)
     1304 
     1305   uintptr_t stack_top;
     1306   address low, high;
     1307   if (find_vma((address)stack_start, &low, &high)) {
     1308     // success, "high" is the true stack top. (ignore "low", because initial
     1309     // thread stack grows on demand, its real bottom is high - RLIMIT_STACK.)
     1310     stack_top = (uintptr_t)high;
     1311   } else {
     1312     // failed, likely because /proc/self/maps does not exist
     1313     warning("Can't detect initial thread stack location - find_vma failed");
     1314     // best effort: stack_start is normally within a few pages below the real
     1315     // stack top, use it as stack top, and reduce stack size so we won't put
     1316     // guard page outside stack.
     1317     stack_top = stack_start;
     1318     stack_size -= 16 * page_size();
     1319   }
     1320 
     1321   // stack_top could be partially down the page so align it
     1322   stack_top = align_size_up(stack_top, page_size());
     1323 
     1324   if (max_size && stack_size > max_size) {
     1325      _initial_thread_stack_size = max_size;
     1326   } else {
     1327      _initial_thread_stack_size = stack_size;
     1328   }
     1329 
     1330   _initial_thread_stack_size = align_size_down(_initial_thread_stack_size, page_size());
     1331   _initial_thread_stack_bottom = (address)stack_top - _initial_thread_stack_size;
     1332 }
     1333 
     1334 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     1335 // time support
     1336 
     1337 // Time since start-up in seconds to a fine granularity.
     1338 // Used by VMSelfDestructTimer and the MemProfiler.
     1339 double os::elapsedTime() {
     1340 
     1341   return (double)(os::elapsed_counter()) * 0.000001;
     1342 }
     1343 
     1344 jlong os::elapsed_counter() {
     1345   timeval time;
     1346   int status = gettimeofday(&time, NULL);
     1347   return jlong(time.tv_sec) * 1000 * 1000 + jlong(time.tv_usec) - initial_time_count;
     1348 }
     1349 
     1350 jlong os::elapsed_frequency() {
     1351   return (1000 * 1000);
     1352 }
     1353 
     1354 // For now, we say that linux does not support vtime.  I have no idea
     1355 // whether it can actually be made to (DLD, 9/13/05).
     1356 
     1357 bool os::supports_vtime() { return false; }
     1358 bool os::enable_vtime()   { return false; }
     1359 bool os::vtime_enabled()  { return false; }
     1360 double os::elapsedVTime() {
     1361   // better than nothing, but not much
     1362   return elapsedTime();
     1363 }
     1364 
     1365 jlong os::javaTimeMillis() {
     1366   timeval time;
     1367   int status = gettimeofday(&time, NULL);
     1368   assert(status != -1, "linux error");
     1369   return jlong(time.tv_sec) * 1000  +  jlong(time.tv_usec / 1000);
     1370 }
     1371 
     1372 #ifndef CLOCK_MONOTONIC
     1373 #define CLOCK_MONOTONIC (1)
     1374 #endif
     1375 
     1376 void os::Linux::clock_init() {
     1377   // we do dlopen's in this particular order due to bug in linux
     1378   // dynamical loader (see 6348968) leading to crash on exit
     1379   void* handle = dlopen("librt.so.1", RTLD_LAZY);
     1380   if (handle == NULL) {
     1381     handle = dlopen("librt.so", RTLD_LAZY);
     1382   }
     1383 
     1384   if (handle) {
     1385     int (*clock_getres_func)(clockid_t, struct timespec*) =
     1386            (int(*)(clockid_t, struct timespec*))dlsym(handle, "clock_getres");
     1387     int (*clock_gettime_func)(clockid_t, struct timespec*) =
     1388            (int(*)(clockid_t, struct timespec*))dlsym(handle, "clock_gettime");
     1389     if (clock_getres_func && clock_gettime_func) {
     1390       // See if monotonic clock is supported by the kernel. Note that some
     1391       // early implementations simply return kernel jiffies (updated every
     1392       // 1/100 or 1/1000 second). It would be bad to use such a low res clock
     1393       // for nano time (though the monotonic property is still nice to have).
     1394       // It's fixed in newer kernels, however clock_getres() still returns
     1395       // 1/HZ. We check if clock_getres() works, but will ignore its reported
     1396       // resolution for now. Hopefully as people move to new kernels, this
     1397       // won't be a problem.
     1398       struct timespec res;
     1399       struct timespec tp;
     1400       if (clock_getres_func (CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &res) == 0 &&
     1401           clock_gettime_func(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &tp)  == 0) {
     1402         // yes, monotonic clock is supported
     1403         _clock_gettime = clock_gettime_func;
     1404       } else {
     1405         // close librt if there is no monotonic clock
     1406         dlclose(handle);
     1407       }
     1408     }
     1409   }
     1410 }
     1411 
     1412 #ifndef SYS_clock_getres
     1413 
     1414 #if defined(IA32) || defined(AMD64)
     1415 #define SYS_clock_getres IA32_ONLY(266)  AMD64_ONLY(229)
     1416 #define sys_clock_getres(x,y)  ::syscall(SYS_clock_getres, x, y)
     1417 #else
     1418 #warning "SYS_clock_getres not defined for this platform, disabling fast_thread_cpu_time"
     1419 #define sys_clock_getres(x,y)  -1
     1420 #endif
     1421 
     1422 #else
     1423 #define sys_clock_getres(x,y)  ::syscall(SYS_clock_getres, x, y)
     1424 #endif
     1425 
     1426 void os::Linux::fast_thread_clock_init() {
     1427   if (!UseLinuxPosixThreadCPUClocks) {
     1428     return;
     1429   }
     1430   clockid_t clockid;
     1431   struct timespec tp;
     1432   int (*pthread_getcpuclockid_func)(pthread_t, clockid_t *) =
     1433       (int(*)(pthread_t, clockid_t *)) dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "pthread_getcpuclockid");
     1434 
     1435   // Switch to using fast clocks for thread cpu time if
     1436   // the sys_clock_getres() returns 0 error code.
     1437   // Note, that some kernels may support the current thread
     1438   // clock (CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID) but not the clocks
     1439   // returned by the pthread_getcpuclockid().
     1440   // If the fast Posix clocks are supported then the sys_clock_getres()
     1441   // must return at least tp.tv_sec == 0 which means a resolution
     1442   // better than 1 sec. This is extra check for reliability.
     1443 
     1444   if(pthread_getcpuclockid_func &&
     1445      pthread_getcpuclockid_func(_main_thread, &clockid) == 0 &&
     1446      sys_clock_getres(clockid, &tp) == 0 && tp.tv_sec == 0) {
     1447 
     1448     _supports_fast_thread_cpu_time = true;
     1449     _pthread_getcpuclockid = pthread_getcpuclockid_func;
     1450   }
     1451 }
     1452 
     1453 jlong os::javaTimeNanos() {
     1454   if (Linux::supports_monotonic_clock()) {
     1455     struct timespec tp;
     1456     int status = Linux::clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &tp);
     1457     assert(status == 0, "gettime error");
     1458     jlong result = jlong(tp.tv_sec) * (1000 * 1000 * 1000) + jlong(tp.tv_nsec);
     1459     return result;
     1460   } else {
     1461     timeval time;
     1462     int status = gettimeofday(&time, NULL);
     1463     assert(status != -1, "linux error");
     1464     jlong usecs = jlong(time.tv_sec) * (1000 * 1000) + jlong(time.tv_usec);
     1465     return 1000 * usecs;
     1466   }
     1467 }
     1468 
     1469 void os::javaTimeNanos_info(jvmtiTimerInfo *info_ptr) {
     1470   if (Linux::supports_monotonic_clock()) {
     1471     info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS;
     1472 
     1473     // CLOCK_MONOTONIC - amount of time since some arbitrary point in the past
     1474     info_ptr->may_skip_backward = false;      // not subject to resetting or drifting
     1475     info_ptr->may_skip_forward = false;       // not subject to resetting or drifting
     1476   } else {
     1477     // gettimeofday - based on time in seconds since the Epoch thus does not wrap
     1478     info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS;
     1479 
     1480     // gettimeofday is a real time clock so it skips
     1481     info_ptr->may_skip_backward = true;
     1482     info_ptr->may_skip_forward = true;
     1483   }
     1484 
     1485   info_ptr->kind = JVMTI_TIMER_ELAPSED;                // elapsed not CPU time
     1486 }
     1487 
     1488 // Return the real, user, and system times in seconds from an
     1489 // arbitrary fixed point in the past.
     1490 bool os::getTimesSecs(double* process_real_time,
     1491                       double* process_user_time,
     1492                       double* process_system_time) {
     1493   struct tms ticks;
     1494   clock_t real_ticks = times(&ticks);
     1495 
     1496   if (real_ticks == (clock_t) (-1)) {
     1497     return false;
     1498   } else {
     1499     double ticks_per_second = (double) clock_tics_per_sec;
     1500     *process_user_time = ((double) ticks.tms_utime) / ticks_per_second;
     1501     *process_system_time = ((double) ticks.tms_stime) / ticks_per_second;
     1502     *process_real_time = ((double) real_ticks) / ticks_per_second;
     1503 
     1504     return true;
     1505   }
     1506 }
     1507 
     1508 
     1509 char * os::local_time_string(char *buf, size_t buflen) {
     1510   struct tm t;
     1511   time_t long_time;
     1512   time(&long_time);
     1513   localtime_r(&long_time, &t);
     1514   jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, "%d-%02d-%02d %02d:%02d:%02d",
     1515                t.tm_year + 1900, t.tm_mon + 1, t.tm_mday,
     1516                t.tm_hour, t.tm_min, t.tm_sec);
     1517   return buf;
     1518 }
     1519 
     1520 struct tm* os::localtime_pd(const time_t* clock, struct tm*  res) {
     1521   return localtime_r(clock, res);
     1522 }
     1523 
     1524 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     1525 // runtime exit support
     1526 
     1527 // Note: os::shutdown() might be called very early during initialization, or
     1528 // called from signal handler. Before adding something to os::shutdown(), make
     1529 // sure it is async-safe and can handle partially initialized VM.
     1530 void os::shutdown() {
     1531 
     1532   // allow PerfMemory to attempt cleanup of any persistent resources
     1533   perfMemory_exit();
     1534 
     1535   // needs to remove object in file system
     1536   AttachListener::abort();
     1537 
     1538   // flush buffered output, finish log files
     1539   ostream_abort();
     1540 
     1541   // Check for abort hook
     1542   abort_hook_t abort_hook = Arguments::abort_hook();
     1543   if (abort_hook != NULL) {
     1544     abort_hook();
     1545   }
     1546 
     1547 }
     1548 
     1549 // Note: os::abort() might be called very early during initialization, or
     1550 // called from signal handler. Before adding something to os::abort(), make
     1551 // sure it is async-safe and can handle partially initialized VM.
     1552 void os::abort(bool dump_core) {
     1553   os::shutdown();
     1554   if (dump_core) {
     1555 #ifndef PRODUCT
     1556     fdStream out(defaultStream::output_fd());
     1557     out.print_raw("Current thread is ");
     1558     char buf[16];
     1559     jio_snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), UINTX_FORMAT, os::current_thread_id());
     1560     out.print_raw_cr(buf);
     1561     out.print_raw_cr("Dumping core ...");
     1562 #endif
     1563     ::abort(); // dump core
     1564   }
     1565 
     1566   ::exit(1);
     1567 }
     1568 
     1569 // Die immediately, no exit hook, no abort hook, no cleanup.
     1570 void os::die() {
     1571   // _exit() on LinuxThreads only kills current thread
     1572   ::abort();
     1573 }
     1574 
     1575 // unused on linux for now.
     1576 void os::set_error_file(const char *logfile) {}
     1577 
     1578 
     1579 // This method is a copy of JDK's sysGetLastErrorString
     1580 // from src/solaris/hpi/src/system_md.c
     1581 
     1582 size_t os::lasterror(char *buf, size_t len) {
     1583 
     1584   if (errno == 0)  return 0;
     1585 
     1586   const char *s = ::strerror(errno);
     1587   size_t n = ::strlen(s);
     1588   if (n >= len) {
     1589     n = len - 1;
     1590   }
     1591   ::strncpy(buf, s, n);
     1592   buf[n] = '\0';
     1593   return n;
     1594 }
     1595 
     1596 intx os::current_thread_id() { return (intx)pthread_self(); }
     1597 int os::current_process_id() {
     1598 
     1599   // Under the old linux thread library, linux gives each thread
     1600   // its own process id. Because of this each thread will return
     1601   // a different pid if this method were to return the result
     1602   // of getpid(2). Linux provides no api that returns the pid
     1603   // of the launcher thread for the vm. This implementation
     1604   // returns a unique pid, the pid of the launcher thread
     1605   // that starts the vm 'process'.
     1606 
     1607   // Under the NPTL, getpid() returns the same pid as the
     1608   // launcher thread rather than a unique pid per thread.
     1609   // Use gettid() if you want the old pre NPTL behaviour.
     1610 
     1611   // if you are looking for the result of a call to getpid() that
     1612   // returns a unique pid for the calling thread, then look at the
     1613   // OSThread::thread_id() method in osThread_linux.hpp file
     1614 
     1615   return (int)(_initial_pid ? _initial_pid : getpid());
     1616 }
     1617 
     1618 // DLL functions
     1619 
     1620 const char* os::dll_file_extension() { return ".so"; }
     1621 
     1622 // This must be hard coded because it's the system's temporary
     1623 // directory not the java application's temp directory, ala java.io.tmpdir.
     1624 const char* os::get_temp_directory() { return "/tmp"; }
     1625 
     1626 static bool file_exists(const char* filename) {
     1627   struct stat statbuf;
     1628   if (filename == NULL || strlen(filename) == 0) {
     1629     return false;
     1630   }
     1631   return os::stat(filename, &statbuf) == 0;
     1632 }
     1633 
     1634 void os::dll_build_name(char* buffer, size_t buflen,
     1635                         const char* pname, const char* fname) {
     1636   // Copied from libhpi
     1637   const size_t pnamelen = pname ? strlen(pname) : 0;
     1638 
     1639   // Quietly truncate on buffer overflow.  Should be an error.
     1640   if (pnamelen + strlen(fname) + 10 > (size_t) buflen) {
     1641       *buffer = '\0';
     1642       return;
     1643   }
     1644 
     1645   if (pnamelen == 0) {
     1646     snprintf(buffer, buflen, "lib%s.so", fname);
     1647   } else if (strchr(pname, *os::path_separator()) != NULL) {
     1648     int n;
     1649     char** pelements = split_path(pname, &n);
     1650     for (int i = 0 ; i < n ; i++) {
     1651       // Really shouldn't be NULL, but check can't hurt
     1652       if (pelements[i] == NULL || strlen(pelements[i]) == 0) {
     1653         continue; // skip the empty path values
     1654       }
     1655       snprintf(buffer, buflen, "%s/lib%s.so", pelements[i], fname);
     1656       if (file_exists(buffer)) {
     1657         break;
     1658       }
     1659     }
     1660     // release the storage
     1661     for (int i = 0 ; i < n ; i++) {
     1662       if (pelements[i] != NULL) {
     1663         FREE_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char, pelements[i]);
     1664       }
     1665     }
     1666     if (pelements != NULL) {
     1667       FREE_C_HEAP_ARRAY(char*, pelements);
     1668     }
     1669   } else {
     1670     snprintf(buffer, buflen, "%s/lib%s.so", pname, fname);
     1671   }
     1672 }
     1673 
     1674 const char* os::get_current_directory(char *buf, int buflen) {
     1675   return getcwd(buf, buflen);
     1676 }
     1677 
     1678 // check if addr is inside libjvm[_g].so
     1679 bool os::address_is_in_vm(address addr) {
     1680   static address libjvm_base_addr;
     1681   Dl_info dlinfo;
     1682 
     1683   if (libjvm_base_addr == NULL) {
     1684     dladdr(CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void *, os::address_is_in_vm), &dlinfo);
     1685     libjvm_base_addr = (address)dlinfo.dli_fbase;
     1686     assert(libjvm_base_addr !=NULL, "Cannot obtain base address for libjvm");
     1687   }
     1688 
     1689   if (dladdr((void *)addr, &dlinfo)) {
     1690     if (libjvm_base_addr == (address)dlinfo.dli_fbase) return true;
     1691   }
     1692 
     1693   return false;
     1694 }
     1695 
     1696 bool os::dll_address_to_function_name(address addr, char *buf,
     1697                                       int buflen, int *offset) {
     1698   Dl_info dlinfo;
     1699 
     1700   if (dladdr((void*)addr, &dlinfo) && dlinfo.dli_sname != NULL) {
     1701     if (buf != NULL) {
     1702       if(!Decoder::demangle(dlinfo.dli_sname, buf, buflen)) {
     1703         jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, "%s", dlinfo.dli_sname);
     1704       }
     1705     }
     1706     if (offset != NULL) *offset = addr - (address)dlinfo.dli_saddr;
     1707     return true;
     1708   } else if (dlinfo.dli_fname != NULL && dlinfo.dli_fbase != 0) {
     1709     if (Decoder::decode((address)(addr - (address)dlinfo.dli_fbase),
     1710        dlinfo.dli_fname, buf, buflen, offset) == Decoder::no_error) {
     1711        return true;
     1712     }
     1713   }
     1714 
     1715   if (buf != NULL) buf[0] = '\0';
     1716   if (offset != NULL) *offset = -1;
     1717   return false;
     1718 }
     1719 
     1720 struct _address_to_library_name {
     1721   address addr;          // input : memory address
     1722   size_t  buflen;        //         size of fname
     1723   char*   fname;         // output: library name
     1724   address base;          //         library base addr
     1725 };
     1726 
     1727 static int address_to_library_name_callback(struct dl_phdr_info *info,
     1728                                             size_t size, void *data) {
     1729   int i;
     1730   bool found = false;
     1731   address libbase = NULL;
     1732   struct _address_to_library_name * d = (struct _address_to_library_name *)data;
     1733 
     1734   // iterate through all loadable segments
     1735   for (i = 0; i < info->dlpi_phnum; i++) {
     1736     address segbase = (address)(info->dlpi_addr + info->dlpi_phdr[i].p_vaddr);
     1737     if (info->dlpi_phdr[i].p_type == PT_LOAD) {
     1738       // base address of a library is the lowest address of its loaded
     1739       // segments.
     1740       if (libbase == NULL || libbase > segbase) {
     1741         libbase = segbase;
     1742       }
     1743       // see if 'addr' is within current segment
     1744       if (segbase <= d->addr &&
     1745           d->addr < segbase + info->dlpi_phdr[i].p_memsz) {
     1746         found = true;
     1747       }
     1748     }
     1749   }
     1750 
     1751   // dlpi_name is NULL or empty if the ELF file is executable, return 0
     1752   // so dll_address_to_library_name() can fall through to use dladdr() which
     1753   // can figure out executable name from argv[0].
     1754   if (found && info->dlpi_name && info->dlpi_name[0]) {
     1755     d->base = libbase;
     1756     if (d->fname) {
     1757       jio_snprintf(d->fname, d->buflen, "%s", info->dlpi_name);
     1758     }
     1759     return 1;
     1760   }
     1761   return 0;
     1762 }
     1763 
     1764 bool os::dll_address_to_library_name(address addr, char* buf,
     1765                                      int buflen, int* offset) {
     1766   Dl_info dlinfo;
     1767   struct _address_to_library_name data;
     1768 
     1769   // There is a bug in old glibc dladdr() implementation that it could resolve
     1770   // to wrong library name if the .so file has a base address != NULL. Here
     1771   // we iterate through the program headers of all loaded libraries to find
     1772   // out which library 'addr' really belongs to. This workaround can be
     1773   // removed once the minimum requirement for glibc is moved to 2.3.x.
