view src/core/ngx_cpuinfo.c @ 9225:1c9264603adc

Syslog: introduced ngx_syslog_send() error logging moderation. Errors when logging to syslog are now logged at most once per second. This ensures that persistent errors won't flood other logs, and spontaneous errors, such as ENOBUFS as observed on BSD systems when syslogd cannot cope with load, or EAGAIN as seen in similar situation on Linux, won't further overload logging subsystem, leading to more errors. Further, errors now can only trigger reconnects at most once per second. This ensures that persistent errors, which cannot be fixed with reconnects, don't trigger too much unneeded work. Additionally, in case of connection errors, such as when syslogd is not running, connection attempts are only made once per second.
author Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru>
date Fri, 01 Mar 2024 05:42:12 +0300
parents d620f497c50f
children
line wrap: on
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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