Better type declarations for fill-pointer related code.
[sbcl.git] / src / code / unix.lisp
blob34b1bda43a528e78b1c75355e1f436ba6a559602
1 ;;;; This file contains Unix support that SBCL needs to implement
2 ;;;; itself. It's derived from Peter Van Eynde's unix-glibc2.lisp for
3 ;;;; CMU CL, which was derived from CMU CL unix.lisp 1.56. But those
4 ;;;; files aspired to be complete Unix interfaces exported to the end
5 ;;;; user, while this file aims to be as simple as possible and is not
6 ;;;; intended for the end user.
7 ;;;;
8 ;;;; FIXME: The old CMU CL unix.lisp code was implemented as hand
9 ;;;; transcriptions from Unix headers into Lisp. It appears that this was as
10 ;;;; unmaintainable in practice as you'd expect in theory, so I really really
11 ;;;; don't want to do that. It'd be good to implement the various system calls
12 ;;;; as C code implemented using the Unix header files, and have their
13 ;;;; interface back to SBCL code be characterized by things like "32-bit-wide
14 ;;;; int" which are already in the interface between the runtime
15 ;;;; executable and the SBCL lisp code.
17 ;;;; This software is part of the SBCL system. See the README file for
18 ;;;; more information.
19 ;;;;
20 ;;;; This software is derived from the CMU CL system, which was
21 ;;;; written at Carnegie Mellon University and released into the
22 ;;;; public domain. The software is in the public domain and is
23 ;;;; provided with absolutely no warranty. See the COPYING and CREDITS
24 ;;;; files for more information.
26 (in-package "SB!UNIX")
28 (/show0 "unix.lisp 21")
30 ;;; Given a C-level zero-terminated array of C strings, return a
31 ;;; corresponding Lisp-level list of SIMPLE-STRINGs.
32 (defun c-strings->string-list (c-strings)
33 (declare (type (alien (* c-string)) c-strings))
34 (let ((reversed-result nil))
35 (dotimes (i most-positive-fixnum (error "argh! can't happen"))
36 (declare (type index i))
37 (let ((c-string (deref c-strings i)))
38 (if c-string
39 (push c-string reversed-result)
40 (return (nreverse reversed-result)))))))
42 ;;;; Lisp types used by syscalls
44 (deftype unix-pathname () 'simple-string)
45 (deftype unix-fd () `(integer 0 ,sb!xc:most-positive-fixnum))
47 (deftype unix-file-mode () '(unsigned-byte 32))
48 (deftype unix-pid () '(unsigned-byte 32))
49 (deftype unix-uid () '(unsigned-byte 32))
50 (deftype unix-gid () '(unsigned-byte 32))
52 ;;;; system calls
54 (/show0 "unix.lisp 74")
56 ;;; FIXME: The various FOO-SYSCALL-BAR macros, and perhaps some other
57 ;;; macros in this file, are only used in this file, and could be
58 ;;; implemented using SB!XC:DEFMACRO wrapped in EVAL-WHEN.
59 ;;;
60 ;;; SB-EXECUTABLE, at least, uses one of these macros; other libraries
61 ;;; and programs have been known to use them as well. Perhaps they
62 ;;; should live in SB-SYS or even SB-EXT?
64 (defmacro syscall ((name &rest arg-types) success-form &rest args)
65 (when (eql 3 (mismatch "[_]" name))
66 (setf name
67 (concatenate 'string #!+win32 "_" (subseq name 3))))
68 `(locally
69 (declare (optimize (sb!c::float-accuracy 0)))
70 (let ((result (alien-funcall (extern-alien ,name (function int ,@arg-types))
71 ,@args)))
72 (if (minusp result)
73 (values nil (get-errno))
74 ,success-form))))
76 ;;; This is like SYSCALL, but if it fails, signal an error instead of
77 ;;; returning error codes. Should only be used for syscalls that will
78 ;;; never really get an error.
79 (defmacro syscall* ((name &rest arg-types) success-form &rest args)
80 `(locally
81 (declare (optimize (sb!c::float-accuracy 0)))
82 (let ((result (alien-funcall (extern-alien ,name (function int ,@arg-types))
83 ,@args)))
84 (if (minusp result)
85 (error "Syscall ~A failed: ~A" ,name (strerror))
86 ,success-form))))
88 (defmacro int-syscall ((name &rest arg-types) &rest args)
89 `(syscall (,name ,@arg-types) (values result 0) ,@args))
91 (defmacro with-restarted-syscall ((&optional (value (gensym))
92 (errno (gensym)))
93 syscall-form &rest body)
94 #!+sb-doc
95 "Evaluate BODY with VALUE and ERRNO bound to the return values of
96 SYSCALL-FORM. Repeat evaluation of SYSCALL-FORM if it is interrupted."
97 `(let (,value ,errno)
98 (loop (multiple-value-setq (,value ,errno)
99 ,syscall-form)
100 (unless #!-win32 (eql ,errno eintr) #!+win32 nil
101 (return (values ,value ,errno))))
102 ,@body))
104 (defmacro void-syscall ((name &rest arg-types) &rest args)
105 `(syscall (,name ,@arg-types) (values t 0) ,@args))
107 #!+win32
108 (progn
109 (defconstant espipe 29))
111 ;;;; hacking the Unix environment
113 #!-win32
114 (define-alien-routine ("getenv" posix-getenv) c-string
115 #!+sb-doc
116 "Return the \"value\" part of the environment string \"name=value\" which
117 corresponds to NAME, or NIL if there is none."
118 (name (c-string :not-null t)))
120 ;;; from stdio.h
122 ;;; Rename the file with string NAME1 to the string NAME2. NIL and an
123 ;;; error code is returned if an error occurs.
124 #!-win32
125 (defun unix-rename (name1 name2)
126 (declare (type unix-pathname name1 name2))
127 (void-syscall ("rename" (c-string :not-null t)
128 (c-string :not-null t))
129 name1 name2))
131 ;;; from sys/types.h and gnu/types.h
133 (/show0 "unix.lisp 220")
135 ;;; FIXME: We shouldn't hand-copy types from header files into Lisp
136 ;;; like this unless we have extreme provocation. Reading directories
137 ;;; is not extreme enough, since it doesn't need to be blindingly
138 ;;; fast: we can just implement those functions in C as a wrapper
139 ;;; layer.
140 (define-alien-type fd-mask unsigned)
142 (define-alien-type nil
143 (struct fd-set
144 (fds-bits (array fd-mask #.(/ fd-setsize
145 sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)))))
147 (/show0 "unix.lisp 304")
150 ;;;; fcntl.h
151 ;;;;
152 ;;;; POSIX Standard: 6.5 File Control Operations <fcntl.h>
154 ;;; Open the file whose pathname is specified by PATH for reading
155 ;;; and/or writing as specified by the FLAGS argument. Various FLAGS
156 ;;; masks (O_RDONLY etc.) are defined in fcntlbits.h.
