/*
Copyright (c) 2009-2011 250bpm s.r.o.
Copyright (c) 2007-2009 iMatix Corporation
Copyright (c) 2011 VMware, Inc.
Copyright (c) 2007-2011 Other contributors as noted in the AUTHORS file
This file is part of 0MQ.
0MQ is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
0MQ is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
along with this program. If not, see .
*/
#include
#include
#include "pipe.hpp"
#include "err.hpp"
int zmq::pipepair (class object_t *parents_ [2], class pipe_t* pipes_ [2],
int hwms_ [2], bool delays_ [2])
{
// Creates two pipe objects. These objects are connected by two ypipes,
// each to pass messages in one direction.
pipe_t::upipe_t *upipe1 = new (std::nothrow) pipe_t::upipe_t ();
alloc_assert (upipe1);
pipe_t::upipe_t *upipe2 = new (std::nothrow) pipe_t::upipe_t ();
alloc_assert (upipe2);
pipes_ [0] = new (std::nothrow) pipe_t (parents_ [0], upipe1, upipe2,
hwms_ [1], hwms_ [0], delays_ [0]);
alloc_assert (pipes_ [0]);
pipes_ [1] = new (std::nothrow) pipe_t (parents_ [1], upipe2, upipe1,
hwms_ [0], hwms_ [1], delays_ [1]);
alloc_assert (pipes_ [1]);
pipes_ [0]->set_peer (pipes_ [1]);
pipes_ [1]->set_peer (pipes_ [0]);
return 0;
}
zmq::pipe_t::pipe_t (object_t *parent_, upipe_t *inpipe_, upipe_t *outpipe_,
int inhwm_, int outhwm_, bool delay_) :
object_t (parent_),
inpipe (inpipe_),
outpipe (outpipe_),
in_active (true),
out_active (true),
hwm (outhwm_),
lwm (compute_lwm (inhwm_)),
msgs_read (0),
msgs_written (0),
peers_msgs_read (0),
peer (NULL),
sink (NULL),
state (active),
delay (delay_),
pipe_id (0)
{
}
zmq::pipe_t::~pipe_t ()
{
}
void zmq::pipe_t::set_peer (pipe_t *peer_)
{
// Peer can be set once only.
zmq_assert (!peer);
peer = peer_;
}
void zmq::pipe_t::set_event_sink (i_pipe_events *sink_)
{
// Sink can be set once only.
zmq_assert (!sink);
sink = sink_;
}
void zmq::pipe_t::set_pipe_id (uint32_t id_)
{
pipe_id = id_;
}
uint32_t zmq::pipe_t::get_pipe_id ()
{
return pipe_id;
}
bool zmq::pipe_t::check_read ()
{
if (unlikely (!in_active || (state != active && state != pending)))
return false;
// Check if there's an item in the pipe.
if (!inpipe->check_read ()) {
in_active = false;
return false;
}
// If the next item in the pipe is message delimiter,
// initiate termination process.
if (inpipe->probe (is_delimiter)) {
msg_t msg;
bool ok = inpipe->read (&msg);
zmq_assert (ok);
delimit ();
return false;
}
return true;
}
bool zmq::pipe_t::read (msg_t *msg_)
{
if (unlikely (!in_active || (state != active && state != pending)))
return false;
if (!inpipe->read (msg_)) {
in_active = false;
return false;
}
// If delimiter was read, start termination process of the pipe.
if (msg_->is_delimiter ()) {
delimit ();
return false;
}
if (!(msg_->flags () & msg_t::more))
msgs_read++;
if (lwm > 0 && msgs_read % lwm == 0)
send_activate_write (peer, msgs_read);
return true;
}
bool zmq::pipe_t::check_write (msg_t *msg_)
{
if (unlikely (!out_active || state != active))
return false;
bool full = hwm > 0 && msgs_written - peers_msgs_read == uint64_t (hwm);
if (unlikely (full)) {
out_active = false;
return false;
}
return true;
}
bool zmq::pipe_t::write (msg_t *msg_)
{
if (unlikely (!check_write (msg_)))
return false;
bool more = msg_->flags () & msg_t::more ? true : false;
outpipe->write (*msg_, more);
if (!more)
msgs_written++;
return true;
}
void zmq::pipe_t::rollback ()
{
// Remove incomplete message from the outbound pipe.
msg_t msg;
if (outpipe) {
while (outpipe->unwrite (&msg)) {
zmq_assert (msg.flags () & msg_t::more);
int rc = msg.close ();
errno_assert (rc == 0);
}
}
}
void zmq::pipe_t::flush ()
{
// If terminate() was already called do nothing.
if (state == terminated && state == double_terminated)
return;
// The peer does not exist anymore at this point.
if (state == terminating)
return;
if (outpipe && !outpipe->flush ())
send_activate_read (peer);
}
void zmq::pipe_t::process_activate_read ()
{
if (!in_active && (state == active || state == pending)) {
in_active = true;
sink->read_activated (this);
}
}
void zmq::pipe_t::process_activate_write (uint64_t msgs_read_)
{
// Remember the peers's message sequence number.
peers_msgs_read = msgs_read_;
if (!out_active && state == active) {
out_active = true;
sink->write_activated (this);
}
}
void zmq::pipe_t::process_hiccup (void *pipe_)
{
// Destroy old outpipe. Note that the read end of the pipe was already
// migrated to this thread.
zmq_assert (outpipe);
outpipe->flush ();
msg_t msg;
while (outpipe->read (&msg)) {
int rc = msg.close ();
errno_assert (rc == 0);
}
delete outpipe;
// Plug in the new outpipe.
zmq_assert (pipe_);
outpipe = (upipe_t*) pipe_;
out_active = true;
// If appropriate, notify the user about the hiccup.
if (state == active)
sink->hiccuped (this);
}
void zmq::pipe_t::process_pipe_term ()
{
// This is the simple case of peer-induced termination. If there are no
// more pending messages to read, or if the pipe was configured to drop
// pending messages, we can move directly to the terminating state.
