1998-11-22 Roland McGrath <roland@baalperazim.frob.com>

* sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/init-first.c (init): Provide temporary storage 
for the per-thread variables of the main user thread to make it 
possible to use malloc as soon as _hurd_preinit_hook has been run. 
For cthreads, copy values to new stack from there. 
For non-cthreads, malloc threadvar array here and copy from temp space. 
(init1): No longer initialize threadvars here. 
(doinit1): Made static void at top level. 
(init): Folded into [PIC] _init or [!PIC] doinit1, since GCC cannot 
inline a function that uses dynamic auto arrays.
This commit is contained in:
Roland McGrath 1998-11-22 17:32:14 +00:00
parent b17f830fe1
commit 54509b04ce

View File

@ -105,20 +105,6 @@ init1 (int argc, char *arg0, ...)
}
}
if (__hurd_threadvar_stack_mask == 0)
{
/* We are not using cthreads, so we will have just a single allocated
area for the per-thread variables of the main user thread. */
unsigned long int i;
__hurd_threadvar_stack_offset
= (unsigned long int) malloc (__hurd_threadvar_max *
sizeof (unsigned long int));
if (__hurd_threadvar_stack_offset == 0)
__libc_fatal ("Can't allocate single-threaded per-thread variables.");
for (i = 0; i < __hurd_threadvar_max; ++i)
((unsigned long int *) __hurd_threadvar_stack_offset)[i] = 0;
}
if ((void *) d != argv[0] && (d->portarray || d->intarray))
/* Initialize library data structures, start signal processing, etc. */
_hurd_init (d->flags, argv,
@ -133,95 +119,6 @@ init1 (int argc, char *arg0, ...)
}
static inline void
init (int *data)
{
int argc = *data;
char **argv = (void *) (data + 1);
char **envp = &argv[argc + 1];
struct hurd_startup_data *d;
__environ = envp;
while (*envp)
++envp;
d = (void *) ++envp;
/* The user might have defined a value for this, to get more variables.
Otherwise it will be zero on startup. We must make sure it is set
properly before before cthreads initialization, so cthreads can know
how much space to leave for thread variables. */
if (__hurd_threadvar_max < _HURD_THREADVAR_MAX)
__hurd_threadvar_max = _HURD_THREADVAR_MAX;
/* After possibly switching stacks, call `init1' (above) with the user
code as the return address, and the argument data immediately above
that on the stack. */
if (_cthread_init_routine)
{
/* Initialize cthreads, which will allocate us a new stack to run on. */
void *newsp = (*_cthread_init_routine) ();
struct hurd_startup_data *od;
/* Copy the argdata from the old stack to the new one. */
newsp = memcpy (newsp - ((char *) &d[1] - (char *) data), data,
(char *) d - (char *) data);
/* Set up the Hurd startup data block immediately following
the argument and environment pointers on the new stack. */
od = (newsp + ((char *) d - (char *) data));
if ((void *) argv[0] == d)
/* We were started up by the kernel with arguments on the stack.
There is no Hurd startup data, so zero the block. */
memset (od, 0, sizeof *od);
else
/* Copy the Hurd startup data block to the new stack. */
*od = *d;
/* Push the user code address on the top of the new stack. It will
be the return address for `init1'; we will jump there with NEWSP
as the stack pointer. */
*--(int *) newsp = data[-1];
((void **) data)[-1] = &&switch_stacks;
/* Force NEWSP into %ecx and &init1 into %eax, which are not restored
by function return. */
asm volatile ("# a %0 c %1" : : "a" (newsp), "c" (&init1));
}
else
{
/* The argument data is just above the stack frame we will unwind by
returning. Mutate our own return address to run the code below. */
int usercode = data[-1];
((void **) data)[-1] = &&call_init1;
/* Force USERCODE into %eax and &init1 into %ecx, which are not
restored by function return. */
asm volatile ("# a %0 c %1" : : "a" (usercode), "c" (&init1));
}
return;
switch_stacks:
/* Our return address was redirected to here, so at this point our stack
is unwound and callers' registers restored. Only %ecx and %eax are
call-clobbered and thus still have the values we set just above.
Fetch from there the new stack pointer we will run on, and jmp to the
run-time address of `init1'; when it returns, it will run the user
code with the argument data at the top of the stack. */
asm volatile ("movl %eax, %esp; jmp *%ecx");
/* NOTREACHED */
call_init1:
/* As in the stack-switching case, at this point our stack is unwound and
callers' registers restored, and only %ecx and %eax communicate values
from the lines above. In this case we have stashed in %eax the user
code return address. Push it on the top of the stack so it acts as
init1's return address, and then jump there. */
asm volatile ("pushl %eax; jmp *%ecx");
/* NOTREACHED */
}
#ifdef PIC
/* This function is called to initialize the shared C library.
It is called just before the user _start code from i386/elf/start.S,
