Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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We have log messages when a coroutine terminates abnormally, but we don't
report either when it starts or when it terminates normally. Address that.
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Maintenance X
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(cherry picked from commit dc0b3aed4782e4e4835fd6b9d59d1d70b78be4a7)
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LF, and trim trailing whitespaces as needed
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Make LLCoros constructor echo "LLApp" status-change events on new "LLCoros"
event pump.
Rename LLCoros::kill() to killreq() because this operation only registers a
request for the named coroutine to terminate next time it calls checkStop().
Add a new CoroData member to record the name of the coroutine requesting
termination. killreq() sets that and also posts "killreq" to "LLCoros".
Add an optional final-cleanup callback to LLCoros::checkStop(). Make
checkStop() check for a pending killreq() request as well as viewer
termination. Introduce new LLCoros::Killed exception for that case.
Introduce LLCoros::getStopListener(), with two overloads, to encapsulate some
of the messy logic to listen (perhaps temporarily) for viewer shutdown. Both
overloads are for use by code at the source end of a queue or promise or other
resource for which coroutines might still be waiting at viewer shutdown time.
One overload is specifically for when the caller knows the name of the one and
only coroutine that will wait on the resource (e.g. because the caller IS that
coroutine). That overload honors killreq().
Use getStopListener() to simplify the four existing places where we set up
such a listener. Add a fifth: also make WorkQueue listen for viewer shutdown
(resolving a TODO comment).
Remove LLLUAmanager::terminateScript(), getTerminationList() and the static
sTerminationList. In the Lua interrupt callback, instead of checking
sTerminationList, call LLCoros::checkStop().
Change LLFloaterLUAScripts terminate-script logic to call LLCoros::killreq()
instead of posting on "LLLua" and calling LLLUAmanager::terminateScript().
Drop LLApp::setStatus() posting to "LLLua" LLEventPump: the above makes that
moot.
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# Conflicts:
# .github/workflows/build.yaml
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Under debug LL_ERRS will show a message as well, but release won't show
anything and will quit silently so show a notification when applicable.
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# Conflicts:
# indra/newview/llspatialpartition.cpp
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On a Windows CI host, we got the dreaded rc 3221225725 aka c00000fd aka stack
overflow.
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# Conflicts:
# autobuild.xml
# indra/llcommon/tests/llleap_test.cpp
# indra/newview/viewer_manifest.py
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A test executable on a GitHub Windows runner failed with C00000FD, which
reports stack overflow.
(cherry picked from commit aab7b4ba3812e5876b1205285bcfd8cff96bcac9)
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For unknown reason allocations of these coroutines often crash on client machines.
1. Limit quantity of coros running in parallel by reducing retries and wait time
2. Print out more diagnostic info
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This partially reverts commit 935c1362a222f192bf913270d01f6c31c16e175b.
Reporting seems to have stoped working, trying the same way mac works.
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# Conflicts:
# indra/newview/app_settings/settings.xml
# indra/newview/llfloatersearch.cpp
# indra/newview/llgroupactions.cpp
# indra/newview/llvovolume.cpp
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SL-14961 works better for windows than rethrow
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Rename 'winlevel()' to 'sehandle()'; change it from a static member function
to a free function, thus eliminating the conditional in llcoros.h.
Elsewhere than Windows, provide a zero-cost pass-through sehandle()
implementation, eliminating the conditional in toplevel().
# Conflicts:
# indra/llcommon/llcoros.cpp
# indra/llcommon/llcoros.h
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This mechanism uses a queue of std::exception_ptrs to transport an (otherwise)
uncaught exception from a terminated coroutine to the thread's main fiber. The
main loop calls LLCoros::rethrow() just after giving some cycles to ready
coroutines that frame.
# Conflicts:
# indra/llcommon/llcoros.cpp
# indra/llcommon/llcoros.h
# indra/newview/llappviewer.cpp
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Will be replaced with retrow from nat
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# Conflicts:
# indra/newview/llfloatereditextdaycycle.cpp
# indra/newview/llviewerinput.cpp
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# Conflicts:
# autobuild.xml
# indra/llcommon/llerror.cpp
# indra/llui/llnotifications.h
# indra/newview/llappviewer.cpp
# indra/newview/llappviewermacosx.cpp
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Superficially looks like an out of memory crash, redirect allocation failures into LL_ERRS.
