src/os/linux/vm/attachListener_linux.cpp

Tue, 28 May 2013 09:32:06 +0200

author
tschatzl
date
Tue, 28 May 2013 09:32:06 +0200
changeset 5204
e72f7eecc96d
parent 2314
f95d63e2154a
child 5264
e95fc50106cf
permissions
-rw-r--r--

8013895: G1: G1SummarizeRSetStats output on Linux needs improvemen
Summary: Fixed the output of G1SummarizeRSetStats: too small datatype for the number of concurrently processed cards, added concurrent remembered set thread time retrieval for Linux and Windows (BSD uses os::elapsedTime() now), and other cleanup. The information presented during VM operation is now relative to the previous output, not always cumulative if G1SummarizeRSetStatsPeriod > 0. At VM exit, the code prints a cumulative summary.
Reviewed-by: johnc, jwilhelm

     1 /*
     2  * Copyright (c) 2005, 2010, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
     3  * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
     4  *
     5  * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
     6  * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
     7  * published by the Free Software Foundation.
     8  *
     9  * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
    10  * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
    11  * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License
    12  * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
    13  * accompanied this code).
    14  *
    15  * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
    16  * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
    17  * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
    18  *
    19  * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA
    20  * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any
    21  * questions.
    22  *
    23  */
    25 #include "precompiled.hpp"
    26 #include "runtime/interfaceSupport.hpp"
    27 #include "runtime/os.hpp"
    28 #include "services/attachListener.hpp"
    29 #include "services/dtraceAttacher.hpp"
    31 #include <unistd.h>
    32 #include <signal.h>
    33 #include <sys/types.h>
    34 #include <sys/socket.h>
    35 #include <sys/un.h>
    36 #include <sys/stat.h>
    38 #ifndef UNIX_PATH_MAX
    39 #define UNIX_PATH_MAX   sizeof(((struct sockaddr_un *)0)->sun_path)
    40 #endif
    42 // The attach mechanism on Linux uses a UNIX domain socket. An attach listener
    43 // thread is created at startup or is created on-demand via a signal from
    44 // the client tool. The attach listener creates a socket and binds it to a file
    45 // in the filesystem. The attach listener then acts as a simple (single-
    46 // threaded) server - it waits for a client to connect, reads the request,
    47 // executes it, and returns the response to the client via the socket
    48 // connection.
    49 //
    50 // As the socket is a UNIX domain socket it means that only clients on the
    51 // local machine can connect. In addition there are two other aspects to
    52 // the security:
    53 // 1. The well known file that the socket is bound to has permission 400
    54 // 2. When a client connect, the SO_PEERCRED socket option is used to
    55 //    obtain the credentials of client. We check that the effective uid
    56 //    of the client matches this process.
    58 // forward reference
    59 class LinuxAttachOperation;
    61 class LinuxAttachListener: AllStatic {
    62  private:
    63   // the path to which we bind the UNIX domain socket
    64   static char _path[UNIX_PATH_MAX];
    65   static bool _has_path;
    67   // the file descriptor for the listening socket
    68   static int _listener;
    70   static void set_path(char* path) {
    71     if (path == NULL) {
    72       _has_path = false;
    73     } else {
    74       strncpy(_path, path, UNIX_PATH_MAX);
    75       _path[UNIX_PATH_MAX-1] = '\0';
    76       _has_path = true;
    77     }
    78   }
    80   static void set_listener(int s)               { _listener = s; }
    82   // reads a request from the given connected socket
    83   static LinuxAttachOperation* read_request(int s);
    85  public:
    86   enum {
    87     ATTACH_PROTOCOL_VER = 1                     // protocol version
    88   };
    89   enum {
    90     ATTACH_ERROR_BADVERSION     = 101           // error codes
    91   };
    93   // initialize the listener, returns 0 if okay
    94   static int init();
    96   static char* path()                   { return _path; }
    97   static bool has_path()                { return _has_path; }
    98   static int listener()                 { return _listener; }
   100   // write the given buffer to a socket
   101   static int write_fully(int s, char* buf, int len);
   103   static LinuxAttachOperation* dequeue();
   104 };
   106 class LinuxAttachOperation: public AttachOperation {
   107  private:
   108   // the connection to the client
   109   int _socket;
   111  public:
   112   void complete(jint res, bufferedStream* st);
   114   void set_socket(int s)                                { _socket = s; }
   115   int socket() const                                    { return _socket; }
   117   LinuxAttachOperation(char* name) : AttachOperation(name) {
   118     set_socket(-1);
   119   }
   120 };
   122 // statics
   123 char LinuxAttachListener::_path[UNIX_PATH_MAX];
   124 bool LinuxAttachListener::_has_path;
   125 int LinuxAttachListener::_listener = -1;
   127 // Supporting class to help split a buffer into individual components
   128 class ArgumentIterator : public StackObj {
   129  private:
   130   char* _pos;
   131   char* _end;
   132  public:
   133   ArgumentIterator(char* arg_buffer, size_t arg_size) {
   134     _pos = arg_buffer;
   135     _end = _pos + arg_size - 1;
   136   }
   137   char* next() {
   138     if (*_pos == '\0') {
   139       return NULL;
   140     }
   141     char* res = _pos;
   142     char* next_pos = strchr(_pos, '\0');
   143     if (next_pos < _end)  {
   144       next_pos++;
   145     }
   146     _pos = next_pos;
   147     return res;
   148   }
   149 };
   152 // atexit hook to stop listener and unlink the file that it is
   153 // bound too.
