blob: 517a493a70014ccee4b7ee1f4cf3ec2b9b81ad88 [file] [log] [blame]
// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Time-related runtime and pieces of package time.
package runtime
import (
"runtime/internal/atomic"
"runtime/internal/sys"
"unsafe"
)
// Package time knows the layout of this structure.
// If this struct changes, adjust ../time/sleep.go:/runtimeTimer.
type timer struct {
// If this timer is on a heap, which P's heap it is on.
// puintptr rather than *p to match uintptr in the versions
// of this struct defined in other packages.
pp puintptr
// Timer wakes up at when, and then at when+period, ... (period > 0 only)
// each time calling f(arg, now) in the timer goroutine, so f must be
// a well-behaved function and not block.
//
// when must be positive on an active timer.
when int64
period int64
f func(interface{}, uintptr)
arg interface{}
seq uintptr
// What to set the when field to in timerModifiedXX status.
nextwhen int64
// The status field holds one of the values below.
status uint32
}
// Code outside this file has to be careful in using a timer value.
//
// The pp, status, and nextwhen fields may only be used by code in this file.
//
// Code that creates a new timer value can set the when, period, f,
// arg, and seq fields.
// A new timer value may be passed to addtimer (called by time.startTimer).
// After doing that no fields may be touched.
//
// An active timer (one that has been passed to addtimer) may be
// passed to deltimer (time.stopTimer), after which it is no longer an
// active timer. It is an inactive timer.
// In an inactive timer the period, f, arg, and seq fields may be modified,
// but not the when field.
// It's OK to just drop an inactive timer and let the GC collect it.
// It's not OK to pass an inactive timer to addtimer.
// Only newly allocated timer values may be passed to addtimer.
//
// An active timer may be passed to modtimer. No fields may be touched.
// It remains an active timer.
//
// An inactive timer may be passed to resettimer to turn into an
// active timer with an updated when field.
// It's OK to pass a newly allocated timer value to resettimer.
//
// Timer operations are addtimer, deltimer, modtimer, resettimer,
// cleantimers, adjusttimers, and runtimer.
//
// We don't permit calling addtimer/deltimer/modtimer/resettimer simultaneously,
// but adjusttimers and runtimer can be called at the same time as any of those.
//
// Active timers live in heaps attached to P, in the timers field.
// Inactive timers live there too temporarily, until they are removed.
//
// addtimer:
// timerNoStatus -> timerWaiting
// anything else -> panic: invalid value
// deltimer:
// timerWaiting -> timerModifying -> timerDeleted
// timerModifiedEarlier -> timerModifying -> timerDeleted
// timerModifiedLater -> timerModifying -> timerDeleted
// timerNoStatus -> do nothing
// timerDeleted -> do nothing
// timerRemoving -> do nothing
// timerRemoved -> do nothing
// timerRunning -> wait until status changes
// timerMoving -> wait until status changes
// timerModifying -> wait until status changes
// modtimer:
// timerWaiting -> timerModifying -> timerModifiedXX
// timerModifiedXX -> timerModifying -> timerModifiedYY
// timerNoStatus -> timerModifying -> timerWaiting
// timerRemoved -> timerModifying -> timerWaiting
// timerDeleted -> timerModifying -> timerModifiedXX
// timerRunning -> wait until status changes
// timerMoving -> wait until status changes
// timerRemoving -> wait until status changes
// timerModifying -> wait until status changes
// cleantimers (looks in P's timer heap):
// timerDeleted -> timerRemoving -> timerRemoved
// timerModifiedXX -> timerMoving -> timerWaiting
// adjusttimers (looks in P's timer heap):
// timerDeleted -> timerRemoving -> timerRemoved
// timerModifiedXX -> timerMoving -> timerWaiting
// runtimer (looks in P's timer heap):
// timerNoStatus -> panic: uninitialized timer
// timerWaiting -> timerWaiting or
// timerWaiting -> timerRunning -> timerNoStatus or
// timerWaiting -> timerRunning -> timerWaiting
// timerModifying -> wait until status changes
// timerModifiedXX -> timerMoving -> timerWaiting
// timerDeleted -> timerRemoving -> timerRemoved
// timerRunning -> panic: concurrent runtimer calls
// timerRemoved -> panic: inconsistent timer heap
// timerRemoving -> panic: inconsistent timer heap
// timerMoving -> panic: inconsistent timer heap
// Values for the timer status field.