     1774   data.addr = addr;
     1775   data.fname = buf;
     1776   data.buflen = buflen;
     1777   data.base = NULL;
     1778   int rslt = dl_iterate_phdr(address_to_library_name_callback, (void *)&data);
     1779 
     1780   if (rslt) {
     1781      // buf already contains library name
     1782      if (offset) *offset = addr - data.base;
     1783      return true;
     1784   } else if (dladdr((void*)addr, &dlinfo)){
     1785      if (buf) jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, "%s", dlinfo.dli_fname);
     1786      if (offset) *offset = addr - (address)dlinfo.dli_fbase;
     1787      return true;
     1788   } else {
     1789      if (buf) buf[0] = '\0';
     1790      if (offset) *offset = -1;
     1791      return false;
     1792   }
     1793 }
     1794 
     1795   // Loads .dll/.so and
     1796   // in case of error it checks if .dll/.so was built for the
     1797   // same architecture as Hotspot is running on
     1798 
     1799 void * os::dll_load(const char *filename, char *ebuf, int ebuflen)
     1800 {
     1801   void * result= ::dlopen(filename, RTLD_LAZY);
     1802   if (result != NULL) {
     1803     // Successful loading
     1804     return result;
     1805   }
     1806 
     1807   Elf32_Ehdr elf_head;
     1808 
     1809   // Read system error message into ebuf
     1810   // It may or may not be overwritten below
     1811   ::strncpy(ebuf, ::dlerror(), ebuflen-1);
     1812   ebuf[ebuflen-1]='\0';
     1813   int diag_msg_max_length=ebuflen-strlen(ebuf);
     1814   char* diag_msg_buf=ebuf+strlen(ebuf);
     1815 
     1816   if (diag_msg_max_length==0) {
     1817     // No more space in ebuf for additional diagnostics message
     1818     return NULL;
     1819   }
     1820 
     1821 
     1822   int file_descriptor= ::open(filename, O_RDONLY | O_NONBLOCK);
     1823 
     1824   if (file_descriptor < 0) {
     1825     // Can't open library, report dlerror() message
     1826     return NULL;
     1827   }
     1828 
     1829   bool failed_to_read_elf_head=
     1830     (sizeof(elf_head)!=
     1831         (::read(file_descriptor, &elf_head,sizeof(elf_head)))) ;
     1832 
     1833   ::close(file_descriptor);
     1834   if (failed_to_read_elf_head) {
     1835     // file i/o error - report dlerror() msg
     1836     return NULL;
     1837   }
     1838 
     1839   typedef struct {
     1840     Elf32_Half  code;         // Actual value as defined in elf.h
     1841     Elf32_Half  compat_class; // Compatibility of archs at VM's sense
     1842     char        elf_class;    // 32 or 64 bit
     1843     char        endianess;    // MSB or LSB
     1844     char*       name;         // String representation
     1845   } arch_t;
     1846 
     1847   #ifndef EM_486
     1848   #define EM_486          6               /* Intel 80486 */
     1849   #endif
     1850 
     1851   static const arch_t arch_array[]={
     1852     {EM_386,         EM_386,     ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"IA 32"},
     1853     {EM_486,         EM_386,     ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"IA 32"},
     1854     {EM_IA_64,       EM_IA_64,   ELFCLASS64, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"IA 64"},
     1855     {EM_X86_64,      EM_X86_64,  ELFCLASS64, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"AMD 64"},
     1856     {EM_SPARC,       EM_SPARC,   ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"Sparc 32"},
     1857     {EM_SPARC32PLUS, EM_SPARC,   ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"Sparc 32"},
     1858     {EM_SPARCV9,     EM_SPARCV9, ELFCLASS64, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"Sparc v9 64"},
     1859     {EM_PPC,         EM_PPC,     ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"Power PC 32"},
     1860     {EM_PPC64,       EM_PPC64,   ELFCLASS64, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"Power PC 64"},
     1861     {EM_ARM,         EM_ARM,     ELFCLASS32,   ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"ARM"},
     1862     {EM_S390,        EM_S390,    ELFCLASSNONE, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"IBM System/390"},
     1863     {EM_ALPHA,       EM_ALPHA,   ELFCLASS64, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"Alpha"},
     1864     {EM_MIPS_RS3_LE, EM_MIPS_RS3_LE, ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2LSB, (char*)"MIPSel"},
     1865     {EM_MIPS,        EM_MIPS,    ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"MIPS"},
     1866     {EM_PARISC,      EM_PARISC,  ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"PARISC"},
     1867     {EM_68K,         EM_68K,     ELFCLASS32, ELFDATA2MSB, (char*)"M68k"}
     1868   };
     1869 
     1870   #if  (defined IA32)
     1871     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_386;
     1872   #elif   (defined AMD64)
     1873     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_X86_64;
     1874   #elif  (defined IA64)
     1875     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_IA_64;
     1876   #elif  (defined __sparc) && (defined _LP64)
     1877     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_SPARCV9;
     1878   #elif  (defined __sparc) && (!defined _LP64)
     1879     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_SPARC;
     1880   #elif  (defined __powerpc64__)
     1881     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_PPC64;
     1882   #elif  (defined __powerpc__)
     1883     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_PPC;
     1884   #elif  (defined ARM)
     1885     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_ARM;
     1886   #elif  (defined S390)
     1887     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_S390;
     1888   #elif  (defined ALPHA)
     1889     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_ALPHA;
     1890   #elif  (defined MIPSEL)
     1891     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_MIPS_RS3_LE;
     1892   #elif  (defined PARISC)
     1893     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_PARISC;
     1894   #elif  (defined MIPS)
     1895     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_MIPS;
     1896   #elif  (defined M68K)
     1897     static  Elf32_Half running_arch_code=EM_68K;
     1898   #else
     1899     #error Method os::dll_load requires that one of following is defined:\
     1900          IA32, AMD64, IA64, __sparc, __powerpc__, ARM, S390, ALPHA, MIPS, MIPSEL, PARISC, M68K
     1901   #endif
     1902 
     1903   // Identify compatability class for VM's architecture and library's architecture
     1904   // Obtain string descriptions for architectures
     1905 
     1906   arch_t lib_arch={elf_head.e_machine,0,elf_head.e_ident[EI_CLASS], elf_head.e_ident[EI_DATA], NULL};
     1907   int running_arch_index=-1;
     1908 
     1909   for (unsigned int i=0 ; i < ARRAY_SIZE(arch_array) ; i++ ) {
     1910     if (running_arch_code == arch_array[i].code) {
     1911       running_arch_index    = i;
     1912     }
     1913     if (lib_arch.code == arch_array[i].code) {
     1914       lib_arch.compat_class = arch_array[i].compat_class;
     1915       lib_arch.name         = arch_array[i].name;
     1916     }
     1917   }
     1918 
     1919   assert(running_arch_index != -1,
     1920     "Didn't find running architecture code (running_arch_code) in arch_array");
     1921   if (running_arch_index == -1) {
     1922     // Even though running architecture detection failed
     1923     // we may still continue with reporting dlerror() message
     1924     return NULL;
     1925   }
     1926 
     1927   if (lib_arch.endianess != arch_array[running_arch_index].endianess) {
     1928     ::snprintf(diag_msg_buf, diag_msg_max_length-1," (Possible cause: endianness mismatch)");
     1929     return NULL;
     1930   }
     1931 
     1932 #ifndef S390
     1933   if (lib_arch.elf_class != arch_array[running_arch_index].elf_class) {
     1934     ::snprintf(diag_msg_buf, diag_msg_max_length-1," (Possible cause: architecture word width mismatch)");
     1935     return NULL;
     1936   }
     1937 #endif // !S390
     1938 
     1939   if (lib_arch.compat_class != arch_array[running_arch_index].compat_class) {
     1940     if ( lib_arch.name!=NULL ) {
     1941       ::snprintf(diag_msg_buf, diag_msg_max_length-1,
     1942         " (Possible cause: can't load %s-bit .so on a %s-bit platform)",
     1943         lib_arch.name, arch_array[running_arch_index].name);
     1944     } else {
     1945       ::snprintf(diag_msg_buf, diag_msg_max_length-1,
     1946       " (Possible cause: can't load this .so (machine code=0x%x) on a %s-bit platform)",
     1947         lib_arch.code,
     1948         arch_array[running_arch_index].name);
     1949     }
     1950   }
     1951 
     1952   return NULL;
     1953 }
     1954 
     1955 /*
     1956  * glibc-2.0 libdl is not MT safe.  If you are building with any glibc,
     1957  * chances are you might want to run the generated bits against glibc-2.0
     1958  * libdl.so, so always use locking for any version of glibc.
     1959  */
     1960 void* os::dll_lookup(void* handle, const char* name) {
     1961   pthread_mutex_lock(&dl_mutex);
     1962   void* res = dlsym(handle, name);
     1963   pthread_mutex_unlock(&dl_mutex);
     1964   return res;
     1965 }
     1966 
     1967 
     1968 static bool _print_ascii_file(const char* filename, outputStream* st) {
     1969   int fd = ::open(filename, O_RDONLY);
     1970   if (fd == -1) {
     1971      return false;
     1972   }
     1973 
     1974   char buf[32];
     1975   int bytes;
     1976   while ((bytes = ::read(fd, buf, sizeof(buf))) > 0) {
     1977     st->print_raw(buf, bytes);
     1978   }
     1979 
     1980   ::close(fd);
     1981 
     1982   return true;
     1983 }
     1984 
     1985 void os::print_dll_info(outputStream *st) {
     1986    st->print_cr("Dynamic libraries:");
     1987 
     1988    char fname[32];
     1989    pid_t pid = os::Linux::gettid();
     1990 
     1991    jio_snprintf(fname, sizeof(fname), "/proc/%d/maps", pid);
     1992 
     1993    if (!_print_ascii_file(fname, st)) {
     1994      st->print("Can not get library information for pid = %d\n", pid);
     1995    }
     1996 }
     1997 
     1998 
     1999 void os::print_os_info(outputStream* st) {
     2000   st->print("OS:");
     2001 
     2002   // Try to identify popular distros.
     2003   // Most Linux distributions have /etc/XXX-release file, which contains
     2004   // the OS version string. Some have more than one /etc/XXX-release file
     2005   // (e.g. Mandrake has both /etc/mandrake-release and /etc/redhat-release.),
     2006   // so the order is important.
     2007   if (!_print_ascii_file("/etc/mandrake-release", st) &&
     2008       !_print_ascii_file("/etc/sun-release", st) &&
     2009       !_print_ascii_file("/etc/redhat-release", st) &&
     2010       !_print_ascii_file("/etc/SuSE-release", st) &&
     2011       !_print_ascii_file("/etc/turbolinux-release", st) &&
     2012       !_print_ascii_file("/etc/gentoo-release", st) &&
     2013       !_print_ascii_file("/etc/debian_version", st) &&
     2014       !_print_ascii_file("/etc/ltib-release", st) &&
     2015       !_print_ascii_file("/etc/angstrom-version", st)) {
     2016       st->print("Linux");
     2017   }
     2018   st->cr();
     2019 
     2020   // kernel
     2021   st->print("uname:");
     2022   struct utsname name;
     2023   uname(&name);
     2024   st->print(name.sysname); st->print(" ");
     2025   st->print(name.release); st->print(" ");
     2026   st->print(name.version); st->print(" ");
     2027   st->print(name.machine);
     2028   st->cr();
     2029 
     2030   // Print warning if unsafe chroot environment detected
     2031   if (unsafe_chroot_detected) {
     2032     st->print("WARNING!! ");
     2033     st->print_cr(unstable_chroot_error);
     2034   }
     2035 
     2036   // libc, pthread
     2037   st->print("libc:");
     2038   st->print(os::Linux::glibc_version()); st->print(" ");
     2039   st->print(os::Linux::libpthread_version()); st->print(" ");
     2040   if (os::Linux::is_LinuxThreads()) {
     2041      st->print("(%s stack)", os::Linux::is_floating_stack() ? "floating" : "fixed");
     2042   }
     2043   st->cr();
     2044 
     2045   // rlimit
     2046   st->print("rlimit:");
     2047   struct rlimit rlim;
     2048 
     2049   st->print(" STACK ");
     2050   getrlimit(RLIMIT_STACK, &rlim);
     2051   if (rlim.rlim_cur == RLIM_INFINITY) st->print("infinity");
     2052   else st->print("%uk", rlim.rlim_cur >> 10);
     2053 
     2054   st->print(", CORE ");
     2055   getrlimit(RLIMIT_CORE, &rlim);
     2056   if (rlim.rlim_cur == RLIM_INFINITY) st->print("infinity");
     2057   else st->print("%uk", rlim.rlim_cur >> 10);
     2058 
     2059   st->print(", NPROC ");
     2060   getrlimit(RLIMIT_NPROC, &rlim);
     2061   if (rlim.rlim_cur == RLIM_INFINITY) st->print("infinity");
     2062   else st->print("%d", rlim.rlim_cur);
     2063 
     2064   st->print(", NOFILE ");
     2065   getrlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE, &rlim);
     2066   if (rlim.rlim_cur == RLIM_INFINITY) st->print("infinity");
     2067   else st->print("%d", rlim.rlim_cur);
     2068 
     2069   st->print(", AS ");
     2070   getrlimit(RLIMIT_AS, &rlim);
     2071   if (rlim.rlim_cur == RLIM_INFINITY) st->print("infinity");
     2072   else st->print("%uk", rlim.rlim_cur >> 10);
     2073   st->cr();
     2074 
     2075   // load average
     2076   st->print("load average:");
     2077   double loadavg[3];
     2078   os::loadavg(loadavg, 3);
     2079   st->print("%0.02f %0.02f %0.02f", loadavg[0], loadavg[1], loadavg[2]);
     2080   st->cr();
     2081 
     2082   // meminfo
     2083   st->print("\n/proc/meminfo:\n");
     2084   _print_ascii_file("/proc/meminfo", st);
     2085   st->cr();
     2086 }
     2087 
     2088 void os::print_memory_info(outputStream* st) {
     2089 
     2090   st->print("Memory:");
     2091   st->print(" %dk page", os::vm_page_size()>>10);
     2092 
     2093   // values in struct sysinfo are "unsigned long"
     2094   struct sysinfo si;
     2095   sysinfo(&si);
     2096 
     2097   st->print(", physical " UINT64_FORMAT "k",
     2098             os::physical_memory() >> 10);
     2099   st->print("(" UINT64_FORMAT "k free)",
     2100             os::available_memory() >> 10);
     2101   st->print(", swap " UINT64_FORMAT "k",
     2102             ((jlong)si.totalswap * si.mem_unit) >> 10);
     2103   st->print("(" UINT64_FORMAT "k free)",
     2104             ((jlong)si.freeswap * si.mem_unit) >> 10);
     2105   st->cr();
     2106 }
     2107 
     2108 // Taken from /usr/include/bits/siginfo.h  Supposed to be architecture specific
     2109 // but they're the same for all the linux arch that we support
     2110 // and they're the same for solaris but there's no common place to put this.
     2111 const char *ill_names[] = { "ILL0", "ILL_ILLOPC", "ILL_ILLOPN", "ILL_ILLADR",
     2112                           "ILL_ILLTRP", "ILL_PRVOPC", "ILL_PRVREG",
     2113                           "ILL_COPROC", "ILL_BADSTK" };
     2114 
     2115 const char *fpe_names[] = { "FPE0", "FPE_INTDIV", "FPE_INTOVF", "FPE_FLTDIV",
     2116                           "FPE_FLTOVF", "FPE_FLTUND", "FPE_FLTRES",
     2117                           "FPE_FLTINV", "FPE_FLTSUB", "FPE_FLTDEN" };
     2118 
     2119 const char *segv_names[] = { "SEGV0", "SEGV_MAPERR", "SEGV_ACCERR" };
     2120 
     2121 const char *bus_names[] = { "BUS0", "BUS_ADRALN", "BUS_ADRERR", "BUS_OBJERR" };
     2122 
     2123 void os::print_siginfo(outputStream* st, void* siginfo) {
     2124   st->print("siginfo:");
     2125 
     2126   const int buflen = 100;
     2127   char buf[buflen];
     2128   siginfo_t *si = (siginfo_t*)siginfo;
     2129   st->print("si_signo=%s: ", os::exception_name(si->si_signo, buf, buflen));
     2130   if (si->si_errno != 0 && strerror_r(si->si_errno, buf, buflen) == 0) {
     2131     st->print("si_errno=%s", buf);
     2132   } else {
     2133     st->print("si_errno=%d", si->si_errno);
     2134   }
     2135   const int c = si->si_code;
     2136   assert(c > 0, "unexpected si_code");
     2137   switch (si->si_signo) {
     2138   case SIGILL:
     2139     st->print(", si_code=%d (%s)", c, c > 8 ? "" : ill_names[c]);
     2140     st->print(", si_addr=" PTR_FORMAT, si->si_addr);
     2141     break;
     2142   case SIGFPE:
     2143     st->print(", si_code=%d (%s)", c, c > 9 ? "" : fpe_names[c]);
     2144     st->print(", si_addr=" PTR_FORMAT, si->si_addr);
     2145     break;
     2146   case SIGSEGV:
     2147     st->print(", si_code=%d (%s)", c, c > 2 ? "" : segv_names[c]);
     2148     st->print(", si_addr=" PTR_FORMAT, si->si_addr);
     2149     break;
     2150   case SIGBUS:
     2151     st->print(", si_code=%d (%s)", c, c > 3 ? "" : bus_names[c]);
     2152     st->print(", si_addr=" PTR_FORMAT, si->si_addr);
     2153     break;
     2154   default:
     2155     st->print(", si_code=%d", si->si_code);
     2156     // no si_addr
     2157   }
     2158 
     2159   if ((si->si_signo == SIGBUS || si->si_signo == SIGSEGV) &&
     2160       UseSharedSpaces) {
     2161     FileMapInfo* mapinfo = FileMapInfo::current_info();
     2162     if (mapinfo->is_in_shared_space(si->si_addr)) {
     2163       st->print("\n\nError accessing class data sharing archive."   \
     2164                 " Mapped file inaccessible during execution, "      \
     2165                 " possible disk/network problem.");
     2166     }
     2167   }
     2168   st->cr();
     2169 }
     2170 
     2171 
     2172 static void print_signal_handler(outputStream* st, int sig,
     2173                                  char* buf, size_t buflen);
     2174 
     2175 void os::print_signal_handlers(outputStream* st, char* buf, size_t buflen) {
     2176   st->print_cr("Signal Handlers:");
     2177   print_signal_handler(st, SIGSEGV, buf, buflen);
     2178   print_signal_handler(st, SIGBUS , buf, buflen);
     2179   print_signal_handler(st, SIGFPE , buf, buflen);
     2180   print_signal_handler(st, SIGPIPE, buf, buflen);
     2181   print_signal_handler(st, SIGXFSZ, buf, buflen);
     2182   print_signal_handler(st, SIGILL , buf, buflen);
     2183   print_signal_handler(st, INTERRUPT_SIGNAL, buf, buflen);
     2184   print_signal_handler(st, SR_signum, buf, buflen);
     2185   print_signal_handler(st, SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL, buf, buflen);
     2186   print_signal_handler(st, SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL , buf, buflen);
     2187   print_signal_handler(st, SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL , buf, buflen);
     2188   print_signal_handler(st, BREAK_SIGNAL, buf, buflen);
     2189 }
     2190 
     2191 static char saved_jvm_path[MAXPATHLEN] = {0};
     2192 
     2193 // Find the full path to the current module, libjvm.so or libjvm_g.so
     2194 void os::jvm_path(char *buf, jint buflen) {
     2195   // Error checking.
     2196   if (buflen < MAXPATHLEN) {
     2197     assert(false, "must use a large-enough buffer");
     2198     buf[0] = '\0';
     2199     return;
     2200   }
     2201   // Lazy resolve the path to current module.
     2202   if (saved_jvm_path[0] != 0) {
     2203     strcpy(buf, saved_jvm_path);
     2204     return;
     2205   }
     2206 
     2207   char dli_fname[MAXPATHLEN];
     2208   bool ret = dll_address_to_library_name(
     2209                 CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, os::jvm_path),
     2210                 dli_fname, sizeof(dli_fname), NULL);
     2211   assert(ret != 0, "cannot locate libjvm");
     2212   char *rp = realpath(dli_fname, buf);
     2213   if (rp == NULL)
     2214     return;
     2215 
     2216   if (Arguments::created_by_gamma_launcher()) {
     2217     // Support for the gamma launcher.  Typical value for buf is
     2218     // "<JAVA_HOME>/jre/lib/<arch>/<vmtype>/libjvm.so".  If "/jre/lib/" appears at
     2219     // the right place in the string, then assume we are installed in a JDK and
     2220     // we're done.  Otherwise, check for a JAVA_HOME environment variable and fix
     2221     // up the path so it looks like libjvm.so is installed there (append a
     2222     // fake suffix hotspot/libjvm.so).
     2223     const char *p = buf + strlen(buf) - 1;
     2224     for (int count = 0; p > buf && count < 5; ++count) {
     2225       for (--p; p > buf && *p != '/'; --p)
     2226         /* empty */ ;
     2227     }
     2228 
     2229     if (strncmp(p, "/jre/lib/", 9) != 0) {
     2230       // Look for JAVA_HOME in the environment.
     2231       char* java_home_var = ::getenv("JAVA_HOME");
     2232       if (java_home_var != NULL && java_home_var[0] != 0) {
     2233         char* jrelib_p;
     2234         int len;
     2235 
     2236         // Check the current module name "libjvm.so" or "libjvm_g.so".
     2237         p = strrchr(buf, '/');
     2238         assert(strstr(p, "/libjvm") == p, "invalid library name");
     2239         p = strstr(p, "_g") ? "_g" : "";
     2240 
     2241         rp = realpath(java_home_var, buf);
     2242         if (rp == NULL)
     2243           return;
     2244 
     2245         // determine if this is a legacy image or modules image
     2246         // modules image doesn't have "jre" subdirectory
     2247         len = strlen(buf);
     2248         jrelib_p = buf + len;
     2249         snprintf(jrelib_p, buflen-len, "/jre/lib/%s", cpu_arch);
     2250         if (0 != access(buf, F_OK)) {
     2251           snprintf(jrelib_p, buflen-len, "/lib/%s", cpu_arch);
     2252         }
     2253 
     2254         if (0 == access(buf, F_OK)) {
     2255           // Use current module name "libjvm[_g].so" instead of
     2256           // "libjvm"debug_only("_g")".so" since for fastdebug version
     2257           // we should have "libjvm.so" but debug_only("_g") adds "_g"!
     2258           len = strlen(buf);
     2259           snprintf(buf + len, buflen-len, "/hotspot/libjvm%s.so", p);
     2260         } else {
     2261           // Go back to path of .so
     2262           rp = realpath(dli_fname, buf);
     2263           if (rp == NULL)
     2264             return;
     2265         }
     2266       }
     2267     }
     2268   }
     2269 
     2270   strcpy(saved_jvm_path, buf);
     2271 }
     2272 
     2273 void os::print_jni_name_prefix_on(outputStream* st, int args_size) {
     2274   // no prefix required, not even "_"
     2275 }
     2276 
     2277 void os::print_jni_name_suffix_on(outputStream* st, int args_size) {
     2278   // no suffix required
     2279 }
     2280 
     2281 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     2282 // sun.misc.Signal support
     2283 
     2284 static volatile jint sigint_count = 0;
     2285 
     2286 static void
     2287 UserHandler(int sig, void *siginfo, void *context) {
     2288   // 4511530 - sem_post is serialized and handled by the manager thread. When
     2289   // the program is interrupted by Ctrl-C, SIGINT is sent to every thread. We
     2290   // don't want to flood the manager thread with sem_post requests.
     2291   if (sig == SIGINT && Atomic::add(1, &sigint_count) > 1)
     2292       return;
     2293 
     2294   // Ctrl-C is pressed during error reporting, likely because the error
     2295   // handler fails to abort. Let VM die immediately.
