Mercurial > hg > nginx
view src/core/ngx_cpuinfo.c @ 8045:aa28c802409f
Resolver: make TCP write timer event cancelable.
Similar to 70e65bf8dfd7, the change is made to ensure that the ability to
cancel resolver tasks is fully controlled by the caller. As mentioned in the
referenced commit, it is safe to make this timer cancelable because resolve
tasks can have their own timeouts that are not cancelable.
The scenario where this may become a problem is a periodic background resolve
task (not tied to a specific request or a client connection), which receives a
response with short TTL, large enough to warrant fallback to a TCP query.
With each event loop wakeup, we either have a previously set write timer
instance or schedule a new one. The non-cancelable write timer can delay or
block graceful shutdown of a worker even if the ngx_resolver_ctx_t->cancelable
flag is set by the API user, and there are no other tasks or connections.
We use the resolver API in this way to maintain the list of upstream server
addresses specified with the 'resolve' parameter, and there could be third-party
modules implementing similar logic.
author | Aleksei Bavshin <a.bavshin@f5.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 01 Jun 2022 20:17:23 -0700 |
parents | d620f497c50f |
children |
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/* * Copyright (C) Igor Sysoev * Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc. */ #include <ngx_config.h> #include <ngx_core.h> #if (( __i386__ || __amd64__ ) && ( __GNUC__ || __INTEL_COMPILER )) static ngx_inline void ngx_cpuid(uint32_t i, uint32_t *buf); #if ( __i386__ ) static ngx_inline void ngx_cpuid(uint32_t i, uint32_t *buf) { /* * we could not use %ebx as output parameter if gcc builds PIC, * and we could not save %ebx on stack, because %esp is used, * when the -fomit-frame-pointer optimization is specified. */ __asm__ ( " mov %%ebx, %%esi; " " cpuid; " " mov %%eax, (%1); " " mov %%ebx, 4(%1); " " mov %%edx, 8(%1); " " mov %%ecx, 12(%1); " " mov %%esi, %%ebx; " : : "a" (i), "D" (buf) : "ecx", "edx", "esi", "memory" ); } #else /* __amd64__ */ static ngx_inline void ngx_cpuid(uint32_t i, uint32_t *buf) { uint32_t eax, ebx, ecx, edx; __asm__ ( "cpuid" : "=a" (eax), "=b" (ebx), "=c" (ecx), "=d" (edx) : "a" (i) ); buf[0] = eax; buf[1] = ebx; buf[2] = edx; buf[3] = ecx; } #endif /* auto detect the L2 cache line size of modern and widespread CPUs */ void ngx_cpuinfo(void) { u_char *vendor; uint32_t vbuf[5], cpu[4], model; vbuf[0] = 0; vbuf[1] = 0; vbuf[2] = 0; vbuf[3] = 0; vbuf[4] = 0; ngx_cpuid(0, vbuf); vendor = (u_char *) &vbuf[1]; if (vbuf[0] == 0) { return; } ngx_cpuid(1, cpu); if (ngx_strcmp(vendor, "GenuineIntel") == 0) { switch ((cpu[0] & 0xf00) >> 8) { /* Pentium */ case 5: ngx_cacheline_size = 32; break; /* Pentium Pro, II, III */ case 6: ngx_cacheline_size = 32; model = ((cpu[0] & 0xf0000) >> 8) | (cpu[0] & 0xf0); if (model >= 0xd0) { /* Intel Core, Core 2, Atom */ ngx_cacheline_size = 64; } break; /* * Pentium 4, although its cache line size is 64 bytes, * it prefetches up to two cache lines during memory read */ case 15: ngx_cacheline_size = 128; break; } } else if (ngx_strcmp(vendor, "AuthenticAMD") == 0) { ngx_cacheline_size = 64; } } #else void ngx_cpuinfo(void) { } #endif