// Otherwise we'll hang up in pending state till all the pending messages
// are sent.
if (state == active) {
if (!delay) {
state = terminating;
outpipe = NULL;
send_pipe_term_ack (peer);
return;
}
else {
state = pending;
return;
}
}
// Delimiter happened to arrive before the term command. Now we have the
// term command as well, so we can move straight to terminating state.
if (state == delimited) {
state = terminating;
outpipe = NULL;
send_pipe_term_ack (peer);
return;
}
// This is the case where both ends of the pipe are closed in parallel.
// We simply reply to the request by ack and continue waiting for our
// own ack.
if (state == terminated) {
state = double_terminated;
outpipe = NULL;
send_pipe_term_ack (peer);
return;
}
// pipe_term is invalid in other states.
zmq_assert (false);
}
void zmq::pipe_t::process_pipe_term_ack ()
{
// Notify the user that all the references to the pipe should be dropped.
zmq_assert (sink);
sink->terminated (this);
// In terminating and double_terminated states there's nothing to do.
// Simply deallocate the pipe. In terminated state we have to ack the
// peer before deallocating this side of the pipe. All the other states
// are invalid.
if (state == terminating) ;
else if (state == double_terminated);
else if (state == terminated) {
outpipe = NULL;
send_pipe_term_ack (peer);
}
else
zmq_assert (false);
// We'll deallocate the inbound pipe, the peer will deallocate the outbound
// pipe (which is an inbound pipe from its point of view).
// First, delete all the unread messages in the pipe. We have to do it by
// hand because msg_t doesn't have automatic destructor. Then deallocate
// the ypipe itself.
msg_t msg;
while (inpipe->read (&msg)) {
int rc = msg.close ();
errno_assert (rc == 0);
}
delete inpipe;
// Deallocate the pipe object
delete this;
}
void zmq::pipe_t::terminate (bool delay_)
{
// Overload the value specified at pipe creation.
delay = delay_;
// If terminate was already called, we can ignore the duplicit invocation.
if (state == terminated || state == double_terminated)
return;
// If the pipe is in the final phase of async termination, it's going to
// closed anyway. No need to do anything special here.
else if (state == terminating)
return;
// The simple sync termination case. Ask the peer to terminate and wait
// for the ack.
else if (state == active) {
send_pipe_term (peer);
state = terminated;
}
// There are still pending messages available, but the user calls
// 'terminate'. We can act as if all the pending messages were read.
else if (state == pending && !delay) {
outpipe = NULL;
send_pipe_term_ack (peer);
state = terminating;
}
// If there are pending messages still availabe, do nothing.
else if (state == pending && delay) {
}
// We've already got delimiter, but not term command yet. We can ignore
// the delimiter and ack synchronously terminate as if we were in
// active state.
else if (state == delimited) {
send_pipe_term (peer);
state = terminated;
}
// There are no other states.
else
zmq_assert (false);
// Stop outbound flow of messages.
out_active = false;
if (outpipe) {
// Rollback any unfinished outbound messages.
rollback ();
// Push delimiter into the outbound pipe. Note that watermarks are not
// checked thus the delimiter can be written even though the pipe is full.
msg_t msg;
msg.init_delimiter ();
outpipe->write (msg, false);
flush ();
}
}
bool zmq::pipe_t::is_delimiter (msg_t &msg_)
{
return msg_.is_delimiter ();
}
int zmq::pipe_t::compute_lwm (int hwm_)
{
// Compute the low water mark. Following point should be taken
// into consideration:
//
// 1. LWM has to be less than HWM.
// 2. LWM cannot be set to very low value (such as zero) as after filling
// the queue it would start to refill only after all the messages are
// read from it and thus unnecessarily hold the progress back.
// 3. LWM cannot be set to very high value (such as HWM-1) as it would
// result in lock-step filling of the queue - if a single message is
// read from a full queue, writer thread is resumed to write exactly one
// message to the queue and go back to sleep immediately. This would
// result in low performance.
//
// Given the 3. it would be good to keep HWM and LWM as far apart as
// possible to reduce the thread switching overhead to almost zero,
// say HWM-LWM should be max_wm_delta.
//
// That done, we still we have to account for the cases where
// HWM < max_wm_delta thus driving LWM to negative numbers.
// Let's make LWM 1/2 of HWM in such cases.
int result = (hwm_ > max_wm_delta * 2) ?
hwm_ - max_wm_delta : (hwm_ + 1) / 2;
return result;
}
void zmq::pipe_t::delimit ()
{
if (state == active) {
state = delimited;
return;
}
if (state == pending) {
outpipe = NULL;
send_pipe_term_ack (peer);
state = terminating;
return;
}
// Delimiter in any other state is invalid.
zmq_assert (false);
}
void zmq::pipe_t::hiccup ()
{
// If termination is already under way do nothing.
if (state != active)
return;
// We'll drop the pointer to the inpipe. From now on, the peer is
// responsible for deallocating it.
inpipe = NULL;
// Create new inpipe.
inpipe = new (std::nothrow) pipe_t::upipe_t ();
alloc_assert (inpipe);
in_active = true;
// Notify the peer about the hiccup.
send_hiccup (peer, (void*) inpipe);
}