     2296   if (sig == SIGINT && is_error_reported()) {
     2297      os::die();
     2298   }
     2299 
     2300   os::signal_notify(sig);
     2301 }
     2302 
     2303 void* os::user_handler() {
     2304   return CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, UserHandler);
     2305 }
     2306 
     2307 extern "C" {
     2308   typedef void (*sa_handler_t)(int);
     2309   typedef void (*sa_sigaction_t)(int, siginfo_t *, void *);
     2310 }
     2311 
     2312 void* os::signal(int signal_number, void* handler) {
     2313   struct sigaction sigAct, oldSigAct;
     2314 
     2315   sigfillset(&(sigAct.sa_mask));
     2316   sigAct.sa_flags   = SA_RESTART|SA_SIGINFO;
     2317   sigAct.sa_handler = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(sa_handler_t, handler);
     2318 
     2319   if (sigaction(signal_number, &sigAct, &oldSigAct)) {
     2320     // -1 means registration failed
     2321     return (void *)-1;
     2322   }
     2323 
     2324   return CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, oldSigAct.sa_handler);
     2325 }
     2326 
     2327 void os::signal_raise(int signal_number) {
     2328   ::raise(signal_number);
     2329 }
     2330 
     2331 /*
     2332  * The following code is moved from os.cpp for making this
     2333  * code platform specific, which it is by its very nature.
     2334  */
     2335 
     2336 // Will be modified when max signal is changed to be dynamic
     2337 int os::sigexitnum_pd() {
     2338   return NSIG;
     2339 }
     2340 
     2341 // a counter for each possible signal value
     2342 static volatile jint pending_signals[NSIG+1] = { 0 };
     2343 
     2344 // Linux(POSIX) specific hand shaking semaphore.
     2345 static sem_t sig_sem;
     2346 
     2347 void os::signal_init_pd() {
     2348   // Initialize signal structures
     2349   ::memset((void*)pending_signals, 0, sizeof(pending_signals));
     2350 
     2351   // Initialize signal semaphore
     2352   ::sem_init(&sig_sem, 0, 0);
     2353 }
     2354 
     2355 void os::signal_notify(int sig) {
     2356   Atomic::inc(&pending_signals[sig]);
     2357   ::sem_post(&sig_sem);
     2358 }
     2359 
     2360 static int check_pending_signals(bool wait) {
     2361   Atomic::store(0, &sigint_count);
     2362   for (;;) {
     2363     for (int i = 0; i < NSIG + 1; i++) {
     2364       jint n = pending_signals[i];
     2365       if (n > 0 && n == Atomic::cmpxchg(n - 1, &pending_signals[i], n)) {
     2366         return i;
     2367       }
     2368     }
     2369     if (!wait) {
     2370       return -1;
     2371     }
     2372     JavaThread *thread = JavaThread::current();
     2373     ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(thread);
     2374 
     2375     bool threadIsSuspended;
     2376     do {
     2377       thread->set_suspend_equivalent();
     2378       // cleared by handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition() or java_suspend_self()
     2379       ::sem_wait(&sig_sem);
     2380 
     2381       // were we externally suspended while we were waiting?
     2382       threadIsSuspended = thread->handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition();
     2383       if (threadIsSuspended) {
     2384         //
     2385         // The semaphore has been incremented, but while we were waiting
     2386         // another thread suspended us. We don't want to continue running
     2387         // while suspended because that would surprise the thread that
     2388         // suspended us.
     2389         //
     2390         ::sem_post(&sig_sem);
     2391 
     2392         thread->java_suspend_self();
     2393       }
     2394     } while (threadIsSuspended);
     2395   }
     2396 }
     2397 
     2398 int os::signal_lookup() {
     2399   return check_pending_signals(false);
     2400 }
     2401 
     2402 int os::signal_wait() {
     2403   return check_pending_signals(true);
     2404 }
     2405 
     2406 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     2407 // Virtual Memory
     2408 
     2409 int os::vm_page_size() {
     2410   // Seems redundant as all get out
     2411   assert(os::Linux::page_size() != -1, "must call os::init");
     2412   return os::Linux::page_size();
     2413 }
     2414 
     2415 // Solaris allocates memory by pages.
     2416 int os::vm_allocation_granularity() {
     2417   assert(os::Linux::page_size() != -1, "must call os::init");
     2418   return os::Linux::page_size();
     2419 }
     2420 
     2421 // Rationale behind this function:
     2422 //  current (Mon Apr 25 20:12:18 MSD 2005) oprofile drops samples without executable
     2423 //  mapping for address (see lookup_dcookie() in the kernel module), thus we cannot get
     2424 //  samples for JITted code. Here we create private executable mapping over the code cache
     2425 //  and then we can use standard (well, almost, as mapping can change) way to provide
     2426 //  info for the reporting script by storing timestamp and location of symbol
     2427 void linux_wrap_code(char* base, size_t size) {
     2428   static volatile jint cnt = 0;
     2429 
     2430   if (!UseOprofile) {
     2431     return;
     2432   }
     2433 
     2434   char buf[PATH_MAX+1];
     2435   int num = Atomic::add(1, &cnt);
     2436 
     2437   snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "%s/hs-vm-%d-%d",
     2438            os::get_temp_directory(), os::current_process_id(), num);
     2439   unlink(buf);
     2440 
     2441   int fd = ::open(buf, O_CREAT | O_RDWR, S_IRWXU);
     2442 
     2443   if (fd != -1) {
     2444     off_t rv = ::lseek(fd, size-2, SEEK_SET);
     2445     if (rv != (off_t)-1) {
     2446       if (::write(fd, "", 1) == 1) {
     2447         mmap(base, size,
     2448              PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC,
     2449              MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_FIXED|MAP_NORESERVE, fd, 0);
     2450       }
     2451     }
     2452     ::close(fd);
     2453     unlink(buf);
     2454   }
     2455 }
     2456 
     2457 // NOTE: Linux kernel does not really reserve the pages for us.
     2458 //       All it does is to check if there are enough free pages
     2459 //       left at the time of mmap(). This could be a potential
     2460 //       problem.
     2461 bool os::commit_memory(char* addr, size_t size, bool exec) {
     2462   int prot = exec ? PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC : PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE;
     2463   uintptr_t res = (uintptr_t) ::mmap(addr, size, prot,
     2464                                    MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_FIXED|MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0);
     2465   return res != (uintptr_t) MAP_FAILED;
     2466 }
     2467 
     2468 // Define MAP_HUGETLB here so we can build HotSpot on old systems.
     2469 #ifndef MAP_HUGETLB
     2470 #define MAP_HUGETLB 0x40000
     2471 #endif
     2472 
     2473 // Define MADV_HUGEPAGE here so we can build HotSpot on old systems.
     2474 #ifndef MADV_HUGEPAGE
     2475 #define MADV_HUGEPAGE 14
     2476 #endif
     2477 
     2478 bool os::commit_memory(char* addr, size_t size, size_t alignment_hint,
     2479                        bool exec) {
     2480   if (UseHugeTLBFS && alignment_hint > (size_t)vm_page_size()) {
     2481     int prot = exec ? PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC : PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE;
     2482     uintptr_t res =
     2483       (uintptr_t) ::mmap(addr, size, prot,
     2484                          MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_FIXED|MAP_ANONYMOUS|MAP_HUGETLB,
     2485                          -1, 0);
     2486     return res != (uintptr_t) MAP_FAILED;
     2487   }
     2488 
     2489   return commit_memory(addr, size, exec);
     2490 }
     2491 
     2492 void os::realign_memory(char *addr, size_t bytes, size_t alignment_hint) {
     2493   if (UseHugeTLBFS && alignment_hint > (size_t)vm_page_size()) {
     2494     // We don't check the return value: madvise(MADV_HUGEPAGE) may not
     2495     // be supported or the memory may already be backed by huge pages.
     2496     ::madvise(addr, bytes, MADV_HUGEPAGE);
     2497   }
     2498 }
     2499 
     2500 void os::free_memory(char *addr, size_t bytes) {
     2501   ::madvise(addr, bytes, MADV_DONTNEED);
     2502 }
     2503 
     2504 void os::numa_make_global(char *addr, size_t bytes) {
     2505   Linux::numa_interleave_memory(addr, bytes);
     2506 }
     2507 
     2508 void os::numa_make_local(char *addr, size_t bytes, int lgrp_hint) {
     2509   Linux::numa_tonode_memory(addr, bytes, lgrp_hint);
     2510 }
     2511 
     2512 bool os::numa_topology_changed()   { return false; }
     2513 
     2514 size_t os::numa_get_groups_num() {
     2515   int max_node = Linux::numa_max_node();
     2516   return max_node > 0 ? max_node + 1 : 1;
     2517 }
     2518 
     2519 int os::numa_get_group_id() {
     2520   int cpu_id = Linux::sched_getcpu();
     2521   if (cpu_id != -1) {
     2522     int lgrp_id = Linux::get_node_by_cpu(cpu_id);
     2523     if (lgrp_id != -1) {
     2524       return lgrp_id;
     2525     }
     2526   }
     2527   return 0;
     2528 }
     2529 
     2530 size_t os::numa_get_leaf_groups(int *ids, size_t size) {
     2531   for (size_t i = 0; i < size; i++) {
     2532     ids[i] = i;
     2533   }
     2534   return size;
     2535 }
     2536 
     2537 bool os::get_page_info(char *start, page_info* info) {
     2538   return false;
     2539 }
     2540 
     2541 char *os::scan_pages(char *start, char* end, page_info* page_expected, page_info* page_found) {
     2542   return end;
     2543 }
     2544 
     2545 // Something to do with the numa-aware allocator needs these symbols
     2546 extern "C" JNIEXPORT void numa_warn(int number, char *where, ...) { }
     2547 extern "C" JNIEXPORT void numa_error(char *where) { }
     2548 extern "C" JNIEXPORT int fork1() { return fork(); }
     2549 
     2550 
     2551 // If we are running with libnuma version > 2, then we should
     2552 // be trying to use symbols with versions 1.1
     2553 // If we are running with earlier version, which did not have symbol versions,
     2554 // we should use the base version.
     2555 void* os::Linux::libnuma_dlsym(void* handle, const char *name) {
     2556   void *f = dlvsym(handle, name, "libnuma_1.1");
     2557   if (f == NULL) {
     2558     f = dlsym(handle, name);
     2559   }
     2560   return f;
     2561 }
     2562 
     2563 bool os::Linux::libnuma_init() {
     2564   // sched_getcpu() should be in libc.
     2565   set_sched_getcpu(CAST_TO_FN_PTR(sched_getcpu_func_t,
     2566                                   dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "sched_getcpu")));
     2567 
     2568   if (sched_getcpu() != -1) { // Does it work?
     2569     void *handle = dlopen("libnuma.so.1", RTLD_LAZY);
     2570     if (handle != NULL) {
     2571       set_numa_node_to_cpus(CAST_TO_FN_PTR(numa_node_to_cpus_func_t,
     2572                                            libnuma_dlsym(handle, "numa_node_to_cpus")));
     2573       set_numa_max_node(CAST_TO_FN_PTR(numa_max_node_func_t,
     2574                                        libnuma_dlsym(handle, "numa_max_node")));
     2575       set_numa_available(CAST_TO_FN_PTR(numa_available_func_t,
     2576                                         libnuma_dlsym(handle, "numa_available")));
     2577       set_numa_tonode_memory(CAST_TO_FN_PTR(numa_tonode_memory_func_t,
     2578                                             libnuma_dlsym(handle, "numa_tonode_memory")));
     2579       set_numa_interleave_memory(CAST_TO_FN_PTR(numa_interleave_memory_func_t,
     2580                                             libnuma_dlsym(handle, "numa_interleave_memory")));
     2581 
     2582 
     2583       if (numa_available() != -1) {
     2584         set_numa_all_nodes((unsigned long*)libnuma_dlsym(handle, "numa_all_nodes"));
     2585         // Create a cpu -> node mapping
     2586         _cpu_to_node = new (ResourceObj::C_HEAP) GrowableArray<int>(0, true);
     2587         rebuild_cpu_to_node_map();
     2588         return true;
     2589       }
     2590     }
     2591   }
     2592   return false;
     2593 }
     2594 
     2595 // rebuild_cpu_to_node_map() constructs a table mapping cpud id to node id.
     2596 // The table is later used in get_node_by_cpu().
     2597 void os::Linux::rebuild_cpu_to_node_map() {
     2598   const size_t NCPUS = 32768; // Since the buffer size computation is very obscure
     2599                               // in libnuma (possible values are starting from 16,
     2600                               // and continuing up with every other power of 2, but less
     2601                               // than the maximum number of CPUs supported by kernel), and
     2602                               // is a subject to change (in libnuma version 2 the requirements
     2603                               // are more reasonable) we'll just hardcode the number they use
     2604                               // in the library.
     2605   const size_t BitsPerCLong = sizeof(long) * CHAR_BIT;
     2606 
     2607   size_t cpu_num = os::active_processor_count();
     2608   size_t cpu_map_size = NCPUS / BitsPerCLong;
     2609   size_t cpu_map_valid_size =
     2610     MIN2((cpu_num + BitsPerCLong - 1) / BitsPerCLong, cpu_map_size);
     2611 
     2612   cpu_to_node()->clear();
     2613   cpu_to_node()->at_grow(cpu_num - 1);
     2614   size_t node_num = numa_get_groups_num();
     2615 
     2616   unsigned long *cpu_map = NEW_C_HEAP_ARRAY(unsigned long, cpu_map_size);
     2617   for (size_t i = 0; i < node_num; i++) {
     2618     if (numa_node_to_cpus(i, cpu_map, cpu_map_size * sizeof(unsigned long)) != -1) {
     2619       for (size_t j = 0; j < cpu_map_valid_size; j++) {
     2620         if (cpu_map[j] != 0) {
     2621           for (size_t k = 0; k < BitsPerCLong; k++) {
     2622             if (cpu_map[j] & (1UL << k)) {
     2623               cpu_to_node()->at_put(j * BitsPerCLong + k, i);
     2624             }
     2625           }
     2626         }
     2627       }
     2628     }
     2629   }
     2630   FREE_C_HEAP_ARRAY(unsigned long, cpu_map);
     2631 }
     2632 
     2633 int os::Linux::get_node_by_cpu(int cpu_id) {
     2634   if (cpu_to_node() != NULL && cpu_id >= 0 && cpu_id < cpu_to_node()->length()) {
     2635     return cpu_to_node()->at(cpu_id);
     2636   }
     2637   return -1;
     2638 }
     2639 
     2640 GrowableArray<int>* os::Linux::_cpu_to_node;
     2641 os::Linux::sched_getcpu_func_t os::Linux::_sched_getcpu;
     2642 os::Linux::numa_node_to_cpus_func_t os::Linux::_numa_node_to_cpus;
     2643 os::Linux::numa_max_node_func_t os::Linux::_numa_max_node;
     2644 os::Linux::numa_available_func_t os::Linux::_numa_available;
     2645 os::Linux::numa_tonode_memory_func_t os::Linux::_numa_tonode_memory;
     2646 os::Linux::numa_interleave_memory_func_t os::Linux::_numa_interleave_memory;
     2647 unsigned long* os::Linux::_numa_all_nodes;
     2648 
     2649 bool os::uncommit_memory(char* addr, size_t size) {
     2650   uintptr_t res = (uintptr_t) ::mmap(addr, size, PROT_NONE,
     2651                 MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_FIXED|MAP_NORESERVE|MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0);
     2652   return res  != (uintptr_t) MAP_FAILED;
     2653 }
     2654 
     2655 // Linux uses a growable mapping for the stack, and if the mapping for
     2656 // the stack guard pages is not removed when we detach a thread the
     2657 // stack cannot grow beyond the pages where the stack guard was
     2658 // mapped.  If at some point later in the process the stack expands to
     2659 // that point, the Linux kernel cannot expand the stack any further
     2660 // because the guard pages are in the way, and a segfault occurs.
     2661 //
     2662 // However, it's essential not to split the stack region by unmapping
     2663 // a region (leaving a hole) that's already part of the stack mapping,
     2664 // so if the stack mapping has already grown beyond the guard pages at
     2665 // the time we create them, we have to truncate the stack mapping.
     2666 // So, we need to know the extent of the stack mapping when
     2667 // create_stack_guard_pages() is called.
     2668 
     2669 // Find the bounds of the stack mapping.  Return true for success.
     2670 //
     2671 // We only need this for stacks that are growable: at the time of
     2672 // writing thread stacks don't use growable mappings (i.e. those
     2673 // creeated with MAP_GROWSDOWN), and aren't marked "[stack]", so this
     2674 // only applies to the main thread.
     2675 
     2676 static
     2677 bool get_stack_bounds(uintptr_t *bottom, uintptr_t *top) {
     2678 
     2679   char buf[128];
     2680   int fd, sz;
     2681 
     2682   if ((fd = ::open("/proc/self/maps", O_RDONLY)) < 0) {
     2683     return false;
     2684   }
     2685 
     2686   const char kw[] = "[stack]";
     2687   const int kwlen = sizeof(kw)-1;
     2688 
     2689   // Address part of /proc/self/maps couldn't be more than 128 bytes
     2690   while ((sz = os::get_line_chars(fd, buf, sizeof(buf))) > 0) {
     2691      if (sz > kwlen && ::memcmp(buf+sz-kwlen, kw, kwlen) == 0) {
     2692         // Extract addresses
     2693         if (sscanf(buf, "%" SCNxPTR "-%" SCNxPTR, bottom, top) == 2) {
     2694            uintptr_t sp = (uintptr_t) __builtin_frame_address(0);
     2695            if (sp >= *bottom && sp <= *top) {
     2696               ::close(fd);
     2697               return true;
     2698            }
     2699         }
     2700      }
     2701   }
     2702 
     2703  ::close(fd);
     2704   return false;
     2705 }
     2706 
     2707 
     2708 // If the (growable) stack mapping already extends beyond the point
     2709 // where we're going to put our guard pages, truncate the mapping at
     2710 // that point by munmap()ping it.  This ensures that when we later
     2711 // munmap() the guard pages we don't leave a hole in the stack
     2712 // mapping. This only affects the main/initial thread, but guard
     2713 // against future OS changes
     2714 bool os::create_stack_guard_pages(char* addr, size_t size) {
     2715   uintptr_t stack_extent, stack_base;
     2716   bool chk_bounds = NOT_DEBUG(os::Linux::is_initial_thread()) DEBUG_ONLY(true);
     2717   if (chk_bounds && get_stack_bounds(&stack_extent, &stack_base)) {
     2718       assert(os::Linux::is_initial_thread(),
     2719            "growable stack in non-initial thread");
     2720     if (stack_extent < (uintptr_t)addr)
     2721       ::munmap((void*)stack_extent, (uintptr_t)addr - stack_extent);
     2722   }
     2723 
     2724   return os::commit_memory(addr, size);
     2725 }
     2726 
     2727 // If this is a growable mapping, remove the guard pages entirely by
     2728 // munmap()ping them.  If not, just call uncommit_memory(). This only
     2729 // affects the main/initial thread, but guard against future OS changes
     2730 bool os::remove_stack_guard_pages(char* addr, size_t size) {
     2731   uintptr_t stack_extent, stack_base;
     2732   bool chk_bounds = NOT_DEBUG(os::Linux::is_initial_thread()) DEBUG_ONLY(true);
     2733   if (chk_bounds && get_stack_bounds(&stack_extent, &stack_base)) {
     2734       assert(os::Linux::is_initial_thread(),
     2735            "growable stack in non-initial thread");
     2736 
     2737     return ::munmap(addr, size) == 0;
     2738   }
     2739 
     2740   return os::uncommit_memory(addr, size);
     2741 }
     2742 
     2743 static address _highest_vm_reserved_address = NULL;
     2744 
     2745 // If 'fixed' is true, anon_mmap() will attempt to reserve anonymous memory
     2746 // at 'requested_addr'. If there are existing memory mappings at the same
     2747 // location, however, they will be overwritten. If 'fixed' is false,
     2748 // 'requested_addr' is only treated as a hint, the return value may or
     2749 // may not start from the requested address. Unlike Linux mmap(), this
     2750 // function returns NULL to indicate failure.
     2751 static char* anon_mmap(char* requested_addr, size_t bytes, bool fixed) {
     2752   char * addr;
     2753   int flags;
     2754 
     2755   flags = MAP_PRIVATE | MAP_NORESERVE | MAP_ANONYMOUS;
     2756   if (fixed) {
     2757     assert((uintptr_t)requested_addr % os::Linux::page_size() == 0, "unaligned address");
     2758     flags |= MAP_FIXED;
     2759   }
     2760 
     2761   // Map uncommitted pages PROT_READ and PROT_WRITE, change access
     2762   // to PROT_EXEC if executable when we commit the page.
     2763   addr = (char*)::mmap(requested_addr, bytes, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE,
     2764                        flags, -1, 0);
     2765 
     2766   if (addr != MAP_FAILED) {
     2767     // anon_mmap() should only get called during VM initialization,
     2768     // don't need lock (actually we can skip locking even it can be called
     2769     // from multiple threads, because _highest_vm_reserved_address is just a
     2770     // hint about the upper limit of non-stack memory regions.)
     2771     if ((address)addr + bytes > _highest_vm_reserved_address) {
     2772       _highest_vm_reserved_address = (address)addr + bytes;
     2773     }
     2774   }
     2775 
     2776   return addr == MAP_FAILED ? NULL : addr;
     2777 }
     2778 
     2779 // Don't update _highest_vm_reserved_address, because there might be memory
     2780 // regions above addr + size. If so, releasing a memory region only creates
     2781 // a hole in the address space, it doesn't help prevent heap-stack collision.