158 ;;; If the O_CREAT flag is specified, then the file is created with a
159 ;;; permission of argument MODE if the file doesn't exist. An integer
160 ;;; file descriptor is returned by UNIX-OPEN.
161 (defun unix-open (path flags mode)
162 (declare (type unix-pathname path)
163 (type fixnum flags)
164 (type unix-file-mode mode))
165 #!+win32 (sb!win32:unixlike-open path flags mode)
166 #!-win32
167 (with-restarted-syscall (value errno)
168 (int-syscall ("open" c-string int int)
169 path
170 (logior #!+largefile o_largefile
171 flags)
172 mode)))
174 ;;; UNIX-CLOSE accepts a file descriptor and attempts to close the file
175 ;;; associated with it.
176 (/show0 "unix.lisp 391")
177 (defun unix-close (fd)
178 #!+win32 (sb!win32:unixlike-close fd)
179 #!-win32 (declare (type unix-fd fd))
180 #!-win32 (void-syscall ("close" int) fd))
182 ;;;; stdlib.h
184 ;;; There are good reasons to implement some OPEN options with an
185 ;;; mkstemp(3)-like routine, but we don't do that yet. Instead, this
186 ;;; function is used only to make a temporary file for RUN-PROGRAM.
187 ;;; sb_mkstemp() is a wrapper that lives in src/runtime/wrap.c. Since
188 ;;; SUSv3 mkstemp() doesn't specify the mode of the created file and
189 ;;; since we have to implement most of this ourselves for Windows
190 ;;; anyway, it seems worthwhile to depart from the mkstemp()
191 ;;; specification by taking a mode to use when creating the new file.
192 (defun sb-mkstemp (template-string mode)
193 (declare (type string template-string)
194 (type unix-file-mode mode))
195 (let ((template-buffer (string-to-octets template-string :null-terminate t)))
196 (with-pinned-objects (template-buffer)
197 (let ((fd (alien-funcall (extern-alien "sb_mkstemp"
198 (function int (* char) int))
199 (vector-sap template-buffer)
200 mode)))
201 (if (minusp fd)
202 (values nil (get-errno))
203 (values #!-win32 fd #!+win32 (sb!win32::duplicate-and-unwrap-fd fd)
204 (octets-to-string template-buffer)))))))
206 ;;;; resourcebits.h
208 (defconstant rusage_self 0) ; the calling process
209 (defconstant rusage_children -1) ; terminated child processes
210 (defconstant rusage_both -2)
212 (define-alien-type nil
213 (struct rusage
214 (ru-utime (struct timeval)) ; user time used
215 (ru-stime (struct timeval)) ; system time used.
216 (ru-maxrss long) ; maximum resident set size (in kilobytes)
217 (ru-ixrss long) ; integral shared memory size
218 (ru-idrss long) ; integral unshared data size
219 (ru-isrss long) ; integral unshared stack size
220 (ru-minflt long) ; page reclaims
221 (ru-majflt long) ; page faults
222 (ru-nswap long) ; swaps
223 (ru-inblock long) ; block input operations
224 (ru-oublock long) ; block output operations
225 (ru-msgsnd long) ; messages sent
226 (ru-msgrcv long) ; messages received
227 (ru-nsignals long) ; signals received
228 (ru-nvcsw long) ; voluntary context switches
229 (ru-nivcsw long))) ; involuntary context switches
231 ;;;; unistd.h
233 ;;; Given a file path (a string) and one of four constant modes,
234 ;;; return T if the file is accessible with that mode and NIL if not.
235 ;;; When NIL, also return an errno value with NIL which tells why the
236 ;;; file was not accessible.
238 ;;; The access modes are:
239 ;;; r_ok Read permission.
240 ;;; w_ok Write permission.
241 ;;; x_ok Execute permission.
242 ;;; f_ok Presence of file.
244 ;;; In Windows, the MODE argument to access is defined in terms of
245 ;;; literal magic numbers---there are no constants to grovel. X_OK
246 ;;; is not defined.
247 #!+win32
248 (progn
249 (defconstant f_ok 0)
250 (defconstant w_ok 2)
251 (defconstant r_ok 4))
253 (defun unix-access (path mode)
254 (declare (type unix-pathname path)
255 (type (mod 8) mode))
256 (void-syscall ("[_]access" c-string int) path mode))
258 ;;; values for the second argument to UNIX-LSEEK
259 ;;; Note that nowadays these are called SEEK_SET, SEEK_CUR, and SEEK_END
260 (defconstant l_set 0) ; to set the file pointer
261 (defconstant l_incr 1) ; to increment the file pointer
262 (defconstant l_xtnd 2) ; to extend the file size
264 ;; off_t is 32 bit on Windows, yet our functions support 64 bit seeks.
265 (define-alien-type unix-offset
266 #!-win32 off-t
267 #!+win32 (signed 64))
269 ;;; Is a stream interactive?
270 (defun unix-isatty (fd)
271 (declare (type unix-fd fd))
272 #!-win32 (int-syscall ("isatty" int) fd)
273 #!+win32 (sb!win32::windows-isatty fd))
275 (defun unix-lseek (fd offset whence)
276 #!+sb-doc
277 "Unix-lseek accepts a file descriptor and moves the file pointer by
278 OFFSET octets. Whence can be any of the following:
280 L_SET Set the file pointer.
281 L_INCR Increment the file pointer.
282 L_XTND Extend the file size.
284 (declare (type unix-fd fd)
285 (type (integer 0 2) whence))
286 (let ((result
287 #!-win32
288 (alien-funcall (extern-alien #!-largefile "lseek"
289 #!+largefile "lseek_largefile"
290 (function off-t int off-t int))
291 fd offset whence)
292 #!+win32 (sb!win32:lseeki64 fd offset whence)))
293 (if (minusp result)
294 (values nil (get-errno))
295 (values result 0))))
297 ;;; UNIX-READ accepts a file descriptor, a buffer, and the length to read.
298 ;;; It attempts to read len bytes from the device associated with fd
299 ;;; and store them into the buffer. It returns the actual number of
300 ;;; bytes read.
302 #!-sb!fluid
303 (declaim (maybe-inline unix-read))
305 (defun unix-read (fd buf len)
306 (declare (type unix-fd fd)
307 (type (unsigned-byte 32) len))
308 (int-syscall (#!-win32 "read" #!+win32 "win32_unix_read"
309 int (* char) int) fd buf len))
311 ;;; UNIX-WRITE accepts a file descriptor, a buffer, an offset, and the
312 ;;; length to write. It attempts to write len bytes to the device
313 ;;; associated with fd from the buffer starting at offset. It returns
314 ;;; the actual number of bytes written.
