Commit Graph

684 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jim Warner
80e210d38e library: refactor #define FALSE_THREADS dependent code
This refactor was done in response to the Qualys patch
referenced below, which deals with some 'readeither()'
flaws under the master branch. Under our newlib branch
those flaws mostly disappear since the function is now
private. But without a redesign the #define is broken.

When the #define FALSE_THREADS is active, some special
strings showing "[ duplicate ENUM ]" will appear under
each child thread. Note that the real reason for those
appearing isn't being exercised, only their mechanics.

In reality, they only show when a user duplicates such
enums in a results stack & only 1 instance can own it.

Reference(s):
. original qualys patch
0084-proc-readproc.c-Work-around-a-design-flaw-in-readeit.patch
. QUICK_THREADS became FALSE_THREADS
commit c546d9dd44

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:20 +10:00
Jim Warner
97d078a9af library: clean up some miscellaneous compiler warnings
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:20 +10:00
Jim Warner
e051535686 library: adapt for increased (cmd) program name length
In the new library 'cmd' is dynamically allocated just
like 'cmdline'. This will align us with the ref below.

Reference(s):
. master branch increase to 64
commit 2cfdbbe897

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:20 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
48d118b81b 0084-proc/readproc.c: Work around a design flaw in readeither().
readeither() caches (in new_p) a pointer to the proc_t of a task-group
leader, but readeither()'s callers can do pretty much anything with the
proc_t structure passed to and/or returned by this function. For
example, they can 1/ free it or 2/ recycle it (by passing it to
readeither() as x).

1/ leads to a use-after-free, and 2/ leads to unexpected behavior when
taskreader()/simple_readtask() is called with new_p equal to x (this is
not a theoretical flaw: 2/ happens in readproctab3() when want_task()
returns false and p is a group leader).

As a workaround, we keep a copy of new_p's first member (tid) in static
storage, and the next times we enter readeither() we check this "canary"
against the tid in new_p: if they differ, we reset new_p to NULL, which
forces the allocation of a new proc_t (the new "leader", or reference).

This always detects 2/ (because free_acquired(x,1) memsets x and hence
new_p); always detects 1/ if freed via free_acquired() and/or freeproc()
(very likely, otherwise memory may be leaked); probably detects 1/ even
if freed directly via free() (because the canary is the first member of
proc_t, likely to be overwritten by free()); but can not detect 1/ if
free() does not write to new_p's chunk at all.

Moreover, accessing new_p->tid to check the canary in case 1/ is itself
a use-after-free, so a better long-term solution should be implemented
at some point (we wanted to avoid intrusive and backward-incompatible
changes in this library function, hence this imperfect workaround).

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. adapted via 'patch' (rejected due to 'xcalloc' ref)
. with loss of both readproctab functions, most no longer true

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
b9a9fd4c74 0082-proc/readproc.c: Fix double-free()s in readtask().
If QUICK_THREADS is not defined (it is not by default, but most
distributions enable it) and task_dir_missing is true (only on very old
kernels), then readtask() forgets to reset some of the struct proc_t t's
members, which later results in double-free()s in free_acquired().

For now, we simply synchronized the list of members to be reset with the
list of members freed in free_acquired().

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. now 'cmd' is also dynamic
. just synchronized with those freed in free_acquired
. QUICK_THREADS is now FALSE_THREADS, serving different purpose
. entire patch will be effectively reverted with upcoming refactor

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
990ea89ae9 0080-proc/readproc.c: Harden openproc().
Replace xmalloc() with xcalloc().

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. trade xcalloc() for calloc()
. thus we must account for potential ENOMEM

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
c03e52786d 0078-proc/readproc.c: Harden simple_nextpid().
Replace memcpy+strcpy with snprintf.

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. adapted via 'patch' (without rejections)

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
ed463c7d88 0077-proc/readproc.c: Harden fill_cgroup_cvt().
Check the return value of snprintf(), otherwise dst may point
out-of-bounds when it reaches the end of the dst_buffer (the snprintf()
always returns 1 in that case, even if there is not enough space left),
and vMAX becomes negative and is passed to snprintf() as a size_t.

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. adapted via 'patch (without rejections)

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
1052091107 0076-proc/readproc.c: Harden vectorize_this_str().
This detects an integer overflow of "strlen + 1", prevents an integer
overflow of "tot + adj + (2 * pSZ)", and avoids calling snprintf with a
string longer than INT_MAX. Truncate rather than fail, since the callers
do not expect a failure of this function.

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. logic is now in pids.c
. former 'vectorize_this_str' is now 'pids_vectorize_this'

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
d9c0a3e36f 0075-proc/readproc.c: Harden read_unvectored().
1/ Prevent an out-of-bounds write if sz is 0.

2/ Limit sz to INT_MAX, because the return value is an int, not an
unsigned int (and because if INT_MAX is equal to SSIZE_MAX, man 2 read
says "If count is greater than SSIZE_MAX, the result is unspecified.")

3/ Always null-terminate dst (unless sz is 0), because a return value of
0 because of an open() error (for example) is indistinguishable from a
return value of 0 because of an empty file.

4/ Use an unsigned int for i (just like n), not an int.

5/ Check for snprintf() truncation.

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. adapted via 'patch (without rejections)

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
86d3d37406 0074-proc/readproc.c: Fix bugs and overflows in file2strvec().
Note: this is by far the most important and complex patch of the whole
series, please review it carefully; thank you very much!

For this patch, we decided to keep the original function's design and
skeleton, to avoid regressions and behavior changes, while fixing the
various bugs and overflows. And like the "Harden file2str()" patch, this
patch does not fail when about to overflow, but truncates instead: there
is information available about this process, so return it to the caller;
also, we used INT_MAX as a limit, but a lower limit could be used.

The easy changes:

- Replace sprintf() with snprintf() (and check for truncation).

- Replace "if (n == 0 && rbuf == 0)" with "if (n <= 0 && tot <= 0)" and
  do break instead of return: it simplifies the code (only one place to
  handle errors), and also guarantees that in the while loop either n or
  tot is > 0 (or both), even if n is reset to 0 when about to overflow.

- Remove the "if (n < 0)" block in the while loop: it is (and was) dead
  code, since we enter the while loop only if n >= 0.

- Rewrite the missing-null-terminator detection: in the original
  function, if the size of the file is a multiple of 2047, a null-
  terminator is appended even if the file is already null-terminated.

- Replace "if (n <= 0 && !end_of_file)" with "if (n < 0 || tot <= 0)":
  originally, it was equivalent to "if (n < 0)", but we added "tot <= 0"
  to handle the first break of the while loop, and to guarantee that in
  the rest of the function tot is > 0.

- Double-force ("belt and suspenders") the null-termination of rbuf:
  this is (and was) essential to the correctness of the function.

- Replace the final "while" loop with a "for" loop that behaves just
  like the preceding "for" loop: in the original function, this would
  lead to unexpected results (for example, if rbuf is |\0|A|\0|, this
  would return the array {"",NULL} but should return {"","A",NULL}; and
  if rbuf is |A|\0|B| (should never happen because rbuf should be null-
  terminated), this would make room for two pointers in ret, but would
  write three pointers to ret).

The hard changes:

- Prevent the integer overflow of tot in the while loop, but unlike
  file2str(), file2strvec() cannot let tot grow until it almost reaches
  INT_MAX, because it needs more space for the pointers: this is why we
  introduced ARG_LEN, which also guarantees that we can add "align" and
  a few sizeof(char*)s to tot without overflowing.

- Prevent the integer overflow of "tot + c + align": when INT_MAX is
  (almost) reached, we write the maximal safe amount of pointers to ret
  (ARG_LEN guarantees that there is always space for *ret = rbuf and the
  NULL terminator).