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For the main coroutine on each thread, show the 'main0' (or whatever) name
instead of the empty-string name.
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Actually, introduce static LLCoros::logname() and make the namespaced free
function an alias for that.
Because CoroData is a subclass of LLInstanceTracker with a key, every instance
requires a distinct key. That conflicts with our "getName() returns empty
string for default coroutine on thread" convention. Introduce a new CoroData
constructor, specifically for the default coroutine on each thread, that
initializes the getName() name to empty string while providing a distinct
"mainN" key. Make get_CoroData() use that new constructor for its thread_local
instance, passing an atomic<int> incremented each time we initialize one for a
new thread.
Then LLCoros::logname() returns either the getName() name or the key.
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The new LLCoros::Stop exception is intended to terminate long-lived coroutines
-- not interrupt mainstream shutdown processing. Only throw it on an
explicitly-launched coroutine.
Make LLCoros::getName() (used by the above test) static. As with other LLCoros
methods, it might be called after the LLCoros LLSingleton instance has been
deleted. Requiring the caller to call instance() implies a possible need to
also call wasDeleted(). Encapsulate that nuance into a static method instead.
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Instead of heap-allocating a CoroData instance per coroutine, storing the
pointer in a ptr_map and deleting it from the ptr_map once the
fiber_specific_ptr for that coroutine is cleaned up -- just declare a stack
instance on the top-level stack frame, the simplest C++ lifespan management.
Derive CoroData from LLInstanceTracker to detect potential name collisions and
to enumerate instances.
Continue registering each coroutine's CoroData instance in our
fiber_specific_ptr, but use a no-op deleter function.
Make ~LLCoros() directly pump the fiber scheduler a few times, instead of
having a special "LLApp" listener.
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By the time "LLApp" listeners are notified that the app is quitting, the
mainloop is no longer running. Even though those listeners do things like
close work queues and inject exceptions into pending promises, any coroutines
waiting on those resources must regain control before they can notice and shut
down properly. Add a final "LLApp" listener that resumes ready coroutines a
few more times.
Make sure every other "LLApp" listener is positioned before that new one.
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Introduce LLCoros::Stop exception, with subclasses Stopping, Stopped and
Shutdown. Add LLCoros::checkStop(), intended to be called periodically by any
coroutine with nontrivial lifespan. It checks the LLApp status and, unless
isRunning(), throws one of these new exceptions.
Make LLCoros::toplevel() catch Stop specially and log forcible coroutine
termination.
Now that LLApp status matters even in a test program, introduce a trivial
LLTestApp subclass whose sole function is to make isRunning() true.
(LLApp::setStatus() is protected: only a subclass can call it.) Add LLTestApp
instances to lleventcoro_test.cpp and lllogin_test.cpp.
Make LLCoros::toplevel() accept parameters by value rather than by const
reference so we can continue using them even after context switches.
Make private LLCoros::get_CoroData() static. Given that we've observed some
coroutines living past LLCoros destruction, making the caller call
LLCoros::instance() is more dangerous than encapsulating it within a static
method -- since the encapsulated call can check LLCoros::wasDeleted() first
and do something reasonable instead. This also eliminates the need for both a
const and non-const overload.
Defend LLCoros::delete_CoroData() (cleanup function for fiber_specific_ptr for
CoroData, implicitly called after coroutine termination) against calls after
~LLCoros().
Add a status string to coroutine-local data, with LLCoro::setStatus(),
getStatus() and RAII class TempStatus.
Add an optional 'when' string argument to LLCoros::printActiveCoroutines().
Make ~LLCoros() print the coroutines still active at destruction.
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Delete the test for SRV timeout: lllogin no longer issues an SRV query. That
test only confuses the test program without exercising any useful paths in
production code.
As with other tests dating from the previous LLCoros implementation, we need a
few llcoro::suspend() calls sprinkled in so that a fiber marked ready -- by
fulfilling the future for which it is waiting -- gets a chance to run.
Clear LLEventPumps between test functions.
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Longtime fans will remember that the "dcoroutine" library is a Google Summer
of Code project by Giovanni P. Deretta. He originally called it
"Boost.Coroutine," and we originally added it to our 3p-boost autobuild
package as such. But when the official Boost.Coroutine library came along
(with a very different API), and we still needed the API of the GSoC project,
we renamed the unofficial one "dcoroutine" to allow coexistence.