const (
// Timer has no status set yet.
timerNoStatus = iota
// Waiting for timer to fire.
// The timer is in some P's heap.
timerWaiting
// Running the timer function.
// A timer will only have this status briefly.
timerRunning
// The timer is deleted and should be removed.
// It should not be run, but it is still in some P's heap.
timerDeleted
// The timer is being removed.
// The timer will only have this status briefly.
timerRemoving
// The timer has been stopped.
// It is not in any P's heap.
timerRemoved
// The timer is being modified.
// The timer will only have this status briefly.
timerModifying
// The timer has been modified to an earlier time.
// The new when value is in the nextwhen field.
// The timer is in some P's heap, possibly in the wrong place.
timerModifiedEarlier
// The timer has been modified to the same or a later time.
// The new when value is in the nextwhen field.
// The timer is in some P's heap, possibly in the wrong place.
timerModifiedLater
// The timer has been modified and is being moved.
// The timer will only have this status briefly.
timerMoving
)
// maxWhen is the maximum value for timer's when field.
const maxWhen = 1<<63 - 1
// verifyTimers can be set to true to add debugging checks that the
// timer heaps are valid.
const verifyTimers = false
// Package time APIs.
// Godoc uses the comments in package time, not these.
// time.now is implemented in assembly.
// timeSleep puts the current goroutine to sleep for at least ns nanoseconds.
//go:linkname timeSleep time.Sleep
func timeSleep(ns int64) {
if ns <= 0 {
return
}
gp := getg()
t := gp.timer
if t == nil {
t = new(timer)
gp.timer = t
}
t.f = goroutineReady
t.arg = gp
t.nextwhen = nanotime() + ns
if t.nextwhen < 0 { // check for overflow.
t.nextwhen = maxWhen
}
gopark(resetForSleep, unsafe.Pointer(t), waitReasonSleep, traceEvGoSleep, 1)
}
// resetForSleep is called after the goroutine is parked for timeSleep.
// We can't call resettimer in timeSleep itself because if this is a short
// sleep and there are many goroutines then the P can wind up running the
// timer function, goroutineReady, before the goroutine has been parked.
func resetForSleep(gp *g, ut unsafe.Pointer) bool {
t := (*timer)(ut)
resettimer(t, t.nextwhen)
return true
}
// startTimer adds t to the timer heap.
//go:linkname startTimer time.startTimer
func startTimer(t *timer) {
if raceenabled {
racerelease(unsafe.Pointer(t))
}
addtimer(t)
}
// stopTimer stops a timer.
// It reports whether t was stopped before being run.
//go:linkname stopTimer time.stopTimer
func stopTimer(t *timer) bool {
return deltimer(t)
}
// resetTimer resets an inactive timer, adding it to the heap.
//go:linkname resetTimer time.resetTimer
// Reports whether the timer was modified before it was run.
func resetTimer(t *timer, when int64) bool {
if raceenabled {
racerelease(unsafe.Pointer(t))
}
return resettimer(t, when)
}
// modTimer modifies an existing timer.
//go:linkname modTimer time.modTimer
func modTimer(t *timer, when, period int64, f func(interface{}, uintptr), arg interface{}, seq uintptr) {
modtimer(t, when, period, f, arg, seq)
}
// Go runtime.
// Ready the goroutine arg.
func goroutineReady(arg interface{}, seq uintptr) {
goready(arg.(*g), 0)
}
// addtimer adds a timer to the current P.
