xref: /qemu/include/qemu/main-loop.h (revision 27a4a30e)
1 /*
2  * QEMU System Emulator
3  *
4  * Copyright (c) 2003-2008 Fabrice Bellard
5  *
6  * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
7  * of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
8  * in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
9  * to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
10  * copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
11  * furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
12  *
13  * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
14  * all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
15  *
16  * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
17  * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
18  * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
19  * THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
20  * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
21  * OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
22  * THE SOFTWARE.
23  */
24 
25 #ifndef QEMU_MAIN_LOOP_H
26 #define QEMU_MAIN_LOOP_H
27 
28 #include "block/aio.h"
29 
30 #define SIG_IPI SIGUSR1
31 
32 /**
33  * qemu_init_main_loop: Set up the process so that it can run the main loop.
34  *
35  * This includes setting up signal handlers.  It should be called before
36  * any other threads are created.  In addition, threads other than the
37  * main one should block signals that are trapped by the main loop.
38  * For simplicity, you can consider these signals to be safe: SIGUSR1,
39  * SIGUSR2, thread signals (SIGFPE, SIGILL, SIGSEGV, SIGBUS) and real-time
40  * signals if available.  Remember that Windows in practice does not have
41  * signals, though.
42  *
43  * In the case of QEMU tools, this will also start/initialize timers.
44  */
45 int qemu_init_main_loop(Error **errp);
46 
47 /**
48  * main_loop_wait: Run one iteration of the main loop.
49  *
50  * If @nonblocking is true, poll for events, otherwise suspend until
51  * one actually occurs.  The main loop usually consists of a loop that
52  * repeatedly calls main_loop_wait(false).
53  *
54  * Main loop services include file descriptor callbacks, bottom halves
55  * and timers (defined in qemu-timer.h).  Bottom halves are similar to timers
56  * that execute immediately, but have a lower overhead and scheduling them
57  * is wait-free, thread-safe and signal-safe.
58  *
59  * It is sometimes useful to put a whole program in a coroutine.  In this
60  * case, the coroutine actually should be started from within the main loop,
61  * so that the main loop can run whenever the coroutine yields.  To do this,
62  * you can use a bottom half to enter the coroutine as soon as the main loop
63  * starts:
64  *
65  *     void enter_co_bh(void *opaque) {
66  *         QEMUCoroutine *co = opaque;
67  *         qemu_coroutine_enter(co);
68  *     }
69  *
70  *     ...
71  *     QEMUCoroutine *co = qemu_coroutine_create(coroutine_entry, NULL);
72  *     QEMUBH *start_bh = qemu_bh_new(enter_co_bh, co);
73  *     qemu_bh_schedule(start_bh);
74  *     while (...) {
75  *         main_loop_wait(false);
76  *     }
77  *
78  * (In the future we may provide a wrapper for this).
79  *
80  * @nonblocking: Whether the caller should block until an event occurs.
81  */
82 void main_loop_wait(int nonblocking);
83 
84 /**
85  * qemu_get_aio_context: Return the main loop's AioContext
86  */
87 AioContext *qemu_get_aio_context(void);
88 
89 /**
90  * qemu_notify_event: Force processing of pending events.
91  *
92  * Similar to signaling a condition variable, qemu_notify_event forces
93  * main_loop_wait to look at pending events and exit.  The caller of
94  * main_loop_wait will usually call it again very soon, so qemu_notify_event
95  * also has the side effect of recalculating the sets of file descriptors
96  * that the main loop waits for.
97  *
98  * Calling qemu_notify_event is rarely necessary, because main loop
99  * services (bottom halves and timers) call it themselves.
100  */
101 void qemu_notify_event(void);
102 
103 #ifdef _WIN32
104 /* return TRUE if no sleep should be done afterwards */
105 typedef int PollingFunc(void *opaque);
106 
107 /**
108  * qemu_add_polling_cb: Register a Windows-specific polling callback
109  *
110  * Currently, under Windows some events are polled rather than waited for.
111  * Polling callbacks do not ensure that @func is called timely, because
112  * the main loop might wait for an arbitrarily long time.  If possible,
113  * you should instead create a separate thread that does a blocking poll
114  * and set a Win32 event object.  The event can then be passed to
115  * qemu_add_wait_object.