     2782 //
     2783 static int anon_munmap(char * addr, size_t size) {
     2784   return ::munmap(addr, size) == 0;
     2785 }
     2786 
     2787 char* os::reserve_memory(size_t bytes, char* requested_addr,
     2788                          size_t alignment_hint) {
     2789   return anon_mmap(requested_addr, bytes, (requested_addr != NULL));
     2790 }
     2791 
     2792 bool os::release_memory(char* addr, size_t size) {
     2793   return anon_munmap(addr, size);
     2794 }
     2795 
     2796 static address highest_vm_reserved_address() {
     2797   return _highest_vm_reserved_address;
     2798 }
     2799 
     2800 static bool linux_mprotect(char* addr, size_t size, int prot) {
     2801   // Linux wants the mprotect address argument to be page aligned.
     2802   char* bottom = (char*)align_size_down((intptr_t)addr, os::Linux::page_size());
     2803 
     2804   // According to SUSv3, mprotect() should only be used with mappings
     2805   // established by mmap(), and mmap() always maps whole pages. Unaligned
     2806   // 'addr' likely indicates problem in the VM (e.g. trying to change
     2807   // protection of malloc'ed or statically allocated memory). Check the
     2808   // caller if you hit this assert.
     2809   assert(addr == bottom, "sanity check");
     2810 
     2811   size = align_size_up(pointer_delta(addr, bottom, 1) + size, os::Linux::page_size());
     2812   return ::mprotect(bottom, size, prot) == 0;
     2813 }
     2814 
     2815 // Set protections specified
     2816 bool os::protect_memory(char* addr, size_t bytes, ProtType prot,
     2817                         bool is_committed) {
     2818   unsigned int p = 0;
     2819   switch (prot) {
     2820   case MEM_PROT_NONE: p = PROT_NONE; break;
     2821   case MEM_PROT_READ: p = PROT_READ; break;
     2822   case MEM_PROT_RW:   p = PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE; break;
     2823   case MEM_PROT_RWX:  p = PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC; break;
     2824   default:
     2825     ShouldNotReachHere();
     2826   }
     2827   // is_committed is unused.
     2828   return linux_mprotect(addr, bytes, p);
     2829 }
     2830 
     2831 bool os::guard_memory(char* addr, size_t size) {
     2832   return linux_mprotect(addr, size, PROT_NONE);
     2833 }
     2834 
     2835 bool os::unguard_memory(char* addr, size_t size) {
     2836   return linux_mprotect(addr, size, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE);
     2837 }
     2838 
     2839 bool os::Linux::hugetlbfs_sanity_check(bool warn, size_t page_size) {
     2840   bool result = false;
     2841   void *p = mmap (NULL, page_size, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE,
     2842                   MAP_ANONYMOUS|MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_HUGETLB,
     2843                   -1, 0);
     2844 
     2845   if (p != (void *) -1) {
     2846     // We don't know if this really is a huge page or not.
     2847     FILE *fp = fopen("/proc/self/maps", "r");
     2848     if (fp) {
     2849       while (!feof(fp)) {
     2850         char chars[257];
     2851         long x = 0;
     2852         if (fgets(chars, sizeof(chars), fp)) {
     2853           if (sscanf(chars, "%lx-%*x", &x) == 1
     2854               && x == (long)p) {
     2855             if (strstr (chars, "hugepage")) {
     2856               result = true;
     2857               break;
     2858             }
     2859           }
     2860         }
     2861       }
     2862       fclose(fp);
     2863     }
     2864     munmap (p, page_size);
     2865     if (result)
     2866       return true;
     2867   }
     2868 
     2869   if (warn) {
     2870     warning("HugeTLBFS is not supported by the operating system.");
     2871   }
     2872 
     2873   return result;
     2874 }
     2875 
     2876 /*
     2877 * Set the coredump_filter bits to include largepages in core dump (bit 6)
     2878 *
     2879 * From the coredump_filter documentation:
     2880 *
     2881 * - (bit 0) anonymous private memory
     2882 * - (bit 1) anonymous shared memory
     2883 * - (bit 2) file-backed private memory
     2884 * - (bit 3) file-backed shared memory
     2885 * - (bit 4) ELF header pages in file-backed private memory areas (it is
     2886 *           effective only if the bit 2 is cleared)
     2887 * - (bit 5) hugetlb private memory
     2888 * - (bit 6) hugetlb shared memory
     2889 */
     2890 static void set_coredump_filter(void) {
     2891   FILE *f;
     2892   long cdm;
     2893 
     2894   if ((f = fopen("/proc/self/coredump_filter", "r+")) == NULL) {
     2895     return;
     2896   }
     2897 
     2898   if (fscanf(f, "%lx", &cdm) != 1) {
     2899     fclose(f);
     2900     return;
     2901   }
     2902 
     2903   rewind(f);
     2904 
     2905   if ((cdm & LARGEPAGES_BIT) == 0) {
     2906     cdm |= LARGEPAGES_BIT;
     2907     fprintf(f, "%#lx", cdm);
     2908   }
     2909 
     2910   fclose(f);
     2911 }
     2912 
     2913 // Large page support
     2914 
     2915 static size_t _large_page_size = 0;
     2916 
     2917 void os::large_page_init() {
     2918   if (!UseLargePages) {
     2919     UseHugeTLBFS = false;
     2920     UseSHM = false;
     2921     return;
     2922   }
     2923 
     2924   if (FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(UseHugeTLBFS) && FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(UseSHM)) {
     2925     // If UseLargePages is specified on the command line try both methods,
     2926     // if it's default, then try only HugeTLBFS.
     2927     if (FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(UseLargePages)) {
     2928       UseHugeTLBFS = true;
     2929     } else {
     2930       UseHugeTLBFS = UseSHM = true;
     2931     }
     2932   }
     2933 
     2934   if (LargePageSizeInBytes) {
     2935     _large_page_size = LargePageSizeInBytes;
     2936   } else {
     2937     // large_page_size on Linux is used to round up heap size. x86 uses either
     2938     // 2M or 4M page, depending on whether PAE (Physical Address Extensions)
     2939     // mode is enabled. AMD64/EM64T uses 2M page in 64bit mode. IA64 can use
     2940     // page as large as 256M.
     2941     //
     2942     // Here we try to figure out page size by parsing /proc/meminfo and looking
     2943     // for a line with the following format:
     2944     //    Hugepagesize:     2048 kB
     2945     //
     2946     // If we can't determine the value (e.g. /proc is not mounted, or the text
     2947     // format has been changed), we'll use the largest page size supported by
     2948     // the processor.
     2949 
     2950 #ifndef ZERO
     2951     _large_page_size = IA32_ONLY(4 * M) AMD64_ONLY(2 * M) IA64_ONLY(256 * M) SPARC_ONLY(4 * M)
     2952                        ARM_ONLY(2 * M) PPC_ONLY(4 * M);
     2953 #endif // ZERO
     2954 
     2955     FILE *fp = fopen("/proc/meminfo", "r");
     2956     if (fp) {
     2957       while (!feof(fp)) {
     2958         int x = 0;
     2959         char buf[16];
     2960         if (fscanf(fp, "Hugepagesize: %d", &x) == 1) {
     2961           if (x && fgets(buf, sizeof(buf), fp) && strcmp(buf, " kB\n") == 0) {
     2962             _large_page_size = x * K;
     2963             break;
     2964           }
     2965         } else {
     2966           // skip to next line
     2967           for (;;) {
     2968             int ch = fgetc(fp);
     2969             if (ch == EOF || ch == (int)'\n') break;
     2970           }
     2971         }
     2972       }
     2973       fclose(fp);
     2974     }
     2975   }
     2976 
     2977   // print a warning if any large page related flag is specified on command line
     2978   bool warn_on_failure = !FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(UseHugeTLBFS);
     2979 
     2980   const size_t default_page_size = (size_t)Linux::page_size();
     2981   if (_large_page_size > default_page_size) {
     2982     _page_sizes[0] = _large_page_size;
     2983     _page_sizes[1] = default_page_size;
     2984     _page_sizes[2] = 0;
     2985   }
     2986   UseHugeTLBFS = UseHugeTLBFS &&
     2987                  Linux::hugetlbfs_sanity_check(warn_on_failure, _large_page_size);
     2988 
     2989   if (UseHugeTLBFS)
     2990     UseSHM = false;
     2991 
     2992   UseLargePages = UseHugeTLBFS || UseSHM;
     2993 
     2994   set_coredump_filter();
     2995 }
     2996 
     2997 #ifndef SHM_HUGETLB
     2998 #define SHM_HUGETLB 04000
     2999 #endif
     3000 
     3001 char* os::reserve_memory_special(size_t bytes, char* req_addr, bool exec) {
     3002   // "exec" is passed in but not used.  Creating the shared image for
     3003   // the code cache doesn't have an SHM_X executable permission to check.
     3004   assert(UseLargePages && UseSHM, "only for SHM large pages");
     3005 
     3006   key_t key = IPC_PRIVATE;
     3007   char *addr;
     3008 
     3009   bool warn_on_failure = UseLargePages &&
     3010                         (!FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(UseLargePages) ||
     3011                          !FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(LargePageSizeInBytes)
     3012                         );
     3013   char msg[128];
     3014 
     3015   // Create a large shared memory region to attach to based on size.
     3016   // Currently, size is the total size of the heap
     3017   int shmid = shmget(key, bytes, SHM_HUGETLB|IPC_CREAT|SHM_R|SHM_W);
     3018   if (shmid == -1) {
     3019      // Possible reasons for shmget failure:
     3020      // 1. shmmax is too small for Java heap.
     3021      //    > check shmmax value: cat /proc/sys/kernel/shmmax
     3022      //    > increase shmmax value: echo "0xffffffff" > /proc/sys/kernel/shmmax
     3023      // 2. not enough large page memory.
     3024      //    > check available large pages: cat /proc/meminfo
     3025      //    > increase amount of large pages:
     3026      //          echo new_value > /proc/sys/vm/nr_hugepages
     3027      //      Note 1: different Linux may use different name for this property,
     3028      //            e.g. on Redhat AS-3 it is "hugetlb_pool".
     3029      //      Note 2: it's possible there's enough physical memory available but
     3030      //            they are so fragmented after a long run that they can't
     3031      //            coalesce into large pages. Try to reserve large pages when
     3032      //            the system is still "fresh".
     3033      if (warn_on_failure) {
     3034        jio_snprintf(msg, sizeof(msg), "Failed to reserve shared memory (errno = %d).", errno);
     3035        warning(msg);
     3036      }
     3037      return NULL;
     3038   }
     3039 
     3040   // attach to the region
     3041   addr = (char*)shmat(shmid, req_addr, 0);
     3042   int err = errno;
     3043 
     3044   // Remove shmid. If shmat() is successful, the actual shared memory segment
     3045   // will be deleted when it's detached by shmdt() or when the process
     3046   // terminates. If shmat() is not successful this will remove the shared
     3047   // segment immediately.
     3048   shmctl(shmid, IPC_RMID, NULL);
     3049 
     3050   if ((intptr_t)addr == -1) {
     3051      if (warn_on_failure) {
     3052        jio_snprintf(msg, sizeof(msg), "Failed to attach shared memory (errno = %d).", err);
     3053        warning(msg);
     3054      }
     3055      return NULL;
     3056   }
     3057 
     3058   return addr;
     3059 }
     3060 
     3061 bool os::release_memory_special(char* base, size_t bytes) {
     3062   // detaching the SHM segment will also delete it, see reserve_memory_special()
     3063   int rslt = shmdt(base);
     3064   return rslt == 0;
     3065 }
     3066 
     3067 size_t os::large_page_size() {
     3068   return _large_page_size;
     3069 }
     3070 
     3071 // HugeTLBFS allows application to commit large page memory on demand;
     3072 // with SysV SHM the entire memory region must be allocated as shared
     3073 // memory.
     3074 bool os::can_commit_large_page_memory() {
     3075   return UseHugeTLBFS;
     3076 }
     3077 
     3078 bool os::can_execute_large_page_memory() {
     3079   return UseHugeTLBFS;
     3080 }
     3081 
     3082 // Reserve memory at an arbitrary address, only if that area is
     3083 // available (and not reserved for something else).
     3084 
     3085 char* os::attempt_reserve_memory_at(size_t bytes, char* requested_addr) {
     3086   const int max_tries = 10;
     3087   char* base[max_tries];
     3088   size_t size[max_tries];
     3089   const size_t gap = 0x000000;
     3090 
     3091   // Assert only that the size is a multiple of the page size, since
     3092   // that's all that mmap requires, and since that's all we really know
     3093   // about at this low abstraction level.  If we need higher alignment,
     3094   // we can either pass an alignment to this method or verify alignment
     3095   // in one of the methods further up the call chain.  See bug 5044738.
     3096   assert(bytes % os::vm_page_size() == 0, "reserving unexpected size block");
     3097 
     3098   // Repeatedly allocate blocks until the block is allocated at the
     3099   // right spot. Give up after max_tries. Note that reserve_memory() will
     3100   // automatically update _highest_vm_reserved_address if the call is
     3101   // successful. The variable tracks the highest memory address every reserved
     3102   // by JVM. It is used to detect heap-stack collision if running with
     3103   // fixed-stack LinuxThreads. Because here we may attempt to reserve more
     3104   // space than needed, it could confuse the collision detecting code. To
     3105   // solve the problem, save current _highest_vm_reserved_address and
     3106   // calculate the correct value before return.
     3107   address old_highest = _highest_vm_reserved_address;
     3108 
     3109   // Linux mmap allows caller to pass an address as hint; give it a try first,
     3110   // if kernel honors the hint then we can return immediately.
     3111   char * addr = anon_mmap(requested_addr, bytes, false);
     3112   if (addr == requested_addr) {
     3113      return requested_addr;
     3114   }
     3115 
     3116   if (addr != NULL) {
     3117      // mmap() is successful but it fails to reserve at the requested address
     3118      anon_munmap(addr, bytes);
     3119   }
     3120 
     3121   int i;
     3122   for (i = 0; i < max_tries; ++i) {
     3123     base[i] = reserve_memory(bytes);
     3124 
     3125     if (base[i] != NULL) {
     3126       // Is this the block we wanted?
     3127       if (base[i] == requested_addr) {
     3128         size[i] = bytes;
     3129         break;
     3130       }
     3131 
     3132       // Does this overlap the block we wanted? Give back the overlapped
     3133       // parts and try again.
     3134 
     3135       size_t top_overlap = requested_addr + (bytes + gap) - base[i];
     3136       if (top_overlap >= 0 && top_overlap < bytes) {
     3137         unmap_memory(base[i], top_overlap);
     3138         base[i] += top_overlap;
     3139         size[i] = bytes - top_overlap;
     3140       } else {
     3141         size_t bottom_overlap = base[i] + bytes - requested_addr;
     3142         if (bottom_overlap >= 0 && bottom_overlap < bytes) {
     3143           unmap_memory(requested_addr, bottom_overlap);
     3144           size[i] = bytes - bottom_overlap;
     3145         } else {
     3146           size[i] = bytes;
     3147         }
     3148       }
     3149     }
     3150   }
     3151 
     3152   // Give back the unused reserved pieces.
     3153 
     3154   for (int j = 0; j < i; ++j) {
     3155     if (base[j] != NULL) {
     3156       unmap_memory(base[j], size[j]);
     3157     }
     3158   }
     3159 
     3160   if (i < max_tries) {
     3161     _highest_vm_reserved_address = MAX2(old_highest, (address)requested_addr + bytes);
     3162     return requested_addr;
     3163   } else {
     3164     _highest_vm_reserved_address = old_highest;
     3165     return NULL;
     3166   }
     3167 }
     3168 
     3169 size_t os::read(int fd, void *buf, unsigned int nBytes) {
     3170   return ::read(fd, buf, nBytes);
     3171 }
     3172 
     3173 // TODO-FIXME: reconcile Solaris' os::sleep with the linux variation.
     3174 // Solaris uses poll(), linux uses park().
     3175 // Poll() is likely a better choice, assuming that Thread.interrupt()
     3176 // generates a SIGUSRx signal. Note that SIGUSR1 can interfere with
     3177 // SIGSEGV, see 4355769.
     3178 
     3179 const int NANOSECS_PER_MILLISECS = 1000000;
     3180 
     3181 int os::sleep(Thread* thread, jlong millis, bool interruptible) {
     3182   assert(thread == Thread::current(),  "thread consistency check");
     3183 
     3184   ParkEvent * const slp = thread->_SleepEvent ;
     3185   slp->reset() ;
     3186   OrderAccess::fence() ;
     3187 
     3188   if (interruptible) {
     3189     jlong prevtime = javaTimeNanos();
     3190 
     3191     for (;;) {
     3192       if (os::is_interrupted(thread, true)) {
     3193         return OS_INTRPT;
     3194       }
     3195 
     3196       jlong newtime = javaTimeNanos();
     3197 
     3198       if (newtime - prevtime < 0) {
     3199         // time moving backwards, should only happen if no monotonic clock
     3200         // not a guarantee() because JVM should not abort on kernel/glibc bugs
     3201         assert(!Linux::supports_monotonic_clock(), "time moving backwards");
     3202       } else {
     3203         millis -= (newtime - prevtime) / NANOSECS_PER_MILLISECS;
     3204       }
     3205 
     3206       if(millis <= 0) {
     3207         return OS_OK;
     3208       }
     3209 
     3210       prevtime = newtime;
     3211 
     3212       {
     3213         assert(thread->is_Java_thread(), "sanity check");
     3214         JavaThread *jt = (JavaThread *) thread;
     3215         ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(jt);
     3216         OSThreadWaitState osts(jt->osthread(), false /* not Object.wait() */);
     3217 
     3218         jt->set_suspend_equivalent();
     3219         // cleared by handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition() or
     3220         // java_suspend_self() via check_and_wait_while_suspended()
     3221 
     3222         slp->park(millis);
     3223 
     3224         // were we externally suspended while we were waiting?
     3225         jt->check_and_wait_while_suspended();
     3226       }
     3227     }
     3228   } else {
     3229     OSThreadWaitState osts(thread->osthread(), false /* not Object.wait() */);
     3230     jlong prevtime = javaTimeNanos();
     3231 
     3232     for (;;) {
     3233       // It'd be nice to avoid the back-to-back javaTimeNanos() calls on
     3234       // the 1st iteration ...
     3235       jlong newtime = javaTimeNanos();
     3236 
     3237       if (newtime - prevtime < 0) {
     3238         // time moving backwards, should only happen if no monotonic clock
     3239         // not a guarantee() because JVM should not abort on kernel/glibc bugs
     3240         assert(!Linux::supports_monotonic_clock(), "time moving backwards");
     3241       } else {
     3242         millis -= (newtime - prevtime) / NANOSECS_PER_MILLISECS;
     3243       }
     3244 
     3245       if(millis <= 0) break ;
     3246 
     3247       prevtime = newtime;
     3248       slp->park(millis);
     3249     }
     3250     return OS_OK ;
     3251   }
     3252 }
     3253 
     3254 int os::naked_sleep() {
     3255   // %% make the sleep time an integer flag. for now use 1 millisec.
     3256   return os::sleep(Thread::current(), 1, false);
     3257 }
     3258 
     3259 // Sleep forever; naked call to OS-specific sleep; use with CAUTION
     3260 void os::infinite_sleep() {
     3261   while (true) {    // sleep forever ...
     3262     ::sleep(100);   // ... 100 seconds at a time
     3263   }
     3264 }
     3265 
     3266 // Used to convert frequent JVM_Yield() to nops
     3267 bool os::dont_yield() {
     3268   return DontYieldALot;
     3269 }
     3270 
     3271 void os::yield() {
     3272   sched_yield();
     3273 }
     3274 
     3275 os::YieldResult os::NakedYield() { sched_yield(); return os::YIELD_UNKNOWN ;}
     3276 
     3277 void os::yield_all(int attempts) {
     3278   // Yields to all threads, including threads with lower priorities
     3279   // Threads on Linux are all with same priority. The Solaris style
     3280   // os::yield_all() with nanosleep(1ms) is not necessary.
     3281   sched_yield();
     3282 }
     3283 
     3284 // Called from the tight loops to possibly influence time-sharing heuristics
     3285 void os::loop_breaker(int attempts) {
     3286   os::yield_all(attempts);
     3287 }
     3288 
     3289 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     3290 // thread priority support
     3291 
     3292 // Note: Normal Linux applications are run with SCHED_OTHER policy. SCHED_OTHER
     3293 // only supports dynamic priority, static priority must be zero. For real-time
     3294 // applications, Linux supports SCHED_RR which allows static priority (1-99).
     3295 // However, for large multi-threaded applications, SCHED_RR is not only slower
     3296 // than SCHED_OTHER, but also very unstable (my volano tests hang hard 4 out
     3297 // of 5 runs - Sep 2005).
     3298 //
     3299 // The following code actually changes the niceness of kernel-thread/LWP. It
     3300 // has an assumption that setpriority() only modifies one kernel-thread/LWP,
     3301 // not the entire user process, and user level threads are 1:1 mapped to kernel
     3302 // threads. It has always been the case, but could change in the future. For
     3303 // this reason, the code should not be used as default (ThreadPriorityPolicy=0).
     3304 // It is only used when ThreadPriorityPolicy=1 and requires root privilege.