   154 extern "C" {
   155   static void listener_cleanup() {
   156     static int cleanup_done;
   157     if (!cleanup_done) {
   158       cleanup_done = 1;
   159       int s = LinuxAttachListener::listener();
   160       if (s != -1) {
   161         ::close(s);
   162       }
   163       if (LinuxAttachListener::has_path()) {
   164         ::unlink(LinuxAttachListener::path());
   165       }
   166     }
   167   }
   168 }
   170 // Initialization - create a listener socket and bind it to a file
   172 int LinuxAttachListener::init() {
   173   char path[UNIX_PATH_MAX];          // socket file
   174   char initial_path[UNIX_PATH_MAX];  // socket file during setup
   175   int listener;                      // listener socket (file descriptor)
   177   // register function to cleanup
   178   ::atexit(listener_cleanup);
   180   int n = snprintf(path, UNIX_PATH_MAX, "%s/.java_pid%d",
   181                    os::get_temp_directory(), os::current_process_id());
   182   if (n < (int)UNIX_PATH_MAX) {
   183     n = snprintf(initial_path, UNIX_PATH_MAX, "%s.tmp", path);
   184   }
   185   if (n >= (int)UNIX_PATH_MAX) {
   186     return -1;
   187   }
   189   // create the listener socket
   190   listener = ::socket(PF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
   191   if (listener == -1) {
   192     return -1;
   193   }
   195   // bind socket
   196   struct sockaddr_un addr;
   197   addr.sun_family = AF_UNIX;
   198   strcpy(addr.sun_path, initial_path);
   199   ::unlink(initial_path);
   200   int res = ::bind(listener, (struct sockaddr*)&addr, sizeof(addr));
   201   if (res == -1) {
   202     RESTARTABLE(::close(listener), res);
   203     return -1;
   204   }
   206   // put in listen mode, set permissions, and rename into place
   207   res = ::listen(listener, 5);
   208   if (res == 0) {
   209       RESTARTABLE(::chmod(initial_path, S_IREAD|S_IWRITE), res);
   210       if (res == 0) {
   211           res = ::rename(initial_path, path);
   212       }
   213   }
   214   if (res == -1) {
   215     RESTARTABLE(::close(listener), res);
   216     ::unlink(initial_path);
   217     return -1;
   218   }
   219   set_path(path);
   220   set_listener(listener);
   222   return 0;
   223 }
   225 // Given a socket that is connected to a peer we read the request and
   226 // create an AttachOperation. As the socket is blocking there is potential
   227 // for a denial-of-service if the peer does not response. However this happens
   228 // after the peer credentials have been checked and in the worst case it just
   229 // means that the attach listener thread is blocked.
   230 //
   231 LinuxAttachOperation* LinuxAttachListener::read_request(int s) {
   232   char ver_str[8];
   233   sprintf(ver_str, "%d", ATTACH_PROTOCOL_VER);
   235   // The request is a sequence of strings so we first figure out the
   236   // expected count and the maximum possible length of the request.
