// Copyright 2018 The gVisor Authors. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. // You may obtain a copy of the License at // // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and // limitations under the License. package kernel import ( "math" "gvisor.dev/gvisor/pkg/abi/linux" ktime "gvisor.dev/gvisor/pkg/sentry/kernel/time" "gvisor.dev/gvisor/pkg/syserror" ) // IntervalTimer represents a POSIX interval timer as described by // timer_create(2). // // +stateify savable type IntervalTimer struct { timer *ktime.Timer // If target is not nil, it receives signo from timer expirations. If group // is true, these signals are thread-group-directed. These fields are // immutable. target *Task signo linux.Signal id linux.TimerID sigval uint64 group bool // If sigpending is true, a signal to target is already queued, and timer // expirations should increment overrunCur instead of sending another // signal. sigpending is protected by target's signal mutex. (If target is // nil, the timer will never send signals, so sigpending will be unused.) sigpending bool // If sigorphan is true, timer's setting has been changed since sigpending // last became true, such that overruns should no longer be counted in the // pending signals si_overrun. sigorphan is protected by target's signal // mutex. sigorphan bool // overrunCur is the number of overruns that have occurred since the last // time a signal was sent. overrunCur is protected by target's signal // mutex. overrunCur uint64 // Consider the last signal sent by this timer that has been dequeued. // overrunLast is the number of overruns that occurred between when this // signal was sent and when it was dequeued. Equivalently, overrunLast was // the value of overrunCur when this signal was dequeued. overrunLast is // protected by target's signal mutex. overrunLast uint64 } // DestroyTimer releases it's resources. func (it *IntervalTimer) DestroyTimer() { it.timer.Destroy() it.timerSettingChanged() // A destroyed IntervalTimer is still potentially reachable via a // pendingSignal; nil out timer so that it won't be saved. it.timer = nil } func (it *IntervalTimer) timerSettingChanged() { if it.target == nil { return } it.target.tg.pidns.owner.mu.RLock() defer it.target.tg.pidns.owner.mu.RUnlock() it.target.tg.signalHandlers.mu.Lock() defer it.target.tg.signalHandlers.mu.Unlock() it.sigorphan = true it.overrunCur = 0 it.overrunLast = 0 } // PauseTimer pauses the associated Timer. func (it *IntervalTimer) PauseTimer() { it.timer.Pause() } // ResumeTimer resumes the associated Timer. func (it *IntervalTimer) ResumeTimer() { it.timer.Resume() } // Preconditions: it.target's signal mutex must be locked. func (it *IntervalTimer) updateDequeuedSignalLocked(si *linux.SignalInfo) { it.sigpending = false if it.sigorphan { return } it.overrunLast = it.overrunCur it.overrunCur = 0 si.SetOverrun(saturateI32FromU64(it.overrunLast)) } // Preconditions: it.target's signal mutex must be locked. func (it *IntervalTimer) signalRejectedLocked() { it.sigpending = false if it.sigorphan { return } it.overrunCur++ } // Notify implements ktime.TimerListener.Notify. func (it *IntervalTimer) Notify(exp uint64, setting ktime.Setting) (ktime.Setting, bool) { if it.target == nil { return ktime.Setting{}, false } it.target.tg.pidns.owner.mu.RLock() defer it.target.tg.pidns.owner.mu.RUnlock() it.target.tg.signalHandlers.mu.Lock() defer it.target.tg.signalHandlers.mu.Unlock() if it.sigpending { it.overrunCur += exp return ktime.Setting{}, false } // sigpending must be set before sendSignalTimerLocked() so that it can be // unset if the signal is discarded (in which case sendSignalTimerLocked() // will return nil). it.sigpending = true it.sigorphan = false it.overrunCur += exp - 1 si := &linux.SignalInfo{ Signo: int32(it.signo), Code: linux.SI_TIMER, } si.SetTimerID(it.id) si.SetSigval(it.sigval) // si_overrun is set when the signal is dequeued. if err := it.target.sendSignalTimerLocked(si, it.group, it); err != nil { it.signalRejectedLocked() } return ktime.Setting{}, false } // Destroy implements ktime.TimerListener.Destroy. Users of Timer should call // DestroyTimer instead. func (it *IntervalTimer) Destroy() { } // IntervalTimerCreate implements timer_create(2). func (t *Task) IntervalTimerCreate(c ktime.Clock, sigev *linux.Sigevent) (linux.TimerID, error) { t.tg.timerMu.Lock() defer t.tg.timerMu.Unlock() // Allocate a timer ID. var id linux.TimerID end := t.tg.nextTimerID for { id = t.tg.nextTimerID _, ok := t.tg.timers[id] t.tg.nextTimerID++ if t.tg.nextTimerID < 0 { t.tg.nextTimerID = 0 } if !ok { break } if t.tg.nextTimerID == end { return 0, syserror.EAGAIN } } // "The implementation of the default case where evp [sic] is NULL is // handled inside glibc, which invokes the underlying system call with a // suitably populated sigevent structure." - timer_create(2). This is // misleading; the timer_create syscall also handles a NULL sevp as // described by the man page // (kernel/time/posix-timers.c:sys_timer_create(), do_timer_create()). This // must be handled here instead of the syscall wrapper since sigval is the // timer ID, which isn't available until we allocate it in this function. if sigev == nil { sigev = &linux.Sigevent{ Signo: int32(linux.SIGALRM), Notify: linux.SIGEV_SIGNAL, Value: uint64(id), } } // Construct the timer. it := &IntervalTimer{ id: id, sigval: sigev.Value, } switch sigev.Notify { case linux.SIGEV_NONE: // leave it.target = nil case linux.SIGEV_SIGNAL, linux.SIGEV_THREAD: // POSIX SIGEV_THREAD semantics are implemented in userspace by libc; // to the kernel, SIGEV_THREAD and SIGEV_SIGNAL are equivalent. (See // Linux's kernel/time/posix-timers.c:good_sigevent().) it.target = t.tg.leader it.group = true case linux.SIGEV_THREAD_ID: t.tg.pidns.owner.mu.RLock() target, ok := t.tg.pidns.tasks[ThreadID(sigev.Tid)] t.tg.pidns.owner.mu.RUnlock() if !ok || target.tg != t.tg { return 0, syserror.EINVAL } it.target = target default: return 0, syserror.EINVAL } if sigev.Notify != linux.SIGEV_NONE { it.signo = linux.Signal(sigev.Signo) if !it.signo.IsValid() { return 0, syserror.EINVAL } } it.timer = ktime.NewTimer(c, it) t.tg.timers[id] = it return id, nil } // IntervalTimerDelete implements timer_delete(2). func (t *Task) IntervalTimerDelete(id linux.TimerID) error { t.tg.timerMu.Lock() defer t.tg.timerMu.Unlock() it := t.tg.timers[id] if it == nil { return syserror.EINVAL } delete(t.tg.timers, id) it.DestroyTimer() return nil } // IntervalTimerSettime implements timer_settime(2). func (t *Task) IntervalTimerSettime(id linux.TimerID, its linux.Itimerspec, abs bool) (linux.Itimerspec, error) { t.tg.timerMu.Lock() defer t.tg.timerMu.Unlock() it := t.tg.timers[id] if it == nil { return linux.Itimerspec{}, syserror.EINVAL } newS, err := ktime.SettingFromItimerspec(its, abs, it.timer.Clock()) if err != nil { return linux.Itimerspec{}, err } tm, oldS := it.timer.SwapAnd(newS, it.timerSettingChanged) its = ktime.ItimerspecFromSetting(tm, oldS) return its, nil } // IntervalTimerGettime implements timer_gettime(2). func (t *Task) IntervalTimerGettime(id linux.TimerID) (linux.Itimerspec, error) { t.tg.timerMu.Lock() defer t.tg.timerMu.Unlock() it := t.tg.timers[id] if it == nil { return linux.Itimerspec{}, syserror.EINVAL } tm, s := it.timer.Get() its := ktime.ItimerspecFromSetting(tm, s) return its, nil } // IntervalTimerGetoverrun implements timer_getoverrun(2). // // Preconditions: The caller must be running on the task goroutine. func (t *Task) IntervalTimerGetoverrun(id linux.TimerID) (int32, error) { t.tg.timerMu.Lock() defer t.tg.timerMu.Unlock() it := t.tg.timers[id] if it == nil { return 0, syserror.EINVAL } // By timer_create(2) invariant, either it.target == nil (in which case // it.overrunLast is immutably 0) or t.tg == it.target.tg; and the fact // that t is executing timer_getoverrun(2) means that t.tg can't be // completing execve, so t.tg.signalHandlers can't be changing, allowing us // to lock t.tg.signalHandlers.mu without holding the TaskSet mutex. t.tg.signalHandlers.mu.Lock() defer t.tg.signalHandlers.mu.Unlock() // This is consistent with Linux after 78c9c4dfbf8c ("posix-timers: // Sanitize overrun handling"). return saturateI32FromU64(it.overrunLast), nil } func saturateI32FromU64(x uint64) int32 { if x > math.MaxInt32 { return math.MaxInt32 } return int32(x) }