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. there were many formatting differences
. i introduced several myself (especially comments)
. stdlib 'realloc' used, not that home grown xrealloc
. stdlib 'realloc' required extra 'return NULL' statement

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
0bc48f7af7 0073-proc/readproc.c: Harden file2str().
1/ Replace sprintf() with snprintf() (and check for truncation).

2/ Prevent an integer overflow of ub->siz. The "tot_read--" is needed to
avoid an off-by-one overflow in "ub->buf[tot_read] = '\0'". It is safe
to decrement tot_read here, because we know that tot_read is equal to
ub->siz (and ub->siz is very large).

We believe that truncation is a better option than failure (implementing
failure instead should be as easy as replacing the "tot_read--" with
"tot_read = 0").

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. no real changes, patch refused due to mem alloc & failure return

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
7c09d76e9b 0072-proc/readproc.c: Harden stat2proc().
1/ Use a "size_t num" instead of an "unsigned num" (also, do not store
the return value of sscanf() into num, it was unused anyway).

2/ Check the return value of strchr() and strrchr().

3/ Never jump over the terminating null byte with "S = tmp + 2".

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. newlib doesn't use that 'unlikely' crap
. the cmd field is now also dynamic (like cmdline)
. thus we must account for potential ENOMEM

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
ec0cb25af6 0071-proc/readproc.c: Harden supgrps_from_supgids().
1/ Prevent an integer overflow of t.

2/ Avoid an infinite loop if s contains characters other than comma,
spaces, +, -, and digits.

3/ Handle all possible return values of snprintf().

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. we can't use xrealloc(), so we use realloc() instead
. and must account for a mem failure via a return of 1

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
807498f899 0070-proc/readproc.c: Harden status2proc().
1/ Do not read past the terminating null byte when hashing the name.

2/ S[x] is used as an index, but S is "char *S" (signed) and hence may
index the array out-of-bounds. Bit-mask S[x] with 127 (the array has 128
entries).

3/ Use a size_t for j, not an int (strlen() returns a size_t).

Notes:

- These are (mostly) theoretical problems, because the contents of
  /proc/PID/status are (mostly) trusted.

- The "name" member of the status_table_struct has 8 bytes, and
  "RssShmem" occupies exactly 8 bytes, which means that "name" is not
  null-terminated. This is fine right now, because status2proc() uses
  memcmp(), not strcmp(), but it is worth mentioning.

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. newlib doesn't use that 'unlikely' crap
. newlib also had a '#ifdef FALSE_THREADS'

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
0753b86931 0069-proc/readproc.c: Fix the unhex() function.
This function is unused (SIGNAL_STRING is defined by default, and if it
is not, procps does not compile -- for example, there is no "outbuf" in
help_pr_sig()) but fix it anyway. There are two bugs:

- it accepts non-hexadecimal characters (anything >= 0x30);

- "(c - (c>0x57) ? 0x57 : 0x30)" is always equal to 0x57.

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. newlib doesn't use that 'unlikely' crap

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
1e48648b82 0051-proc/escape.c: Prevent buffer overflows in escape_command().
This solves several problems:

1/ outbuf[1] was written to, but not outbuf[0], which was left
uninitialized (well, SECURE_ESCAPE_ARGS() already fixes this, but do it
explicitly as well); we know it is safe to write one byte to outbuf,
because SECURE_ESCAPE_ARGS() guarantees it.

2/ If bytes was 1, the write to outbuf[1] was an off-by-one overflow.

3/ Do not call escape_str() with a 0 bufsize if bytes == overhead.

4/ Prevent various buffer overflows if bytes <= overhead.
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
1eddce14c3 0050-proc/escape.c: Prevent integer overflows in escape_str_utf8().
Simply rearrange the old comparisons. The new comparisons are safe,
because we know from previous checks that:

1/ wlen > 0

2/ my_cells < *maxcells (also: my_cells >= 0 and *maxcells > 0)

3/ len > 1

4/ my_bytes+1 < bufsize (also: my_bytes >= 0 and bufsize > 0)
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
8f49e98a3f 0049-proc/escape.c: Handle negative wcwidth() return value.
This should never happen, because wcwidth() is called only if iswprint()
returns nonzero. But belt-and-suspenders, and make it visually clear
(very important for the next patch).
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
1ecf125d3f 0048-proc/escape.c: Make sure all escape*() arguments are safe.
The SECURE_ESCAPE_ARGS() macro solves several potential problems
(although we found no problematic calls to the escape*() functions in
procps's code-base, but had to thoroughly review every call; and this is
library code):

1/ off-by-one overflows if the size of the destination buffer is 0;

2/ buffer overflows if this size (or "maxroom") is negative;

3/ integer overflows (for example, "*maxcells+1");

4/ always null-terminate the destination buffer (unless its size is 0).

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. the escape.c now has just a single exported function
. thus SECURE_ESCAPE_ARGS() is needed in only 2 places
. unlike that original patch, macro is executed 1 time
( not like 'escape_command' calling 'escape_strlist' )
( which might then call 'escape_str' multiple times! )

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
efae601c3c 0047-proc/whattime.c: Always initialize buf.
In the human_readable case; otherwise the strcat() that follows may
append bytes to the previous contents of buf.

Also, slightly enlarge buf, as it was a bit too tight.

Could also replace all sprintf()s with snprintf()s, but all the calls
here output a limited number of characters, so they should be safe.

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. the source file is now proc/uptime.c
. function is now named 'procps_uptime_sprint()'
. new human readable function 'procps_uptime_sprint_short()'
. both were already initialized, so just raised size of 2 buffers

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
d1729bed6b 0042-proc/slab.h: Fix off-by-one overflow in sscanf().
In proc/slab.c, functions parse_slabinfo20() and parse_slabinfo11(),
sscanf() might overflow curr->name, because "String input conversions
store a terminating null byte ('\0') to mark the end of the input; the
maximum field width does not include this terminator."

Add one byte to name[] for this terminator.

---------------------------- adapted for newlib branch
. file is now proc/slabinfo.c (not .h)
. manifest constant renamed SLABINFO_NAME_LEN
. older parse_slabinfo11() function no longer present

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
69b67b6f6e 0040-proc/devname.c: Never write more than "chop" (part 2).
"chop" is the maximum offset where the null-byte should be written;
respect this even if about to write just one (non-null) character.
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
0e365c8930 0039-proc/devname.c: Never write more than "chop" characters.
This should be guaranteed by "tmp[chop] = '\0';" and "if(!c) break;" but
this patch adds a very easy belt-and-suspenders check.
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
a3111efa71 0038-proc/devname.c: Prevent off-by-one overflow in dev_to_tty(). 2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Qualys Security Advisory
170397d59c 0037-proc/devname.c: Use snprintf() in link_name().
Found no problematic use case at the moment, but better safe than sorry.
Also, return an error on snprintf() or readlink() truncation.
2018-06-09 21:35:19 +10:00
Jim Warner
b0908eec4b library: replace the troublesome '__BEGIN_DECLS' macro
When 'newlib' was introduced, in the commit referenced
below, the use of that glibc '__BEGIN_DECLS' macro was
standardized. However, as issue #88 revealed, this may
result in a fatal build error with other environments.

So, this patch just trades that macro for the standard
'#ifdef __cplusplus' conventions (thus avoiding use of
all those '#include <features.h>' directives as well).