     3305 
     3306 int os::java_to_os_priority[MaxPriority + 1] = {
     3307   19,              // 0 Entry should never be used
     3308 
     3309    4,              // 1 MinPriority
     3310    3,              // 2
     3311    2,              // 3
     3312 
     3313    1,              // 4
     3314    0,              // 5 NormPriority
     3315   -1,              // 6
     3316 
     3317   -2,              // 7
     3318   -3,              // 8
     3319   -4,              // 9 NearMaxPriority
     3320 
     3321   -5               // 10 MaxPriority
     3322 };
     3323 
     3324 static int prio_init() {
     3325   if (ThreadPriorityPolicy == 1) {
     3326     // Only root can raise thread priority. Don't allow ThreadPriorityPolicy=1
     3327     // if effective uid is not root. Perhaps, a more elegant way of doing
     3328     // this is to test CAP_SYS_NICE capability, but that will require libcap.so
     3329     if (geteuid() != 0) {
     3330       if (!FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(ThreadPriorityPolicy)) {
     3331         warning("-XX:ThreadPriorityPolicy requires root privilege on Linux");
     3332       }
     3333       ThreadPriorityPolicy = 0;
     3334     }
     3335   }
     3336   return 0;
     3337 }
     3338 
     3339 OSReturn os::set_native_priority(Thread* thread, int newpri) {
     3340   if ( !UseThreadPriorities || ThreadPriorityPolicy == 0 ) return OS_OK;
     3341 
     3342   int ret = setpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, thread->osthread()->thread_id(), newpri);
     3343   return (ret == 0) ? OS_OK : OS_ERR;
     3344 }
     3345 
     3346 OSReturn os::get_native_priority(const Thread* const thread, int *priority_ptr) {
     3347   if ( !UseThreadPriorities || ThreadPriorityPolicy == 0 ) {
     3348     *priority_ptr = java_to_os_priority[NormPriority];
     3349     return OS_OK;
     3350   }
     3351 
     3352   errno = 0;
     3353   *priority_ptr = getpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, thread->osthread()->thread_id());
     3354   return (*priority_ptr != -1 || errno == 0 ? OS_OK : OS_ERR);
     3355 }
     3356 
     3357 // Hint to the underlying OS that a task switch would not be good.
     3358 // Void return because it's a hint and can fail.
     3359 void os::hint_no_preempt() {}
     3360 
     3361 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     3362 // suspend/resume support
     3363 
     3364 //  the low-level signal-based suspend/resume support is a remnant from the
     3365 //  old VM-suspension that used to be for java-suspension, safepoints etc,
     3366 //  within hotspot. Now there is a single use-case for this:
     3367 //    - calling get_thread_pc() on the VMThread by the flat-profiler task
     3368 //      that runs in the watcher thread.
     3369 //  The remaining code is greatly simplified from the more general suspension
     3370 //  code that used to be used.
     3371 //
     3372 //  The protocol is quite simple:
     3373 //  - suspend:
     3374 //      - sends a signal to the target thread
     3375 //      - polls the suspend state of the osthread using a yield loop
     3376 //      - target thread signal handler (SR_handler) sets suspend state
     3377 //        and blocks in sigsuspend until continued
     3378 //  - resume:
     3379 //      - sets target osthread state to continue
     3380 //      - sends signal to end the sigsuspend loop in the SR_handler
     3381 //
     3382 //  Note that the SR_lock plays no role in this suspend/resume protocol.
     3383 //
     3384 
     3385 static void resume_clear_context(OSThread *osthread) {
     3386   osthread->set_ucontext(NULL);
     3387   osthread->set_siginfo(NULL);
     3388 
     3389   // notify the suspend action is completed, we have now resumed
     3390   osthread->sr.clear_suspended();
     3391 }
     3392 
     3393 static void suspend_save_context(OSThread *osthread, siginfo_t* siginfo, ucontext_t* context) {
     3394   osthread->set_ucontext(context);
     3395   osthread->set_siginfo(siginfo);
     3396 }
     3397 
     3398 //
     3399 // Handler function invoked when a thread's execution is suspended or
     3400 // resumed. We have to be careful that only async-safe functions are
     3401 // called here (Note: most pthread functions are not async safe and
     3402 // should be avoided.)
     3403 //
     3404 // Note: sigwait() is a more natural fit than sigsuspend() from an
     3405 // interface point of view, but sigwait() prevents the signal hander
     3406 // from being run. libpthread would get very confused by not having
     3407 // its signal handlers run and prevents sigwait()'s use with the
     3408 // mutex granting granting signal.
     3409 //
     3410 // Currently only ever called on the VMThread
     3411 //
     3412 static void SR_handler(int sig, siginfo_t* siginfo, ucontext_t* context) {
     3413   // Save and restore errno to avoid confusing native code with EINTR
     3414   // after sigsuspend.
     3415   int old_errno = errno;
     3416 
     3417   Thread* thread = Thread::current();
     3418   OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread();
     3419   assert(thread->is_VM_thread(), "Must be VMThread");
     3420   // read current suspend action
     3421   int action = osthread->sr.suspend_action();
     3422   if (action == SR_SUSPEND) {
     3423     suspend_save_context(osthread, siginfo, context);
     3424 
     3425     // Notify the suspend action is about to be completed. do_suspend()
     3426     // waits until SR_SUSPENDED is set and then returns. We will wait
     3427     // here for a resume signal and that completes the suspend-other
     3428     // action. do_suspend/do_resume is always called as a pair from
     3429     // the same thread - so there are no races
     3430 
     3431     // notify the caller
     3432     osthread->sr.set_suspended();
     3433 
     3434     sigset_t suspend_set;  // signals for sigsuspend()
     3435 
     3436     // get current set of blocked signals and unblock resume signal
     3437     pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, NULL, &suspend_set);
     3438     sigdelset(&suspend_set, SR_signum);
     3439 
     3440     // wait here until we are resumed
     3441     do {
     3442       sigsuspend(&suspend_set);
     3443       // ignore all returns until we get a resume signal
     3444     } while (osthread->sr.suspend_action() != SR_CONTINUE);
     3445 
     3446     resume_clear_context(osthread);
     3447 
     3448   } else {
     3449     assert(action == SR_CONTINUE, "unexpected sr action");
     3450     // nothing special to do - just leave the handler
     3451   }
     3452 
     3453   errno = old_errno;
     3454 }
     3455 
     3456 
     3457 static int SR_initialize() {
     3458   struct sigaction act;
     3459   char *s;
     3460   /* Get signal number to use for suspend/resume */
     3461   if ((s = ::getenv("_JAVA_SR_SIGNUM")) != 0) {
     3462     int sig = ::strtol(s, 0, 10);
     3463     if (sig > 0 || sig < _NSIG) {
     3464         SR_signum = sig;
     3465     }
     3466   }
     3467 
     3468   assert(SR_signum > SIGSEGV && SR_signum > SIGBUS,
     3469         "SR_signum must be greater than max(SIGSEGV, SIGBUS), see 4355769");
     3470 
     3471   sigemptyset(&SR_sigset);
     3472   sigaddset(&SR_sigset, SR_signum);
     3473 
     3474   /* Set up signal handler for suspend/resume */
     3475   act.sa_flags = SA_RESTART|SA_SIGINFO;
     3476   act.sa_handler = (void (*)(int)) SR_handler;
     3477 
     3478   // SR_signum is blocked by default.
     3479   // 4528190 - We also need to block pthread restart signal (32 on all
     3480   // supported Linux platforms). Note that LinuxThreads need to block
     3481   // this signal for all threads to work properly. So we don't have
     3482   // to use hard-coded signal number when setting up the mask.
     3483   pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, NULL, &act.sa_mask);
     3484 
     3485   if (sigaction(SR_signum, &act, 0) == -1) {
     3486     return -1;
     3487   }
     3488 
     3489   // Save signal flag
     3490   os::Linux::set_our_sigflags(SR_signum, act.sa_flags);
     3491   return 0;
     3492 }
     3493 
     3494 static int SR_finalize() {
     3495   return 0;
     3496 }
     3497 
     3498 
     3499 // returns true on success and false on error - really an error is fatal
     3500 // but this seems the normal response to library errors
     3501 static bool do_suspend(OSThread* osthread) {
     3502   // mark as suspended and send signal
     3503   osthread->sr.set_suspend_action(SR_SUSPEND);
     3504   int status = pthread_kill(osthread->pthread_id(), SR_signum);
     3505   assert_status(status == 0, status, "pthread_kill");
     3506 
     3507   // check status and wait until notified of suspension
     3508   if (status == 0) {
     3509     for (int i = 0; !osthread->sr.is_suspended(); i++) {
     3510       os::yield_all(i);
     3511     }
     3512     osthread->sr.set_suspend_action(SR_NONE);
     3513     return true;
     3514   }
     3515   else {
     3516     osthread->sr.set_suspend_action(SR_NONE);
     3517     return false;
     3518   }
     3519 }
     3520 
     3521 static void do_resume(OSThread* osthread) {
     3522   assert(osthread->sr.is_suspended(), "thread should be suspended");
     3523   osthread->sr.set_suspend_action(SR_CONTINUE);
     3524 
     3525   int status = pthread_kill(osthread->pthread_id(), SR_signum);
     3526   assert_status(status == 0, status, "pthread_kill");
     3527   // check status and wait unit notified of resumption
     3528   if (status == 0) {
     3529     for (int i = 0; osthread->sr.is_suspended(); i++) {
     3530       os::yield_all(i);
     3531     }
     3532   }
     3533   osthread->sr.set_suspend_action(SR_NONE);
     3534 }
     3535 
     3536 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     3537 // interrupt support
     3538 
     3539 void os::interrupt(Thread* thread) {
     3540   assert(Thread::current() == thread || Threads_lock->owned_by_self(),
     3541     "possibility of dangling Thread pointer");
     3542 
     3543   OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread();
     3544 
     3545   if (!osthread->interrupted()) {
     3546     osthread->set_interrupted(true);
     3547     // More than one thread can get here with the same value of osthread,
     3548     // resulting in multiple notifications.  We do, however, want the store
     3549     // to interrupted() to be visible to other threads before we execute unpark().
     3550     OrderAccess::fence();
     3551     ParkEvent * const slp = thread->_SleepEvent ;
     3552     if (slp != NULL) slp->unpark() ;
     3553   }
     3554 
     3555   // For JSR166. Unpark even if interrupt status already was set
     3556   if (thread->is_Java_thread())
     3557     ((JavaThread*)thread)->parker()->unpark();
     3558 
     3559   ParkEvent * ev = thread->_ParkEvent ;
     3560   if (ev != NULL) ev->unpark() ;
     3561 
     3562 }
     3563 
     3564 bool os::is_interrupted(Thread* thread, bool clear_interrupted) {
     3565   assert(Thread::current() == thread || Threads_lock->owned_by_self(),
     3566     "possibility of dangling Thread pointer");
     3567 
     3568   OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread();
     3569 
     3570   bool interrupted = osthread->interrupted();
     3571 
     3572   if (interrupted && clear_interrupted) {
     3573     osthread->set_interrupted(false);
     3574     // consider thread->_SleepEvent->reset() ... optional optimization
     3575   }
     3576 
     3577   return interrupted;
     3578 }
     3579 
     3580 ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     3581 // signal handling (except suspend/resume)
     3582 
     3583 // This routine may be used by user applications as a "hook" to catch signals.
     3584 // The user-defined signal handler must pass unrecognized signals to this
     3585 // routine, and if it returns true (non-zero), then the signal handler must
     3586 // return immediately.  If the flag "abort_if_unrecognized" is true, then this
     3587 // routine will never retun false (zero), but instead will execute a VM panic
     3588 // routine kill the process.
     3589 //
     3590 // If this routine returns false, it is OK to call it again.  This allows
     3591 // the user-defined signal handler to perform checks either before or after
     3592 // the VM performs its own checks.  Naturally, the user code would be making
     3593 // a serious error if it tried to handle an exception (such as a null check
     3594 // or breakpoint) that the VM was generating for its own correct operation.
     3595 //
     3596 // This routine may recognize any of the following kinds of signals:
     3597 //    SIGBUS, SIGSEGV, SIGILL, SIGFPE, SIGQUIT, SIGPIPE, SIGXFSZ, SIGUSR1.
     3598 // It should be consulted by handlers for any of those signals.
     3599 //
     3600 // The caller of this routine must pass in the three arguments supplied
     3601 // to the function referred to in the "sa_sigaction" (not the "sa_handler")
     3602 // field of the structure passed to sigaction().  This routine assumes that
     3603 // the sa_flags field passed to sigaction() includes SA_SIGINFO and SA_RESTART.
     3604 //
     3605 // Note that the VM will print warnings if it detects conflicting signal
     3606 // handlers, unless invoked with the option "-XX:+AllowUserSignalHandlers".
     3607 //
     3608 extern "C" JNIEXPORT int
     3609 JVM_handle_linux_signal(int signo, siginfo_t* siginfo,
     3610                         void* ucontext, int abort_if_unrecognized);
     3611 
     3612 void signalHandler(int sig, siginfo_t* info, void* uc) {
     3613   assert(info != NULL && uc != NULL, "it must be old kernel");
     3614   JVM_handle_linux_signal(sig, info, uc, true);
     3615 }
     3616 
     3617 
     3618 // This boolean allows users to forward their own non-matching signals
     3619 // to JVM_handle_linux_signal, harmlessly.
     3620 bool os::Linux::signal_handlers_are_installed = false;
     3621 
     3622 // For signal-chaining
     3623 struct sigaction os::Linux::sigact[MAXSIGNUM];
     3624 unsigned int os::Linux::sigs = 0;
     3625 bool os::Linux::libjsig_is_loaded = false;
     3626 typedef struct sigaction *(*get_signal_t)(int);
     3627 get_signal_t os::Linux::get_signal_action = NULL;
     3628 
     3629 struct sigaction* os::Linux::get_chained_signal_action(int sig) {
     3630   struct sigaction *actp = NULL;
     3631 
     3632   if (libjsig_is_loaded) {
     3633     // Retrieve the old signal handler from libjsig
     3634     actp = (*get_signal_action)(sig);
     3635   }
     3636   if (actp == NULL) {
     3637     // Retrieve the preinstalled signal handler from jvm
     3638     actp = get_preinstalled_handler(sig);
     3639   }
     3640 
     3641   return actp;
     3642 }
     3643 
     3644 static bool call_chained_handler(struct sigaction *actp, int sig,
     3645                                  siginfo_t *siginfo, void *context) {
     3646   // Call the old signal handler
     3647   if (actp->sa_handler == SIG_DFL) {
     3648     // It's more reasonable to let jvm treat it as an unexpected exception
     3649     // instead of taking the default action.
     3650     return false;
     3651   } else if (actp->sa_handler != SIG_IGN) {
     3652     if ((actp->sa_flags & SA_NODEFER) == 0) {
     3653       // automaticlly block the signal
     3654       sigaddset(&(actp->sa_mask), sig);
     3655     }
     3656 
     3657     sa_handler_t hand;
     3658     sa_sigaction_t sa;
     3659     bool siginfo_flag_set = (actp->sa_flags & SA_SIGINFO) != 0;
     3660     // retrieve the chained handler
     3661     if (siginfo_flag_set) {
     3662       sa = actp->sa_sigaction;
     3663     } else {
     3664       hand = actp->sa_handler;
     3665     }
     3666 
     3667     if ((actp->sa_flags & SA_RESETHAND) != 0) {
     3668       actp->sa_handler = SIG_DFL;
     3669     }
     3670 
     3671     // try to honor the signal mask
     3672     sigset_t oset;
     3673     pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, &(actp->sa_mask), &oset);
     3674 
     3675     // call into the chained handler
     3676     if (siginfo_flag_set) {
     3677       (*sa)(sig, siginfo, context);
     3678     } else {
     3679       (*hand)(sig);
     3680     }
     3681 
     3682     // restore the signal mask
     3683     pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, &oset, 0);
     3684   }
     3685   // Tell jvm's signal handler the signal is taken care of.
     3686   return true;
     3687 }
     3688 
     3689 bool os::Linux::chained_handler(int sig, siginfo_t* siginfo, void* context) {
     3690   bool chained = false;
     3691   // signal-chaining
     3692   if (UseSignalChaining) {
     3693     struct sigaction *actp = get_chained_signal_action(sig);
     3694     if (actp != NULL) {
     3695       chained = call_chained_handler(actp, sig, siginfo, context);
     3696     }
     3697   }
     3698   return chained;
     3699 }
     3700 
     3701 struct sigaction* os::Linux::get_preinstalled_handler(int sig) {
     3702   if ((( (unsigned int)1 << sig ) & sigs) != 0) {
     3703     return &sigact[sig];
     3704   }
     3705   return NULL;
     3706 }
     3707 
     3708 void os::Linux::save_preinstalled_handler(int sig, struct sigaction& oldAct) {
     3709   assert(sig > 0 && sig < MAXSIGNUM, "vm signal out of expected range");
     3710   sigact[sig] = oldAct;
     3711   sigs |= (unsigned int)1 << sig;
     3712 }
     3713 
     3714 // for diagnostic
     3715 int os::Linux::sigflags[MAXSIGNUM];
     3716 
     3717 int os::Linux::get_our_sigflags(int sig) {
     3718   assert(sig > 0 && sig < MAXSIGNUM, "vm signal out of expected range");
     3719   return sigflags[sig];
     3720 }
     3721 
     3722 void os::Linux::set_our_sigflags(int sig, int flags) {
     3723   assert(sig > 0 && sig < MAXSIGNUM, "vm signal out of expected range");
     3724   sigflags[sig] = flags;
     3725 }
     3726 
     3727 void os::Linux::set_signal_handler(int sig, bool set_installed) {
     3728   // Check for overwrite.
     3729   struct sigaction oldAct;
     3730   sigaction(sig, (struct sigaction*)NULL, &oldAct);
     3731 
     3732   void* oldhand = oldAct.sa_sigaction
     3733                 ? CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*,  oldAct.sa_sigaction)
     3734                 : CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*,  oldAct.sa_handler);
     3735   if (oldhand != CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, SIG_DFL) &&
     3736       oldhand != CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, SIG_IGN) &&
     3737       oldhand != CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, (sa_sigaction_t)signalHandler)) {
     3738     if (AllowUserSignalHandlers || !set_installed) {
     3739       // Do not overwrite; user takes responsibility to forward to us.
     3740       return;
     3741     } else if (UseSignalChaining) {
     3742       // save the old handler in jvm
     3743       save_preinstalled_handler(sig, oldAct);
     3744       // libjsig also interposes the sigaction() call below and saves the
     3745       // old sigaction on it own.
     3746     } else {
     3747       fatal(err_msg("Encountered unexpected pre-existing sigaction handler "
     3748                     "%#lx for signal %d.", (long)oldhand, sig));
     3749     }
     3750   }
     3751 
     3752   struct sigaction sigAct;
     3753   sigfillset(&(sigAct.sa_mask));
     3754   sigAct.sa_handler = SIG_DFL;
     3755   if (!set_installed) {
     3756     sigAct.sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO|SA_RESTART;
     3757   } else {
     3758     sigAct.sa_sigaction = signalHandler;
     3759     sigAct.sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO|SA_RESTART;
     3760   }
     3761   // Save flags, which are set by ours
     3762   assert(sig > 0 && sig < MAXSIGNUM, "vm signal out of expected range");
     3763   sigflags[sig] = sigAct.sa_flags;
     3764 
     3765   int ret = sigaction(sig, &sigAct, &oldAct);
     3766   assert(ret == 0, "check");
     3767 
     3768   void* oldhand2  = oldAct.sa_sigaction
     3769                   ? CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, oldAct.sa_sigaction)
     3770                   : CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(void*, oldAct.sa_handler);
     3771   assert(oldhand2 == oldhand, "no concurrent signal handler installation");
     3772 }
     3773 
     3774 // install signal handlers for signals that HotSpot needs to
     3775 // handle in order to support Java-level exception handling.
     3776 
     3777 void os::Linux::install_signal_handlers() {
     3778   if (!signal_handlers_are_installed) {
     3779     signal_handlers_are_installed = true;
     3780 
     3781     // signal-chaining
     3782     typedef void (*signal_setting_t)();
     3783     signal_setting_t begin_signal_setting = NULL;
     3784     signal_setting_t end_signal_setting = NULL;
     3785     begin_signal_setting = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(signal_setting_t,
     3786                              dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "JVM_begin_signal_setting"));
     3787     if (begin_signal_setting != NULL) {
     3788       end_signal_setting = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(signal_setting_t,
     3789                              dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "JVM_end_signal_setting"));
     3790       get_signal_action = CAST_TO_FN_PTR(get_signal_t,
     3791                             dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "JVM_get_signal_action"));
     3792       libjsig_is_loaded = true;
     3793       assert(UseSignalChaining, "should enable signal-chaining");
     3794     }
     3795     if (libjsig_is_loaded) {
     3796       // Tell libjsig jvm is setting signal handlers
     3797       (*begin_signal_setting)();
     3798     }
     3799 
     3800     set_signal_handler(SIGSEGV, true);
     3801     set_signal_handler(SIGPIPE, true);
     3802     set_signal_handler(SIGBUS, true);
     3803     set_signal_handler(SIGILL, true);
     3804     set_signal_handler(SIGFPE, true);
     3805     set_signal_handler(SIGXFSZ, true);
     3806 
     3807     if (libjsig_is_loaded) {
     3808       // Tell libjsig jvm finishes setting signal handlers
     3809       (*end_signal_setting)();
     3810     }
     3811 
     3812     // We don't activate signal checker if libjsig is in place, we trust ourselves
     3813     // and if UserSignalHandler is installed all bets are off
     3814     if (CheckJNICalls) {
     3815       if (libjsig_is_loaded) {
     3816         tty->print_cr("Info: libjsig is activated, all active signal checking is disabled");
     3817         check_signals = false;
     3818       }
     3819       if (AllowUserSignalHandlers) {
     3820         tty->print_cr("Info: AllowUserSignalHandlers is activated, all active signal checking is disabled");
     3821         check_signals = false;
     3822       }
     3823     }
     3824   }
     3825 }
     3826 
     3827 // This is the fastest way to get thread cpu time on Linux.
     3828 // Returns cpu time (user+sys) for any thread, not only for current.
     3829 // POSIX compliant clocks are implemented in the kernels 2.6.16+.
     3830 // It might work on 2.6.10+ with a special kernel/glibc patch.
     3831 // For reference, please, see IEEE Std 1003.1-2004:
     3832 //   http://www.unix.org/single_unix_specification
     3833 
     3834 jlong os::Linux::fast_thread_cpu_time(clockid_t clockid) {
     3835   struct timespec tp;
     3836   int rc = os::Linux::clock_gettime(clockid, &tp);
     3837   assert(rc == 0, "clock_gettime is expected to return 0 code");
     3838 
     3839   return (tp.tv_sec * SEC_IN_NANOSECS) + tp.tv_nsec;
     3840 }
     3841 
     3842 /////
     3843 // glibc on Linux platform uses non-documented flag
     3844 // to indicate, that some special sort of signal
     3845 // trampoline is used.