315 (defun unix-write (fd buf offset len)
316 (declare (type unix-fd fd)
317 (type (unsigned-byte 32) offset len))
318 (flet ((%write (sap)
319 (declare (system-area-pointer sap))
320 (int-syscall (#!-win32 "write" #!+win32 "win32_unix_write"
321 int (* char) int)
323 (with-alien ((ptr (* char) sap))
324 (addr (deref ptr offset)))
325 len)))
326 (etypecase buf
327 ((simple-array * (*))
328 (with-pinned-objects (buf)
329 (%write (vector-sap buf))))
330 (system-area-pointer
331 (%write buf)))))
333 ;;; Set up a unix-piping mechanism consisting of an input pipe and an
334 ;;; output pipe. Return two values: if no error occurred the first
335 ;;; value is the pipe to be read from and the second is can be written
336 ;;; to. If an error occurred the first value is NIL and the second the
337 ;;; unix error code.
338 #!-win32
339 (defun unix-pipe ()
340 (with-alien ((fds (array int 2)))
341 (syscall ("pipe" (* int))
342 (values (deref fds 0) (deref fds 1))
343 (cast fds (* int)))))
345 #!+win32
346 (defun unix-pipe ()
347 (sb!win32::windows-pipe))
349 ;; Windows mkdir() doesn't take the mode argument. It's cdecl, so we could
350 ;; actually call it passing the mode argument, but some sharp-eyed reader
351 ;; would put five and twenty-seven together and ask us about it, so...
352 ;; -- AB, 2005-12-27
353 #!-win32
354 (defun unix-mkdir (name mode)
355 (declare (type unix-pathname name)
356 (type unix-file-mode mode)
357 #!+win32 (ignore mode))
358 (void-syscall ("mkdir" c-string #!-win32 int) name #!-win32 mode))
360 ;;; Given a C char* pointer allocated by malloc(), free it and return a
361 ;;; corresponding Lisp string (or return NIL if the pointer is a C NULL).
362 (defun newcharstar-string (newcharstar)
363 (declare (type (alien (* char)) newcharstar))
364 (if (null-alien newcharstar)
366 (prog1
367 (cast newcharstar c-string)
368 (free-alien newcharstar))))
370 ;;; Return the Unix current directory as a SIMPLE-STRING, in the
371 ;;; style returned by getcwd() (no trailing slash character).
372 #!-win32
373 (defun posix-getcwd ()
374 ;; This implementation relies on a BSD/Linux extension to getcwd()
375 ;; behavior, automatically allocating memory when a null buffer
376 ;; pointer is used. On a system which doesn't support that
377 ;; extension, it'll have to be rewritten somehow.
379 ;; SunOS and OSF/1 provide almost as useful an extension: if given a null
380 ;; buffer pointer, it will automatically allocate size space. The
381 ;; KLUDGE in this solution arises because we have just read off
382 ;; PATH_MAX+1 from the Solaris header files and stuck it in here as
383 ;; a constant. Going the grovel_headers route doesn't seem to be
384 ;; helpful, either, as Solaris doesn't export PATH_MAX from
385 ;; unistd.h.
387 ;; Signal an error at compile-time, since it's needed for the
388 ;; runtime to start up
389 #!-(or android linux openbsd freebsd netbsd sunos osf1 darwin hpux win32 dragonfly)
390 #.(error "POSIX-GETCWD is not implemented.")
392 #!+(or linux openbsd freebsd netbsd sunos osf1 darwin hpux win32 dragonfly)
393 (newcharstar-string (alien-funcall (extern-alien "getcwd"
394 (function (* char)
395 (* char)
396 size-t))
398 #!+(or linux openbsd freebsd netbsd darwin win32 dragonfly) 0
399 #!+(or sunos osf1 hpux) 1025))
400 #!+android
401 (with-alien ((ptr (array char #.path-max)))
402 ;; Older bionic versions do not have the above feature.
403 (alien-funcall
404 (extern-alien "getcwd"
405 (function c-string (array char #.path-max) int))
406 ptr path-max))
407 (simple-perror "getcwd")))
409 ;;; Return the Unix current directory as a SIMPLE-STRING terminated
410 ;;; by a slash character.
411 (defun posix-getcwd/ ()
412 (concatenate 'string (posix-getcwd) "/"))
414 ;;; Duplicate an existing file descriptor (given as the argument) and
415 ;;; return it. If FD is not a valid file descriptor, NIL and an error
416 ;;; number are returned.
417 #!-win32
418 (defun unix-dup (fd)
419 (declare (type unix-fd fd))
420 (int-syscall ("dup" int) fd))
422 ;;; Terminate the current process with an optional error code. If
423 ;;; successful, the call doesn't return. If unsuccessful, the call
424 ;;; returns NIL and an error number.
425 (deftype exit-code ()
426 `(signed-byte 32))
427 (defun os-exit (code &key abort)
428 #!+sb-doc
429 "Exit the process with CODE. If ABORT is true, exit is performed using _exit(2),
430 avoiding atexit(3) hooks, etc. Otherwise exit(2) is called."
431 (unless (typep code 'exit-code)
432 (setf code (if abort 1 0)))
433 (if abort
434 (void-syscall ("_exit" int) code)
435 (void-syscall ("exit" int) code)))
437 (define-deprecated-function :early "1.0.56.55" unix-exit os-exit (code)
438 (os-exit code))
440 ;;; Return the process id of the current process.
441 (define-alien-routine (#!+win32 "_getpid" #!-win32 "getpid" unix-getpid) int)
443 ;;; Return the real user id associated with the current process.
444 #!-win32
445 (define-alien-routine ("getuid" unix-getuid) int)
447 ;;; Translate a user id into a login name.
448 #!-win32
449 (defun uid-username (uid)
450 (or (newcharstar-string (alien-funcall (extern-alien "uid_username"
451 (function (* char) int))
452 uid))
453 (error "found no match for Unix uid=~S" uid)))
455 ;;; Return the namestring of the home directory, being careful to
456 ;;; include a trailing #\/
457 #!-win32
458 (progn
459 (defun uid-homedir (uid)
460 (or (newcharstar-string (alien-funcall (extern-alien "uid_homedir"
461 (function (* char) int))
462 uid))
463 (error "failed to resolve home directory for Unix uid=~S" uid)))
465 (defun user-homedir (uid)
466 (or (newcharstar-string (alien-funcall (extern-alien "user_homedir"
467 (function (* char) c-string))
468 uid))
469 (error "failed to resolve home directory for Unix uid=~S" uid))))
471 ;;; Invoke readlink(2) on the file name specified by PATH. Return
472 ;;; (VALUES LINKSTRING NIL) on success, or (VALUES NIL ERRNO) on
473 ;;; failure.
474 #!-win32
475 (defun unix-readlink (path)
476 (declare (type unix-pathname path))
477 (with-alien ((ptr (* char)
478 (alien-funcall (extern-alien
479 "wrapped_readlink"
480 (function (* char) c-string))
481 path)))
482 (if (null-alien ptr)
483 (values nil (get-errno))
484 (multiple-value-prog1
485 (values (with-alien ((c-string c-string ptr)) c-string)
486 nil)
487 (free-alien ptr)))))
488 #!+win32
489 ;; Win32 doesn't do links, but something likes to call this anyway.
