table of contents
| LOCK(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | LOCK(9) | 
NAME¶
lockinit,
    lockdestroy, lockmgr,
    lockmgr_args,
    lockmgr_args_rw,
    lockmgr_disown,
    lockmgr_printinfo,
    lockmgr_recursed,
    lockmgr_rw, lockmgr_waiters,
    lockstatus, lockmgr_assert
    — lockmgr family of functions
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
    <sys/types.h>
  
  #include <sys/lock.h>
  
  #include <sys/lockmgr.h>
void
  
  lockinit(struct
    lock *lkp, int
    prio, const char
    *wmesg, int timo,
    int flags);
void
  
  lockdestroy(struct
    lock *lkp);
int
  
  lockmgr(struct
    lock *lkp, u_int
    flags, struct mtx
    *ilk);
int
  
  lockmgr_args(struct
    lock *lkp, u_int
    flags, struct mtx
    *ilk, const char
    *wmesg, int prio,
    int timo);
int
  
  lockmgr_args_rw(struct
    lock *lkp, u_int
    flags, struct rwlock
    *ilk, const char
    *wmesg, int prio,
    int timo);
void
  
  lockmgr_disown(struct
    lock *lkp);
void
  
  lockmgr_printinfo(const
    struct lock *lkp);
int
  
  lockmgr_recursed(const
    struct lock *lkp);
int
  
  lockmgr_rw(struct
    lock *lkp, u_int
    flags, struct rwlock
    *ilk);
int
  
  lockmgr_waiters(const
    struct lock *lkp);
int
  
  lockstatus(const
    struct lock *lkp);
  
  options INVARIANTS
  
  options INVARIANT_SUPPORT
  
  void
  
  lockmgr_assert(const
    struct lock *lkp, int
    what);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
    lockinit()
    function is used to initialize a lock. It must be called before any
    operation can be performed on a lock. Its arguments are:
- lkp
- A pointer to the lock to initialize.
- prio
- The priority passed to sleep(9).
- wmesg
- The lock message. This is used for both debugging output and sleep(9).
- timo
- The timeout value passed to sleep(9).
- flags
- The flags the lock is to be initialized with:
    - LK_ADAPTIVE
- Enable adaptive spinning for this lock if the kernel is compiled with the ADAPTIVE_LOCKMGRS option.
- LK_CANRECURSE
- Allow recursive exclusive locks.
- LK_NOPROFILE
- Disable lock profiling for this lock.
- LK_NOSHARE
- Allow exclusive locks only.
- LK_NOWITNESS
- Instruct witness(4) to ignore this lock.
- LK_NODUP
- witness(4) should log messages about duplicate locks being acquired.
- LK_QUIET
- Disable ktr(4) logging for this lock.
- LK_TIMELOCK
- Use timo during a sleep; otherwise, 0 is used.
 
The
    lockdestroy()
    function is used to destroy a lock, and while it is called in a number of
    places in the kernel, it currently does nothing.
The
    lockmgr()
    and
    lockmgr_rw()
    functions handle general locking functionality within the kernel, including
    support for shared and exclusive locks, and recursion.
    lockmgr() and lockmgr_rw()
    are also able to upgrade and downgrade locks.
Their arguments are:
- lkp
- A pointer to the lock to manipulate.
- flags
- Flags indicating what action is to be taken.
    - LK_SHARED
- Acquire a shared lock. If an exclusive lock is currently held,
          EDEADLKwill be returned.
- LK_EXCLUSIVE
- Acquire an exclusive lock. If an exclusive lock is already held, and
          LK_CANRECURSEis not set, the system will panic(9).
- LK_DOWNGRADE
- Downgrade exclusive lock to a shared lock. Downgrading a shared lock is not permitted. If an exclusive lock has been recursed, the system will panic(9).
- LK_UPGRADE
- Upgrade a shared lock to an exclusive lock. If this call fails, the
          shared lock is lost, even if the LK_NOWAITflag is specified. During the upgrade, the shared lock could be temporarily dropped. Attempts to upgrade an exclusive lock will cause a panic(9).
- LK_TRYUPGRADE
- Try to upgrade a shared lock to an exclusive lock. The failure to upgrade does not result in the dropping of the shared lock ownership.
- LK_RELEASE
- Release the lock. Releasing a lock that is not held can cause a panic(9).
- LK_DRAIN
- Wait for all activity on the lock to end, then mark it decommissioned.
          This is used before freeing a lock that is part of a piece of memory
          that is about to be freed. (As documented in
          <sys/lockmgr.h>.)
- LK_SLEEPFAIL
- Fail if operation has slept.
- LK_NOWAIT
- Do not allow the call to sleep. This can be used to test the lock.
- LK_NOWITNESS
- Skip the witness(4) checks for this instance.
- LK_CANRECURSE
- Allow recursion on an exclusive lock. For every lock there must be a release.
- LK_INTERLOCK
- Unlock the interlock (which should be locked already).
- LK_NODDLKTREAT
- Normally,
          lockmgr() postpones serving further shared requests for shared-locked lock if there is exclusive waiter, to avoid exclusive lock starvation. But, if the thread requesting the shared lock already owns a shared lockmgr lock, the request is granted even in presence of the parallel exclusive lock request, which is done to avoid deadlocks with recursive shared acquisition.The LK_NODDLKTREATflag can only be used by code which requests shared non-recursive lock. The flag allows exclusive requests to preempt the current shared request even if the current thread owns shared locks. This is safe since shared lock is guaranteed to not recurse, and is used when thread is known to held unrelated shared locks, to not cause unnecessary starvation. An example isvplocking in VFS lookup(9), whendvpis already locked.
 