     3846 // We will never set this flag, and we should
     3847 // ignore this flag in our diagnostic
     3848 #ifdef SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK
     3849 #undef SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK
     3850 #endif
     3851 #define SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK (~0x04000000)
     3852 
     3853 static const char* get_signal_handler_name(address handler,
     3854                                            char* buf, int buflen) {
     3855   int offset;
     3856   bool found = os::dll_address_to_library_name(handler, buf, buflen, &offset);
     3857   if (found) {
     3858     // skip directory names
     3859     const char *p1, *p2;
     3860     p1 = buf;
     3861     size_t len = strlen(os::file_separator());
     3862     while ((p2 = strstr(p1, os::file_separator())) != NULL) p1 = p2 + len;
     3863     jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, "%s+0x%x", p1, offset);
     3864   } else {
     3865     jio_snprintf(buf, buflen, PTR_FORMAT, handler);
     3866   }
     3867   return buf;
     3868 }
     3869 
     3870 static void print_signal_handler(outputStream* st, int sig,
     3871                                  char* buf, size_t buflen) {
     3872   struct sigaction sa;
     3873 
     3874   sigaction(sig, NULL, &sa);
     3875 
     3876   // See comment for SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK define
     3877   sa.sa_flags &= SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK;
     3878 
     3879   st->print("%s: ", os::exception_name(sig, buf, buflen));
     3880 
     3881   address handler = (sa.sa_flags & SA_SIGINFO)
     3882     ? CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, sa.sa_sigaction)
     3883     : CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, sa.sa_handler);
     3884 
     3885   if (handler == CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, SIG_DFL)) {
     3886     st->print("SIG_DFL");
     3887   } else if (handler == CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, SIG_IGN)) {
     3888     st->print("SIG_IGN");
     3889   } else {
     3890     st->print("[%s]", get_signal_handler_name(handler, buf, buflen));
     3891   }
     3892 
     3893   st->print(", sa_mask[0]=" PTR32_FORMAT, *(uint32_t*)&sa.sa_mask);
     3894 
     3895   address rh = VMError::get_resetted_sighandler(sig);
     3896   // May be, handler was resetted by VMError?
     3897   if(rh != NULL) {
     3898     handler = rh;
     3899     sa.sa_flags = VMError::get_resetted_sigflags(sig) & SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK;
     3900   }
     3901 
     3902   st->print(", sa_flags="   PTR32_FORMAT, sa.sa_flags);
     3903 
     3904   // Check: is it our handler?
     3905   if(handler == CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, (sa_sigaction_t)signalHandler) ||
     3906      handler == CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, (sa_sigaction_t)SR_handler)) {
     3907     // It is our signal handler
     3908     // check for flags, reset system-used one!
     3909     if((int)sa.sa_flags != os::Linux::get_our_sigflags(sig)) {
     3910       st->print(
     3911                 ", flags was changed from " PTR32_FORMAT ", consider using jsig library",
     3912                 os::Linux::get_our_sigflags(sig));
     3913     }
     3914   }
     3915   st->cr();
     3916 }
     3917 
     3918 
     3919 #define DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(sig) \
     3920   if (!sigismember(&check_signal_done, sig)) \
     3921     os::Linux::check_signal_handler(sig)
     3922 
     3923 // This method is a periodic task to check for misbehaving JNI applications
     3924 // under CheckJNI, we can add any periodic checks here
     3925 
     3926 void os::run_periodic_checks() {
     3927 
     3928   if (check_signals == false) return;
     3929 
     3930   // SEGV and BUS if overridden could potentially prevent
     3931   // generation of hs*.log in the event of a crash, debugging
     3932   // such a case can be very challenging, so we absolutely
     3933   // check the following for a good measure:
     3934   DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGSEGV);
     3935   DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGILL);
     3936   DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGFPE);
     3937   DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGBUS);
     3938   DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGPIPE);
     3939   DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SIGXFSZ);
     3940 
     3941 
     3942   // ReduceSignalUsage allows the user to override these handlers
     3943   // see comments at the very top and jvm_solaris.h
     3944   if (!ReduceSignalUsage) {
     3945     DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL);
     3946     DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL);
     3947     DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL);
     3948     DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(BREAK_SIGNAL);
     3949   }
     3950 
     3951   DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(SR_signum);
     3952   DO_SIGNAL_CHECK(INTERRUPT_SIGNAL);
     3953 }
     3954 
     3955 typedef int (*os_sigaction_t)(int, const struct sigaction *, struct sigaction *);
     3956 
     3957 static os_sigaction_t os_sigaction = NULL;
     3958 
     3959 void os::Linux::check_signal_handler(int sig) {
     3960   char buf[O_BUFLEN];
     3961   address jvmHandler = NULL;
     3962 
     3963 
     3964   struct sigaction act;
     3965   if (os_sigaction == NULL) {
     3966     // only trust the default sigaction, in case it has been interposed
     3967     os_sigaction = (os_sigaction_t)dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "sigaction");
     3968     if (os_sigaction == NULL) return;
     3969   }
     3970 
     3971   os_sigaction(sig, (struct sigaction*)NULL, &act);
     3972 
     3973 
     3974   act.sa_flags &= SIGNIFICANT_SIGNAL_MASK;
     3975 
     3976   address thisHandler = (act.sa_flags & SA_SIGINFO)
     3977     ? CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, act.sa_sigaction)
     3978     : CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, act.sa_handler) ;
     3979 
     3980 
     3981   switch(sig) {
     3982   case SIGSEGV:
     3983   case SIGBUS:
     3984   case SIGFPE:
     3985   case SIGPIPE:
     3986   case SIGILL:
     3987   case SIGXFSZ:
     3988     jvmHandler = CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, (sa_sigaction_t)signalHandler);
     3989     break;
     3990 
     3991   case SHUTDOWN1_SIGNAL:
     3992   case SHUTDOWN2_SIGNAL:
     3993   case SHUTDOWN3_SIGNAL:
     3994   case BREAK_SIGNAL:
     3995     jvmHandler = (address)user_handler();
     3996     break;
     3997 
     3998   case INTERRUPT_SIGNAL:
     3999     jvmHandler = CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, SIG_DFL);
     4000     break;
     4001 
     4002   default:
     4003     if (sig == SR_signum) {
     4004       jvmHandler = CAST_FROM_FN_PTR(address, (sa_sigaction_t)SR_handler);
     4005     } else {
     4006       return;
     4007     }
     4008     break;
     4009   }
     4010 
     4011   if (thisHandler != jvmHandler) {
     4012     tty->print("Warning: %s handler ", exception_name(sig, buf, O_BUFLEN));
     4013     tty->print("expected:%s", get_signal_handler_name(jvmHandler, buf, O_BUFLEN));
     4014     tty->print_cr("  found:%s", get_signal_handler_name(thisHandler, buf, O_BUFLEN));
     4015     // No need to check this sig any longer
     4016     sigaddset(&check_signal_done, sig);
     4017   } else if(os::Linux::get_our_sigflags(sig) != 0 && (int)act.sa_flags != os::Linux::get_our_sigflags(sig)) {
     4018     tty->print("Warning: %s handler flags ", exception_name(sig, buf, O_BUFLEN));
     4019     tty->print("expected:" PTR32_FORMAT, os::Linux::get_our_sigflags(sig));
     4020     tty->print_cr("  found:" PTR32_FORMAT, act.sa_flags);
     4021     // No need to check this sig any longer
     4022     sigaddset(&check_signal_done, sig);
     4023   }
     4024 
     4025   // Dump all the signal
     4026   if (sigismember(&check_signal_done, sig)) {
     4027     print_signal_handlers(tty, buf, O_BUFLEN);
     4028   }
     4029 }
     4030 
     4031 extern void report_error(char* file_name, int line_no, char* title, char* format, ...);
     4032 
     4033 extern bool signal_name(int signo, char* buf, size_t len);
     4034 
     4035 const char* os::exception_name(int exception_code, char* buf, size_t size) {
     4036   if (0 < exception_code && exception_code <= SIGRTMAX) {
     4037     // signal
     4038     if (!signal_name(exception_code, buf, size)) {
     4039       jio_snprintf(buf, size, "SIG%d", exception_code);
     4040     }
     4041     return buf;
     4042   } else {
     4043     return NULL;
     4044   }
     4045 }
     4046 
     4047 // this is called _before_ the most of global arguments have been parsed
     4048 void os::init(void) {
     4049   char dummy;   /* used to get a guess on initial stack address */
     4050 //  first_hrtime = gethrtime();
     4051 
     4052   // With LinuxThreads the JavaMain thread pid (primordial thread)
     4053   // is different than the pid of the java launcher thread.
     4054   // So, on Linux, the launcher thread pid is passed to the VM
     4055   // via the sun.java.launcher.pid property.
     4056   // Use this property instead of getpid() if it was correctly passed.
     4057   // See bug 6351349.
     4058   pid_t java_launcher_pid = (pid_t) Arguments::sun_java_launcher_pid();
     4059 
     4060   _initial_pid = (java_launcher_pid > 0) ? java_launcher_pid : getpid();
     4061 
     4062   clock_tics_per_sec = sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK);
     4063 
     4064   init_random(1234567);
     4065 
     4066   ThreadCritical::initialize();
     4067 
     4068   Linux::set_page_size(sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE));
     4069   if (Linux::page_size() == -1) {
     4070     fatal(err_msg("os_linux.cpp: os::init: sysconf failed (%s)",
     4071                   strerror(errno)));
     4072   }
     4073   init_page_sizes((size_t) Linux::page_size());
     4074 
     4075   Linux::initialize_system_info();
     4076 
     4077   // main_thread points to the aboriginal thread
     4078   Linux::_main_thread = pthread_self();
     4079 
     4080   Linux::clock_init();
     4081   initial_time_count = os::elapsed_counter();
     4082   pthread_mutex_init(&dl_mutex, NULL);
     4083 }
     4084 
     4085 // To install functions for atexit system call
     4086 extern "C" {
     4087   static void perfMemory_exit_helper() {
     4088     perfMemory_exit();
     4089   }
     4090 }
     4091 
     4092 // this is called _after_ the global arguments have been parsed
     4093 jint os::init_2(void)
     4094 {
     4095   Linux::fast_thread_clock_init();
     4096 
     4097   // Allocate a single page and mark it as readable for safepoint polling
     4098   address polling_page = (address) ::mmap(NULL, Linux::page_size(), PROT_READ, MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0);
     4099   guarantee( polling_page != MAP_FAILED, "os::init_2: failed to allocate polling page" );
     4100 
     4101   os::set_polling_page( polling_page );
     4102 
     4103 #ifndef PRODUCT
     4104   if(Verbose && PrintMiscellaneous)
     4105     tty->print("[SafePoint Polling address: " INTPTR_FORMAT "]\n", (intptr_t)polling_page);
     4106 #endif
     4107 
     4108   if (!UseMembar) {
     4109     address mem_serialize_page = (address) ::mmap(NULL, Linux::page_size(), PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0);
     4110     guarantee( mem_serialize_page != NULL, "mmap Failed for memory serialize page");
     4111     os::set_memory_serialize_page( mem_serialize_page );
     4112 
     4113 #ifndef PRODUCT
     4114     if(Verbose && PrintMiscellaneous)
     4115       tty->print("[Memory Serialize  Page address: " INTPTR_FORMAT "]\n", (intptr_t)mem_serialize_page);
     4116 #endif
     4117   }
     4118 
     4119   os::large_page_init();
     4120 
     4121   // initialize suspend/resume support - must do this before signal_sets_init()
     4122   if (SR_initialize() != 0) {
     4123     perror("SR_initialize failed");
     4124     return JNI_ERR;
     4125   }
     4126 
     4127   Linux::signal_sets_init();
     4128   Linux::install_signal_handlers();
     4129 
     4130   // Check minimum allowable stack size for thread creation and to initialize
     4131   // the java system classes, including StackOverflowError - depends on page
     4132   // size.  Add a page for compiler2 recursion in main thread.
     4133   // Add in 2*BytesPerWord times page size to account for VM stack during
     4134   // class initialization depending on 32 or 64 bit VM.
     4135   os::Linux::min_stack_allowed = MAX2(os::Linux::min_stack_allowed,
     4136             (size_t)(StackYellowPages+StackRedPages+StackShadowPages+
     4137                     2*BytesPerWord COMPILER2_PRESENT(+1)) * Linux::page_size());
     4138 
     4139   size_t threadStackSizeInBytes = ThreadStackSize * K;
     4140   if (threadStackSizeInBytes != 0 &&
     4141       threadStackSizeInBytes < os::Linux::min_stack_allowed) {
     4142         tty->print_cr("\nThe stack size specified is too small, "
     4143                       "Specify at least %dk",
     4144                       os::Linux::min_stack_allowed/ K);
     4145         return JNI_ERR;
     4146   }
     4147 
     4148   // Make the stack size a multiple of the page size so that
     4149   // the yellow/red zones can be guarded.
     4150   JavaThread::set_stack_size_at_create(round_to(threadStackSizeInBytes,
     4151         vm_page_size()));
     4152 
     4153   Linux::capture_initial_stack(JavaThread::stack_size_at_create());
     4154 
     4155   Linux::libpthread_init();
     4156   if (PrintMiscellaneous && (Verbose || WizardMode)) {
     4157      tty->print_cr("[HotSpot is running with %s, %s(%s)]\n",
     4158           Linux::glibc_version(), Linux::libpthread_version(),
     4159           Linux::is_floating_stack() ? "floating stack" : "fixed stack");
     4160   }
     4161 
     4162   if (UseNUMA) {
     4163     if (!Linux::libnuma_init()) {
     4164       UseNUMA = false;
     4165     } else {
     4166       if ((Linux::numa_max_node() < 1)) {
     4167         // There's only one node(they start from 0), disable NUMA.
     4168         UseNUMA = false;
     4169       }
     4170     }
     4171     // With SHM large pages we cannot uncommit a page, so there's not way
     4172     // we can make the adaptive lgrp chunk resizing work. If the user specified
     4173     // both UseNUMA and UseLargePages (or UseSHM) on the command line - warn and
     4174     // disable adaptive resizing.
     4175     if (UseNUMA && UseLargePages && UseSHM) {
     4176       if (!FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(UseNUMA)) {
     4177         if (FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(UseLargePages) && FLAG_IS_DEFAULT(UseSHM)) {
     4178           UseLargePages = false;
     4179         } else {
     4180           warning("UseNUMA is not fully compatible with SHM large pages, disabling adaptive resizing");
     4181           UseAdaptiveSizePolicy = false;
     4182           UseAdaptiveNUMAChunkSizing = false;
     4183         }
     4184       } else {
     4185         UseNUMA = false;
     4186       }
     4187     }
     4188     if (!UseNUMA && ForceNUMA) {
     4189       UseNUMA = true;
     4190     }
     4191   }
     4192 
     4193   if (MaxFDLimit) {
     4194     // set the number of file descriptors to max. print out error
     4195     // if getrlimit/setrlimit fails but continue regardless.
     4196     struct rlimit nbr_files;
     4197     int status = getrlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE, &nbr_files);
     4198     if (status != 0) {
     4199       if (PrintMiscellaneous && (Verbose || WizardMode))
     4200         perror("os::init_2 getrlimit failed");
     4201     } else {
     4202       nbr_files.rlim_cur = nbr_files.rlim_max;
     4203       status = setrlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE, &nbr_files);
     4204       if (status != 0) {
     4205         if (PrintMiscellaneous && (Verbose || WizardMode))
     4206           perror("os::init_2 setrlimit failed");
     4207       }
     4208     }
     4209   }
     4210 
     4211   // Initialize lock used to serialize thread creation (see os::create_thread)
     4212   Linux::set_createThread_lock(new Mutex(Mutex::leaf, "createThread_lock", false));
     4213 
     4214   // at-exit methods are called in the reverse order of their registration.
     4215   // atexit functions are called on return from main or as a result of a
     4216   // call to exit(3C). There can be only 32 of these functions registered
     4217   // and atexit() does not set errno.
     4218 
     4219   if (PerfAllowAtExitRegistration) {
     4220     // only register atexit functions if PerfAllowAtExitRegistration is set.
     4221     // atexit functions can be delayed until process exit time, which
     4222     // can be problematic for embedded VM situations. Embedded VMs should
     4223     // call DestroyJavaVM() to assure that VM resources are released.
     4224 
     4225     // note: perfMemory_exit_helper atexit function may be removed in
     4226     // the future if the appropriate cleanup code can be added to the
     4227     // VM_Exit VMOperation's doit method.
     4228     if (atexit(perfMemory_exit_helper) != 0) {
     4229       warning("os::init2 atexit(perfMemory_exit_helper) failed");
     4230     }
     4231   }
     4232 
     4233   // initialize thread priority policy
     4234   prio_init();
     4235 
     4236   return JNI_OK;
     4237 }
     4238 
     4239 // this is called at the end of vm_initialization
     4240 void os::init_3(void) { }
     4241 
     4242 // Mark the polling page as unreadable
     4243 void os::make_polling_page_unreadable(void) {
     4244   if( !guard_memory((char*)_polling_page, Linux::page_size()) )
     4245     fatal("Could not disable polling page");
     4246 };
     4247 
     4248 // Mark the polling page as readable
     4249 void os::make_polling_page_readable(void) {
     4250   if( !linux_mprotect((char *)_polling_page, Linux::page_size(), PROT_READ)) {
     4251     fatal("Could not enable polling page");
     4252   }
     4253 };
     4254 
     4255 int os::active_processor_count() {
     4256   // Linux doesn't yet have a (official) notion of processor sets,
     4257   // so just return the number of online processors.
     4258   int online_cpus = ::sysconf(_SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN);
     4259   assert(online_cpus > 0 && online_cpus <= processor_count(), "sanity check");
     4260   return online_cpus;
     4261 }
     4262 
     4263 bool os::distribute_processes(uint length, uint* distribution) {
     4264   // Not yet implemented.
     4265   return false;
     4266 }
     4267 
     4268 bool os::bind_to_processor(uint processor_id) {
     4269   // Not yet implemented.
     4270   return false;
     4271 }
     4272 
     4273 ///
     4274 
     4275 // Suspends the target using the signal mechanism and then grabs the PC before
     4276 // resuming the target. Used by the flat-profiler only
     4277 ExtendedPC os::get_thread_pc(Thread* thread) {
     4278   // Make sure that it is called by the watcher for the VMThread
     4279   assert(Thread::current()->is_Watcher_thread(), "Must be watcher");
     4280   assert(thread->is_VM_thread(), "Can only be called for VMThread");
     4281 
     4282   ExtendedPC epc;
     4283 
     4284   OSThread* osthread = thread->osthread();
     4285   if (do_suspend(osthread)) {
     4286     if (osthread->ucontext() != NULL) {
     4287       epc = os::Linux::ucontext_get_pc(osthread->ucontext());
     4288     } else {
     4289       // NULL context is unexpected, double-check this is the VMThread
     4290       guarantee(thread->is_VM_thread(), "can only be called for VMThread");
     4291     }
     4292     do_resume(osthread);
     4293   }
     4294   // failure means pthread_kill failed for some reason - arguably this is
     4295   // a fatal problem, but such problems are ignored elsewhere
     4296 
     4297   return epc;
     4298 }
     4299 
     4300 int os::Linux::safe_cond_timedwait(pthread_cond_t *_cond, pthread_mutex_t *_mutex, const struct timespec *_abstime)
     4301 {
     4302    if (is_NPTL()) {
     4303       return pthread_cond_timedwait(_cond, _mutex, _abstime);
     4304    } else {
     4305 #ifndef IA64
     4306       // 6292965: LinuxThreads pthread_cond_timedwait() resets FPU control
     4307       // word back to default 64bit precision if condvar is signaled. Java
     4308       // wants 53bit precision.  Save and restore current value.
     4309       int fpu = get_fpu_control_word();
     4310 #endif // IA64
     4311       int status = pthread_cond_timedwait(_cond, _mutex, _abstime);
     4312 #ifndef IA64
     4313       set_fpu_control_word(fpu);
     4314 #endif // IA64
     4315       return status;
     4316    }
     4317 }
     4318 
     4319 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     4320 // debug support
     4321 
     4322 static address same_page(address x, address y) {
     4323   int page_bits = -os::vm_page_size();
     4324   if ((intptr_t(x) & page_bits) == (intptr_t(y) & page_bits))
     4325     return x;
     4326   else if (x > y)
     4327     return (address)(intptr_t(y) | ~page_bits) + 1;
     4328   else
     4329     return (address)(intptr_t(y) & page_bits);
     4330 }
     4331 
     4332 bool os::find(address addr, outputStream* st) {
     4333   Dl_info dlinfo;
     4334   memset(&dlinfo, 0, sizeof(dlinfo));
     4335   if (dladdr(addr, &dlinfo)) {
     4336     st->print(PTR_FORMAT ": ", addr);
     4337     if (dlinfo.dli_sname != NULL) {
     4338       st->print("%s+%#x", dlinfo.dli_sname,
     4339                  addr - (intptr_t)dlinfo.dli_saddr);
     4340     } else if (dlinfo.dli_fname) {
     4341       st->print("<offset %#x>", addr - (intptr_t)dlinfo.dli_fbase);
     4342     } else {
     4343       st->print("<absolute address>");
     4344     }
     4345     if (dlinfo.dli_fname) {
     4346       st->print(" in %s", dlinfo.dli_fname);
     4347     }
     4348     if (dlinfo.dli_fbase) {
     4349       st->print(" at " PTR_FORMAT, dlinfo.dli_fbase);
     4350     }
     4351     st->cr();
     4352 
     4353     if (Verbose) {
     4354       // decode some bytes around the PC
     4355       address begin = same_page(addr-40, addr);
     4356       address end   = same_page(addr+40, addr);
     4357       address       lowest = (address) dlinfo.dli_sname;
     4358       if (!lowest)  lowest = (address) dlinfo.dli_fbase;
     4359       if (begin < lowest)  begin = lowest;
     4360       Dl_info dlinfo2;
     4361       if (dladdr(end, &dlinfo2) && dlinfo2.dli_saddr != dlinfo.dli_saddr
     4362           && end > dlinfo2.dli_saddr && dlinfo2.dli_saddr > begin)
     4363         end = (address) dlinfo2.dli_saddr;
     4364       Disassembler::decode(begin, end, st);
     4365     }
     4366     return true;
     4367   }
     4368   return false;
     4369 }
     4370 
     4371 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
     4372 // misc
     4373 
     4374 // This does not do anything on Linux. This is basically a hook for being
     4375 // able to use structured exception handling (thread-local exception filters)
     4376 // on, e.g., Win32.