Reference(s):
. newlib introduced
commit a410e236ab
. procps-ng-3.3.13 issue
https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/issues/88
. some additional discussion
https://www.freelists.org/post/procps/PATCH-Replace-glibcspecific-macros-in-procnumah,1
. musl wiki (see: sys/cdefs.h error messages)
https://wiki.musl-libc.org/faq.html

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-05-06 07:19:38 +10:00
Jim Warner
bae272fe22 library: eliminate inappropriate '__BEGIN_DECLS' macro
This patch simply eliminates that glibc specific macro
from all header files which contain no public callable
functions. After all, if user code can't link to them,
then protection from C++ name mangling is unnecessary.

[ we also remove any related '#include <features.h>' ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-05-06 07:19:38 +10:00
Jim Warner
c2a29d370c sysctl: relocate the procio code to a more proper home
Now that the procio logic was removed from the library
we must move the header file, lest we break make dist.

In the process, we will relocate that source file too.

[ we'll take a slightly different approach than that ]
[ used under the master branch by exploiting those 2 ]
[ non-library directories 'include' and 'lib', while ]
[ avoiding any sysctl hard coded function prototype. ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-05-06 07:19:37 +10:00
Craig Small
1ddd17b17c sysctl: remove extern from non-library call
Missed removing the extern from the header file
2018-03-01 21:52:20 +11:00
Craig Small
e72f30549b sysctl: Bring procio functions out of library
The procio functions that were in the library have been
moved into sysctl. sysctl is not linked to libprocps in
newlib and none of the other procps binaries would need
to read/write large data to the procfs.

References:
 be6b048a41
2018-03-01 21:47:57 +11:00
Werner Fink
3373a58fb6 Add flexible buffered I/O based on fopencookie(3)
to be able to read and write large buffers below /proc.
The buffers and file offsets are handled dynamically
on the required buffer size at read, that is lseek(2)
is used to determine this size. Large buffers at
write are split at a delimeter into pieces and also
lseek(2) is used to write each of them.

Signed-off-by: Werner Fink <werner@suse.de>
2018-03-01 21:42:10 +11:00
Jim Warner
f341bd4632 library: expanded to provide for the UID used at login
This patch represents the newlib implementation of Jan
Rybar's merge request referenced below. It essentially
moves that code out of the ps program and into our new
library where it's available via the <pids> interface.

Reference(s):
https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/merge_requests/57
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1518986

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-02-19 20:33:59 +11:00
Jim Warner
7ede9ef79f library: account for idle state ('I') threads in total
With the documentation update in the commit referenced
below, we should also account for such threads as they
will already be represented in the task/thread totals.

[ and do it in a way that might avoid future changes ]

Reference(s):
commit 91df65b9e7

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2018-02-12 20:58:31 +11:00
Craig Small
a935a65b77 library: Explicit about task ID string length
This removes the following error by stating the task ID can only be 10
characters wide, as it is an integer.

proc/readproc.c: In function ‘simple_nexttid’:
proc/readproc.c:1185:46: warning: ‘%s’ directive output may be truncated writing up to 255 bytes into a region of size between 41 and 51 [-Wformat-truncation=]
   snprintf(path, PROCPATHLEN, "/proc/%d/task/%s", p->tgid, ent->d_name);
                                              ^~
proc/readproc.c:1185:3: note: ‘snprintf’ output between 14 and 279 bytes into a destination of size 64
   snprintf(path, PROCPATHLEN, "/proc/%d/task/%s", p->tgid, ent->d_name);
   ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2017-12-20 21:37:01 +11:00
Jim Warner
6634e813d4 library: correct 'use' calculations for <slabinfo> api
Awhile back, the calculation for cache utilization was
corrected to avoid a 32 bit overflow. This commit just
brings this branch into line with that earlier change.

[ references shown below represent the master branch ]

Reference(s):
commit 23ba442c88
https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/merge_requests/29
http://www.freelists.org/post/procps/fix-regression-created-by-99d71ad

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-12-20 21:18:54 +11:00
Jim Warner
d53ff45b0d library: delete some obsolete parameter checking logic
This commit removes some obsolete parameter validation
code which was needed back when certain functions were
public, called directly by users (1st/2nd generation).

Now that they're static they can be safely eliminated.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-12-20 21:18:54 +11:00
Jim Warner
06be33b43e library: improve and/or standardize 'errno' management
With older library logic having been modified to avoid
using those potentially deadly alloc.h routines, while
improving 'errno' handling, we're ready to standardize
and enhance newlib's approach to any potential errors.

In so doing, we'll establish the following objectives:

. . . . . . . . . . . . . functions returning an 'int'
. an error will be indicated by a negative number that
is always the inverse of some well known errno.h value

. . . . . . . . . . . functions returning an 'address'
. any error will be indicated by a NULL return pointer
with the actual reason found in the formal errno value

And, when errno is manipulated directly we will strive
to do so whenever possible within those routines which
have been declared with PROCPS_EXPORT. In other words,
in the user callable functions defined in source last.

[ But, that won't always be possible. In particular, ]
[ all the 'read_failed' functions will sometimes set ]
[ 'errno' so that they can serve callers returning a ]
[ NULL or an int without duplicating a lot of logic. ]

[ Also, that includes one subordinate function which ]
[ was called by 'read_failed' in the <slabinfo> API. ]

------------------------------------------------------
Along the way, several additional miscellaneous issues
were addressed. They're listed here now for posterity.

. the '-1' return value passed outside the library was
eliminated since it would erroneously equate to -EPERM

. the stacks_fetch functions in <diskstats> and <stat>
weren't checked for their possible minus return values

. hash create was not checked in <meminfo> or <vmstat>

. fixed 'new' function faulty parm check in <slabinfo>

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-12-20 21:18:54 +11:00
Jim Warner
7453f8719b library: actually remove those alloc.h & alloc.c files
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-12-20 21:18:53 +11:00
Jim Warner
18e684d65d library: eliminate all dependencies on alloc.h/alloc.c
While that old master branch library may utilize those
memory allocation functions found in the alloc module,
it was inappropriate for this newlib branch to subject
callers to a stderr message followed by an early exit.

Of course, the old libprocps offered a message handler
override provision (xalloc_err_handler) but that, too,
would seem to be inappropriate for our modern library.

[ remember the battles fought with that damn libnuma ]

So, this commit will tweak those old inherited sources
setting the stage for standardized return values/errno
settings in connection with a memory allocation error.

------------------------------------------------------
Along the way, we'll address the following miscellany:

. Completely eliminate usage of anything from alloc.h.
This, of course, entails our own error checking of the
alternative allocation calls from stdlib.h & string.h.

. Eliminate use of the strdup function where possible,
as with 'procps_uptime' and 'procps_loadavg' routines.

. Whack some obsolete code (getslabinfo) in sysinfo.c.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-12-20 21:18:53 +11:00
Jim Warner
28f405689c library: fixed miscellaneous whitespace/comment issues
. ensure whitespace exists between the code & comments
[ changing txt slightly keeps right margin alignment ]

. strive for more consistency with some comment styles
[ don't use C '/*' style where C++ '//' style exists ]

. removed the instance of double space in 1 assignment
[ still striving for consistency in whitespace usage ]

. fixed comment relating to number of 'derived fields'
[ the <meminfo> api recently added one new such enum ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-10-01 22:25:18 +11:00
Jim Warner
89775d5418 library: normalize stacks_extent struct layout, <PIDS>
This patch just rearranges 1 item in the stacks_extent
struct to make it equivalent to all the other modules.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-10-01 22:25:18 +11:00
Jim Warner
daf7c86c01 library: add delta values with swap too, <meminfo> api
As an oversight, delta values for SWAP amounts weren't
included in the <meminfo> API. Since any runtime costs
of including them only amount to slightly more storage
this commit will simply correct the earlier oversight.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-10-01 22:25:18 +11:00
Kyle Laker
3651280194 whattime: Show 0 minutes in pretty output
When supplying the -p command to uptime, it does not display any
sections where the value is less than 1; however, after a reboot, this
causes the command to just output "up". Showing 0 minutes when the
system has been up for less than a minute makes it clear a reboot just
occurred.

