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This allows you to re-process the rules if the content of the device
has been changed, most useful for block subsystem to cause vol_id to
be run again.
udevd's event_queue_manager loop is pretty sensitive to the
delays of exiting child processes. I found that it helps boot
times if we try to reap children as quickly as possible.
This patch changes event_queue_manager to call sigchilds_waiting
if it finds a signal has been received.
Signed-off-by: Olaf Kirch <okir@suse.de>
In certain cut-down situations such as an installer or inside the
initramfs, we simply don't have any kind of name service. While we
could use rules without OWNER or GROUP, it's better to have the same
rules as a full system and have udevd ignore those parts of the rules.
Adds a --resolve-names=never switch to udevd that has this effect.
udevd uses a rather old-fashioned way of handling signals
while waiting for input through select (ie by using an unnamed
pipe, to which the signal handler writes one byte for every signal
received). This is rather awkward and may potentially even block
if we receive more signals than the kernel's pipe buffer.
This patch replaces all of that with ppoll, which was designed
for this purpose.
It also removes the SA_RESTART flag from all installed signal
handlers, because otherwise the ppoll call would just be restarted
after handling eg a SIGCHLD.
Signed-off-by: Olaf Kirch <okir@suse.de>
This crops up in my threaded udevd profiles from time to time.
It's not consistent - probably due to variations in the number
of concurrent events - but it can hit 4% user time and higher.
The change halves the user time spent in compare_devpath().
Signed-off-by: Alan Jenkins <alan-jenkins@tuffmail.co.uk>
Unfortunately the linux rmdir implementation unhashes the dentry
even when the directory is not removed. This is apparently by
design (for filesystems that don't allow deleting open files).
Results from time(1) and oprofile follow.
Before:
0.35user 0.90system
samples % image name symbol name
608 9.6738 vmlinux shrink_dcache_parent
293 4.6619 vmlinux copy_page_c
271 4.3119 vmlinux copy_page_range
257 4.0891 udevd udev_rules_iter_next
After:
0.31user 0.67system
samples % image name symbol name
361 5.0419 vmlinux copy_page_range
322 4.4972 udevd udev_rules_iter_next
300 4.1899 vmlinux copy_page_c
Signed-off-by: Alan Jenkins <alan-jenkins@tuffmail.co.uk>
"Hello world!" linked against libselinux parses /proc/mounts and
whatever else on startup, even when the lib is not needed at all.
Not funny! Get rid of that thing where it's not absolutely needed.
strerror() is not threadsafe. It uses a buffer to build messages of the form
"Unknown error 387689".
syslog() provides a %m format which is equivalent to strerror(errno).
As a GNU extension, this is also accepted by printf and friends.
At least in the current implementation, it is correctly threadsafe.
Signed-off-by: Alan Jenkins <alan-jenkins@tuffmail.co.uk>
This was needed in the old days, where all the hotplug scripts did
nothing better than sleep for seconds to work around timing issues.
It made sure, that w continued to fork processes, while the machine
was doing nothing than sleeping, but the maximim number of childs
was already reached. This is no longer needed today, we do not run
many of these scripts anymore.