490 ;; Something in this file, no less. But it only takes one result, so...
491 (defun unix-readlink (path)
492 (declare (ignore path))
493 nil)
495 (defun unix-realpath (path)
496 (declare (type unix-pathname path))
497 (with-alien ((ptr (* char)
498 (alien-funcall (extern-alien
499 "sb_realpath"
500 (function (* char) c-string))
501 path)))
502 (if (null-alien ptr)
503 (values nil (get-errno))
504 (multiple-value-prog1
505 (values (with-alien ((c-string c-string ptr)) c-string)
506 nil)
507 (free-alien ptr)))))
509 ;;; UNIX-UNLINK accepts a name and deletes the directory entry for that
510 ;;; name and the file if this is the last link.
511 (defun unix-unlink (name)
512 (declare (type unix-pathname name))
513 (void-syscall ("[_]unlink" c-string) name))
515 ;;; Return the name of the host machine as a string.
516 #!-win32
517 (defun unix-gethostname ()
518 (with-alien ((buf (array char 256)))
519 (syscall ("gethostname" (* char) int)
520 (cast buf c-string)
521 (cast buf (* char)) 256)))
523 #!-win32
524 (defun unix-setsid ()
525 (int-syscall ("setsid")))
527 ;;;; sys/ioctl.h
529 ;;; UNIX-IOCTL performs a variety of operations on open i/o
530 ;;; descriptors. See the UNIX Programmer's Manual for more
531 ;;; information.
532 #!-win32
533 (defun unix-ioctl (fd cmd arg)
534 (declare (type unix-fd fd)
535 (type (signed-byte 32) cmd))
536 (void-syscall ("ioctl" int int (* char)) fd cmd arg))
538 ;;;; sys/resource.h
540 ;;; FIXME: All we seem to need is the RUSAGE_SELF version of this.
542 ;;; This is like getrusage(2), except it returns only the system and
543 ;;; user time, and returns the seconds and microseconds as separate
544 ;;; values.
545 #!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline unix-fast-getrusage))
546 #!-win32
547 (defun unix-fast-getrusage (who)
548 (declare (values (member t)
549 unsigned-byte fixnum
550 unsigned-byte fixnum))
551 (with-alien ((usage (struct rusage)))
552 (syscall* ("sb_getrusage" int (* (struct rusage)))
553 (values t
554 (slot (slot usage 'ru-utime) 'tv-sec)
555 (slot (slot usage 'ru-utime) 'tv-usec)
556 (slot (slot usage 'ru-stime) 'tv-sec)
557 (slot (slot usage 'ru-stime) 'tv-usec))
558 who (addr usage))))
560 ;;; Return information about the resource usage of the process
561 ;;; specified by WHO. WHO can be either the current process
562 ;;; (rusage_self) or all of the terminated child processes
563 ;;; (rusage_children). NIL and an error number is returned if the call
564 ;;; fails.
565 #!-win32
566 (defun unix-getrusage (who)
567 (with-alien ((usage (struct rusage)))
568 (syscall ("sb_getrusage" int (* (struct rusage)))
569 (values t
570 (+ (* (slot (slot usage 'ru-utime) 'tv-sec) 1000000)
571 (slot (slot usage 'ru-utime) 'tv-usec))
572 (+ (* (slot (slot usage 'ru-stime) 'tv-sec) 1000000)
573 (slot (slot usage 'ru-stime) 'tv-usec))
574 (slot usage 'ru-maxrss)
575 (slot usage 'ru-ixrss)
576 (slot usage 'ru-idrss)
577 (slot usage 'ru-isrss)
578 (slot usage 'ru-minflt)
579 (slot usage 'ru-majflt)
580 (slot usage 'ru-nswap)
581 (slot usage 'ru-inblock)
582 (slot usage 'ru-oublock)
583 (slot usage 'ru-msgsnd)
584 (slot usage 'ru-msgrcv)
585 (slot usage 'ru-nsignals)
586 (slot usage 'ru-nvcsw)
587 (slot usage 'ru-nivcsw))
588 who (addr usage))))
590 (defvar *on-dangerous-wait* :warn)
592 ;;; Calling select in a bad place can hang in a nasty manner, so it's better
593 ;;; to have some way to detect these.
594 (defun note-dangerous-wait (type)
595 (let ((action *on-dangerous-wait*)
596 (*on-dangerous-wait* nil))
597 (case action
598 (:warn
599 (warn "Starting a ~A without a timeout while interrupts are ~
600 disabled."
601 type))
602 (:error
603 (error "Starting a ~A without a timeout while interrupts are ~
604 disabled."
605 type))
606 (:backtrace
607 (format *debug-io*
608 "~&=== Starting a ~A without a timeout while interrupts are disabled. ===~%"
609 type)
610 (sb!debug:print-backtrace)))
611 nil))
613 ;;;; poll.h
614 #!+os-provides-poll
615 (progn
616 (define-alien-type nil
617 (struct pollfd
618 (fd int)
619 (events short) ; requested events
620 (revents short))) ; returned events
622 (defun unix-poll (pollfds nfds to-msec)
623 (declare (fixnum nfds to-msec))
624 (when (and (minusp to-msec) (not *interrupts-enabled*))
625 (note-dangerous-wait "poll(2)"))
626 ;; FAST-SELECT doesn't use WITH-RESTARTED-SYSCALL so this doesn't either
627 (int-syscall ("poll" (* (struct pollfd)) int int)
628 (alien-sap pollfds) nfds to-msec))
630 ;; "simple" poll operates on a single descriptor only
631 (defun unix-simple-poll (fd direction to-msec)
632 (declare (fixnum fd to-msec))
633 (when (and (minusp to-msec) (not *interrupts-enabled*))
634 (note-dangerous-wait "poll(2)"))
635 (let ((events (ecase direction
636 (:input (logior pollin pollpri))
637 (:output pollout))))
638 (with-alien ((fds (struct pollfd)))
639 (with-restarted-syscall (count errno)
640 (progn
641 (setf (slot fds 'fd) fd
642 (slot fds 'events) events
643 (slot fds 'revents) 0)
644 (int-syscall ("poll" (* (struct pollfd)) int int)
645 (addr fds) 1 to-msec))
646 (if (zerop errno)
647 (let ((revents (slot fds 'revents)))
648 (or (and (eql 1 count) (logtest events revents))
649 (logtest pollhup revents)))
650 (error "Syscall poll(2) failed: ~A" (strerror))))))))
652 ;;;; sys/select.h
654 (defmacro with-fd-setsize ((n) &body body)
655 `(let ((,n (if (< 0 ,n fd-setsize)
657 (error "Cannot select(2) on ~D: above FD_SETSIZE limit."