// This should only be called with a newly created timer.
// That avoids the risk of changing the when field of a timer in some P's heap,
// which could cause the heap to become unsorted.
func addtimer(t *timer) {
// when must be positive. A negative value will cause runtimer to
// overflow during its delta calculation and never expire other runtime
// timers. Zero will cause checkTimers to fail to notice the timer.
if t.when <= 0 {
throw("timer when must be positive")
}
if t.period < 0 {
throw("timer period must be non-negative")
}
if t.status != timerNoStatus {
throw("addtimer called with initialized timer")
}
t.status = timerWaiting
when := t.when
// Disable preemption while using pp to avoid changing another P's heap.
mp := acquirem()
pp := getg().m.p.ptr()
lock(&pp.timersLock)
cleantimers(pp)
doaddtimer(pp, t)
unlock(&pp.timersLock)
wakeNetPoller(when)
releasem(mp)
}
// doaddtimer adds t to the current P's heap.
// The caller must have locked the timers for pp.
func doaddtimer(pp *p, t *timer) {
// Timers rely on the network poller, so make sure the poller
// has started.
if netpollInited == 0 {
netpollGenericInit()
}
if t.pp != 0 {
throw("doaddtimer: P already set in timer")
}
t.pp.set(pp)
i := len(pp.timers)
pp.timers = append(pp.timers, t)
siftupTimer(pp.timers, i)
if t == pp.timers[0] {
atomic.Store64(&pp.timer0When, uint64(t.when))
}
atomic.Xadd(&pp.numTimers, 1)
}
// deltimer deletes the timer t. It may be on some other P, so we can't
// actually remove it from the timers heap. We can only mark it as deleted.
// It will be removed in due course by the P whose heap it is on.
// Reports whether the timer was removed before it was run.
func deltimer(t *timer) bool {
for {
switch s := atomic.Load(&t.status); s {
case timerWaiting, timerModifiedLater:
// Prevent preemption while the timer is in timerModifying.
// This could lead to a self-deadlock. See #38070.
mp := acquirem()
if atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerModifying) {
// Must fetch t.pp before changing status,
// as cleantimers in another goroutine
// can clear t.pp of a timerDeleted timer.
tpp := t.pp.ptr()
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerModifying, timerDeleted) {
badTimer()
}
releasem(mp)
atomic.Xadd(&tpp.deletedTimers, 1)
// Timer was not yet run.
return true
} else {
releasem(mp)
}
case timerModifiedEarlier:
// Prevent preemption while the timer is in timerModifying.
// This could lead to a self-deadlock. See #38070.
mp := acquirem()
if atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerModifying) {
// Must fetch t.pp before setting status
// to timerDeleted.
tpp := t.pp.ptr()
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerModifying, timerDeleted) {
badTimer()
}
releasem(mp)
atomic.Xadd(&tpp.deletedTimers, 1)
// Timer was not yet run.
return true
} else {
releasem(mp)
}
case timerDeleted, timerRemoving, timerRemoved:
// Timer was already run.
return false
case timerRunning, timerMoving:
// The timer is being run or moved, by a different P.
// Wait for it to complete.
osyield()
case timerNoStatus:
// Removing timer that was never added or
// has already been run. Also see issue 21874.
return false
case timerModifying:
// Simultaneous calls to deltimer and modtimer.
// Wait for the other call to complete.
osyield()
default:
badTimer()
}
}
}
// dodeltimer removes timer i from the current P's heap.
// We are locked on the P when this is called.
// It returns the smallest changed index in pp.timers.