The "dcoroutine" library had an internal low-level API more or less analogous
to Boost.Context. We later introduced an implementation of that internal API
based on Boost.Context, a step towards eliminating the GSoC code in favor of
official, supported Boost code.
However, recent versions of Boost.Context no longer support the API on which
we built the shim for "dcoroutine." We started down the path of reimplementing
that shim using the current Boost.Context API -- then realized that it's time
to bite the bullet and replace the "dcoroutine" API with the Boost.Fiber API,
which we've been itching to do for literally years now.
Naturally, most of the heavy lifting is in llcoros.{h,cpp} and
lleventcoro.{h,cpp} -- which is good: the LLCoros layer abstracts away most of
the differences between "dcoroutine" and Boost.Fiber.
The one feature Boost.Fiber does not provide is the ability to forcibly
terminate some other fiber. Accordingly, disable LLCoros::kill() and
LLCoprocedureManager::shutdown(). The only known shutdown() call was in
LLCoprocedurePool's destructor.
We also took the opportunity to remove postAndSuspend2() and its associated
machinery: FutureListener2, LLErrorEvent, errorException(), errorLog(),
LLCoroEventPumps. All that dual-LLEventPump stuff was introduced at a time
when the Responder pattern was king, and we assumed we'd want to listen on one
LLEventPump with the success handler and on another with the error handler. We
have never actually used that in practice. Remove associated tests, of course.
There is one other semantic difference that necessitates patching a number of
tests: with "dcoroutine," fulfilling a future IMMEDIATELY resumes the waiting
coroutine. With Boost.Fiber, fulfilling a future merely marks the fiber as
ready to resume next time the scheduler gets around to it. To observe the test
side effects, we've inserted a number of llcoro::suspend() calls -- also in
the main loop.
For a long time we retained a single unit test exercising the raw "dcoroutine"
API. Remove that.
Eliminate llcoro_get_id.{h,cpp}, which provided llcoro::get_id(), which was a
hack to emulate fiber-local variables. Since Boost.Fiber has an actual API for
that, remove the hack.
In fact, use (new alias) LLCoros::local_ptr for LLSingleton's dependency
tracking in place of llcoro::get_id().
In CMake land, replace BOOST_COROUTINE_LIBRARY with BOOST_FIBER_LIBRARY. We
don't actually use the Boost.Coroutine for anything (though there exist
plausible use cases).
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autobuild 1.1 now supports expanding $variables within a config file --
support that was explicitly added to address this very problem. So now the
windows platform in autobuild.xml uses $AUTOBUILD_ADDRSIZE,
$AUTOBUILD_WIN_VSPLATFORM and $AUTOBUILD_WIN_CMAKE_GEN, which should handle
most of the deltas between the windows platform and windows64.
This permits removing the windows64 platform definition from autobuild.xml.
The one remaining delta between the windows64 and windows platform definitions
was -DLL_64BIT_BUILD=TRUE. But we can handle that instead by checking
ADDRESS_SIZE. Change all existing references to WORD_SIZE to ADDRESS_SIZE
instead, and set ADDRESS_SIZE to $AUTOBUILD_ADDRSIZE. Change the one existing
LL_64BIT_BUILD reference to test (ADDRESS_SIZE EQUAL 64) instead.
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Until now, the "main coroutine" (the initial context) of each thread left
LLCoros::Current() NULL. The trouble with that is that llcoro::get_id()
returns that CoroData* as an opaque token, and we want distinct values for
every stack in the process. That would not be true if the "main coroutine" on
thread A returned the same value (NULL) as the "main coroutine" on thread B,
and so forth. Give each thread's "main coroutine" a dummy heap CoroData
instance of its own.
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Change the module-static thread_specific_ptr to a function-static
thread_specific_ptr so it will be initialized on demand -- since LLSingleton
will need to rely on get_id(). Note that since LLCoros isa LLSingleton, we
must take great care to avoid circularity.
Introduce a private helper class LLCoros::Current to obtain and bind that
thread_specific_ptr. Change all existing internal references from the static
thread_specific_ptr to the new Current helper class.
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