658 (1- ,n)))))
659 (declare (type (integer 0 #.fd-setsize) ,n))
660 ,@body))
662 ;;;; FIXME: Why have both UNIX-SELECT and UNIX-FAST-SELECT?
664 ;;; Perform the UNIX select(2) system call.
665 (declaim (inline unix-fast-select))
666 (defun unix-fast-select (num-descriptors
667 read-fds write-fds exception-fds
668 timeout-secs timeout-usecs)
669 (declare (type integer num-descriptors)
670 (type (or (alien (* (struct fd-set))) null)
671 read-fds write-fds exception-fds)
672 (type (or null (unsigned-byte 31)) timeout-secs timeout-usecs))
673 (with-fd-setsize (num-descriptors)
674 (flet ((select (tv-sap)
675 (int-syscall ("sb_select" int (* (struct fd-set)) (* (struct fd-set))
676 (* (struct fd-set)) (* (struct timeval)))
677 num-descriptors read-fds write-fds exception-fds
678 tv-sap)))
679 (cond ((or timeout-secs timeout-usecs)
680 (with-alien ((tv (struct timeval)))
681 (setf (slot tv 'tv-sec) (or timeout-secs 0))
682 (setf (slot tv 'tv-usec) (or timeout-usecs 0))
683 (select (alien-sap (addr tv)))))
685 (unless *interrupts-enabled*
686 (note-dangerous-wait "select(2)"))
687 (select (int-sap 0)))))))
689 ;;; UNIX-SELECT accepts sets of file descriptors and waits for an event
690 ;;; to happen on one of them or to time out.
691 (declaim (inline num-to-fd-set fd-set-to-num))
692 (defun num-to-fd-set (fdset num)
693 (typecase num
694 (fixnum
695 (setf (deref (slot fdset 'fds-bits) 0) num)
696 (loop for index from 1 below (/ fd-setsize
697 sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)
698 do (setf (deref (slot fdset 'fds-bits) index) 0)))
700 (loop for index from 0 below (/ fd-setsize
701 sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)
702 do (setf (deref (slot fdset 'fds-bits) index)
703 (ldb (byte sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits
704 (* index sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits))
705 num))))))
707 (defun fd-set-to-num (nfds fdset)
708 (if (<= nfds sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)
709 (deref (slot fdset 'fds-bits) 0)
710 (loop for index below (/ fd-setsize
711 sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)
712 sum (ash (deref (slot fdset 'fds-bits) index)
713 (* index sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)))))
715 ;;; Examine the sets of descriptors passed as arguments to see whether
716 ;;; they are ready for reading and writing. See the UNIX Programmer's
717 ;;; Manual for more information.
718 (defun unix-select (nfds rdfds wrfds xpfds to-secs &optional (to-usecs 0))
719 (declare (type integer nfds)
720 (type unsigned-byte rdfds wrfds xpfds)
721 (type (or (unsigned-byte 31) null) to-secs)
722 (type (unsigned-byte 31) to-usecs)
723 (optimize (speed 3) (safety 0)))
724 (with-fd-setsize (nfds)
725 (with-alien ((tv (struct timeval))
726 (rdf (struct fd-set))
727 (wrf (struct fd-set))
728 (xpf (struct fd-set)))
729 (cond (to-secs
730 (setf (slot tv 'tv-sec) to-secs
731 (slot tv 'tv-usec) to-usecs))
732 ((not *interrupts-enabled*)
733 (note-dangerous-wait "select(2)")))
734 (num-to-fd-set rdf rdfds)
735 (num-to-fd-set wrf wrfds)
736 (num-to-fd-set xpf xpfds)
737 (macrolet ((frob (lispvar alienvar)
738 `(if (zerop ,lispvar)
739 (int-sap 0)
740 (alien-sap (addr ,alienvar)))))
741 (syscall ("sb_select" int (* (struct fd-set)) (* (struct fd-set))
742 (* (struct fd-set)) (* (struct timeval)))
743 (values result
744 (fd-set-to-num nfds rdf)
745 (fd-set-to-num nfds wrf)
746 (fd-set-to-num nfds xpf))
747 nfds (frob rdfds rdf) (frob wrfds wrf) (frob xpfds xpf)
748 (if to-secs (alien-sap (addr tv)) (int-sap 0)))))))
750 ;;; Lisp-side implmentations of FD_FOO macros.
751 (declaim (inline fd-set fd-clr fd-isset fd-zero))
752 (defun fd-set (offset fd-set)
753 (multiple-value-bind (word bit) (floor offset
754 sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)
755 (setf (deref (slot fd-set 'fds-bits) word)
756 (logior (truly-the (unsigned-byte #.sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)
757 (ash 1 bit))
758 (deref (slot fd-set 'fds-bits) word)))))
760 (defun fd-clr (offset fd-set)
761 (multiple-value-bind (word bit) (floor offset
762 sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)
763 (setf (deref (slot fd-set 'fds-bits) word)
764 (logand (deref (slot fd-set 'fds-bits) word)
765 (sb!kernel:word-logical-not
766 (truly-the (unsigned-byte #.sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)
767 (ash 1 bit)))))))
769 (defun fd-isset (offset fd-set)
770 (multiple-value-bind (word bit) (floor offset
771 sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)
772 (logbitp bit (deref (slot fd-set 'fds-bits) word))))
774 (defun fd-zero (fd-set)
775 (loop for index below (/ fd-setsize sb!vm:n-machine-word-bits)
776 do (setf (deref (slot fd-set 'fds-bits) index) 0)))
778 #!-os-provides-poll
779 (defun unix-simple-poll (fd direction to-msec)
780 (multiple-value-bind (to-sec to-usec)
781 (if (minusp to-msec)
782 (values nil nil)
783 (multiple-value-bind (to-sec to-msec2) (truncate to-msec 1000)
784 (values to-sec (* to-msec2 1000))))
785 (with-restarted-syscall (count errno)
786 (with-alien ((fds (struct fd-set)))
787 (fd-zero fds)
788 (fd-set fd fds)
789 (multiple-value-bind (read-fds write-fds)
790 (ecase direction
791 (:input
792 (values (addr fds) nil))
793 (:output
794 (values nil (addr fds))))
795 (unix-fast-select (1+ fd)
796 read-fds write-fds nil
797 to-sec to-usec)))
798 (case count
799 ((1) t)
800 ((0) nil)
801 (otherwise
802 (error "Syscall select(2) failed on fd ~D: ~A" fd (strerror)))))))
804 ;;;; sys/stat.h
806 ;;; This is a structure defined in src/runtime/wrap.c, to look
807 ;;; basically like "struct stat" according to stat(2). It may not
808 ;;; actually correspond to the real in-memory stat structure that the
809 ;;; syscall uses, and that's OK. Linux in particular is packed full of
810 ;;; stat macros, and trying to keep Lisp code in correspondence with
811 ;;; it is more pain than it's worth, so we just let our C runtime
812 ;;; synthesize a nice consistent structure for us.