References:
 commit 325d68b7c3

Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
2017-09-25 08:36:51 +10:00
Craig Small
d8fb86dbc5 Port of merge request 49 to newlib
Wayne Porter made !49 which added Cygwin support to the master branch
This is the port of those changes to newlib
2017-08-19 23:05:22 +10:00
Jim Warner
876aff8584 library: correct the #define FALSE_THREADS, <PIDS> api
Awhile back, that former QUICK_THREADS #define evolved
into the development (only) FALSE_THREADS which can be
used to ensure a 'duplicate ENUM' convention is output
when certain string fields can't be easily duplicated.

Unfortunately, that original implementation was marred
with zeros being displayed for /proc/$$/meminfo fields
in all the child threads for a multi-threaded process.

So this commit corrects that zero memory field buglet.

Reference(s):
. QUICK_THREADS becomes FALSE_THREADS
commit c546d9dd44

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-07-04 20:40:53 +10:00
Jim Warner
dbc880edd3 library: correct 'used' memory calculations, <meminfo>
The <meminfo> module attempted to duplicate the former
sysinfo memory calculations wherein 'SReclaimable' was
added to 'Cached' for the 'kb_main_cached' equivalent.

But, this original approach was wrong for two reasons.

1. The addition occurred too late to impact the 'USED'
calculation which could then cause an underflow in the
top memory display if 'SReclaimable' was heavily used.

2. In changing the actual /proc/meminfo 'Cached' value
it meant that users could not rely on that proc(5) man
page when interpreting the MEMINFO_MEM_CACHED results.

So this commit adds a new enumerator for the inclusive
cached amount plus repositions the calculation so that
a MEMINFO_MEM_USED result will exclude 'SReclaimable'.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-06-04 21:36:23 +10:00
Jim Warner
3d39e4fd88 library: set stage for NUMA node field display support
In response to that suggestion referenced below, these
changes allow display of task/thread level NUMA nodes.

Currently, only the 'top' program offers any NUMA type
support and it is limited to the Summary Area display.
With this commit both the 'top' and 'ps' programs will
be able to display NUMA nodes associated with threads.

Reference(s):
https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/issues/58

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-05-22 21:38:10 +10:00
Jim Warner
618a813baa misc: eliminate all those remaining gcc -Wall warnings
Reference(s):
proc/readproc.c: In function 'statm2proc'
proc/readproc.c:600:9: warning: variable 'num' set but not used [-Wunused-but-set-variable]

proc/stat.c: In function 'stat_derive_unique':
proc/stat.c:429:1: warning: no return statement in function returning non-void [-Wreturn-type]

ps/parser.c: In function 'arg_type':
ps/parser.c:1098:3: warning: this 'if' clause does not guard... [-Wmisleading-indentation]
ps/parser.c:1099:34: note: ...this statement, but the latter is misleadingly indented as if it is guarded by the 'if'

lib/signals.c: In function 'strtosig':
lib/signals.c:243:9: warning: this 'if' clause does not guard... [-Wmisleading-indentation]
lib/signals.c:245:13: note: ...this statement, but the latter is misleadingly indented as if it is guarded by the 'if'

slabtop.c: In function 'print_summary':
slabtop.c:223:29: warning: unused variable 'stats' [-Wunused-variable]

watch.c: In function 'process_ansi':
watch.c:232:5: warning: this 'if' clause does not guard... [-Wmisleading-indentation]
watch.c:235:2: note: ...this statement, but the latter is misleadingly indented as if it is guarded by the 'if'

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-05-22 21:38:10 +10:00
Jim Warner
6644b1a646 library: eliminate a redundant conditional, <PIDS> api
library: eliminate a single redundant conditional test

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-05-22 21:38:10 +10:00
Jim Warner
253ac7f709 library: improve <STAT> cpus offline/online management
When those standardized 'derived' TIC enumerators were
introduced, a problem with potential DELTA distortions
was also introduced when toggling cpus offline/online.

It has always been true that the 1st (summary) line in
/proc/stat will experience a decrease in total tics if
a new cpu is brought online. Such decreases are mostly
due to reductions in 'idle' and 'iowait' tics. Exactly
why such a counterintuitive phenomenon should occur is
a mystery, but this has been acknowledged in proc.txt.

A separate potential distortion arises with individual
cpus. And, here it extends to both bringing processors
online plus taking them offline too. When that happens
the order of the cpus array tracking is upset, placing
the 'new' values in some other processor's array slot.
But even if we were to occupy the same slot, the issue
regarding reductions in 'idle' & 'iowait' still apply.

In all cases, when a DELTA field was found to be minus
it was forced to zero via the 'TICsetH' macro. However
the 'derived' calculations are subject to new forms of
distortion with their own DELTA values. For example we
could find DELTA_SUM_USER + DELTA_SUM_SYSTEM exceeding
DELTA_SUM_TOTAL, an illogical/inappropriate condition.

So this commit moves former protections for individual
cpus to the stat_derive_unique() function and modifies
it to also extend protections to the 'derived' values.
In the process we now protect the cpu 'summary' counts
which were unfortunately previously overlooked (oops).

Reference(s):
. 'derived' types introduced
commit 2c86c4984a
2017-03-29 22:10:56 +11:00
Jim Warner
ea930f6f9e library <stat>: input file buffer size must be dynamic
Since its introduction, our evolved /proc/stat API has
relied on a static buffer of 8192 bytes. This approach
is probably Ok for other /proc files but it would only
accommodate around 100 processors. If such a threshold
were exceeded then this interface could never succeed.

Now days 100 processors doesn't seem at all excessive.

So this commit trades that static buffer for a dynamic
self-tuning one. And since so much former top CPU code
was already rolled into this module, we just stole the
already proven top dynamic buffer management code too.

[ this also meant switching low level unbuffered I/O ]
[ calls to standard library buffered I/O calls. that ]
[ is exactly what <slabinfo> and <diskstats> employ. ]

Reference(s):
. 1st gen readstat introduction
commit a410e236ab

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-01-05 06:48:38 +11:00
Jim Warner
282ee362f0 library <stat>: improve response to cpu offline/online
With the addition of those new derived SUM values, any
CPUs taken offline or brought online would distort the
historical (delta) results.  So this patch just forces
a history reset when such transitions are encountered.

Reference(s):
. derived SUM provisions introduced
commit 2c86c4984a

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-01-05 06:48:38 +11:00
Jim Warner
f82ac70e13 library <slabinfo>: make read function name consistent
For each of those interfaces employing a priming read,
all the other 'read' functions begin with the module's
name except this guy which began with 'read_slabinfo'.

Now, they'll all begin with their module name then end
the same with a '_read_failed' boolean hinting suffix.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-01-05 06:48:38 +11:00
Jim Warner
e524e48138 library: eliminate distorted history 1st time switches
Upon reflection, at the point where the 'priming read'
was introduced, any possibility of history distortions
was also eliminated.  This was true because all of the
'old' (zeroed) data will have been replaced with 'new'
data whenever a user finally calls get, select & reap.

Thus, any DELTA values will automatically reflect that
interval between 'new' and subsequent retrieval calls.

[ diskstats didn't actually employ a 1st time switch ]
[ like the others so we have changed a comment only. ]
[ but that module will retain something similar used ]
[ inside node_update whenever a new node is created. ]

Reference(s):
. priming read added to slabinfo
commit 5d5a52a380
. priming read added to diskstats
commit ecd64f4445
. priming read added to meminfo, stat, vmstat
commit 1a2b62c779

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-01-05 06:48:38 +11:00
Jim Warner
2c86c4984a library <stat>: standardized new category calculations
This commit arose out of the discussion (and research)
surrounding the issue cited below. It is an attempt to
consolidate and standardize the calculation of jiffies
categories (e.g. 'idle', 'busy', etc.) once & for all.