116  *
117  * Polling callbacks really have nothing Windows specific in them, but
118  * as they are a hack and are currently not necessary under POSIX systems,
119  * they are only available when QEMU is running under Windows.
120  *
121  * @func: The function that does the polling, and returns 1 to force
122  * immediate completion of main_loop_wait.
123  * @opaque: A pointer-size value that is passed to @func.
124  */
125 int qemu_add_polling_cb(PollingFunc *func, void *opaque);
126 
127 /**
128  * qemu_del_polling_cb: Unregister a Windows-specific polling callback
129  *
130  * This function removes a callback that was registered with
131  * qemu_add_polling_cb.
132  *
133  * @func: The function that was passed to qemu_add_polling_cb.
134  * @opaque: A pointer-size value that was passed to qemu_add_polling_cb.
135  */
136 void qemu_del_polling_cb(PollingFunc *func, void *opaque);
137 
138 /* Wait objects handling */
139 typedef void WaitObjectFunc(void *opaque);
140 
141 /**
142  * qemu_add_wait_object: Register a callback for a Windows handle
143  *
144  * Under Windows, the iohandler mechanism can only be used with sockets.
145  * QEMU must use the WaitForMultipleObjects API to wait on other handles.
146  * This function registers a #HANDLE with QEMU, so that it will be included
147  * in the main loop's calls to WaitForMultipleObjects.  When the handle
148  * is in a signaled state, QEMU will call @func.
149  *
150  * @handle: The Windows handle to be observed.
151  * @func: A function to be called when @handle is in a signaled state.
152  * @opaque: A pointer-size value that is passed to @func.
153  */
154 int qemu_add_wait_object(HANDLE handle, WaitObjectFunc *func, void *opaque);
155 
156 /**
157  * qemu_del_wait_object: Unregister a callback for a Windows handle
158  *
159  * This function removes a callback that was registered with
160  * qemu_add_wait_object.
161  *
162  * @func: The function that was passed to qemu_add_wait_object.
163  * @opaque: A pointer-size value that was passed to qemu_add_wait_object.
164  */
165 void qemu_del_wait_object(HANDLE handle, WaitObjectFunc *func, void *opaque);
166 #endif
167 
168 /* async I/O support */
169 
170 typedef void IOReadHandler(void *opaque, const uint8_t *buf, int size);
171 
172 /**
173  * IOCanReadHandler: Return the number of bytes that #IOReadHandler can accept
174  *
175  * This function reports how many bytes #IOReadHandler is prepared to accept.
176  * #IOReadHandler may be invoked with up to this number of bytes.  If this
177  * function returns 0 then #IOReadHandler is not invoked.
178  *
179  * This function is typically called from an event loop.  If the number of
180  * bytes changes outside the event loop (e.g. because a vcpu thread drained the
181  * buffer), then it is necessary to kick the event loop so that this function
182  * is called again.  aio_notify() or qemu_notify_event() can be used to kick
183  * the event loop.
184  */
185 typedef int IOCanReadHandler(void *opaque);
186 
187 /**
188  * qemu_set_fd_handler: Register a file descriptor with the main loop
189  *
190  * This function tells the main loop to wake up whenever one of the
191  * following conditions is true:
192  *
193  * 1) if @fd_write is not %NULL, when the file descriptor is writable;
194  *
195  * 2) if @fd_read is not %NULL, when the file descriptor is readable.
196  *
197  * The callbacks that are set up by qemu_set_fd_handler are level-triggered.
198  * If @fd_read does not read from @fd, or @fd_write does not write to @fd
199  * until its buffers are full, they will be called again on the next
200  * iteration.
201  *
202  * @fd: The file descriptor to be observed.  Under Windows it must be
203  * a #SOCKET.
204  *
205  * @fd_read: A level-triggered callback that is fired if @fd is readable
206  * at the beginning of a main loop iteration, or if it becomes readable
207  * during one.
208  *
209  * @fd_write: A level-triggered callback that is fired when @fd is writable
210  * at the beginning of a main loop iteration, or if it becomes writable
211  * during one.
212  *
213  * @opaque: A pointer-sized value that is passed to @fd_read and @fd_write.