// The caller must have locked the timers for pp.
func dodeltimer(pp *p, i int) int {
if t := pp.timers[i]; t.pp.ptr() != pp {
throw("dodeltimer: wrong P")
} else {
t.pp = 0
}
last := len(pp.timers) - 1
if i != last {
pp.timers[i] = pp.timers[last]
}
pp.timers[last] = nil
pp.timers = pp.timers[:last]
smallestChanged := i
if i != last {
// Moving to i may have moved the last timer to a new parent,
// so sift up to preserve the heap guarantee.
smallestChanged = siftupTimer(pp.timers, i)
siftdownTimer(pp.timers, i)
}
if i == 0 {
updateTimer0When(pp)
}
atomic.Xadd(&pp.numTimers, -1)
return smallestChanged
}
// dodeltimer0 removes timer 0 from the current P's heap.
// We are locked on the P when this is called.
// It reports whether it saw no problems due to races.
// The caller must have locked the timers for pp.
func dodeltimer0(pp *p) {
if t := pp.timers[0]; t.pp.ptr() != pp {
throw("dodeltimer0: wrong P")
} else {
t.pp = 0
}
last := len(pp.timers) - 1
if last > 0 {
pp.timers[0] = pp.timers[last]
}
pp.timers[last] = nil
pp.timers = pp.timers[:last]
if last > 0 {
siftdownTimer(pp.timers, 0)
}
updateTimer0When(pp)
atomic.Xadd(&pp.numTimers, -1)
}
// modtimer modifies an existing timer.
// This is called by the netpoll code or time.Ticker.Reset or time.Timer.Reset.
// Reports whether the timer was modified before it was run.
func modtimer(t *timer, when, period int64, f func(interface{}, uintptr), arg interface{}, seq uintptr) bool {
if when <= 0 {
throw("timer when must be positive")
}
if period < 0 {
throw("timer period must be non-negative")
}
status := uint32(timerNoStatus)
wasRemoved := false
var pending bool
var mp *m
loop:
for {
switch status = atomic.Load(&t.status); status {
case timerWaiting, timerModifiedEarlier, timerModifiedLater:
// Prevent preemption while the timer is in timerModifying.
// This could lead to a self-deadlock. See #38070.
mp = acquirem()
if atomic.Cas(&t.status, status, timerModifying) {
pending = true // timer not yet run
break loop
}
releasem(mp)
case timerNoStatus, timerRemoved:
// Prevent preemption while the timer is in timerModifying.
// This could lead to a self-deadlock. See #38070.
mp = acquirem()
// Timer was already run and t is no longer in a heap.
// Act like addtimer.
if atomic.Cas(&t.status, status, timerModifying) {
wasRemoved = true
pending = false // timer already run or stopped
break loop
}
releasem(mp)
case timerDeleted:
// Prevent preemption while the timer is in timerModifying.
// This could lead to a self-deadlock. See #38070.
mp = acquirem()
if atomic.Cas(&t.status, status, timerModifying) {
atomic.Xadd(&t.pp.ptr().deletedTimers, -1)
pending = false // timer already stopped
break loop
}
releasem(mp)
case timerRunning, timerRemoving, timerMoving:
// The timer is being run or moved, by a different P.
// Wait for it to complete.
osyield()
case timerModifying:
// Multiple simultaneous calls to modtimer.
// Wait for the other call to complete.
osyield()
default:
badTimer()
}
}
t.period = period
t.f = f
t.arg = arg
t.seq = seq
if wasRemoved {
t.when = when
pp := getg().m.p.ptr()
lock(&pp.timersLock)
doaddtimer(pp, t)
unlock(&pp.timersLock)
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerModifying, timerWaiting) {
badTimer()
}
releasem(mp)
wakeNetPoller(when)
} else {
// The timer is in some other P's heap, so we can't change
// the when field. If we did, the other P's heap would
// be out of order. So we put the new when value in the
// nextwhen field, and let the other P set the when field
// when it is prepared to resort the heap.
t.nextwhen = when
newStatus := uint32(timerModifiedLater)
if when < t.when {
newStatus = timerModifiedEarlier
}
tpp := t.pp.ptr()
if newStatus == timerModifiedEarlier {
updateTimerModifiedEarliest(tpp, when)
}
// Set the new status of the timer.