814 ;;; Note that st-dev is a long, not a dev-t. This is because dev-t on
815 ;;; linux 32 bit archs is a 64 bit quantity, but alien doesn't support
816 ;;; those. We don't actually access that field anywhere, though, so
817 ;;; until we can get 64 bit alien support it'll do. Also note that
818 ;;; st_size is a long, not an off-t, because off-t is a 64-bit
819 ;;; quantity on Alpha. And FIXME: "No one would want a file length
820 ;;; longer than 32 bits anyway, right?":-|
822 ;;; The comment about alien and 64-bit quantities has not been kept in
823 ;;; sync with the comment now in wrap.h (formerly wrap.c), but it's
824 ;;; not clear whether either comment is correct. -- RMK 2007-11-14.
825 (define-alien-type nil
826 (struct wrapped_stat
827 (st-dev wst-dev-t)
828 (st-ino wst-ino-t)
829 (st-mode mode-t)
830 (st-nlink wst-nlink-t)
831 (st-uid wst-uid-t)
832 (st-gid wst-gid-t)
833 (st-rdev wst-dev-t)
834 (st-size wst-off-t)
835 (st-blksize wst-blksize-t)
836 (st-blocks wst-blkcnt-t)
837 (st-atime time-t)
838 (st-mtime time-t)
839 (st-ctime time-t)))
841 ;;; shared C-struct-to-multiple-VALUES conversion for the stat(2)
842 ;;; family of Unix system calls
844 ;;; FIXME: I think this should probably not be INLINE. However, when
845 ;;; this was not inline, it seemed to cause memory corruption
846 ;;; problems. My first guess is that it's a bug in the FFI code, where
847 ;;; the WITH-ALIEN expansion doesn't deal well with being wrapped
848 ;;; around a call to a function returning >10 values. But I didn't try
849 ;;; to figure it out, just inlined it as a quick fix. Perhaps someone
850 ;;; who's motivated to debug the FFI code can go over the DISASSEMBLE
851 ;;; output in the not-inlined case and see whether there's a problem,
852 ;;; and maybe even find a fix..
853 (declaim (inline %extract-stat-results))
854 (defun %extract-stat-results (wrapped-stat)
855 (declare (type (alien (* (struct wrapped_stat))) wrapped-stat))
856 (values t
857 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-dev)
858 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-ino)
859 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-mode)
860 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-nlink)
861 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-uid)
862 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-gid)
863 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-rdev)
864 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-size)
865 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-atime)
866 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-mtime)
867 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-ctime)
868 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-blksize)
869 (slot wrapped-stat 'st-blocks)))
871 ;;; Unix system calls in the stat(2) family are handled by calls to
872 ;;; C-level wrapper functions which copy all the raw "struct stat"
873 ;;; slots into the system-independent wrapped_stat format.
874 ;;; stat(2) <-> stat_wrapper()
875 ;;; fstat(2) <-> fstat_wrapper()
876 ;;; lstat(2) <-> lstat_wrapper()
877 (defun unix-stat (name)
878 (declare (type unix-pathname name))
879 (with-alien ((buf (struct wrapped_stat)))
880 (syscall ("stat_wrapper" c-string (* (struct wrapped_stat)))
881 (%extract-stat-results (addr buf))
882 name (addr buf))))
883 (defun unix-lstat (name)
884 (declare (type unix-pathname name))
885 (with-alien ((buf (struct wrapped_stat)))
886 (syscall ("lstat_wrapper" c-string (* (struct wrapped_stat)))
887 (%extract-stat-results (addr buf))
888 name (addr buf))))
889 (defun unix-fstat (fd)
890 #!-win32
891 (declare (type unix-fd fd))
892 (#!-win32 funcall #!+win32 sb!win32::call-with-crt-fd
893 (lambda (fd)
894 (with-alien ((buf (struct wrapped_stat)))
895 (syscall ("fstat_wrapper" int (* (struct wrapped_stat)))
896 (%extract-stat-results (addr buf))
897 fd (addr buf))))
898 fd))
900 #!-win32
901 (defun fd-type (fd)
902 (declare (type unix-fd fd))
903 (let ((fmt (logand
904 s-ifmt
905 (or (with-alien ((buf (struct wrapped_stat)))
906 (syscall ("fstat_wrapper" int (* (struct wrapped_stat)))
907 (slot buf 'st-mode)
908 fd (addr buf)))
909 0))))
910 (cond ((logtest s-ififo fmt)
911 :fifo)
912 ((logtest s-ifchr fmt)
913 :character)
914 ((logtest s-ifdir fmt)
915 :directory)
916 ((logtest s-ifblk fmt)
917 :block)
918 ((logtest s-ifreg fmt)
919 :regular)
920 ((logtest s-ifsock fmt)
921 :socket)
923 :unknown))))
925 ;;;; time.h
927 ;; used by other time functions
928 (define-alien-type nil
929 (struct tm
930 (tm-sec int) ; Seconds. [0-60] (1 leap second)
931 (tm-min int) ; Minutes. [0-59]
932 (tm-hour int) ; Hours. [0-23]
933 (tm-mday int) ; Day. [1-31]
934 (tm-mon int) ; Month. [0-11]
935 (tm-year int) ; Year - 1900.
936 (tm-wday int) ; Day of week. [0-6]
937 (tm-yday int) ; Days in year. [0-365]
938 (tm-isdst int) ; DST. [-1/0/1]
939 (tm-gmtoff long) ; Seconds east of UTC.
940 (tm-zone c-string))) ; Timezone abbreviation.
942 (define-alien-routine get-timezone sb!alien:void
943 (when time-t :in)
944 (seconds-west sb!alien:int :out)
945 (daylight-savings-p sb!alien:boolean :out))
947 #!-win32
948 (defun nanosleep (secs nsecs)
949 (declare (optimize (sb!c:alien-funcall-saves-fp-and-pc 0)))
950 (with-alien ((req (struct timespec))
951 (rem (struct timespec)))
952 (setf (slot req 'tv-sec) secs
953 (slot req 'tv-nsec) nsecs)
954 (loop while (and (eql eintr
955 (nth-value 1
956 (int-syscall ("sb_nanosleep" (* (struct timespec))
957 (* (struct timespec)))
958 (addr req) (addr rem))))
959 ;; KLUDGE: On Darwin, if an interrupt cases nanosleep to
960 ;; take longer than the requested time, the call will
961 ;; return with EINT and (unsigned)-1 seconds in the
962 ;; remainder timespec, which would cause us to enter
963 ;; nanosleep again for ~136 years. So, we check that the
964 ;; remainder time is actually decreasing.