Also included is the enum STAT_TIC_NUM_CONTRIBUTORS in
case anyone, in the future, decides to calculate usage
based upon elapsed time * Hz (like top does in process
level %CPU stats). In such an event, a total number of
CPUs or NUMA Nodes would be needed for proper scaling.

Reference(s):
https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/issues/48

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-01-04 08:29:44 +11:00
Jim Warner
12e070dd5f library: ensure 'namespace' types treated consistently
Unlike the ps kludge under the master branch to ensure
that namespaces appear the same under both 32 & 64-bit
models, this newlib branch already used a proper type.

However source data still carried the original type as
'signed long' versus that more proper 'unsigned long'.

So, this patch makes sources & destinations identical.

Reference(s):
. master branch ps kludge
commit c41c614b0c

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2017-01-04 08:29:44 +11:00
Jan Rybar
5602dd04e1 library: don't strip off prefixes from the wchan names
This commit will resolve the RedHat Bugzilla #1322111.

[ import from identical commit against master branch ]
[ but without trailing whitespace, thank you so much ]

Imported by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-12-07 22:07:00 +11:00
Jim Warner
8ba07209f0 library: accumulated miscellaneous code/comment tweaks
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-12-07 22:07:00 +11:00
Jim Warner
e70531a945 library: protect against possible 'refcount' underflow
In each module employing a priming read at 'new' time,
should that read fail, a call to 'unref' will be made.

However, there is a hidden dependency that these calls
must never occur before the context 'refcount' was set
due to the way an 'unref' conditional was constructed.

So this commit just ensures that 'unref' will function
as expected, even if called with a 'refcount' of zero.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-12-07 22:06:59 +11:00
Jim Warner
912075605b library <stat>: remove that PIDS_WCHAN_ADDR enumerator
Removing the Item_table 'stat' oldflags for WCHAN_ADDR
was wrong since that 'stat' field is not a constant 0.
Rather, it could assume these 3 values: -1, 0, and +1.

I have not been able to pin down a '-1' result, but it
probably means some sort of permission error (-EPERM).

The '1' or '0' values were supposed to distinguish the
tasks that were or were not blocked (whether there was
a wchan address). However, in practice there is little
correlation between those values and availability of a
kernel symbol in /proc/$$/wchan (perhaps due to race).

Anyway, the real point is that a 'stat' wchan does not
now intentionally contain an address. Thus, outputting
'ffffff', '-' or '1' in programs like ps is senseless.

So this patch just eliminates PIDS_WCHAN_ADDR from our
item enumerators leaving only the PIDS_WCHAN_NAME guy.
Now the new library can't be blamed for bad addresses!

Reference(s):
. removed Item_table 'oldflags'
commit c4aa6c0ab4
. linux removal of wchan addresses
commit b2f73922d119686323f14fbbe46587f863852328

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-10-16 08:23:38 +11:00
Jim Warner
71bd5b6485 library <pids>: remove fields obsoleted with linux 2.6
It seems inappropriate to blindly include fields known
to always be zero in our brand new library. Therefore,
this patch removes support for three such enumerators.

[ that stat 'it_real_value' (PIDS_ALARM) field could ]
[ have been made obsolete before a linux 2.6 release ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-10-09 21:31:29 +11:00
Jim Warner
82a0dcda0f library: strictly cosmetic, absolutely no code changes
This commit just contains some tweaks to comments plus
a few adjustments to whitespace for alignment purposes
and a normalization of the header inclusion #define's.

[ plus a spelling error in one header file was fixed ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-10-09 21:31:29 +11:00
Jim Warner
9d1f6cb4ea library <stat>: added overlooked numa guest tic counts
When this module was upgraded to 3rd generation in the
patch referenced below, numa node support was migrated
from the top program into newlib. The 'guest_nice' and
'guest' tics were overlooked as top did not need them.

So, this commit corrects that oversight and achieves a
proper symmetry between the cpu & numa jiffies counts.

Reference(s):
. 3rd gen redesign, numa support imported
commit abc71a46ad

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-09-26 07:40:45 +10:00
Jim Warner
1a2b62c779 library: add priming read at 'new' time <most modules>
A priming read at 'new' time in that <slabinfo> module
was important so that permission problems are detected
early. Plus, it also had the potential of making delta
values valid when 'get' or 'select' were first called.

It is for that latter reason that such a read was also
incorporated in the <diskstats> module 'new' function.
No other module, however, employed such priming reads.

This patch just brings those potential benefits to all
of our other newlib modules with the exception of that
<pids> guy. That module is, of necessity, sufficiently
different from those others to justify such exclusion.

Not only are there precious few DELTA enums in <pids>,
but the costs of a priming read would be much greater.

[ otherwise, these newly added priming reads have no ]
[ measurable negative impact on performance/timings. ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-09-21 21:06:12 +10:00
Jim Warner
5197fa0a71 library: summary name now more descriptive, <slabinfo>
The <slabinfo> header provides 3 groups of enumerators
with prefixes of SLABINFO, SLABS & SLABNODE. The first
is strictly user oriented & isn't supported internally
by any structure. The other two, however, have structs
associated with 'em but, unfortunately, 1 is misnamed.

The 'struct slabs_node' is associated with 'nodes' and
supports the enumerators with the SLABNODE prefix. But
the 'struct slabs_hist' was associated with 'hist' yet
supports those enumerators with just the SLABS prefix.

We do not care very much what some structure is called
but we do care about an identifier used manipulate it.

This patch will trade the 'hist' identifier associated
with 'struct slabs_hist' for a more congruous 'slabs'.

[ it's awful when the author can't remember what the ]
[ true meaning of an identifier is after creating it ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-09-21 21:06:12 +10:00
Jim Warner
eeeba3e66c library: improve support of dynamic numa nodes, <stat>
If, in fact, numa nodes are dynamic (like that current
total of on-line cpus) the existing logic was lacking.
It included an early return before checking the total.

So, this commit ensures that the nodes total is always
set or updated consistently in only a single function.
There's no need to set it at the time 'new' is called.

[ and since under our existing code this nodes total ]
[ could never possibly have been zero, the erroneous ]
[ test (with the early return) has now been whacked! ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-09-21 21:06:12 +10:00
Jim Warner
91d47123f2 library: finally circumvent libnuma memory leak <stat>
Still unhappy with a minor memory leak associated with
libnuma, I experimented with omitting the dlclose that
was issued at module's end. For some reason which will
remain a mystery, the valgrind leak then went bye-bye.

So this patch just omits one use of dlclose and relies
on whatever kernel magic is at work to free the memory
when each process ends. We kept, however, the original
code (now commented-out) to serve as a future caution.

There remains one potential (but unlikely) dlclose use
near the original dlopen. But there will be no leak as
that 'numa_node_of_cpu' will not yet have been called.
This seems to be the culprit that triggers such leaks.

None of this libnuma shit would likely have come close
to hitting our fan had the numa developers provided us
with 'new' and 'unref' functions like our newlib does.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-09-18 20:37:24 +10:00
Craig Small
a8f7e44233 docs: Remove old library man pages 2016-09-11 11:20:03 +10:00
Jim Warner
834ed434c9 library: normalize stack and history allocation naming
Recent profiling and timings have resulted in improved
newlib performance. This patch completes that process.

It just normalizes naming conventions employed for all
allocations involving reaped stacks & history support.

The modules offering a 'reap' function will also offer
the now standardized corresponding STACKS_INCR define.