- ilk
- An interlock mutex for controlling group access to the lock. If
      LK_INTERLOCKis specified,lockmgr() andlockmgr_rw() assume ilk is currently owned and not recursed, and will return it unlocked. See mtx_assert(9).
The
    lockmgr_args()
    and
    lockmgr_args_rw()
    function work like lockmgr() and
    lockmgr_rw() but accepting a
    wmesg, timo and
    prio on a per-instance basis. The specified values
    will override the default ones, but this can still be used passing,
    respectively, LK_WMESG_DEFAULT,
    LK_PRIO_DEFAULT and
    LK_TIMO_DEFAULT.
The
    lockmgr_disown()
    function switches the owner from the current thread to be
    LK_KERNPROC, if the lock is already held.
The
    lockmgr_printinfo()
    function prints debugging information about the lock. It is used primarily
    by VOP_PRINT(9) functions.
The
    lockmgr_recursed()
    function returns true if the lock is recursed, 0 otherwise.
The
    lockmgr_waiters()
    function returns true if the lock has waiters, 0 otherwise.
The
    lockstatus()
    function returns the status of the lock in relation to the current
  thread.
When compiled with options
    INVARIANTS and options INVARIANT_SUPPORT, the
    lockmgr_assert()
    function tests lkp for the assertions specified in
    what, and panics if they are not met. One of the
    following assertions must be specified:
- KA_LOCKED
- Assert that the current thread has either a shared or an exclusive lock on the lkp lock pointed to by the first argument.
- KA_SLOCKED
- Assert that the current thread has a shared lock on the lkp lock pointed to by the first argument.
- KA_XLOCKED
- Assert that the current thread has an exclusive lock on the lkp lock pointed to by the first argument.
- KA_UNLOCKED
- Assert that the current thread has no lock on the lkp lock pointed to by the first argument.
In addition, one of the following optional assertions can be used
    with either an KA_LOCKED,
    KA_SLOCKED, or KA_XLOCKED
    assertion:
- KA_RECURSED
- Assert that the current thread has a recursed lock on lkp.
- KA_NOTRECURSED
- Assert that the current thread does not have a recursed lock on lkp.
RETURN VALUES¶
The lockmgr() and
    lockmgr_rw() functions return 0 on success and
    non-zero on failure.
The lockstatus() function returns:
- LK_EXCLUSIVE
- An exclusive lock is held by the current thread.
- LK_EXCLOTHER
- An exclusive lock is held by someone other than the current thread.
- LK_SHARED
- A shared lock is held.
- 0
- The lock is not held by anyone.
ERRORS¶
lockmgr() and
    lockmgr_rw() fail if:
- [EBUSY]
- LK_FORCEUPGRADEwas requested and another thread had already requested a lock upgrade.
- [EBUSY]
- LK_NOWAITwas set, and a sleep would have been required, or- LK_TRYUPGRADEoperation was not able to upgrade the lock.
- [ENOLCK]
- LK_SLEEPFAILwas set and- lockmgr() or- lockmgr_rw() did sleep.
- [EINTR]
- PCATCHwas set in the lock priority, and a signal was delivered during a sleep. Note the- ERESTARTerror below.
- [ERESTART]
- PCATCHwas set in the lock priority, a signal was delivered during a sleep, and the system call is to be restarted.
- [EWOULDBLOCK]
- a non-zero timeout was given, and the timeout expired.
LOCKS¶
If LK_INTERLOCK is passed in the
    flags argument to
    lockmgr()
    or
    lockmgr_rw(),
    the ilk must be held prior to calling
    lockmgr() or lockmgr_rw(),
    and will be returned unlocked.
Upgrade attempts that fail result in the loss of the lock that is currently held. Also, it is invalid to upgrade an exclusive lock, and a panic(9) will be the result of trying.
SEE ALSO¶
condvar(9), locking(9), mtx_assert(9), mutex(9), panic(9), rwlock(9), sleep(9), sx(9), VOP_PRINT(9)
AUTHORS¶
This manual page was written by Chad David <davidc@acns.ab.ca>.
| November 2, 2014 | Debian |