966 ;; It would be neat to do this bit of defensive
967 ;; programming on all platforms, but unfortunately on
968 ;; Linux, REM can be a little higher than REQ if the
969 ;; nanosleep() call is interrupted quickly enough,
970 ;; probably due to the request being rounded up to the
971 ;; nearest HZ. This would cause the sleep to return way
972 ;; too early.
973 #!+darwin
974 (let ((rem-sec (slot rem 'tv-sec))
975 (rem-nsec (slot rem 'tv-nsec)))
976 (when (or (> secs rem-sec)
977 (and (= secs rem-sec) (>= nsecs rem-nsec)))
978 ;; Update for next round.
979 (setf secs rem-sec
980 nsecs rem-nsec)
981 t)))
982 do (setf (slot req 'tv-sec) (slot rem 'tv-sec)
983 (slot req 'tv-nsec) (slot rem 'tv-nsec)))))
985 (defun unix-get-seconds-west (secs)
986 (multiple-value-bind (ignore seconds dst) (get-timezone secs)
987 (declare (ignore ignore) (ignore dst))
988 (values seconds)))
990 ;;;; sys/time.h
992 ;;; Structure crudely representing a timezone. KLUDGE: This is
993 ;;; obsolete and should never be used.
994 (define-alien-type nil
995 (struct timezone
996 (tz-minuteswest int) ; minutes west of Greenwich
997 (tz-dsttime int))) ; type of dst correction
1000 ;; Type of the second argument to `getitimer' and
1001 ;; the second and third arguments `setitimer'.
1002 (define-alien-type nil
1003 (struct itimerval
1004 (it-interval (struct timeval)) ; timer interval
1005 (it-value (struct timeval)))) ; current value
1007 (defconstant itimer-real 0)
1008 (defconstant itimer-virtual 1)
1009 (defconstant itimer-prof 2)
1011 #!-win32
1012 (defun unix-getitimer (which)
1013 #!+sb-doc
1014 "UNIX-GETITIMER returns the INTERVAL and VALUE slots of one of
1015 three system timers (:real :virtual or :profile). On success,
1016 unix-getitimer returns 5 values,
1017 T, it-interval-secs, it-interval-usec, it-value-secs, it-value-usec."
1018 (declare (type (member :real :virtual :profile) which)
1019 (values t
1020 unsigned-byte (mod 1000000)
1021 unsigned-byte (mod 1000000)))
1022 (let ((which (ecase which
1023 (:real itimer-real)
1024 (:virtual itimer-virtual)
1025 (:profile itimer-prof))))
1026 (with-alien ((itv (struct itimerval)))
1027 (syscall* ("sb_getitimer" int (* (struct itimerval)))
1028 (values t
1029 (slot (slot itv 'it-interval) 'tv-sec)
1030 (slot (slot itv 'it-interval) 'tv-usec)
1031 (slot (slot itv 'it-value) 'tv-sec)
1032 (slot (slot itv 'it-value) 'tv-usec))
1033 which (alien-sap (addr itv))))))
1035 #!-win32
1036 (defun unix-setitimer (which int-secs int-usec val-secs val-usec)
1037 #!+sb-doc
1038 "UNIX-SETITIMER sets the INTERVAL and VALUE slots of one of
1039 three system timers (:real :virtual or :profile). A SIGALRM signal
1040 will be delivered VALUE <seconds+microseconds> from now. INTERVAL,
1041 when non-zero, is <seconds+microseconds> to be loaded each time
1042 the timer expires. Setting INTERVAL and VALUE to zero disables
1043 the timer. See the Unix man page for more details. On success,
1044 unix-setitimer returns the old contents of the INTERVAL and VALUE
1045 slots as in unix-getitimer."
1046 (declare (type (member :real :virtual :profile) which)
1047 (type unsigned-byte int-secs val-secs)
1048 (type (integer 0 (1000000)) int-usec val-usec)
1049 (values t
1050 unsigned-byte (mod 1000000)
1051 unsigned-byte (mod 1000000)))
1052 (let ((which (ecase which
1053 (:real itimer-real)
1054 (:virtual itimer-virtual)
1055 (:profile itimer-prof))))
1056 (with-alien ((itvn (struct itimerval))
1057 (itvo (struct itimerval)))
1058 (setf (slot (slot itvn 'it-interval) 'tv-sec ) int-secs
1059 (slot (slot itvn 'it-interval) 'tv-usec) int-usec
1060 (slot (slot itvn 'it-value ) 'tv-sec ) val-secs
1061 (slot (slot itvn 'it-value ) 'tv-usec) val-usec)
1062 (syscall* ("sb_setitimer" int (* (struct timeval))(* (struct timeval)))
1063 (values t
1064 (slot (slot itvo 'it-interval) 'tv-sec)
1065 (slot (slot itvo 'it-interval) 'tv-usec)
1066 (slot (slot itvo 'it-value) 'tv-sec)
1067 (slot (slot itvo 'it-value) 'tv-usec))
1068 which (alien-sap (addr itvn))(alien-sap (addr itvo))))))
1071 ;;; FIXME: Many Unix error code definitions were deleted from the old
1072 ;;; CMU CL source code here, but not in the exports of SB-UNIX. I
1073 ;;; (WHN) hope that someday I'll figure out an automatic way to detect
1074 ;;; unused symbols in package exports, but if I don't, there are
1075 ;;; enough of them all in one place here that they should probably be
1076 ;;; removed by hand.
1078 (defconstant micro-seconds-per-internal-time-unit
1079 (/ 1000000 sb!xc:internal-time-units-per-second))
1081 ;;; UNIX specific code, that has been cleanly separated from the
1082 ;;; Windows build.
1083 #!-win32
1084 (progn
1086 #!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline get-time-of-day))
1087 (defun get-time-of-day ()
1088 #!+sb-doc
1089 "Return the number of seconds and microseconds since the beginning of
1090 the UNIX epoch (January 1st 1970.)"
1091 #!+(or darwin netbsd)
1092 (with-alien ((tv (struct timeval)))
1093 ;; CLH: FIXME! This seems to be a MacOS bug, but on x86-64/darwin,
1094 ;; gettimeofday occasionally fails. passing in a null pointer for the
1095 ;; timezone struct seems to work around the problem. NS notes: Darwin
1096 ;; manpage says the timezone is not used anymore in their implementation
1097 ;; at all.