The modules which provide dynamic history support will
now have a separate #define called NEWOLD_INCR used in
allocations/reallocations. And, while values currently
are set equal to that STACKS_INCR value, in the future
some reason for divorcing those two may be discovered.

----------------------------- for future reference ---

In those modules which contain the STACKS_INCR #define
it is tempting to specify a large value so as to avoid
repeated calls to malloc/realloc. However, in doing so
an extra runtime price will be paid in 'cleanup_stack'
calls with any iterative programs like top or slabtop.

So, with the current values a balance has been sought.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-09-11 09:31:05 +10:00
Jim Warner
3ac040d047 library: revert one ancient 'escape_str_utf8' deletion
Profiling revealed a large amount of time spent in the
'escape_str_utf8' function (escape.c) with both of our
NLS branches (newlib and master). That same result was
not seen under an ancient top-3.2.8 program & library.

Well, the 3.2.8 result was ultimately explained by the
absence of a 'setlocale', necessary under NLS support.
Thus, when that ancient library tested for locale, all
it got was 'ANSI_...' & assumed 'UTF-8' wasn't active.

But after a hack to that ancient code to place it on a
par with newlib/master, I still found cost differences
that led me to revisit an old change referenced below.

It turns out that 'iswprint' costs far more than would
a call of 'isprint', even with the extra support code.
So this commit just reverts that five year old change.

Reference(s):
commit 7b0fc19e9d

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-23 21:11:09 +10:00
Jim Warner
acda6f40d1 library: miscellaneous additional efficiencies, <pids>
This patch contains the following miscellaneous stuff:

. The pids_stacks_fetch() routine might call for newly
allocated stacks to be itemized. However, that job was
already tended to by the pids_stacks_alloc() function.

So, this patch just eliminates a redundant invocation.
------------------------------------------------------

. The concept of 'dirty_stacks' has not kept pace with
the evolving stacks implementation. Originally, stacks
were considered dirty only if free() of dynamic memory
was needed before refreshing any single result struct.

Later, with the introduction of the 'extra' item and a
promise to reset it to zero, 'dirty' was much broader.

So, this patch just treats the dirty flg as others do.
------------------------------------------------------

. Lastly, a word or three about performance & timings.

Tuning efforts concentrated on the <pids> API and top.
And unless an oldlib equivalent to the preceding patch
is applied (favoring stat vs. status), newlib top will
often outperform the oldlib version (obviously wrong).

So assuming /proc/stat is preferred in both libraries,
generally speaking, a cpu and elapsed time increase of
1-5% was found for this new stacks oriented interface.
Of course, there's also an increased memory footprint.

There are some occasions, however, when the newlib top
is at a substantial disadvantage. For example if WCHAN
or TTY is displayed, such items will be present in all
newlib reaped stacks (i.e. every process). But old top
would only incur such overhead with displayable tasks.

Thus, oldlib top could outperform newlib by up to 25%,
for example, if only fields requiring NO library flags
were displayed. However, such a scenario is not likely
since only GID, UID, PID, TGID & WCHAN would be shown.
In the usual case, that overhead associated with WCHAN
and/or TTY is overshadowed by other top runtime costs.

All in all a pleasing outcome I deem quite acceptable.
------------------------------------------------------

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-23 21:11:09 +10:00
Jim Warner
e9c101edcb library: prefer /proc/stat before /proc/status, <pids>
Long ago, in a galaxy far away (when top was in charge
of library FILL flgs) /proc/status was to be preferred
over /proc/stat if a field could be satisfied by both.

This was done to avoid costly 64-bit math emulation in
a 32-bit application due to 'unsigned long long' data.

Well it's time to acknowledge the prevalence of 64-bit
platforms. And in such an environment the cost picture
has shifted significantly. It now costs 14 times (wow)
as much to access /proc/status compared to /proc/stat.

In other words, even with '%llu' variables, a sscanf()
call in stat2proc() beats the pants off that home brew
gperf based hashing employed by the status2proc() guy.
In fact, status2proc incurs higher costs than found in
the most expensive aspect of top's forest view option.

Here's a gprof extract to illustrate the costs. It was
produced with an rcfile requiring fields from both the
/proc/stat & /proc/status pseudo files (among others).
There were 5000 iterations in each of 4 separate gprof
runs subsequently merged into 1 gmon.sum for analysis.

  %      self              self
 time   seconds    calls  us/call  name
 -----  -------  -------  -------  -----------
 28.65     4.10  4689423     0.87  status2proc
 26.14     3.74    40000    93.50  forest_adds
 ...
 01.96     0.28  4689427     0.06  stat2proc

[ since forest_adds is recursive, the calls value is ]
[ the non-recursive #, its 'call graph' shows totals ]

Anyway, now that such cost is known this patch becomes
what is euphemistically known as the usual no-brainer.

[ jeeze, was it really this long between profilings? ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-23 21:11:09 +10:00
Jim Warner
4fe42d0be9 library: most function names now more profile friendly
This patch will begin some refinements associated with
gprof. Initially, functions names have been changed to
help in identifying potential bottlenecks. This effort
also included the obscure set, free and sort routines.

Plus the following additional modifications were made:

. the stacks_alloc prologue was generalized plus added
to a couple of modules where it had not yet propagated

. a couple of the '// end ...' comments were corrected

. some functions have been formally tagged as 'inline'

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-23 21:11:09 +10:00
Jim Warner
4f2fe6411e library: expand fields and break an ABI, <MEMINFO> api
The immediately prior commit demonstrated how our APIs
might be expanded in at some point in the future while
maintaining binary compatibility in previous programs.

However, since we've yet to release the 1st version of
our new library, there's no need to violate alphabetic
ordering just yet. So, this patch restores that order.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-16 21:08:27 +10:00
Jim Warner
09e1886c9e library: expand fields yet maintain ABI, <MEMINFO> api
With the 4.8 kernel, 2 new fields will be added to the
meminfo pseudo file. This commit, soon to be replaced,
is intended as an example of how such changes might be
incorporated plus still maintain binary compatibility.

This actually goes further than is strictly necessary,
by retaining meminfo_item ordering for 'set' functions
and the creation of hash table entries. However, there
is only 1 true requirement, that of Item_table entries
which must always agree exactly with item enumerators.
All of the other changes could be done alphabetically.

Ok, so what happens when an old program encounters the
new expanded meminfo items? Well, if it was thoroughly
tested against an old library, it won't even see those
new fields. On the other hand, if it somehow exceeds a
previous MEMINFO_logical_end, then it will just get an
extra result structure or two, with no real harm done.

[ this patch is being replace by the very next patch ]
[ so that our iniitial newlib release can maintain a ]
[ strict alphabetic ordering in all areas initially! ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-16 21:08:27 +10:00
Jim Warner
530d19f90f library <STAT>: exclude an #include for --disable-numa
When the numa stuff was imported from the top program,
that #include for dlopen() was not made conditional as
it should have been. Well, here it is being corrected.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-11 07:57:55 +10:00
Jim Warner
7d20df9ef0 library: if the VAL type is wrong still return a value
Rather than return a 0 result for all VAL type errors,
return what would have been without validation active.

This will enable a program like pgrep to still print a
result even though it used some incorrect type member.

With this commit, our VAL macro validations logic will
behave in exactly the same way as the GET validations.
While warning messages may be issued, except for a bad
enumerator, values will always be returned to callers.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-11 07:56:00 +10:00
Jim Warner
9f27e9d8d9 library: strengthen the VAL macro validation functions
One ought not to assume that random memory access will
always succeed or, when it does, that an obviously bad
item enumerator will always be found at that location.

Thus, this patch corrects some really poor assumptions
associated with the 'xtra_procps_debug.h' header file.

