mirror of git://sourceware.org/git/glibc.git
It is a lot easier to understand the meaning of the tty interface if it is explained from the beginning as conceptually emulating an RS232 serial port. This greatly simplifies the discussions of specific items like the meaning of line speed. Distinguish between "modem disconnect request" (deasserting DTR) and "modem disconnect" (DCD deasserted). Conflating the two terms is confusing, especially for non-RS232 devices. In particular, on most systems, a pseudo-terminal will *not* respond to a modem disconnect request by triggering a modem disconnect event for the purpose of the HUPCL flag. It is not necessarily true that the line speed has no effect on non-serial port devices: e.g. an SPI port may interpret it as the clock frequency to use; however, SPI does not use asynchronous framing bits, instead synchronization is handled by the SS# wire. Similarly, it is common but not by any means universal for interfaces that employ various forms of fixed data to symbol rate encodings to encode the data link layer bit rate rather than the physical symbol rate, which may be higher (e.g. 8B10B) or lower (e.g. QAM/Trellis), without the encoding or framing overhead. Finally, a handful of devices use the line rate for entirely nonstandard purposes. One example is Arduino USB interfaces, which often interprets changing the baud rate to 1200 baud as a command to reset the device. [ v2: removed a bogus stray chunk from editing ] Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com> Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org> |
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| check-deftype.sh | ||
| check-safety.sh | ||
| conf.texi | ||
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| install.texi | ||
| intro.texi | ||
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| lang.texi | ||
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README.tunables
TUNABLE FRAMEWORK
=================
Tunables is a feature in the GNU C Library that allows application authors and
distribution maintainers to alter the runtime library behaviour to match their
workload.
The tunable framework allows modules within glibc to register variables that
may be tweaked through an environment variable. It aims to enforce a strict
namespace rule to bring consistency to naming of these tunable environment
variables across the project. This document is a guide for glibc developers to
add tunables to the framework.
ADDING A NEW TUNABLE
--------------------
The TOP_NAMESPACE macro is defined by default as 'glibc'. If distributions
intend to add their own tunables, they should do so in a different top
namespace by overriding the TOP_NAMESPACE macro for that tunable. Downstream
implementations are discouraged from using the 'glibc' top namespace for
tunables they don't already have consensus to push upstream.
There are three steps to adding a tunable:
1. Add a tunable to the list and fully specify its properties:
For each tunable you want to add, make an entry in elf/dl-tunables.list. The
format of the file is as follows:
TOP_NAMESPACE {
NAMESPACE1 {
TUNABLE1 {
# tunable attributes, one per line
}
# A tunable with default attributes, i.e. string variable.
TUNABLE2
TUNABLE3 {
# its attributes
}
}
NAMESPACE2 {
...
}
}
The list of allowed attributes are:
- type: Data type. Defaults to STRING. Allowed types are:
INT_32, UINT_64, SIZE_T and STRING. Numeric types may
be in octal or hexadecimal format too.
- minval: Optional minimum acceptable value. For a string type
this is the minimum length of the value.
- maxval: Optional maximum acceptable value. For a string type
this is the maximum length of the value.
- default: Specify an optional default value for the tunable.
- env_alias: An alias environment variable
2. Use TUNABLE_GET/TUNABLE_SET/TUNABLE_SET_WITH_BOUNDS to get and set tunables.
3. OPTIONAL: If tunables in a namespace are being used multiple times within a
specific module, set the TUNABLE_NAMESPACE macro to reduce the amount of
typing.
GETTING AND SETTING TUNABLES
----------------------------
When the TUNABLE_NAMESPACE macro is defined, one may get tunables in that
module using the TUNABLE_GET macro as follows:
val = TUNABLE_GET (check, int32_t, TUNABLE_CALLBACK (check_callback))
where 'check' is the tunable name, 'int32_t' is the C type of the tunable and
'check_callback' is the function to call if the tunable got initialized to a
non-default value. The macro returns the value as type 'int32_t'.
The callback function should be defined as follows:
void
TUNABLE_CALLBACK (check_callback) (int32_t *valp)
{
...
}
where it can expect the tunable value to be passed in VALP.
Tunables in the module can be updated using:
TUNABLE_SET (check, val)
where 'check' is the tunable name and 'val' is a value of same type.
To get and set tunables in a different namespace from that module, use the full
form of the macros as follows:
val = TUNABLE_GET_FULL (glibc, malloc, mmap_max, int32_t, NULL)
TUNABLE_SET_FULL (glibc, malloc, mmap_max, val)
where 'glibc' is the top namespace, 'malloc' is the tunable namespace and the
remaining arguments are the same as the short form macros.
The minimum and maximum values can updated together with the tunable value
using:
TUNABLE_SET_WITH_BOUNDS (check, val, min, max)
where 'check' is the tunable name, 'val' is a value of same type, 'min' and
'max' are the minimum and maximum values of the tunable.
To set the minimum and maximum values of tunables in a different namespace
from that module, use the full form of the macros as follows:
val = TUNABLE_GET_FULL (glibc, malloc, mmap_max, int32_t, NULL)
TUNABLE_SET_WITH_BOUNDS_FULL (glibc, malloc, mmap_max, val, min, max)
where 'glibc' is the top namespace, 'malloc' is the tunable namespace and the
remaining arguments are the same as the short form macros.
When TUNABLE_NAMESPACE is not defined in a module, TUNABLE_GET is equivalent to
TUNABLE_GET_FULL, so you will need to provide full namespace information for
both macros. Likewise for TUNABLE_SET, TUNABLE_SET_FULL,
TUNABLE_SET_WITH_BOUNDS and TUNABLE_SET_WITH_BOUNDS_FULL.
** IMPORTANT NOTE **
The tunable list is set as read-only after the dynamic linker relocates itself,
so setting tunable values must be limited only to tunables within the dynamic
linker, that too before relocation.
FUTURE WORK
-----------
The framework currently only allows a one-time initialization of variables
through environment variables and in some cases, modification of variables via
an API call. A future goals for this project include:
- Setting system-wide and user-wide defaults for tunables through some
mechanism like a configuration file.
- Allow tweaking of some tunables at runtime