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mirror of https://github.com/Zygo/bees.git synced 2025-05-17 21:35:45 +02:00

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Zygo Blaxell
21cedfb13e bytevector: rename the argument to operator[] to be more descriptive
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
2024-12-12 23:10:15 -05:00
Zygo Blaxell
e99a505b3b bytevector: don't deadlock on operator<<
operator<< was a friend class that locked the ByteVector, then invoked
hexdump on the bytevector, which used ByteVector::operator[]...which
locked the ByteVector, resulting in a deadlock.

operator<< shouldn't be a friend class anyway.  Make hexdump use the
normal public access methods for ByteVector.

Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
2024-12-03 23:39:33 -05:00
Zygo Blaxell
148cc03060 bytevector: do not deadlock in self-assignment
Not that this is a particularly useful use case, but it will lock up,
and it should not.

Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
2022-12-20 20:50:58 -05:00
Zygo Blaxell
b699325a77 bytevector: don't need _all_ of those mutexes
Methods that don't even look at the pointer don't need a mutex.

Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
2022-12-20 20:50:58 -05:00
Zygo Blaxell
a59d89ea81 bytevector: add some fugly mutexes
We are using ByteVectors from multiple threads in some cases.  Mostly
these are the status and progress threads which read the ByteVector
object references embedded in BEESNOTE macros.

Since it's not clear what the data race implications are, protect
the shared_ptr in ByteVector with a mutex for now.

Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
2022-12-20 20:50:58 -05:00
Zygo Blaxell
d1015b683f bytevector: add ostream output with hexdump
There is a hexdump template in fs.  Move hexdump to its own header,
then ByteVector can use it too.

Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
2022-12-20 20:50:58 -05:00
Zygo Blaxell
587588d53f bytevector: fix length check
ByteVectors, and shared subranges thereof, might be empty.  The parameter
check should allow that.

Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
2022-10-10 17:40:33 -04:00
Zygo Blaxell
26acc6adfd bytevector: introduce BEES_VALGRIND to help work around valgrind
valgrind doesn't understand ioctl arguments, so it does not know if
or when they initialize memory, and it complains about conditionals
depending on data that comes out of ioctls.  That's a problem for bees,
where every decision we ever make is based on data an ioctl gave us.

Fix the initialization issue by using calloc instead of malloc for
ByteVectors when we are building for valgrind.  Don't enable this by
default because all the callocs aren't necessary (assuming the rest
of the code is correct) and hurt performance.

Define BEES_VALGRIND in localconf to activate, e.g.

	echo CCFLAGS += -DBEES_VALGRIND=1 >> localconf

Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
2021-12-19 15:10:02 -05:00
Zygo Blaxell
f0eb9b202f lib: introduce ByteVector as a replacement for vector<uint8_t> and Spanner
After some benchmarking, it turns out that std::vector<uint8_t> is
about 160 times slower than malloc().  malloc() is faster than "new
uint8_t[]" too.  Get rid of std:;vector<uint8_t> and replace it with
a lightweight wrapper around malloc(), free(), and memcpy().

ByteVector has helpful methods for the common case of moving data to and
from ioctl calls that use a fixed-length header placed contiguously with a
variable-length input/output buffer.  Data bytes are shared between copied
ByteVector objects, allowing a large single buffer to be cheaply chopped
up into smaller objects without memory copies.  ByteVector implements the
more useful parts of the std::vector API, so it can replace std::vector
objects without needing an awkward adaptor class like Spanner.

Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
2021-10-31 19:42:01 -04:00