[ and it does so in somewhat contorted ways so as to ]
[ avoid several darn gcc -Wnonnull warning messages! ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-08 22:01:37 +10:00
Jim Warner
bef8c7fb70 library: ensure that all those 'GET' macros are robust
When users call the native 'get' functions they have a
responsibility to check that the result struct address
was indeed returned. But when using those 'GET' macros
there was no protection for possible NULL dereference.

So this patch will add some protection for a potential
failure of an underlying 'get' function. And should it
occur then those 'GET' macros will just return a zero.

Plus, we'll also mirror that behavior in the debugging
header should the XTRA_PROCPS_DEBUG #define be active.
And, we might as well add a warning when invalid items
are passed to 'GET' macros, just like we do for 'VAL'.

[ lastly, we added the missing opening parens/braces ]
[ to 2 'GET' macros in that xtra-procps-debug.h file ]
[ which went unnoticed until the qa folks caught up. ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-07 21:43:38 +10:00
Jim Warner
e3270d463d library: provide for validating result type references
During development, we now have a means for validating
that a type referenced in application code matches the
actual type set by the library. The new feature can be
activated through either of the following two methods:

1) ./configure CFLAGS='-DXTRA_PROCPS_DEBUG' (all pgms)

2) an #include <proc/xtra-procps-debug.h> (single pgm)

[ in the future, one could add a formal configure.ac ]
[ provision. but for now a manual approach is safer. ]

Lastly, for any module which provides a sort function,
the handling for both 'noop' & 'extra' enumerators was
made consistent. Now, 'noop' is not sorted and 'extra'
will be sorted as that module's widest supported type.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-07 21:40:48 +10:00
Jim Warner
6cafe3abec library: expand VAL macros to include the context parm
This patch will set the stage for validating the types
referenced in the result union. For now, the parameter
representing that 'info' structure will remain unused.

[ and while we're at it, let us correct a faulty GET ]
[ macro in the diskstats header. that puppy missed a ]
[ parm which ain't so good if that guy is ever used! ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-07 21:40:48 +10:00
Jim Warner
c4aa6c0ab4 library: normalize & minimize result types, <PIDS> api
This commit attempts to minimize the variety of types
currently used. Plus, the following were also changed:

. the MEM fields were switched to parallel the VM guys
. PIDS_MEM_VIRT -> PIDS_MEM_VIRT_PGS
. PIDS_MEM_VIRT_KIB -> PIDS_MEM_VIRT

. made NICE 's_int' so that it then parallels PRIORITY

. change RTPRIO & SCHED_CLASS from 'ul_int' to 's_int'

. removed Item_table 'oldflags' for an obsoleted field
. PIDS_WCHAN_ADDR

. added calculations like TICS_ALL_C for the following
. PIDS_TICS_USER_C
. PIDS_TICS_SYSTEM_C

. these three new 'TICS' fields have been incorporated
. PIDS_TICS_BLKIO - jiffies spent in block i/o
. PIDS_TICS_GUEST - jiffies spent as a guest
. PIDS_TICS_GUEST_C - as above, includes dead children

. that PIDS_TICS_DELTA was renamed PIDS_TICS_ALL_DELTA
( so it did not hide between TICS_BLKIO & TICS_GUEST )
( and to make clearer what's included: utime + stime )

. eliminated 'sl_int' entirely from that result struct

[ often, the <pids> module changes necessitated that ]
[ readproc header and source files had to change too ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-08-01 20:09:18 +10:00
Jim Warner
01beb85f7d misc: replace any remaining tab characters in readproc 2016-08-01 20:09:18 +10:00
Jim Warner
6f71a33c1d library: add final remaining sort function, <STAT> api
With this patch, all of the modules which offer a reap
function (pids, diskstats, slabinfo and stat too) will
now also provide for sorting whatever had been reaped.

It was easy to overlook a sort function for our <STAT>
guy given the paucity of CPUs on your typical personal
desktop or laptop. However, out in the world one might
find boxes with hundreds of CPUs plus many NUMA nodes.

Hey, who are we to disallow sorts on something another
person might see as useful under the above conditions?
And, there's always something to be said for symmetry.

[ of course, several minor tweaks were also included ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-28 20:46:18 +10:00
Jim Warner
5c857b865e misc: tweaks (mostly cosmetic) to several source files
. a more appropriate error return code was substituted
. a safer form of comparison is utilized in two places
. a STAT_VAL macro replaced by more proper MEMINFO_VAL
. several of the silly 'xerrx' formats had been missed
. a few whitespace changes have also been incorporated

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-28 20:46:18 +10:00
Jim Warner
612f36189e related: change for lost 'PROCPS_' enumerator prefixes
With this patch we've completed a progression toward a
standard approach to naming conventions which follows:

* Only functions will begin with that 'procps_' prefix
. ........................................... examples
. procps_vmstat_get ()
. procps_diskstats_select ()
- ----------------------------------------------------

* Exposed structures begin with the module/header name
. ........................................... examples
. struct pids_info
. struct stat_reaped
- ----------------------------------------------------

* Item enumerators begin like structs, but capitalized
. ........................................... examples
. VMSTAT_COMPACT_FAIL
. MEMINFO_DELTA_ACTIVE

[ slabinfo varies slightly due to some item variants ]
. SLABINFO_extra
. SLABS_SIZE_ACTIVE
. SLABNODE_OBJS_PER_SLAB
[ could cure with a prefix of SLABINFO, but too long ]
- ----------------------------------------------------

* Other enumerators work exactly like item enumerators
. ........................................... examples
. PIDS_SORT_ASCEND
. STAT_REAP_CPUS_AND_NODES
- ----------------------------------------------------

* Macros and constants begin just like the enumerators
. ........................................... examples
. #define SLABINFO_GET
. #define DISKSTATS_TYPE_DISK
- ----------------------------------------------------

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-26 20:49:44 +10:00
Jim Warner
c4d097c709 library: removed all the 'PROCPS_' enumerator prefixes
Many of our item enumerator identifiers are very long,
especially in that <VMSTAT> module. Additionally, they
all contain the exact same universal 'PROCPS_' prefix.

The origins for this are likely found in the desire to
avoid name clashes with other potential include files.
But with procps-ng newlib, we've probably gone way too
far. Did 'PROCPS_PIDS_TICS_SYSTEM' actually offer more
protection against clash than 'PIDS_TICS_SYSTEM' does?

I don't think so. Besides, no matter how big that name
becomes, one can never guarantee they'll never be some
clash. And, conversely, extremely short names will not
always create conflict. Of course, in either case when
some clash occurs, one can always #undef that problem.

Thus, this commit will eliminate that 'PROCPS_' prefix
making all of those enum identifiers a little shorter.
And, we'll still be well above some ridiculously short
(criminally short) names found in some common headers:

- - - - - - - - - - <term.h>
- 'tab', 'TTY', etc
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - <search.h>
- 'ENTER', ENTRY', 'FIND', etc

------------------------------------------------------
Finally, with this as a last of the wholesale changes,
we will have established the naming conventions below:

. only functions will begin with that 'procps_' prefix
. exposed structures begin with the module/header name
. item enumerators begin like structs, but capitalized
. other enumerators work exactly like item enumerators
. macros and constants begin just like the enumerators
------------------------------------------------------

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-26 20:49:00 +10:00
Jim Warner
d7cbf3448f related: adapt to changes in 'context' structure names
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-26 20:47:50 +10:00
Jim Warner
82d5661603 library: standardize all the 'context' structure names
This patch attempts to standardize the naming of those
most important (declared not defined) context structs.

The present practice represents a hodge podge of names
only some of which reflect the source /proc file name.
And 2 of those file names embed a literal 'info' which
is likely the origin of that required parm identifier.

