// Copyright (c) 2015-2016 The Bitcoin Core developers // Distributed under the MIT software license, see the accompanying // file COPYING or http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php. #include "scheduler.h" #include "random.h" #include "reverselock.h" #include #include #include CScheduler::CScheduler() : nThreadsServicingQueue(0), stopRequested(false), stopWhenEmpty(false) { } CScheduler::~CScheduler() { assert(nThreadsServicingQueue == 0); } #if BOOST_VERSION < 105000 static boost::system_time toPosixTime(const boost::chrono::system_clock::time_point& t) { // Creating the posix_time using from_time_t loses sub-second precision. So rather than exporting the time_point to time_t, // start with a posix_time at the epoch (0) and add the milliseconds that have passed since then. return boost::posix_time::from_time_t(0) + boost::posix_time::milliseconds(boost::chrono::duration_cast(t.time_since_epoch()).count()); } #endif void CScheduler::serviceQueue() { boost::unique_lock lock(newTaskMutex); ++nThreadsServicingQueue; // newTaskMutex is locked throughout this loop EXCEPT // when the thread is waiting or when the user's function // is called. while (!shouldStop()) { try { if (!shouldStop() && taskQueue.empty()) { reverse_lock > rlock(lock); // Use this chance to get a tiny bit more entropy RandAddSeedSleep(); } while (!shouldStop() && taskQueue.empty()) { // Wait until there is something to do. newTaskScheduled.wait(lock); } // Wait until either there is a new task, or until // the time of the first item on the queue: // wait_until needs boost 1.50 or later; older versions have timed_wait: #if BOOST_VERSION < 105000 while (!shouldStop() && !taskQueue.empty() && newTaskScheduled.timed_wait(lock, toPosixTime(taskQueue.begin()->first))) { // Keep waiting until timeout } #else // Some boost versions have a conflicting overload of wait_until that returns void. // Explicitly use a template here to avoid hitting that overload. while (!shouldStop() && !taskQueue.empty()) { boost::chrono::system_clock::time_point timeToWaitFor = taskQueue.begin()->first; if (newTaskScheduled.wait_until<>(lock, timeToWaitFor) == boost::cv_status::timeout) break; // Exit loop after timeout, it means we reached the time of the event } #endif // If there are multiple threads, the queue can empty while we're waiting (another // thread may service the task we were waiting on). if (shouldStop() || taskQueue.empty()) continue; Function f = taskQueue.begin()->second; taskQueue.erase(taskQueue.begin()); { // Unlock before calling f, so it can reschedule itself or another task // without deadlocking: reverse_lock > rlock(lock); f(); } } catch (...) { --nThreadsServicingQueue; throw; } } --nThreadsServicingQueue; newTaskScheduled.notify_one(); } void CScheduler::stop(bool drain) { { boost::unique_lock lock(newTaskMutex); if (drain) stopWhenEmpty = true; else stopRequested = true; } newTaskScheduled.notify_all(); } void CScheduler::schedule(CScheduler::Function f, boost::chrono::system_clock::time_point t) { { boost::unique_lock lock(newTaskMutex); taskQueue.insert(std::make_pair(t, f)); } newTaskScheduled.notify_one(); } void CScheduler::scheduleFromNow(CScheduler::Function f, int64_t deltaMilliSeconds) { schedule(f, boost::chrono::system_clock::now() + boost::chrono::milliseconds(deltaMilliSeconds)); } static void Repeat(CScheduler* s, CScheduler::Function f, int64_t deltaMilliSeconds) { f(); s->scheduleFromNow(boost::bind(&Repeat, s, f, deltaMilliSeconds), deltaMilliSeconds); } void CScheduler::scheduleEvery(CScheduler::Function f, int64_t deltaMilliSeconds) { scheduleFromNow(boost::bind(&Repeat, this, f, deltaMilliSeconds), deltaMilliSeconds); } size_t CScheduler::getQueueInfo(boost::chrono::system_clock::time_point &first, boost::chrono::system_clock::time_point &last) const { boost::unique_lock lock(newTaskMutex); size_t result = taskQueue.size(); if (!taskQueue.empty()) { first = taskQueue.begin()->first; last = taskQueue.rbegin()->first; } return result; } void SingleThreadedSchedulerClient::MaybeScheduleProcessQueue() { { LOCK(m_cs_callbacks_pending); // Try to avoid scheduling too many copies here, but if we // accidentally have two ProcessQueue's scheduled at once its // not a big deal. if (m_are_callbacks_running) return; if (m_callbacks_pending.empty()) return; } m_pscheduler->schedule(std::bind(&SingleThreadedSchedulerClient::ProcessQueue, this)); } void SingleThreadedSchedulerClient::ProcessQueue() { std::function callback; { LOCK(m_cs_callbacks_pending); if (m_are_callbacks_running) return; if (m_callbacks_pending.empty()) return; m_are_callbacks_running = true; callback = std::move(m_callbacks_pending.front()); m_callbacks_pending.pop_front(); } // RAII the setting of fCallbacksRunning and calling MaybeScheduleProcessQueue // to ensure both happen safely even if callback() throws. struct RAIICallbacksRunning { SingleThreadedSchedulerClient* instance; RAIICallbacksRunning(SingleThreadedSchedulerClient* _instance) : instance(_instance) {} ~RAIICallbacksRunning() { { LOCK(instance->m_cs_callbacks_pending); instance->m_are_callbacks_running = false; } instance->MaybeScheduleProcessQueue(); } } raiicallbacksrunning(this); callback(); } void SingleThreadedSchedulerClient::AddToProcessQueue(std::function func) { assert(m_pscheduler); { LOCK(m_cs_callbacks_pending); m_callbacks_pending.emplace_back(std::move(func)); } MaybeScheduleProcessQueue(); }