1098 (syscall* ("sb_gettimeofday" (* (struct timeval))
1099 (* (struct timezone)))
1100 (values (slot tv 'tv-sec)
1101 (slot tv 'tv-usec))
1102 (addr tv)
1103 nil))
1104 #!-(or darwin netbsd)
1105 (with-alien ((tv (struct timeval))
1106 (tz (struct timezone)))
1107 (syscall* ("sb_gettimeofday" (* (struct timeval))
1108 (* (struct timezone)))
1109 (values (slot tv 'tv-sec)
1110 (slot tv 'tv-usec))
1111 (addr tv)
1112 (addr tz))))
1114 (declaim (inline system-internal-run-time
1115 system-real-time-values))
1117 (defun system-real-time-values ()
1118 (multiple-value-bind (sec usec) (get-time-of-day)
1119 (declare (type unsigned-byte sec) (type (unsigned-byte 31) usec))
1120 (values sec (truncate usec micro-seconds-per-internal-time-unit))))
1122 ;; There are two optimizations here that actually matter (on 32-bit
1123 ;; systems): substract the epoch from seconds and milliseconds
1124 ;; separately, as those should remain fixnums for the first 17 years
1125 ;; or so of runtime. Also, avoid doing consing a new bignum if the
1126 ;; result would be = to the last result given.
1128 ;; Note: the next trick would be to spin a separate thread to update
1129 ;; a global value once per internal tick, so each individual call to
1130 ;; get-internal-real-time would be just a memory read... but that is
1131 ;; probably best left for user-level code. ;)
1133 ;; Thanks to James Anderson for the optimization hint.
1135 ;; Yes, it is possible to a computation to be GET-INTERNAL-REAL-TIME
1136 ;; bound.
1138 ;; --NS 2007-04-05
1139 (let ((e-sec 0)
1140 (e-msec 0)
1141 (c-sec 0)
1142 (c-msec 0)
1143 (now 0))
1144 (declare (type sb!kernel:internal-seconds e-sec c-sec)
1145 (type sb!kernel:internal-seconds e-msec c-msec)
1146 (type sb!kernel:internal-time now))
1147 (defun reinit-internal-real-time ()
1148 (setf (values e-sec e-msec) (system-real-time-values)
1149 c-sec 0
1150 c-msec 0))
1151 ;; If two threads call this at the same time, we're still safe, I
1152 ;; believe, as long as NOW is updated before either of C-MSEC or
1153 ;; C-SEC. Same applies to interrupts. --NS
1155 ;; I believe this is almost correct with x86/x86-64 cache
1156 ;; coherency, but if the new value of C-SEC, C-MSEC can become
1157 ;; visible to another CPU without NOW doing the same then it's
1158 ;; unsafe. It's `almost' correct on x86 because writes by other
1159 ;; processors may become visible in any order provided transitity
1160 ;; holds. With at least three cpus, C-MSEC and C-SEC may be from
1161 ;; different threads and an incorrect value may be returned.
1162 ;; Considering that this failure is not detectable by the caller -
1163 ;; it looks like time passes a bit slowly - and that it should be
1164 ;; an extremely rare occurance I'm inclinded to leave it as it is.
1165 ;; --MG
1166 (defun get-internal-real-time ()
1167 (multiple-value-bind (sec msec) (system-real-time-values)
1168 (unless (and (= msec c-msec) (= sec c-sec))
1169 (setf now (+ (* (- sec e-sec)
1170 sb!xc:internal-time-units-per-second)
1171 (- msec e-msec))
1172 c-msec msec
1173 c-sec sec))
1174 now)))
1176 (defun system-internal-run-time ()
1177 (multiple-value-bind (ignore utime-sec utime-usec stime-sec stime-usec)
1178 (unix-fast-getrusage rusage_self)
1179 (declare (ignore ignore)
1180 (type unsigned-byte utime-sec stime-sec)
1181 ;; (Classic CMU CL had these (MOD 1000000) instead, but
1182 ;; at least in Linux 2.2.12, the type doesn't seem to
1183 ;; be documented anywhere and the observed behavior is
1184 ;; to sometimes return 1000000 exactly.)
1185 (type fixnum utime-usec stime-usec))
1186 (let ((result (+ (* (+ utime-sec stime-sec)
1187 sb!xc:internal-time-units-per-second)
1188 (floor (+ utime-usec
1189 stime-usec
1190 (floor micro-seconds-per-internal-time-unit 2))
1191 micro-seconds-per-internal-time-unit))))
1192 result))))
1194 ;;; FIXME, KLUDGE: GET-TIME-OF-DAY used to be UNIX-GETTIMEOFDAY, and had a
1195 ;;; primary return value indicating sucess, and also returned timezone
1196 ;;; information -- though the timezone data was not there on Darwin.
1197 ;;; Now we have GET-TIME-OF-DAY, but it turns out that despite SB-UNIX being
1198 ;;; an implementation package UNIX-GETTIMEOFDAY has users in the wild.
1199 ;;; So we're stuck with it for a while -- maybe delete it towards the end
1200 ;;; of 2009.
1201 (defun unix-gettimeofday ()
1202 (multiple-value-bind (sec usec) (get-time-of-day)
1203 (values t sec usec nil nil)))
1205 ;;;; opendir, readdir, closedir, and dirent-name
1207 (declaim (inline unix-opendir))
1208 (defun unix-opendir (namestring &optional (errorp t))
1209 (let ((dir (alien-funcall
1210 (extern-alien "sb_opendir"
1211 (function system-area-pointer c-string))
1212 namestring)))
1213 (if (zerop (sap-int dir))
1214 (when errorp (simple-perror
1215 (format nil "Error opening directory ~S"
1216 namestring)))
1217 dir)))
1219 (declaim (inline unix-readdir))
1220 (defun unix-readdir (dir &optional (errorp t) namestring)
1221 (let ((ent (alien-funcall
1222 (extern-alien "sb_readdir"
1223 (function system-area-pointer system-area-pointer))
1224 dir))
1225 errno)
1226 (if (zerop (sap-int ent))
1227 (when (and errorp
1228 (not (zerop (setf errno (get-errno)))))
1229 (simple-perror
1230 (format nil "Error reading directory entry~@[ from ~S~]"
1231 namestring)
1232 :errno errno))
1233 ent)))
1235 (declaim (inline unix-closedir))
1236 (defun unix-closedir (dir &optional (errorp t) namestring)
1237 (let ((r (alien-funcall
1238 (extern-alien "sb_closedir" (function int system-area-pointer))
1239 dir)))
1240 (if (minusp r)
1241 (when errorp (simple-perror
1242 (format nil "Error closing directory~@[ ~S~]"
1243 namestring)))
1244 r)))
1246 (declaim (inline unix-dirent-name))
1247 (defun unix-dirent-name (ent)
1248 (alien-funcall
1249 (extern-alien "sb_dirent_name" (function c-string system-area-pointer))
1250 ent))
1252 ;;;; A magic constant for wait3().
1253 ;;;;
1254 ;;;; FIXME: This used to be defined in run-program.lisp as
1255 ;;;; (defconstant wait-wstopped #-svr4 #o177 #+svr4 wait-wuntraced)
1256 ;;;; According to some of the man pages, the #o177 is part of the API
1257 ;;;; for wait3(); that said, under SunOS there is a WSTOPPED thing in
1258 ;;;; the headers that may or may not be the same thing. To be
1259 ;;;; investigated. -- CSR, 2002-03-25
1260 (defconstant wstopped #o177)