214  */
215 void qemu_set_fd_handler(int fd,
216                          IOHandler *fd_read,
217                          IOHandler *fd_write,
218                          void *opaque);
219 
220 
221 /**
222  * event_notifier_set_handler: Register an EventNotifier with the main loop
223  *
224  * This function tells the main loop to wake up whenever the
225  * #EventNotifier was set.
226  *
227  * @e: The #EventNotifier to be observed.
228  *
229  * @handler: A level-triggered callback that is fired when @e
230  * has been set.  @e is passed to it as a parameter.
231  */
232 void event_notifier_set_handler(EventNotifier *e,
233                                 EventNotifierHandler *handler);
234 
235 GSource *iohandler_get_g_source(void);
236 AioContext *iohandler_get_aio_context(void);
237 #ifdef CONFIG_POSIX
238 /**
239  * qemu_add_child_watch: Register a child process for reaping.
240  *
241  * Under POSIX systems, a parent process must read the exit status of
242  * its child processes using waitpid, or the operating system will not
243  * free some of the resources attached to that process.
244  *
245  * This function directs the QEMU main loop to observe a child process
246  * and call waitpid as soon as it exits; the watch is then removed
247  * automatically.  It is useful whenever QEMU forks a child process
248  * but will find out about its termination by other means such as a
249  * "broken pipe".
250  *
251  * @pid: The pid that QEMU should observe.
252  */
253 int qemu_add_child_watch(pid_t pid);
254 #endif
255 
256 /**
257  * qemu_mutex_iothread_locked: Return lock status of the main loop mutex.
258  *
259  * The main loop mutex is the coarsest lock in QEMU, and as such it
260  * must always be taken outside other locks.  This function helps
261  * functions take different paths depending on whether the current
262  * thread is running within the main loop mutex.
263  */
264 bool qemu_mutex_iothread_locked(void);
265 
266 /**
267  * qemu_mutex_lock_iothread: Lock the main loop mutex.
268  *
269  * This function locks the main loop mutex.  The mutex is taken by
270  * main() in vl.c and always taken except while waiting on
271  * external events (such as with select).  The mutex should be taken
272  * by threads other than the main loop thread when calling
273  * qemu_bh_new(), qemu_set_fd_handler() and basically all other
274  * functions documented in this file.
275  *
276  * NOTE: tools currently are single-threaded and qemu_mutex_lock_iothread
277  * is a no-op there.
278  */
279 #define qemu_mutex_lock_iothread()                      \
280     qemu_mutex_lock_iothread_impl(__FILE__, __LINE__)
281 void qemu_mutex_lock_iothread_impl(const char *file, int line);
282 
283 /**
284  * qemu_mutex_unlock_iothread: Unlock the main loop mutex.
285  *
286  * This function unlocks the main loop mutex.  The mutex is taken by
287  * main() in vl.c and always taken except while waiting on
288  * external events (such as with select).  The mutex should be unlocked
289  * as soon as possible by threads other than the main loop thread,
290  * because it prevents the main loop from processing callbacks,
291  * including timers and bottom halves.
292  *
293  * NOTE: tools currently are single-threaded and qemu_mutex_unlock_iothread
294  * is a no-op there.
295  */
296 void qemu_mutex_unlock_iothread(void);
297 
298 /*
299  * qemu_cond_wait_iothread: Wait on condition for the main loop mutex
300  *
301  * This function atomically releases the main loop mutex and causes
302  * the calling thread to block on the condition.
303  */
304 void qemu_cond_wait_iothread(QemuCond *cond);
305 
306 /* internal interfaces */
307 
308 void qemu_fd_register(int fd);
309 
310 QEMUBH *qemu_bh_new(QEMUBHFunc *cb, void *opaque);
311 void qemu_bh_schedule_idle(QEMUBH *bh);
312 
313 enum {
314     MAIN_LOOP_POLL_FILL,
315     MAIN_LOOP_POLL_ERR,
316     MAIN_LOOP_POLL_OK,
317 };
318 
319 typedef struct MainLoopPoll {
320     int state;
321     uint32_t timeout;
322     GArray *pollfds;
323 } MainLoopPoll;
324 
325 void main_loop_poll_add_notifier(Notifier *notify);
326 void main_loop_poll_remove_notifier(Notifier *notify);
327 
328 #endif
329