     4377 void
     4378 os::os_exception_wrapper(java_call_t f, JavaValue* value, methodHandle* method,
     4379                          JavaCallArguments* args, Thread* thread) {
     4380   f(value, method, args, thread);
     4381 }
     4382 
     4383 void os::print_statistics() {
     4384 }
     4385 
     4386 int os::message_box(const char* title, const char* message) {
     4387   int i;
     4388   fdStream err(defaultStream::error_fd());
     4389   for (i = 0; i < 78; i++) err.print_raw("=");
     4390   err.cr();
     4391   err.print_raw_cr(title);
     4392   for (i = 0; i < 78; i++) err.print_raw("-");
     4393   err.cr();
     4394   err.print_raw_cr(message);
     4395   for (i = 0; i < 78; i++) err.print_raw("=");
     4396   err.cr();
     4397 
     4398   char buf[16];
     4399   // Prevent process from exiting upon "read error" without consuming all CPU
     4400   while (::read(0, buf, sizeof(buf)) <= 0) { ::sleep(100); }
     4401 
     4402   return buf[0] == 'y' || buf[0] == 'Y';
     4403 }
     4404 
     4405 int os::stat(const char *path, struct stat *sbuf) {
     4406   char pathbuf[MAX_PATH];
     4407   if (strlen(path) > MAX_PATH - 1) {
     4408     errno = ENAMETOOLONG;
     4409     return -1;
     4410   }
     4411   os::native_path(strcpy(pathbuf, path));
     4412   return ::stat(pathbuf, sbuf);
     4413 }
     4414 
     4415 bool os::check_heap(bool force) {
     4416   return true;
     4417 }
     4418 
     4419 int local_vsnprintf(char* buf, size_t count, const char* format, va_list args) {
     4420   return ::vsnprintf(buf, count, format, args);
     4421 }
     4422 
     4423 // Is a (classpath) directory empty?
     4424 bool os::dir_is_empty(const char* path) {
     4425   DIR *dir = NULL;
     4426   struct dirent *ptr;
     4427 
     4428   dir = opendir(path);
     4429   if (dir == NULL) return true;
     4430 
     4431   /* Scan the directory */
     4432   bool result = true;
     4433   char buf[sizeof(struct dirent) + MAX_PATH];
     4434   while (result && (ptr = ::readdir(dir)) != NULL) {
     4435     if (strcmp(ptr->d_name, ".") != 0 && strcmp(ptr->d_name, "..") != 0) {
     4436       result = false;
     4437     }
     4438   }
     4439   closedir(dir);
     4440   return result;
     4441 }
     4442 
     4443 // This code originates from JDK's sysOpen and open64_w
     4444 // from src/solaris/hpi/src/system_md.c
     4445 
     4446 #ifndef O_DELETE
     4447 #define O_DELETE 0x10000
     4448 #endif
     4449 
     4450 // Open a file. Unlink the file immediately after open returns
     4451 // if the specified oflag has the O_DELETE flag set.
     4452 // O_DELETE is used only in j2se/src/share/native/java/util/zip/ZipFile.c
     4453 
     4454 int os::open(const char *path, int oflag, int mode) {
     4455 
     4456   if (strlen(path) > MAX_PATH - 1) {
     4457     errno = ENAMETOOLONG;
     4458     return -1;
     4459   }
     4460   int fd;
     4461   int o_delete = (oflag & O_DELETE);
     4462   oflag = oflag & ~O_DELETE;
     4463 
     4464   fd = ::open64(path, oflag, mode);
     4465   if (fd == -1) return -1;
     4466 
     4467   //If the open succeeded, the file might still be a directory
     4468   {
     4469     struct stat64 buf64;
     4470     int ret = ::fstat64(fd, &buf64);
     4471     int st_mode = buf64.st_mode;
     4472 
     4473     if (ret != -1) {
     4474       if ((st_mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFDIR) {
     4475         errno = EISDIR;
     4476         ::close(fd);
     4477         return -1;
     4478       }
     4479     } else {
     4480       ::close(fd);
     4481       return -1;
     4482     }
     4483   }
     4484 
     4485     /*
     4486      * All file descriptors that are opened in the JVM and not
     4487      * specifically destined for a subprocess should have the
     4488      * close-on-exec flag set.  If we don't set it, then careless 3rd
     4489      * party native code might fork and exec without closing all
     4490      * appropriate file descriptors (e.g. as we do in closeDescriptors in
     4491      * UNIXProcess.c), and this in turn might:
     4492      *
     4493      * - cause end-of-file to fail to be detected on some file
     4494      *   descriptors, resulting in mysterious hangs, or
     4495      *
     4496      * - might cause an fopen in the subprocess to fail on a system
     4497      *   suffering from bug 1085341.
     4498      *
     4499      * (Yes, the default setting of the close-on-exec flag is a Unix
     4500      * design flaw)
     4501      *
     4502      * See:
     4503      * 1085341: 32-bit stdio routines should support file descriptors >255
     4504      * 4843136: (process) pipe file descriptor from Runtime.exec not being closed
     4505      * 6339493: (process) Runtime.exec does not close all file descriptors on Solaris 9
     4506      */
     4507 #ifdef FD_CLOEXEC
     4508     {
     4509         int flags = ::fcntl(fd, F_GETFD);
     4510         if (flags != -1)
     4511             ::fcntl(fd, F_SETFD, flags | FD_CLOEXEC);
     4512     }
     4513 #endif
     4514 
     4515   if (o_delete != 0) {
     4516     ::unlink(path);
     4517   }
     4518   return fd;
     4519 }
     4520 
     4521 
     4522 // create binary file, rewriting existing file if required
     4523 int os::create_binary_file(const char* path, bool rewrite_existing) {
     4524   int oflags = O_WRONLY | O_CREAT;
     4525   if (!rewrite_existing) {
     4526     oflags |= O_EXCL;
     4527   }
     4528   return ::open64(path, oflags, S_IREAD | S_IWRITE);
     4529 }
     4530 
     4531 // return current position of file pointer
     4532 jlong os::current_file_offset(int fd) {
     4533   return (jlong)::lseek64(fd, (off64_t)0, SEEK_CUR);
     4534 }
     4535 
     4536 // move file pointer to the specified offset
     4537 jlong os::seek_to_file_offset(int fd, jlong offset) {
     4538   return (jlong)::lseek64(fd, (off64_t)offset, SEEK_SET);
     4539 }
     4540 
     4541 // This code originates from JDK's sysAvailable
     4542 // from src/solaris/hpi/src/native_threads/src/sys_api_td.c
     4543 
     4544 int os::available(int fd, jlong *bytes) {
     4545   jlong cur, end;
     4546   int mode;
     4547   struct stat64 buf64;
     4548 
     4549   if (::fstat64(fd, &buf64) >= 0) {
     4550     mode = buf64.st_mode;
     4551     if (S_ISCHR(mode) || S_ISFIFO(mode) || S_ISSOCK(mode)) {
     4552       /*
     4553       * XXX: is the following call interruptible? If so, this might
     4554       * need to go through the INTERRUPT_IO() wrapper as for other
     4555       * blocking, interruptible calls in this file.
     4556       */
     4557       int n;
     4558       if (::ioctl(fd, FIONREAD, &n) >= 0) {
     4559         *bytes = n;
     4560         return 1;
     4561       }
     4562     }
     4563   }
     4564   if ((cur = ::lseek64(fd, 0L, SEEK_CUR)) == -1) {
     4565     return 0;
     4566   } else if ((end = ::lseek64(fd, 0L, SEEK_END)) == -1) {
     4567     return 0;
     4568   } else if (::lseek64(fd, cur, SEEK_SET) == -1) {
     4569     return 0;
     4570   }
     4571   *bytes = end - cur;
     4572   return 1;
     4573 }
     4574 
     4575 int os::socket_available(int fd, jint *pbytes) {
     4576   // Linux doc says EINTR not returned, unlike Solaris
     4577   int ret = ::ioctl(fd, FIONREAD, pbytes);
     4578 
     4579   //%% note ioctl can return 0 when successful, JVM_SocketAvailable
     4580   // is expected to return 0 on failure and 1 on success to the jdk.
     4581   return (ret < 0) ? 0 : 1;
     4582 }
     4583 
     4584 // Map a block of memory.
     4585 char* os::map_memory(int fd, const char* file_name, size_t file_offset,
     4586                      char *addr, size_t bytes, bool read_only,
     4587                      bool allow_exec) {
     4588   int prot;
     4589   int flags;
     4590 
     4591   if (read_only) {
     4592     prot = PROT_READ;
     4593     flags = MAP_SHARED;
     4594   } else {
     4595     prot = PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE;
     4596     flags = MAP_PRIVATE;
     4597   }
     4598 
     4599   if (allow_exec) {
     4600     prot |= PROT_EXEC;
     4601   }
     4602 
     4603   if (addr != NULL) {
     4604     flags |= MAP_FIXED;
     4605   }
     4606 
     4607   char* mapped_address = (char*)mmap(addr, (size_t)bytes, prot, flags,
     4608                                      fd, file_offset);
     4609   if (mapped_address == MAP_FAILED) {
     4610     return NULL;
     4611   }
     4612   return mapped_address;
     4613 }
     4614 
     4615 
     4616 // Remap a block of memory.
     4617 char* os::remap_memory(int fd, const char* file_name, size_t file_offset,
     4618                        char *addr, size_t bytes, bool read_only,
     4619                        bool allow_exec) {
     4620   // same as map_memory() on this OS
     4621   return os::map_memory(fd, file_name, file_offset, addr, bytes, read_only,
     4622                         allow_exec);
     4623 }
     4624 
     4625 
     4626 // Unmap a block of memory.
     4627 bool os::unmap_memory(char* addr, size_t bytes) {
     4628   return munmap(addr, bytes) == 0;
     4629 }
     4630 
     4631 static jlong slow_thread_cpu_time(Thread *thread, bool user_sys_cpu_time);
     4632 
     4633 static clockid_t thread_cpu_clockid(Thread* thread) {
     4634   pthread_t tid = thread->osthread()->pthread_id();
     4635   clockid_t clockid;
     4636 
     4637   // Get thread clockid
     4638   int rc = os::Linux::pthread_getcpuclockid(tid, &clockid);
     4639   assert(rc == 0, "pthread_getcpuclockid is expected to return 0 code");
     4640   return clockid;
     4641 }
     4642 
     4643 // current_thread_cpu_time(bool) and thread_cpu_time(Thread*, bool)
     4644 // are used by JVM M&M and JVMTI to get user+sys or user CPU time
     4645 // of a thread.
     4646 //
     4647 // current_thread_cpu_time() and thread_cpu_time(Thread*) returns
     4648 // the fast estimate available on the platform.
     4649 
     4650 jlong os::current_thread_cpu_time() {
     4651   if (os::Linux::supports_fast_thread_cpu_time()) {
     4652     return os::Linux::fast_thread_cpu_time(CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID);
     4653   } else {
     4654     // return user + sys since the cost is the same
     4655     return slow_thread_cpu_time(Thread::current(), true /* user + sys */);
     4656   }
     4657 }
     4658 
     4659 jlong os::thread_cpu_time(Thread* thread) {
     4660   // consistent with what current_thread_cpu_time() returns
     4661   if (os::Linux::supports_fast_thread_cpu_time()) {
     4662     return os::Linux::fast_thread_cpu_time(thread_cpu_clockid(thread));
     4663   } else {
     4664     return slow_thread_cpu_time(thread, true /* user + sys */);
     4665   }
     4666 }
     4667 
     4668 jlong os::current_thread_cpu_time(bool user_sys_cpu_time) {
     4669   if (user_sys_cpu_time && os::Linux::supports_fast_thread_cpu_time()) {
     4670     return os::Linux::fast_thread_cpu_time(CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID);
     4671   } else {
     4672     return slow_thread_cpu_time(Thread::current(), user_sys_cpu_time);
     4673   }
     4674 }
     4675 
     4676 jlong os::thread_cpu_time(Thread *thread, bool user_sys_cpu_time) {
     4677   if (user_sys_cpu_time && os::Linux::supports_fast_thread_cpu_time()) {
     4678     return os::Linux::fast_thread_cpu_time(thread_cpu_clockid(thread));
     4679   } else {
     4680     return slow_thread_cpu_time(thread, user_sys_cpu_time);
     4681   }
     4682 }
     4683 
     4684 //
     4685 //  -1 on error.
     4686 //
     4687 
     4688 static jlong slow_thread_cpu_time(Thread *thread, bool user_sys_cpu_time) {
     4689   static bool proc_pid_cpu_avail = true;
     4690   static bool proc_task_unchecked = true;
     4691   static const char *proc_stat_path = "/proc/%d/stat";
     4692   pid_t  tid = thread->osthread()->thread_id();
     4693   int i;
     4694   char *s;
     4695   char stat[2048];
     4696   int statlen;
     4697   char proc_name[64];
     4698   int count;
     4699   long sys_time, user_time;
     4700   char string[64];
     4701   char cdummy;
     4702   int idummy;
     4703   long ldummy;
     4704   FILE *fp;
     4705 
     4706   // We first try accessing /proc/<pid>/cpu since this is faster to
     4707   // process.  If this file is not present (linux kernels 2.5 and above)
     4708   // then we open /proc/<pid>/stat.
     4709   if ( proc_pid_cpu_avail ) {
     4710     sprintf(proc_name, "/proc/%d/cpu", tid);
     4711     fp =  fopen(proc_name, "r");
     4712     if ( fp != NULL ) {
     4713       count = fscanf( fp, "%s %lu %lu\n", string, &user_time, &sys_time);
     4714       fclose(fp);
     4715       if ( count != 3 ) return -1;
     4716 
     4717       if (user_sys_cpu_time) {
     4718         return ((jlong)sys_time + (jlong)user_time) * (1000000000 / clock_tics_per_sec);
     4719       } else {
     4720         return (jlong)user_time * (1000000000 / clock_tics_per_sec);
     4721       }
     4722     }
     4723     else proc_pid_cpu_avail = false;
     4724   }
     4725 
     4726   // The /proc/<tid>/stat aggregates per-process usage on
     4727   // new Linux kernels 2.6+ where NPTL is supported.
     4728   // The /proc/self/task/<tid>/stat still has the per-thread usage.
     4729   // See bug 6328462.
     4730   // There can be no directory /proc/self/task on kernels 2.4 with NPTL
     4731   // and possibly in some other cases, so we check its availability.
     4732   if (proc_task_unchecked && os::Linux::is_NPTL()) {
     4733     // This is executed only once
     4734     proc_task_unchecked = false;
     4735     fp = fopen("/proc/self/task", "r");
     4736     if (fp != NULL) {
     4737       proc_stat_path = "/proc/self/task/%d/stat";
     4738       fclose(fp);
     4739     }
     4740   }
     4741 
     4742   sprintf(proc_name, proc_stat_path, tid);
     4743   fp = fopen(proc_name, "r");
     4744   if ( fp == NULL ) return -1;
     4745   statlen = fread(stat, 1, 2047, fp);
     4746   stat[statlen] = '\0';
     4747   fclose(fp);
     4748 
     4749   // Skip pid and the command string. Note that we could be dealing with
     4750   // weird command names, e.g. user could decide to rename java launcher
     4751   // to "java 1.4.2 :)", then the stat file would look like
     4752   //                1234 (java 1.4.2 :)) R ... ...
     4753   // We don't really need to know the command string, just find the last
     4754   // occurrence of ")" and then start parsing from there. See bug 4726580.
     4755   s = strrchr(stat, ')');
     4756   i = 0;
     4757   if (s == NULL ) return -1;
     4758 
     4759   // Skip blank chars
     4760   do s++; while (isspace(*s));
     4761 
     4762   count = sscanf(s,"%c %d %d %d %d %d %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu %lu",
     4763                  &cdummy, &idummy, &idummy, &idummy, &idummy, &idummy,
     4764                  &ldummy, &ldummy, &ldummy, &ldummy, &ldummy,
     4765                  &user_time, &sys_time);
     4766   if ( count != 13 ) return -1;
     4767   if (user_sys_cpu_time) {
     4768     return ((jlong)sys_time + (jlong)user_time) * (1000000000 / clock_tics_per_sec);
     4769   } else {
     4770     return (jlong)user_time * (1000000000 / clock_tics_per_sec);
     4771   }
     4772 }
     4773 
     4774 void os::current_thread_cpu_time_info(jvmtiTimerInfo *info_ptr) {
     4775   info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS;       // will not wrap in less than 64 bits
     4776   info_ptr->may_skip_backward = false;     // elapsed time not wall time
     4777   info_ptr->may_skip_forward = false;      // elapsed time not wall time
     4778   info_ptr->kind = JVMTI_TIMER_TOTAL_CPU;  // user+system time is returned
     4779 }
     4780 
     4781 void os::thread_cpu_time_info(jvmtiTimerInfo *info_ptr) {
     4782   info_ptr->max_value = ALL_64_BITS;       // will not wrap in less than 64 bits
     4783   info_ptr->may_skip_backward = false;     // elapsed time not wall time
     4784   info_ptr->may_skip_forward = false;      // elapsed time not wall time
     4785   info_ptr->kind = JVMTI_TIMER_TOTAL_CPU;  // user+system time is returned
     4786 }
     4787 
     4788 bool os::is_thread_cpu_time_supported() {
     4789   return true;
     4790 }
     4791 
     4792 // System loadavg support.  Returns -1 if load average cannot be obtained.
     4793 // Linux doesn't yet have a (official) notion of processor sets,
     4794 // so just return the system wide load average.
     4795 int os::loadavg(double loadavg[], int nelem) {
     4796   return ::getloadavg(loadavg, nelem);
     4797 }
     4798 
     4799 void os::pause() {
     4800   char filename[MAX_PATH];
     4801   if (PauseAtStartupFile && PauseAtStartupFile[0]) {
     4802     jio_snprintf(filename, MAX_PATH, PauseAtStartupFile);
     4803   } else {
     4804     jio_snprintf(filename, MAX_PATH, "./vm.paused.%d", current_process_id());
     4805   }
     4806 
     4807   int fd = ::open(filename, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC, 0666);
     4808   if (fd != -1) {
     4809     struct stat buf;
     4810     ::close(fd);
     4811     while (::stat(filename, &buf) == 0) {
     4812       (void)::poll(NULL, 0, 100);
     4813     }
     4814   } else {
     4815     jio_fprintf(stderr,
     4816       "Could not open pause file '%s', continuing immediately.\n", filename);
     4817   }
     4818 }
     4819 
     4820 
     4821 // Refer to the comments in os_solaris.cpp park-unpark.
     4822 //
     4823 // Beware -- Some versions of NPTL embody a flaw where pthread_cond_timedwait() can
     4824 // hang indefinitely.  For instance NPTL 0.60 on 2.4.21-4ELsmp is vulnerable.
     4825 // For specifics regarding the bug see GLIBC BUGID 261237 :
     4826 //    http://www.mail-archive.com/debian-glibc@lists.debian.org/msg10837.html.
     4827 // Briefly, pthread_cond_timedwait() calls with an expiry time that's not in the future
     4828 // will either hang or corrupt the condvar, resulting in subsequent hangs if the condvar
     4829 // is used.  (The simple C test-case provided in the GLIBC bug report manifests the
     4830 // hang).  The JVM is vulernable via sleep(), Object.wait(timo), LockSupport.parkNanos()
     4831 // and monitorenter when we're using 1-0 locking.  All those operations may result in
     4832 // calls to pthread_cond_timedwait().  Using LD_ASSUME_KERNEL to use an older version
     4833 // of libpthread avoids the problem, but isn't practical.
     4834 //
     4835 // Possible remedies:
     4836 //
     4837 // 1.   Establish a minimum relative wait time.  50 to 100 msecs seems to work.
     4838 //      This is palliative and probabilistic, however.  If the thread is preempted
     4839 //      between the call to compute_abstime() and pthread_cond_timedwait(), more
     4840 //      than the minimum period may have passed, and the abstime may be stale (in the
     4841 //      past) resultin in a hang.   Using this technique reduces the odds of a hang
     4842 //      but the JVM is still vulnerable, particularly on heavily loaded systems.
     4843 //
     4844 // 2.   Modify park-unpark to use per-thread (per ParkEvent) pipe-pairs instead
     4845 //      of the usual flag-condvar-mutex idiom.  The write side of the pipe is set
     4846 //      NDELAY. unpark() reduces to write(), park() reduces to read() and park(timo)
     4847 //      reduces to poll()+read().  This works well, but consumes 2 FDs per extant
     4848 //      thread.
     4849 //
     4850 // 3.   Embargo pthread_cond_timedwait() and implement a native "chron" thread
     4851 //      that manages timeouts.  We'd emulate pthread_cond_timedwait() by enqueuing
     4852 //      a timeout request to the chron thread and then blocking via pthread_cond_wait().
     4853 //      This also works well.  In fact it avoids kernel-level scalability impediments
     4854 //      on certain platforms that don't handle lots of active pthread_cond_timedwait()
     4855 //      timers in a graceful fashion.