   237   // The request is:
   238   //   <ver>0<cmd>0<arg>0<arg>0<arg>0
   239   // where <ver> is the protocol version (1), <cmd> is the command
   240   // name ("load", "datadump", ...), and <arg> is an argument
   241   int expected_str_count = 2 + AttachOperation::arg_count_max;
   242   const int max_len = (sizeof(ver_str) + 1) + (AttachOperation::name_length_max + 1) +
   243     AttachOperation::arg_count_max*(AttachOperation::arg_length_max + 1);
   245   char buf[max_len];
   246   int str_count = 0;
   248   // Read until all (expected) strings have been read, the buffer is
   249   // full, or EOF.
   251   int off = 0;
   252   int left = max_len;
   254   do {
   255     int n;
   256     RESTARTABLE(read(s, buf+off, left), n);
   257     if (n == -1) {
   258       return NULL;      // reset by peer or other error
   259     }
   260     if (n == 0) {
   261       break;
   262     }
   263     for (int i=0; i<n; i++) {
   264       if (buf[off+i] == 0) {
   265         // EOS found
   266         str_count++;
   268         // The first string is <ver> so check it now to
   269         // check for protocol mis-match
   270         if (str_count == 1) {
   271           if ((strlen(buf) != strlen(ver_str)) ||
   272               (atoi(buf) != ATTACH_PROTOCOL_VER)) {
   273             char msg[32];
   274             sprintf(msg, "%d\n", ATTACH_ERROR_BADVERSION);
   275             write_fully(s, msg, strlen(msg));
   276             return NULL;
   277           }
   278         }
   279       }
   280     }
   281     off += n;
   282     left -= n;
   283   } while (left > 0 && str_count < expected_str_count);
   285   if (str_count != expected_str_count) {
   286     return NULL;        // incomplete request
   287   }
   289   // parse request
   291   ArgumentIterator args(buf, (max_len)-left);
   293   // version already checked
   294   char* v = args.next();
   296   char* name = args.next();
   297   if (name == NULL || strlen(name) > AttachOperation::name_length_max) {
   298     return NULL;
   299   }
   301   LinuxAttachOperation* op = new LinuxAttachOperation(name);
   303   for (int i=0; i<AttachOperation::arg_count_max; i++) {
   304     char* arg = args.next();
   305     if (arg == NULL) {
   306       op->set_arg(i, NULL);
   307     } else {
   308       if (strlen(arg) > AttachOperation::arg_length_max) {
   309         delete op;
   310         return NULL;
   311       }
   312       op->set_arg(i, arg);
   313     }
   314   }
   316   op->set_socket(s);
   317   return op;
   318 }
   321 // Dequeue an operation
   322 //
   323 // In the Linux implementation there is only a single operation and clients
   324 // cannot queue commands (except at the socket level).
   325 //
   326 LinuxAttachOperation* LinuxAttachListener::dequeue() {
   327   for (;;) {
   328     int s;
   330     // wait for client to connect
   331     struct sockaddr addr;
   332     socklen_t len = sizeof(addr);
   333     RESTARTABLE(::accept(listener(), &addr, &len), s);
   334     if (s == -1) {
   335       return NULL;      // log a warning?
   336     }
   338     // get the credentials of the peer and check the effective uid/guid
   339     // - check with jeff on this.
   340     struct ucred cred_info;
   341     socklen_t optlen = sizeof(cred_info);
   342     if (::getsockopt(s, SOL_SOCKET, SO_PEERCRED, (void*)&cred_info, &optlen) == -1) {
   343       int res;
   344       RESTARTABLE(::close(s), res);
   345       continue;
   346     }
   347     uid_t euid = geteuid();
   348     gid_t egid = getegid();
   350     if (cred_info.uid != euid || cred_info.gid != egid) {
   351       int res;
   352       RESTARTABLE(::close(s), res);
   353       continue;
   354     }
   356     // peer credential look okay so we read the request
   357     LinuxAttachOperation* op = read_request(s);
   358     if (op == NULL) {
   359       int res;
   360       RESTARTABLE(::close(s), res);
   361       continue;
   362     } else {
   363       return op;
   364     }
   365   }
   366 }
   368 // write the given buffer to the socket
   369 int LinuxAttachListener::write_fully(int s, char* buf, int len) {
   370   do {
   371     int n = ::write(s, buf, len);
   372     if (n == -1) {
   373       if (errno != EINTR) return -1;
   374     } else {
   375       buf += n;
   376       len -= n;
   377     }
   378   }
   379   while (len > 0);
   380   return 0;
   381 }
   383 // Complete an operation by sending the operation result and any result
   384 // output to the client. At this time the socket is in blocking mode so
   385 // potentially we can block if there is a lot of data and the client is
   386 // non-responsive. For most operations this is a non-issue because the
   387 // default send buffer is sufficient to buffer everything. In the future
   388 // if there are operations that involves a very big reply then it the
   389 // socket could be made non-blocking and a timeout could be used.