@ -239,9 +136,133 @@ _init (int argc, ...)
RUN_HOOK (_hurd_preinit_hook, ());
init (&argc);
}
#else
/* In statically-linked programs, this function is
called from _hurd_stack_setup (below). */
static void
doinit1 (int argc, ...)
{
#endif
/* This block used to be a separate inline function.
But GCC refuses to inline a function that uses alloca
or dynamically-sized auto arrays. */
{
int *const data = &argc;
char **argv = (void *) (data + 1);
char **envp = &argv[argc + 1];
struct hurd_startup_data *d;
unsigned long int threadvars[__hurd_threadvar_max];
/* Provide temporary storage for thread-specific variables on the startup
stack so the cthreads initialization code can use them for malloc et al,
or so we can use malloc below for the real threadvars array. */
memset (threadvars, 0, sizeof threadvars);
__hurd_threadvar_stack_offset = (unsigned long int) threadvars;
__environ = envp;
while (*envp)
++envp;
d = (void *) ++envp;
/* The user might have defined a value for this, to get more variables.
Otherwise it will be zero on startup. We must make sure it is set
properly before before cthreads initialization, so cthreads can know
how much space to leave for thread variables. */
if (__hurd_threadvar_max < _HURD_THREADVAR_MAX)
__hurd_threadvar_max = _HURD_THREADVAR_MAX;
/* After possibly switching stacks, call `init1' (above) with the user
code as the return address, and the argument data immediately above
that on the stack. */
if (_cthread_init_routine)
{
void *newsp;
struct hurd_startup_data *od;
/* Initialize cthreads, which will allocate us a new
stack to run on. */
newsp = (*_cthread_init_routine) ();
/* Copy per-thread variables from that temporary
area onto the new cthread stack. */
memcpy (__hurd_threadvar_location_from_sp (0, newsp),
threadvars, sizeof threadvars);
/* Copy the argdata from the old stack to the new one. */
newsp = memcpy (newsp - ((char *) &d[1] - (char *) data), data,
(char *) d - (char *) data);
/* Set up the Hurd startup data block immediately following
the argument and environment pointers on the new stack. */
od = (newsp + ((char *) d - (char *) data));
if ((void *) argv[0] == d)
/* We were started up by the kernel with arguments on the stack.
There is no Hurd startup data, so zero the block. */
memset (od, 0, sizeof *od);
else
/* Copy the Hurd startup data block to the new stack. */
*od = *d;
/* Push the user code address on the top of the new stack. It will
be the return address for `init1'; we will jump there with NEWSP
as the stack pointer. */
*--(int *) newsp = data[-1];
((void **) data)[-1] = &&switch_stacks;
/* Force NEWSP into %ecx and &init1 into %eax, which are not restored
by function return. */
asm volatile ("# a %0 c %1" : : "a" (newsp), "c" (&init1));
}
else
{
/* We are not using cthreads, so we will have just a single allocated
area for the per-thread variables of the main user thread. */
void *array;
int usercode;
array = malloc (sizeof threadvars);
if (array == NULL)
__libc_fatal ("Can't allocate single-threaded thread variables.");
/* Copy per-thread variables from the temporary array into the
newly malloc'd space. */
memcpy (array, threadvars, sizeof threadvars);
__hurd_threadvar_stack_offset = (unsigned long int) array;
/* The argument data is just above the stack frame we will unwind by
returning. Mutate our own return address to run the code below. */
usercode = data[-1];
((void **) data)[-1] = &&call_init1;
/* Force USERCODE into %eax and &init1 into %ecx, which are not
restored by function return. */
asm volatile ("# a %0 c %1" : : "a" (usercode), "c" (&init1));
}
return;
switch_stacks:
/* Our return address was redirected to here, so at this point our
stack is unwound and callers' registers restored. Only %ecx and
%eax are call-clobbered and thus still have the values we set just
above. Fetch from there the new stack pointer we will run on, and
jmp to the run-time address of `init1'; when it returns, it will run
the user code with the argument data at the top of the stack. */
asm volatile ("movl %eax, %esp; jmp *%ecx");
/* NOTREACHED */
call_init1:
/* As in the stack-switching case, at this point our stack is unwound
and callers' registers restored, and only %ecx and %eax communicate
values from the lines above. In this case we have stashed in %eax
the user code return address. Push it on the top of the stack so it
acts as init1's return address, and then jump there. */
asm volatile ("pushl %eax; jmp *%ecx");
/* NOTREACHED */
}
}
void
@ -264,10 +285,6 @@ _hurd_stack_setup (int argc __attribute__ ((unused)), ...)
void doinit (int *data)
{
/* This function gets called with the argument data at TOS. */
void doinit1 (int argc, ...)
{
init (&argc);
}
/* Push the user return address after the argument data, and then
jump to `doinit1' (above), so it is as if __libc_init_first's