Re: [PATCH 1/2] kthread_create

From: Davide Libenzi
Date: Sat Jan 03 2004 - 14:03:38 EST


On Fri, 2 Jan 2004, Davide Libenzi wrote:

> On Sat, 3 Jan 2004, Rusty Russell wrote:
>
> > In message <Pine.LNX.4.44.0401020856150.2278-100000@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> you write:
> > > Rusty, you still have to use global static data when there is no need.
> >
> > And you're still putting obscure crap in the task struct when there's
> > no need. Honestly, I'd be ashamed to post such a patch.
>
> Ashamed !? Take a look at your original patch and then define shame. You
> had a communication mechanism that whilst being a private 1<->1
> communication among two tasks, relied on a single global message
> strucure, lock and mutex. Honestly I do not like myself to add stuff
> inside a strcture for one-time use. Not because of adding 12 bytes to the
> struct, that are laughable. But because it is used by a small piece of
> code w/out a re-use ability for other things.

Rusty, I took a better look at the patch and I think we can have
per-kthread stuff w/out littering the task_struct and by making the thing
more robust. We keep a global list_head protected by a global spinlock. We
define a structure that contain all the per-kthread stuff we need
(including a task_struct* to the kthread itself). When a kthread starts it
will add itself to the list, and when it will die it will remove itself
from the list. The start/stop functions will lookup the list (or hash,
depending on how much stuff you want to drop in) with the target
task_struct*, and if the lookup fails, it means the task already quit
(another task already did kthread_stop() ??, natural death ????). This is
too bad, but at least there won't be deadlock (or crash) beacause of this.
This because currently we keep the kthread task_struct* lingering around
w/out a method that willl inform us if the task goes away for some reason
(so that we can avoid signaling it and waiting for some interaction). The
list/hash will be able to tell us this. What do you think?




- Davide



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