     4856 //
     4857 // 4.   When the abstime value is in the past it appears that control returns
     4858 //      correctly from pthread_cond_timedwait(), but the condvar is left corrupt.
     4859 //      Subsequent timedwait/wait calls may hang indefinitely.  Given that, we
     4860 //      can avoid the problem by reinitializing the condvar -- by cond_destroy()
     4861 //      followed by cond_init() -- after all calls to pthread_cond_timedwait().
     4862 //      It may be possible to avoid reinitialization by checking the return
     4863 //      value from pthread_cond_timedwait().  In addition to reinitializing the
     4864 //      condvar we must establish the invariant that cond_signal() is only called
     4865 //      within critical sections protected by the adjunct mutex.  This prevents
     4866 //      cond_signal() from "seeing" a condvar that's in the midst of being
     4867 //      reinitialized or that is corrupt.  Sadly, this invariant obviates the
     4868 //      desirable signal-after-unlock optimization that avoids futile context switching.
     4869 //
     4870 //      I'm also concerned that some versions of NTPL might allocate an auxilliary
     4871 //      structure when a condvar is used or initialized.  cond_destroy()  would
     4872 //      release the helper structure.  Our reinitialize-after-timedwait fix
     4873 //      put excessive stress on malloc/free and locks protecting the c-heap.
     4874 //
     4875 // We currently use (4).  See the WorkAroundNTPLTimedWaitHang flag.
     4876 // It may be possible to refine (4) by checking the kernel and NTPL verisons
     4877 // and only enabling the work-around for vulnerable environments.
     4878 
     4879 // utility to compute the abstime argument to timedwait:
     4880 // millis is the relative timeout time
     4881 // abstime will be the absolute timeout time
     4882 // TODO: replace compute_abstime() with unpackTime()
     4883 
     4884 static struct timespec* compute_abstime(timespec* abstime, jlong millis) {
     4885   if (millis < 0)  millis = 0;
     4886   struct timeval now;
     4887   int status = gettimeofday(&now, NULL);
     4888   assert(status == 0, "gettimeofday");
     4889   jlong seconds = millis / 1000;
     4890   millis %= 1000;
     4891   if (seconds > 50000000) { // see man cond_timedwait(3T)
     4892     seconds = 50000000;
     4893   }
     4894   abstime->tv_sec = now.tv_sec  + seconds;
     4895   long       usec = now.tv_usec + millis * 1000;
     4896   if (usec >= 1000000) {
     4897     abstime->tv_sec += 1;
     4898     usec -= 1000000;
     4899   }
     4900   abstime->tv_nsec = usec * 1000;
     4901   return abstime;
     4902 }
     4903 
     4904 
     4905 // Test-and-clear _Event, always leaves _Event set to 0, returns immediately.
     4906 // Conceptually TryPark() should be equivalent to park(0).
     4907 
     4908 int os::PlatformEvent::TryPark() {
     4909   for (;;) {
     4910     const int v = _Event ;
     4911     guarantee ((v == 0) || (v == 1), "invariant") ;
     4912     if (Atomic::cmpxchg (0, &_Event, v) == v) return v  ;
     4913   }
     4914 }
     4915 
     4916 void os::PlatformEvent::park() {       // AKA "down()"
     4917   // Invariant: Only the thread associated with the Event/PlatformEvent
     4918   // may call park().
     4919   // TODO: assert that _Assoc != NULL or _Assoc == Self
     4920   int v ;
     4921   for (;;) {
     4922       v = _Event ;
     4923       if (Atomic::cmpxchg (v-1, &_Event, v) == v) break ;
     4924   }
     4925   guarantee (v >= 0, "invariant") ;
     4926   if (v == 0) {
     4927      // Do this the hard way by blocking ...
     4928      int status = pthread_mutex_lock(_mutex);
     4929      assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_lock");
     4930      guarantee (_nParked == 0, "invariant") ;
     4931      ++ _nParked ;
     4932      while (_Event < 0) {
     4933         status = pthread_cond_wait(_cond, _mutex);
     4934         // for some reason, under 2.7 lwp_cond_wait() may return ETIME ...
     4935         // Treat this the same as if the wait was interrupted
     4936         if (status == ETIME) { status = EINTR; }
     4937         assert_status(status == 0 || status == EINTR, status, "cond_wait");
     4938      }
     4939      -- _nParked ;
     4940 
     4941     // In theory we could move the ST of 0 into _Event past the unlock(),
     4942     // but then we'd need a MEMBAR after the ST.
     4943     _Event = 0 ;
     4944      status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex);
     4945      assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_unlock");
     4946   }
     4947   guarantee (_Event >= 0, "invariant") ;
     4948 }
     4949 
     4950 int os::PlatformEvent::park(jlong millis) {
     4951   guarantee (_nParked == 0, "invariant") ;
     4952 
     4953   int v ;
     4954   for (;;) {
     4955       v = _Event ;
     4956       if (Atomic::cmpxchg (v-1, &_Event, v) == v) break ;
     4957   }
     4958   guarantee (v >= 0, "invariant") ;
     4959   if (v != 0) return OS_OK ;
     4960 
     4961   // We do this the hard way, by blocking the thread.
     4962   // Consider enforcing a minimum timeout value.
     4963   struct timespec abst;
     4964   compute_abstime(&abst, millis);
     4965 
     4966   int ret = OS_TIMEOUT;
     4967   int status = pthread_mutex_lock(_mutex);
     4968   assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_lock");
     4969   guarantee (_nParked == 0, "invariant") ;
     4970   ++_nParked ;
     4971 
     4972   // Object.wait(timo) will return because of
     4973   // (a) notification
     4974   // (b) timeout
     4975   // (c) thread.interrupt
     4976   //
     4977   // Thread.interrupt and object.notify{All} both call Event::set.
     4978   // That is, we treat thread.interrupt as a special case of notification.
     4979   // The underlying Solaris implementation, cond_timedwait, admits
     4980   // spurious/premature wakeups, but the JLS/JVM spec prevents the
     4981   // JVM from making those visible to Java code.  As such, we must
     4982   // filter out spurious wakeups.  We assume all ETIME returns are valid.
     4983   //
     4984   // TODO: properly differentiate simultaneous notify+interrupt.
     4985   // In that case, we should propagate the notify to another waiter.
     4986 
     4987   while (_Event < 0) {
     4988     status = os::Linux::safe_cond_timedwait(_cond, _mutex, &abst);
     4989     if (status != 0 && WorkAroundNPTLTimedWaitHang) {
     4990       pthread_cond_destroy (_cond);
     4991       pthread_cond_init (_cond, NULL) ;
     4992     }
     4993     assert_status(status == 0 || status == EINTR ||
     4994                   status == ETIME || status == ETIMEDOUT,
     4995                   status, "cond_timedwait");
     4996     if (!FilterSpuriousWakeups) break ;                 // previous semantics
     4997     if (status == ETIME || status == ETIMEDOUT) break ;
     4998     // We consume and ignore EINTR and spurious wakeups.
     4999   }
     5000   --_nParked ;
     5001   if (_Event >= 0) {
     5002      ret = OS_OK;
     5003   }
     5004   _Event = 0 ;
     5005   status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex);
     5006   assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_unlock");
     5007   assert (_nParked == 0, "invariant") ;
     5008   return ret;
     5009 }
     5010 
     5011 void os::PlatformEvent::unpark() {
     5012   int v, AnyWaiters ;
     5013   for (;;) {
     5014       v = _Event ;
     5015       if (v > 0) {
     5016          // The LD of _Event could have reordered or be satisfied
     5017          // by a read-aside from this processor's write buffer.
     5018          // To avoid problems execute a barrier and then
     5019          // ratify the value.
     5020          OrderAccess::fence() ;
     5021          if (_Event == v) return ;
     5022          continue ;
     5023       }
     5024       if (Atomic::cmpxchg (v+1, &_Event, v) == v) break ;
     5025   }
     5026   if (v < 0) {
     5027      // Wait for the thread associated with the event to vacate
     5028      int status = pthread_mutex_lock(_mutex);
     5029      assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_lock");
     5030      AnyWaiters = _nParked ;
     5031      assert (AnyWaiters == 0 || AnyWaiters == 1, "invariant") ;
     5032      if (AnyWaiters != 0 && WorkAroundNPTLTimedWaitHang) {
     5033         AnyWaiters = 0 ;
     5034         pthread_cond_signal (_cond);
     5035      }
     5036      status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex);
     5037      assert_status(status == 0, status, "mutex_unlock");
     5038      if (AnyWaiters != 0) {
     5039         status = pthread_cond_signal(_cond);
     5040         assert_status(status == 0, status, "cond_signal");
     5041      }
     5042   }
     5043 
     5044   // Note that we signal() _after dropping the lock for "immortal" Events.
     5045   // This is safe and avoids a common class of  futile wakeups.  In rare
     5046   // circumstances this can cause a thread to return prematurely from
     5047   // cond_{timed}wait() but the spurious wakeup is benign and the victim will
     5048   // simply re-test the condition and re-park itself.
     5049 }
     5050 
     5051 
     5052 // JSR166
     5053 // -------------------------------------------------------
     5054 
     5055 /*
     5056  * The solaris and linux implementations of park/unpark are fairly
     5057  * conservative for now, but can be improved. They currently use a
     5058  * mutex/condvar pair, plus a a count.
     5059  * Park decrements count if > 0, else does a condvar wait.  Unpark
     5060  * sets count to 1 and signals condvar.  Only one thread ever waits
     5061  * on the condvar. Contention seen when trying to park implies that someone
     5062  * is unparking you, so don't wait. And spurious returns are fine, so there
     5063  * is no need to track notifications.
     5064  */
     5065 
     5066 
     5067 #define NANOSECS_PER_SEC 1000000000
     5068 #define NANOSECS_PER_MILLISEC 1000000
     5069 #define MAX_SECS 100000000
     5070 /*
     5071  * This code is common to linux and solaris and will be moved to a
     5072  * common place in dolphin.
     5073  *
     5074  * The passed in time value is either a relative time in nanoseconds
     5075  * or an absolute time in milliseconds. Either way it has to be unpacked
     5076  * into suitable seconds and nanoseconds components and stored in the
     5077  * given timespec structure.
     5078  * Given time is a 64-bit value and the time_t used in the timespec is only
     5079  * a signed-32-bit value (except on 64-bit Linux) we have to watch for
     5080  * overflow if times way in the future are given. Further on Solaris versions
     5081  * prior to 10 there is a restriction (see cond_timedwait) that the specified
     5082  * number of seconds, in abstime, is less than current_time  + 100,000,000.
     5083  * As it will be 28 years before "now + 100000000" will overflow we can
     5084  * ignore overflow and just impose a hard-limit on seconds using the value
     5085  * of "now + 100,000,000". This places a limit on the timeout of about 3.17
     5086  * years from "now".
     5087  */
     5088 
     5089 static void unpackTime(timespec* absTime, bool isAbsolute, jlong time) {
     5090   assert (time > 0, "convertTime");
     5091 
     5092   struct timeval now;
     5093   int status = gettimeofday(&now, NULL);
     5094   assert(status == 0, "gettimeofday");
     5095 
     5096   time_t max_secs = now.tv_sec + MAX_SECS;
     5097 
     5098   if (isAbsolute) {
     5099     jlong secs = time / 1000;
     5100     if (secs > max_secs) {
     5101       absTime->tv_sec = max_secs;
     5102     }
     5103     else {
     5104       absTime->tv_sec = secs;
     5105     }
     5106     absTime->tv_nsec = (time % 1000) * NANOSECS_PER_MILLISEC;
     5107   }
     5108   else {
     5109     jlong secs = time / NANOSECS_PER_SEC;
     5110     if (secs >= MAX_SECS) {
     5111       absTime->tv_sec = max_secs;
     5112       absTime->tv_nsec = 0;
     5113     }
     5114     else {
     5115       absTime->tv_sec = now.tv_sec + secs;
     5116       absTime->tv_nsec = (time % NANOSECS_PER_SEC) + now.tv_usec*1000;
     5117       if (absTime->tv_nsec >= NANOSECS_PER_SEC) {
     5118         absTime->tv_nsec -= NANOSECS_PER_SEC;
     5119         ++absTime->tv_sec; // note: this must be <= max_secs
     5120       }
     5121     }
     5122   }
     5123   assert(absTime->tv_sec >= 0, "tv_sec < 0");
     5124   assert(absTime->tv_sec <= max_secs, "tv_sec > max_secs");
     5125   assert(absTime->tv_nsec >= 0, "tv_nsec < 0");
     5126   assert(absTime->tv_nsec < NANOSECS_PER_SEC, "tv_nsec >= nanos_per_sec");
     5127 }
     5128 
     5129 void Parker::park(bool isAbsolute, jlong time) {
     5130   // Optional fast-path check:
     5131   // Return immediately if a permit is available.
     5132   if (_counter > 0) {
     5133       _counter = 0 ;
     5134       OrderAccess::fence();
     5135       return ;
     5136   }
     5137 
     5138   Thread* thread = Thread::current();
     5139   assert(thread->is_Java_thread(), "Must be JavaThread");
     5140   JavaThread *jt = (JavaThread *)thread;
     5141 
     5142   // Optional optimization -- avoid state transitions if there's an interrupt pending.
     5143   // Check interrupt before trying to wait
     5144   if (Thread::is_interrupted(thread, false)) {
     5145     return;
     5146   }
     5147 
     5148   // Next, demultiplex/decode time arguments
     5149   timespec absTime;
     5150   if (time < 0 || (isAbsolute && time == 0) ) { // don't wait at all
     5151     return;
     5152   }
     5153   if (time > 0) {
     5154     unpackTime(&absTime, isAbsolute, time);
     5155   }
     5156 
     5157 
     5158   // Enter safepoint region
     5159   // Beware of deadlocks such as 6317397.
     5160   // The per-thread Parker:: mutex is a classic leaf-lock.
     5161   // In particular a thread must never block on the Threads_lock while
     5162   // holding the Parker:: mutex.  If safepoints are pending both the
     5163   // the ThreadBlockInVM() CTOR and DTOR may grab Threads_lock.
     5164   ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(jt);
     5165 
     5166   // Don't wait if cannot get lock since interference arises from
     5167   // unblocking.  Also. check interrupt before trying wait
     5168   if (Thread::is_interrupted(thread, false) || pthread_mutex_trylock(_mutex) != 0) {
     5169     return;
     5170   }
     5171 
     5172   int status ;
     5173   if (_counter > 0)  { // no wait needed
     5174     _counter = 0;
     5175     status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex);
     5176     assert (status == 0, "invariant") ;
     5177     OrderAccess::fence();
     5178     return;
     5179   }
     5180 
     5181 #ifdef ASSERT
     5182   // Don't catch signals while blocked; let the running threads have the signals.
     5183   // (This allows a debugger to break into the running thread.)
     5184   sigset_t oldsigs;
     5185   sigset_t* allowdebug_blocked = os::Linux::allowdebug_blocked_signals();
     5186   pthread_sigmask(SIG_BLOCK, allowdebug_blocked, &oldsigs);
     5187 #endif
     5188 
     5189   OSThreadWaitState osts(thread->osthread(), false /* not Object.wait() */);
     5190   jt->set_suspend_equivalent();
     5191   // cleared by handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition() or java_suspend_self()
     5192 
     5193   if (time == 0) {
     5194     status = pthread_cond_wait (_cond, _mutex) ;
     5195   } else {
     5196     status = os::Linux::safe_cond_timedwait (_cond, _mutex, &absTime) ;
     5197     if (status != 0 && WorkAroundNPTLTimedWaitHang) {
     5198       pthread_cond_destroy (_cond) ;
     5199       pthread_cond_init    (_cond, NULL);
     5200     }
     5201   }
     5202   assert_status(status == 0 || status == EINTR ||
     5203                 status == ETIME || status == ETIMEDOUT,
     5204                 status, "cond_timedwait");
     5205 
     5206 #ifdef ASSERT
     5207   pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, &oldsigs, NULL);
     5208 #endif
     5209 
     5210   _counter = 0 ;
     5211   status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex) ;
     5212   assert_status(status == 0, status, "invariant") ;
     5213   // If externally suspended while waiting, re-suspend
     5214   if (jt->handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition()) {
     5215     jt->java_suspend_self();
     5216   }
     5217 
     5218   OrderAccess::fence();
     5219 }
     5220 
     5221 void Parker::unpark() {
     5222   int s, status ;
     5223   status = pthread_mutex_lock(_mutex);
     5224   assert (status == 0, "invariant") ;
     5225   s = _counter;
     5226   _counter = 1;
     5227   if (s < 1) {
     5228      if (WorkAroundNPTLTimedWaitHang) {
     5229         status = pthread_cond_signal (_cond) ;
     5230         assert (status == 0, "invariant") ;
     5231         status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex);
     5232         assert (status == 0, "invariant") ;
     5233      } else {
     5234         status = pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex);
     5235         assert (status == 0, "invariant") ;
     5236         status = pthread_cond_signal (_cond) ;
     5237         assert (status == 0, "invariant") ;
     5238      }
     5239   } else {
     5240     pthread_mutex_unlock(_mutex);
     5241     assert (status == 0, "invariant") ;
     5242   }
     5243 }
     5244 
     5245 
     5246 extern char** environ;
     5247 
     5248 #ifndef __NR_fork
     5249 #define __NR_fork IA32_ONLY(2) IA64_ONLY(not defined) AMD64_ONLY(57)
     5250 #endif
     5251 
     5252 #ifndef __NR_execve
     5253 #define __NR_execve IA32_ONLY(11) IA64_ONLY(1033) AMD64_ONLY(59)
     5254 #endif
     5255 
     5256 // Run the specified command in a separate process. Return its exit value,
     5257 // or -1 on failure (e.g. can't fork a new process).
     5258 // Unlike system(), this function can be called from signal handler. It
     5259 // doesn't block SIGINT et al.
     5260 int os::fork_and_exec(char* cmd) {
     5261   const char * argv[4] = {"sh", "-c", cmd, NULL};
     5262 
     5263   // fork() in LinuxThreads/NPTL is not async-safe. It needs to run
     5264   // pthread_atfork handlers and reset pthread library. All we need is a
     5265   // separate process to execve. Make a direct syscall to fork process.
     5266   // On IA64 there's no fork syscall, we have to use fork() and hope for
     5267   // the best...
     5268   pid_t pid = NOT_IA64(syscall(__NR_fork);)
     5269               IA64_ONLY(fork();)
     5270 
     5271   if (pid < 0) {
     5272     // fork failed
     5273     return -1;
     5274 
     5275   } else if (pid == 0) {
     5276     // child process
     5277 
     5278     // execve() in LinuxThreads will call pthread_kill_other_threads_np()
     5279     // first to kill every thread on the thread list. Because this list is
     5280     // not reset by fork() (see notes above), execve() will instead kill
     5281     // every thread in the parent process. We know this is the only thread
     5282     // in the new process, so make a system call directly.
     5283     // IA64 should use normal execve() from glibc to match the glibc fork()
     5284     // above.
     5285     NOT_IA64(syscall(__NR_execve, "/bin/sh", argv, environ);)
     5286     IA64_ONLY(execve("/bin/sh", (char* const*)argv, environ);)
     5287 
     5288     // execve failed
     5289     _exit(-1);
     5290 
     5291   } else  {
     5292     // copied from J2SE ..._waitForProcessExit() in UNIXProcess_md.c; we don't
     5293     // care about the actual exit code, for now.
     5294 
     5295     int status;
     5296 
     5297     // Wait for the child process to exit.  This returns immediately if
     5298     // the child has already exited. */
     5299     while (waitpid(pid, &status, 0) < 0) {
     5300         switch (errno) {
     5301         case ECHILD: return 0;
     5302         case EINTR: break;
     5303         default: return -1;
     5304         }
     5305     }
     5306 
     5307     if (WIFEXITED(status)) {
     5308        // The child exited normally; get its exit code.
     5309        return WEXITSTATUS(status);
     5310     } else if (WIFSIGNALED(status)) {
     5311        // The child exited because of a signal
     5312        // The best value to return is 0x80 + signal number,
     5313        // because that is what all Unix shells do, and because
     5314        // it allows callers to distinguish between process exit and
     5315        // process death by signal.
     5316        return 0x80 + WTERMSIG(status);
     5317     } else {
     5318        // Unknown exit code; pass it through
     5319        return status;
     5320     }
     5321   }
     5322 }
     5323 
     5324 // is_headless_jre()
     5325 //
     5326 // Test for the existence of libmawt in motif21 or xawt directories
     5327 // in order to report if we are running in a headless jre
     5328 //
     5329 bool os::is_headless_jre() {
     5330     struct stat statbuf;
     5331     char buf[MAXPATHLEN];
     5332     char libmawtpath[MAXPATHLEN];
     5333     const char *xawtstr  = "/xawt/libmawt.so";
     5334     const char *motifstr = "/motif21/libmawt.so";
     5335     char *p;
     5336 
     5337     // Get path to libjvm.so
     5338     os::jvm_path(buf, sizeof(buf));
     5339 
     5340     // Get rid of libjvm.so
     5341     p = strrchr(buf, '/');
     5342     if (p == NULL) return false;
     5343     else *p = '\0';
     5344 
     5345     // Get rid of client or server
     5346     p = strrchr(buf, '/');
     5347     if (p == NULL) return false;
     5348     else *p = '\0';
     5349 
     5350     // check xawt/libmawt.so
     5351     strcpy(libmawtpath, buf);
     5352     strcat(libmawtpath, xawtstr);
     5353     if (::stat(libmawtpath, &statbuf) == 0) return false;
     5354 
     5355     // check motif21/libmawt.so
     5356     strcpy(libmawtpath, buf);
     5357     strcat(libmawtpath, motifstr);
     5358     if (::stat(libmawtpath, &statbuf) == 0) return false;
     5359 
     5360     return true;
     5361 }
     5362