src/win32/thread.c


Log

Author Commit Date CI Message
Edward Thomson c6ebdb29 2020-11-22T09:43:06 win32: use GIT_ASSERT
Edward Thomson e316b0d3 2020-05-15T11:47:09 runtime: move init/shutdown into the "runtime" Provide a mechanism for system components to register for initialization and shutdown of the libgit2 runtime.
Edward Thomson 8970acb7 2020-05-15T10:29:41 thread: don't use the global tlsdata for thread exit We want to store a pointer to emulate `pthread_exit` on Windows. Do this within the threading infrastructure so that it could potentially be re-used outside of the context of libgit2 itself.
Edward Thomson 4853d94c 2020-05-14T10:36:35 global: separate global state from thread-local state Our "global initialization" has accumulated some debris over the years. It was previously responsible for both running the various global initializers (that set up various subsystems) _and_ setting up the "global state", which is actually the thread-local state for things like error reporting. Separate the thread local state out into "threadstate". Use the normal subsystem initialization functions that we already have to set it up. This makes both the global initialization system and the threadstate system simpler to reason about.
Edward Thomson fe12423a 2020-05-12T13:08:22 init: move thread init to git_global_threads_init Instead of treating win32 thread initialization specially in the win32 git_libgit2_init function, add a git_global_threads_init function.
Patrick Steinhardt 5c6180b5 2019-11-29T11:06:11 global: convert to fiber-local storage to fix exit races On Windows platforms, we automatically clean up the thread-local storage upon detaching a thread via `DllMain()`. The thing is that this happens for every thread of applications that link against the libgit2 DLL, even those that don't have anything to do with libgit2 itself. As a result, we cannot assume that these unsuspecting threads make use of our `git_libgit2_init()` and `git_libgit2_shutdow()` reference counting, which may lead to racy situations: Thread 1 Thread 2 git_libgit2_shutdown() DllMain(DETACH_THREAD) git__free_tls_data() git_atomic_dec() == 0 git__free_tls_data() TlsFree(_tls_index) TlsGetValue(_tls_index) Due to the second thread never having executed `git_libgit2_init()`, the first thread will clean up TLS data and as a result also free the `_tls_index` variable. When detaching the second thread, we unconditionally access the now-free'd `_tls_index` variable, which is obviously not going to work out well. Fix the issue by converting the code to use fiber-local storage instead of thread-local storage. While FLS will behave the exact same as TLS if no fibers are in use, it does allow us to specify a destructor similar to the one that is accepted by pthread_key_create(3P). Like this, we do not have to manually free indices anymore, but will let the FLS handle calling the destructor. This allows us to get rid of `DllMain()` completely, as we only used it to keep track of when threads were exiting and results in an overall simplification of TLS cleanup.
Edward Thomson 759ec7d4 2019-06-15T22:01:00 win32: cast GetProcAddress to void * before casting GetProcAddress is prototyped to return a `FARPROC`, which is meant to be a generic function pointer. It's literally `int (FAR WINAPI * FARPROC)()` which gcc complains if you attempt to cast to a `void (*)(GIT_SRWLOCK *)`. Cast to a `void *` before casting to avoid warnings about the arguments.
Patrick Steinhardt 0c7f49dd 2017-06-30T13:39:01 Make sure to always include "common.h" first Next to including several files, our "common.h" header also declares various macros which are then used throughout the project. As such, we have to make sure to always include this file first in all implementation files. Otherwise, we might encounter problems or even silent behavioural differences due to macros or defines not being defined as they should be. So in fact, our header and implementation files should make sure to always include "common.h" first. This commit does so by establishing a common include pattern. Header files inside of "src" will now always include "common.h" as its first other file, separated by a newline from all the other includes to make it stand out as special. There are two cases for the implementation files. If they do have a matching header file, they will always include this one first, leading to "common.h" being transitively included as first file. If they do not have a matching header file, they instead include "common.h" as first file themselves. This fixes the outlined problems and will become our standard practice for header and source files inside of the "src/" from now on.
Edward Thomson 82f15896 2016-11-18T07:19:22 threads: introduce `git_thread_exit` Introduce `git_thread_exit`, which will allow threads to terminate at an arbitrary time, returning a `void *`. On Windows, this means that we need to store the current `git_thread` in TLS, so that we can set its `return` value when terminating. We cannot simply use `ExitThread`, since Win32 returns `DWORD`s from threads; we return `void *`.
Patrick Steinhardt aab266c9 2016-06-20T20:07:33 threads: add platform-independent thread initialization function
Patrick Steinhardt 8aaa9fb6 2016-06-20T18:21:42 win32: rename pthread.{c,h} to thread.{c,h} The old pthread-file did re-implement the pthreads API with exact symbol matching. As the thread-abstraction has now been split up between Unix- and Windows-specific files within the `git_` namespace to avoid symbol-clashes between libgit2 and pthreads, the rewritten wrappers have nothing to do with pthreads anymore. Rename the Windows-specific pthread-files to honor this change.