   391 void LinuxAttachOperation::complete(jint result, bufferedStream* st) {
   392   JavaThread* thread = JavaThread::current();
   393   ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(thread);
   395   thread->set_suspend_equivalent();
   396   // cleared by handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition() or
   397   // java_suspend_self() via check_and_wait_while_suspended()
   399   // write operation result
   400   char msg[32];
   401   sprintf(msg, "%d\n", result);
   402   int rc = LinuxAttachListener::write_fully(this->socket(), msg, strlen(msg));
   404   // write any result data
   405   if (rc == 0) {
   406     LinuxAttachListener::write_fully(this->socket(), (char*) st->base(), st->size());
   407     ::shutdown(this->socket(), 2);
   408   }
   410   // done
   411   RESTARTABLE(::close(this->socket()), rc);
   413   // were we externally suspended while we were waiting?
   414   thread->check_and_wait_while_suspended();
   416   delete this;
   417 }
   420 // AttachListener functions
   422 AttachOperation* AttachListener::dequeue() {
   423   JavaThread* thread = JavaThread::current();
   424   ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(thread);
   426   thread->set_suspend_equivalent();
   427   // cleared by handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition() or
   428   // java_suspend_self() via check_and_wait_while_suspended()
   430   AttachOperation* op = LinuxAttachListener::dequeue();
   432   // were we externally suspended while we were waiting?
   433   thread->check_and_wait_while_suspended();
   435   return op;
   436 }
   438 int AttachListener::pd_init() {
   439   JavaThread* thread = JavaThread::current();
   440   ThreadBlockInVM tbivm(thread);
   442   thread->set_suspend_equivalent();
   443   // cleared by handle_special_suspend_equivalent_condition() or
   444   // java_suspend_self() via check_and_wait_while_suspended()
   446   int ret_code = LinuxAttachListener::init();
   448   // were we externally suspended while we were waiting?
   449   thread->check_and_wait_while_suspended();
   451   return ret_code;
   452 }
   454 // Attach Listener is started lazily except in the case when
   455 // +ReduseSignalUsage is used
   456 bool AttachListener::init_at_startup() {
   457   if (ReduceSignalUsage) {
   458     return true;
   459   } else {
   460     return false;
   461   }
   462 }
   464 // If the file .attach_pid<pid> exists in the working directory
   465 // or /tmp then this is the trigger to start the attach mechanism
   466 bool AttachListener::is_init_trigger() {
   467   if (init_at_startup() || is_initialized()) {
   468     return false;               // initialized at startup or already initialized
   469   }
   470   char fn[PATH_MAX+1];
   471   sprintf(fn, ".attach_pid%d", os::current_process_id());
   472   int ret;
   473   struct stat64 st;
   474   RESTARTABLE(::stat64(fn, &st), ret);
   475   if (ret == -1) {
   476     snprintf(fn, sizeof(fn), "%s/.attach_pid%d",
   477              os::get_temp_directory(), os::current_process_id());
   478     RESTARTABLE(::stat64(fn, &st), ret);
   479   }
   480   if (ret == 0) {
   481     // simple check to avoid starting the attach mechanism when
   482     // a bogus user creates the file
   483     if (st.st_uid == geteuid()) {
   484       init();
   485       return true;
   486     }
   487   }
   488   return false;
   489 }
   491 // if VM aborts then remove listener
   492 void AttachListener::abort() {
   493   listener_cleanup();
   494 }
   496 void AttachListener::pd_data_dump() {
   497   os::signal_notify(SIGQUIT);
   498 }
   500 AttachOperationFunctionInfo* AttachListener::pd_find_operation(const char* n) {
   501   return NULL;
   502 }
   504 jint AttachListener::pd_set_flag(AttachOperation* op, outputStream* out) {
   505   out->print_cr("flag '%s' cannot be changed", op->arg(0));
   506   return JNI_ERR;
   507 }
   509 void AttachListener::pd_detachall() {
   510   // do nothing for now
   511 }

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