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerModifying, newStatus) {
badTimer()
}
releasem(mp)
// If the new status is earlier, wake up the poller.
if newStatus == timerModifiedEarlier {
wakeNetPoller(when)
}
}
return pending
}
// resettimer resets the time when a timer should fire.
// If used for an inactive timer, the timer will become active.
// This should be called instead of addtimer if the timer value has been,
// or may have been, used previously.
// Reports whether the timer was modified before it was run.
func resettimer(t *timer, when int64) bool {
return modtimer(t, when, t.period, t.f, t.arg, t.seq)
}
// cleantimers cleans up the head of the timer queue. This speeds up
// programs that create and delete timers; leaving them in the heap
// slows down addtimer. Reports whether no timer problems were found.
// The caller must have locked the timers for pp.
func cleantimers(pp *p) {
gp := getg()
for {
if len(pp.timers) == 0 {
return
}
// This loop can theoretically run for a while, and because
// it is holding timersLock it cannot be preempted.
// If someone is trying to preempt us, just return.
// We can clean the timers later.
if gp.preemptStop {
return
}
t := pp.timers[0]
if t.pp.ptr() != pp {
throw("cleantimers: bad p")
}
switch s := atomic.Load(&t.status); s {
case timerDeleted:
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerRemoving) {
continue
}
dodeltimer0(pp)
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerRemoving, timerRemoved) {
badTimer()
}
atomic.Xadd(&pp.deletedTimers, -1)
case timerModifiedEarlier, timerModifiedLater:
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerMoving) {
continue
}
// Now we can change the when field.
t.when = t.nextwhen
// Move t to the right position.
dodeltimer0(pp)
doaddtimer(pp, t)
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerMoving, timerWaiting) {
badTimer()
}
default:
// Head of timers does not need adjustment.
return
}
}
}
// moveTimers moves a slice of timers to pp. The slice has been taken
// from a different P.
// This is currently called when the world is stopped, but the caller
// is expected to have locked the timers for pp.
func moveTimers(pp *p, timers []*timer) {
for _, t := range timers {
loop:
for {
switch s := atomic.Load(&t.status); s {
case timerWaiting:
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerMoving) {
continue
}
t.pp = 0
doaddtimer(pp, t)
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerMoving, timerWaiting) {
badTimer()
}
break loop
case timerModifiedEarlier, timerModifiedLater:
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerMoving) {
continue
}
t.when = t.nextwhen
t.pp = 0
doaddtimer(pp, t)
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerMoving, timerWaiting) {
badTimer()
}
break loop
case timerDeleted:
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerRemoved) {
continue
}
t.pp = 0
// We no longer need this timer in the heap.
break loop
case timerModifying:
// Loop until the modification is complete.
osyield()
case timerNoStatus, timerRemoved:
// We should not see these status values in a timers heap.
badTimer()
case timerRunning, timerRemoving, timerMoving:
// Some other P thinks it owns this timer,
// which should not happen.
badTimer()
default:
badTimer()
}
}
}
}
// adjusttimers looks through the timers in the current P's heap for
// any timers that have been modified to run earlier, and puts them in
// the correct place in the heap. While looking for those timers,
// it also moves timers that have been modified to run later,
// and removes deleted timers. The caller must have locked the timers for pp.
func adjusttimers(pp *p, now int64) {
// If we haven't yet reached the time of the first timerModifiedEarlier
// timer, don't do anything. This speeds up programs that adjust
// a lot of timers back and forth if the timers rarely expire.
