As a follow up to Ibba98f5d88be1c306d14e9b9366302ecbef6d534, where we
added a work around to convert the CLOCK_REALTIME timeouts to
CLOCK_MONOTONIC for pthread and semaphore timed wait functions, we're
introducing a set of _monotonic_np versions of each of these functions
that wait on CLOCK_MONOTONIC directly.
The primary motivation here is that while the above work around helps
for 3rd party code, it creates a dilemma when implementing new code
that would use these functions: either one implements code with these
functions knowing there is a race condition possible or one avoids
these functions and reinvent their own waiting/signaling mechanisms.
Neither are satisfactory, so we create a third option to use these
Android specific _monotonic_np functions that completely remove the
race condition while keeping the rest of the interface.
Specifically this adds the below functions:
pthread_mutex_timedlock_monotonic_np()
pthread_cond_timedwait_monotonic_np()
pthread_rwlock_timedrdlock_monotonic_np()
pthread_rwlock_timedwrlock_monotonic_np()
sem_timedwait_monotonic_np()
Note that pthread_cond_timedwait_monotonic_np() previously existed and
was removed since it's possible to initialize a condition variable to
use CLOCK_MONOTONIC. It is added back for a mix of reasons,
1) Symmetry with the rest of the functions we're adding
2) libc++ cannot easily take advantage of the new initializer, but
will be able to use this function in order to wait on
std::steady_clock
3) Frankly, it's a better API to specify the clock in the waiter function
than to specify the clock when the condition variable is
initialized.
Bug: 73951740
Test: new unit tests
Change-Id: I23aa5c204e36a194237d41e064c5c8ccaa4204e3
This reverts commit 9af9120091 (a revert
of 079bff4fa5), now the versioner bug is
fixed.
Bug: http://b/64613623 # header bug
Bug: http://b/64802958 # versioner bug
Change-Id: I1cb9d7832d4b3aecdc57a9285e2291443e59d02d
This reverts commit 079bff4fa5.
Broke builds with SANITIZE_HOST=address with an asan failure in versioner.
Change-Id: I22b113fd5405589d1a25e5e137c450aaba1ade5f
Reserve 12 more bytes in sem_t to give room for future implementation
improvements. This gets us to a 16 bytes sem_t. Glibc uses 32 bytes (16
actual use + 16 reserved), while OpenBSD has 16 bytes (out of which 4
are for padding).
Bug: 14587103
Bug: 12875898
Change-Id: Id835cc5abf874c651e6b5ad5b8f29c9d6ab08d5a