// We'll postpone looking through all the adjusted timers until
// one would actually expire.
first := atomic.Load64(&pp.timerModifiedEarliest)
if first == 0 || int64(first) > now {
if verifyTimers {
verifyTimerHeap(pp)
}
return
}
// We are going to clear all timerModifiedEarlier timers.
atomic.Store64(&pp.timerModifiedEarliest, 0)
var moved []*timer
for i := 0; i < len(pp.timers); i++ {
t := pp.timers[i]
if t.pp.ptr() != pp {
throw("adjusttimers: bad p")
}
switch s := atomic.Load(&t.status); s {
case timerDeleted:
if atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerRemoving) {
changed := dodeltimer(pp, i)
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerRemoving, timerRemoved) {
badTimer()
}
atomic.Xadd(&pp.deletedTimers, -1)
// Go back to the earliest changed heap entry.
// "- 1" because the loop will add 1.
i = changed - 1
}
case timerModifiedEarlier, timerModifiedLater:
if atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerMoving) {
// Now we can change the when field.
t.when = t.nextwhen
// Take t off the heap, and hold onto it.
// We don't add it back yet because the
// heap manipulation could cause our
// loop to skip some other timer.
changed := dodeltimer(pp, i)
moved = append(moved, t)
// Go back to the earliest changed heap entry.
// "- 1" because the loop will add 1.
i = changed - 1
}
case timerNoStatus, timerRunning, timerRemoving, timerRemoved, timerMoving:
badTimer()
case timerWaiting:
// OK, nothing to do.
case timerModifying:
// Check again after modification is complete.
osyield()
i--
default:
badTimer()
}
}
if len(moved) > 0 {
addAdjustedTimers(pp, moved)
}
if verifyTimers {
verifyTimerHeap(pp)
}
}
// addAdjustedTimers adds any timers we adjusted in adjusttimers
// back to the timer heap.
func addAdjustedTimers(pp *p, moved []*timer) {
for _, t := range moved {
doaddtimer(pp, t)
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerMoving, timerWaiting) {
badTimer()
}
}
}
// nobarrierWakeTime looks at P's timers and returns the time when we
// should wake up the netpoller. It returns 0 if there are no timers.
// This function is invoked when dropping a P, and must run without
// any write barriers.
//go:nowritebarrierrec
func nobarrierWakeTime(pp *p) int64 {
next := int64(atomic.Load64(&pp.timer0When))
nextAdj := int64(atomic.Load64(&pp.timerModifiedEarliest))
if next == 0 || (nextAdj != 0 && nextAdj < next) {
next = nextAdj
}
return next
}
// runtimer examines the first timer in timers. If it is ready based on now,
// it runs the timer and removes or updates it.
// Returns 0 if it ran a timer, -1 if there are no more timers, or the time
// when the first timer should run.
// The caller must have locked the timers for pp.
// If a timer is run, this will temporarily unlock the timers.
//go:systemstack
func runtimer(pp *p, now int64) int64 {
for {
t := pp.timers[0]
if t.pp.ptr() != pp {
throw("runtimer: bad p")
}
switch s := atomic.Load(&t.status); s {
case timerWaiting:
if t.when > now {
// Not ready to run.
return t.when
}
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerRunning) {
continue
}
// Note that runOneTimer may temporarily unlock
// pp.timersLock.
runOneTimer(pp, t, now)
return 0
case timerDeleted:
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerRemoving) {
continue
}
dodeltimer0(pp)
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerRemoving, timerRemoved) {
badTimer()
}
atomic.Xadd(&pp.deletedTimers, -1)
if len(pp.timers) == 0 {
return -1
}
case timerModifiedEarlier, timerModifiedLater:
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerMoving) {
continue
}
t.when = t.nextwhen
dodeltimer0(pp)
doaddtimer(pp, t)
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerMoving, timerWaiting) {
badTimer()
}
case timerModifying:
// Wait for modification to complete.
osyield()
case timerNoStatus, timerRemoved:
// Should not see a new or inactive timer on the heap.
badTimer()
case timerRunning, timerRemoving, timerMoving:
// These should only be set when timers are locked,
// and we didn't do it.
badTimer()
default:
badTimer()
}
}
}
// runOneTimer runs a single timer.
// The caller must have locked the timers for pp.
// This will temporarily unlock the timers while running the timer function.
//go:systemstack
func runOneTimer(pp *p, t *timer, now int64) {
if raceenabled {
ppcur := getg().m.p.ptr()
if ppcur.timerRaceCtx == 0 {
ppcur.timerRaceCtx = racegostart(funcPC(runtimer) + sys.PCQuantum)
}
raceacquirectx(ppcur.timerRaceCtx, unsafe.Pointer(t))
}
f := t.f
arg := t.arg
seq := t.seq
if t.period > 0 {
// Leave in heap but adjust next time to fire.
delta := t.when - now
t.when += t.period * (1 + -delta/t.period)
if t.when < 0 { // check for overflow.
t.when = maxWhen
}
siftdownTimer(pp.timers, 0)
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerRunning, timerWaiting) {
badTimer()
}
updateTimer0When(pp)
} else {
// Remove from heap.
dodeltimer0(pp)
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerRunning, timerNoStatus) {
badTimer()
}
}
if raceenabled {
// Temporarily use the current P's racectx for g0.
gp := getg()
if gp.racectx != 0 {
throw("runOneTimer: unexpected racectx")
}
gp.racectx = gp.m.p.ptr().timerRaceCtx
}
unlock(&pp.timersLock)
f(arg, seq)
lock(&pp.timersLock)
if raceenabled {
gp := getg()
gp.racectx = 0
}
}
// clearDeletedTimers removes all deleted timers from the P's timer heap.
// This is used to avoid clogging up the heap if the program
// starts a lot of long-running timers and then stops them.
// For example, this can happen via context.WithTimeout.
//
// This is the only function that walks through the entire timer heap,
// other than moveTimers which only runs when the world is stopped.
//
// The caller must have locked the timers for pp.
func clearDeletedTimers(pp *p) {
// We are going to clear all timerModifiedEarlier timers.
// Do this now in case new ones show up while we are looping.
atomic.Store64(&pp.timerModifiedEarliest, 0)
cdel := int32(0)
to := 0
changedHeap := false
timers := pp.timers
nextTimer:
for _, t := range timers {
for {
switch s := atomic.Load(&t.status); s {
case timerWaiting:
if changedHeap {
timers[to] = t
siftupTimer(timers, to)
}
to++
continue nextTimer
case timerModifiedEarlier, timerModifiedLater:
if atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerMoving) {
t.when = t.nextwhen
timers[to] = t
siftupTimer(timers, to)
to++
changedHeap = true
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerMoving, timerWaiting) {
badTimer()
}
continue nextTimer
}
case timerDeleted:
if atomic.Cas(&t.status, s, timerRemoving) {
t.pp = 0
cdel++
if !atomic.Cas(&t.status, timerRemoving, timerRemoved) {
badTimer()
}
changedHeap = true
continue nextTimer
}
case timerModifying:
// Loop until modification complete.
osyield()
case timerNoStatus, timerRemoved:
// We should not see these status values in a timer heap.
badTimer()
case timerRunning, timerRemoving, timerMoving:
// Some other P thinks it owns this timer,
// which should not happen.
badTimer()
default:
badTimer()
}
}
}
// Set remaining slots in timers slice to nil,
// so that the timer values can be garbage collected.
for i := to; i < len(timers); i++ {
timers[i] = nil
}
atomic.Xadd(&pp.deletedTimers, -cdel)
atomic.Xadd(&pp.numTimers, -cdel)
timers = timers[:to]
pp.timers = timers
updateTimer0When(pp)
if verifyTimers {
verifyTimerHeap(pp)
}
}
// verifyTimerHeap verifies that the timer heap is in a valid state.
// This is only for debugging, and is only called if verifyTimers is true.
// The caller must have locked the timers.
func verifyTimerHeap(pp *p) {
for i, t := range pp.timers {
if i == 0 {
// First timer has no parent.
continue
}
// The heap is 4-ary. See siftupTimer and siftdownTimer.
p := (i - 1) / 4
if t.when < pp.timers[p].when {
print("bad timer heap at ", i, ": ", p, ": ", pp.timers[p].when, ", ", i, ": ", t.when, "\n")
throw("bad timer heap")
}
}
if numTimers := int(atomic.Load(&pp.numTimers)); len(pp.timers) != numTimers {
println("timer heap len", len(pp.timers), "!= numTimers", numTimers)
throw("bad timer heap len")
}
}
// updateTimer0When sets the P's timer0When field.
// The caller must have locked the timers for pp.
func updateTimer0When(pp *p) {
if len(pp.timers) == 0 {
atomic.Store64(&pp.timer0When, 0)
} else {
atomic.Store64(&pp.timer0When, uint64(pp.timers[0].when))
}
}
// updateTimerModifiedEarliest updates the recorded nextwhen field of the
// earlier timerModifiedEarier value.
// The timers for pp will not be locked.
func updateTimerModifiedEarliest(pp *p, nextwhen int64) {
for {
old := atomic.Load64(&pp.timerModifiedEarliest)
if old != 0 && int64(old) < nextwhen {
return
}
if atomic.Cas64(&pp.timerModifiedEarliest, old, uint64(nextwhen)) {
return
}
}
}
// timeSleepUntil returns the time when the next timer should fire,
// and the P that holds the timer heap that that timer is on.
// This is only called by sysmon and checkdead.
func timeSleepUntil() (int64, *p) {
next := int64(maxWhen)
var pret *p
// Prevent allp slice changes. This is like retake.
lock(&allpLock)
for _, pp := range allp {
if pp == nil {
// This can happen if procresize has grown
// allp but not yet created new Ps.
continue
}
w := int64(atomic.Load64(&pp.timer0When))
if w != 0 && w < next {
next = w
pret = pp
}
w = int64(atomic.Load64(&pp.timerModifiedEarliest))
if w != 0 && w < next {
next = w
pret = pp
}
}
unlock(&allpLock)
return next, pret
}
// Heap maintenance algorithms.
// These algorithms check for slice index errors manually.
// Slice index error can happen if the program is using racy
// access to timers. We don't want to panic here, because
// it will cause the program to crash with a mysterious
// "panic holding locks" message. Instead, we panic while not
// holding a lock.
// siftupTimer puts the timer at position i in the right place
// in the heap by moving it up toward the top of the heap.
// It returns the smallest changed index.
func siftupTimer(t []*timer, i int) int {
if i >= len(t) {
badTimer()
}
when := t[i].when
if when <= 0 {
badTimer()
}
tmp := t[i]
for i > 0 {
p := (i - 1) / 4 // parent
if when >= t[p].when {
break
}
t[i] = t[p]
i = p
}
if tmp != t[i] {
t[i] = tmp
}
return i
}
// siftdownTimer puts the timer at position i in the right place
// in the heap by moving it down toward the bottom of the heap.
func siftdownTimer(t []*timer, i int) {
n := len(t)
if i >= n {
badTimer()
}
when := t[i].when
if when <= 0 {
badTimer()
}
tmp := t[i]
for {
c := i*4 + 1 // left child
c3 := c + 2 // mid child
if c >= n {
break
}
w := t[c].when
if c+1 < n && t[c+1].when < w {
w = t[c+1].when
c++
}
if c3 < n {
w3 := t[c3].when
if c3+1 < n && t[c3+1].when < w3 {
w3 = t[c3+1].when
c3++
}
if w3 < w {
w = w3
c = c3
}
}
if w >= when {
break
}
t[i] = t[c]
i = c
}
if tmp != t[i] {
t[i] = tmp
}
}
// badTimer is called if the timer data structures have been corrupted,
// presumably due to racy use by the program. We panic here rather than
// panicing due to invalid slice access while holding locks.
// See issue #25686.
func badTimer() {
throw("timer data corruption")
}