Now we'll append a universal '_info' to such structure
names, while including the names of those /proc pseudo
files where possible. In any case, that context struct
will *always* begin with the actual module/header file
name. And only the following two sound a little weird!

---------> 'meminfo_info' + 'slabinfo_info' <---------

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-26 20:47:34 +10:00
Jim Warner
ecd64f4445 library: normalize/standardize an i/f, <DISKSTATS> api
This patch will bring this interface up to our 3rd gen
standards. The following summarizes the major changes.

* New delta provisions have been added to most fields.

There are, of course, some fields for which a delta is
inappropriate. They include the identifying items such
as name, type, major and minor. Plus the io_inprogress
field which already acts, in effect, as a delta value.

* To provide delta support, dev_node historical values
have become persistent. By the same token, the library
must provide for future removal of disks/partitions. A
timestamp is used to detect 'stale' data which will be
deleted so as not to satisfy some get, select or reap.

* Such persistent support is provided by a linked list
which, by default, grows from the bottom down so as to
maintain compatibility with the /proc/diskstats order.

Initially, I was tempted to use the GNU tsearch (tree)
provisions until I discovered the overhead of building
that tree plus costs of a subsequent 'twalk'. Besides,
walking such a tree means retrieval order would differ
from an order required/expected by the vmstat program.

* The '/sys/block' directory is no longer scanned with
every refresh cycle. Rather, it's only accessed when a
node is first encountered. Then, that node's 'type' is
persistent for its lifetime like several other fields.

* A sort provision was included, at virtually no cost,
even though such a provision was not currently needed.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-26 20:46:08 +10:00
Jim Warner
8e5d5e44e9 library: rename 'diskstat' source as 'diskstats' files
Where possible, libprocps files convey the name of the
actual source pseudo file under the '/proc' directory.

This brings diskstats into line with such an approach.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-26 07:59:52 +10:00
Jim Warner
338166df57 misc: just eliminate several 'unused' warning messages
[ plus we also play catch up on some earlier changes ]
[ that impacted skill.c, after using --enable-skill! ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-26 07:59:48 +10:00
Jim Warner
220236a9af library: some minor miscellaeous improvements, 3rd gen
A collection of miscellaneous code and comment tweaks.

[ such changes will stop when desk checking ends too ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-17 08:49:48 +10:00
Jim Warner
c546d9dd44 library: recycle the QUICK_THREADS #define, <PIDS> api
That #define QUICK_THREADS was impossible to implement
under the new <pids> interface. Plus it was also found
to distort some thread information (referenced below).

So, it's always been inactive under the newlib branch.

However, it will (with small changes) still serve some
useful purpose in our library. Now, when the redefined
FALSE_THREADS is active, those special strings showing
"[ duplicate ENUM ]" will appear for any child thread.

Note: the real reason for such strings appearing isn't
being exercised, only their mechanics. In actual usage
they are substituted when a user duplicates such items
in a results stack & only the 1st instance can own it.

With this patch, we are simply fooling the <pids> code
into thinking an item was duplicated via a NULL value.

Reference(s):
. from master branch
commit 25a6ecdbfb

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-17 08:49:48 +10:00
Jim Warner
9bea1b2def library: the overlooked twerks (oops, tweaks), 3rd gen
Yes, all of these changes are strictly cosmetic. It is
likely symptomatic of some deep-seated character flaw.

[ or, it might be because of a certain pride in this ]
[ new library and the desire to make it even better! ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-09 12:48:28 +10:00
Jim Warner
a6115bfff4 library: some tweaks to 2 file read functions, 3rd gen
Ever since their introduction, plus continuing through
several evolutions, both the meminfo and vmstat 'read'
functions employed a 'do while' loop for /proc access.

However, that loop construct was wrong since identical
tests were already done (twice!) within each loop body
itself, then accompanied by its own 'break' statement.

So, we will now transform them both into forever loops
which will help us to emphasize such break statements.

[ plus, let's return an error should nothing be read ]

[ lastly, eliminate 1 erroneous PROCPS_EXPORT prefix ]

Reference(s):
. original meminfo introduction
commit a20e88e4e7
. original vmstat introduction
commit a410e236ab

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-06 21:36:37 +10:00
Simon Tatham
f888a30d23 library: find tty device name of process quicker
The procps library attempts to work out the tty of a process
through several methods. For things like /dev/tty123 or
/dev/foo it works fine.

For tty devices that put the minor number in a directory
of the major name this fails. So then we have to fallback
to stating things like the processes STDERR and try again.

Considering a lot of processes sit on ttys such as
/dev/pts/3 this is a lot of wasted time. At the point of
entering driver_name we know "/dev/pts" and we know "3"
we just didn't join them up the right way as this is old
code.

This change now looks for /dev/pts/3 as well. It does it
after looking for /dev/pts3 so the behaviour is the same.

References:
 https://bugs.debian.org/770215

Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
2016-07-03 10:47:25 +10:00
Jim Warner
80ad63dc31 library: refactor exposed pointers management, 3rd gen
This commit brings all of those 'fetch' type functions
(supporting some form of 'reap') into closer alignment
with one another. The biggest impact is to be found in
the <stat> module, which now provides for the separate
copy of stack pointers which will be exposed to users.

The reason such a copy was not employed initially with
<stat>, unlike those for <pids> and <slabinfo>, is due
to the fact that such stacks were never sortable. Thus
the original raw consolidated extent pointers wouldn't
have been disturbed. But that meant no NULL delimiter.

So with this commit, all reap/fetch operations now use
pointer copies when returning results to callers. And,
all such arrays are now NULL delimited meaning callers
can choose their own access fencepost: totals or NULL.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-02 16:33:01 +10:00
Jim Warner
4fe52ccd44 library: reduce copies of items to minimum, <STAT> api
This commit will consolidate the three separate copies
of the item enumerators currently supporting that reap
function (summary, cpus & nodes) into one shared copy.

That select function will continue to maintain its own
dedicated items copy, albeit via a new item structure.

[ and while we're at it, we'll move the 'select' guy ]
[ to its proper alphabetical place, after our 'reap' ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-02 16:33:01 +10:00
Jim Warner
8cd1214aac library: stop treating lxcname differently, <PIDS> api
Unlike other cached string fields (such as USER name),
that lxcname field was defined as 'const char *'. This
required a custom 'set' function using a cast in order
to avoid a compiler warning regarding that assignment.

So this commit brings lxcname into line with all those
other cached string fields. And while we're at it, the
reason some string fields have no 'freefunc' will also
be explained with some new comments in the Item_table.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-02 16:33:01 +10:00
Jim Warner
eff9fbc06e library: standardize extents_free_all() logic, 3rd gen
As those 3rd generation newlib APIs evolved so too did
the extents_free_all() function. Most versions of this
function required the callers to first verify that the
extents anchor wasn't empty, which was poor etiquette.

This simple function should have been much more robust
and forgiving. With this commit, it fnally becomes so.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-07-02 16:33:01 +10:00
Craig Small
96e6600c84 library: Cater for 32 char device names
The new library has this boundary set in a define.
Also fixed the off-by-one problem with the buffer and scanf

References:
 commit 1794875ab6
2016-07-02 15:01:11 +10:00
Jim Warner
380253ff7f library: more pids_fetch struct opaqueness, <PIDS> api
With all our 3rd generation interfaces, we're now well
positioned to preserve binary compatibility should new
fields be added to any public structure (assuming that
the 'result' union already contains its largest type).

This remains true even for the <pids> interface, which
unlike the others, has one structure embedded within a
separate struct rather than declaring a pointer to it.

The counts struct was positioned after the stacks ptrs
array so as to preserve that ABI if ever new ints were
added. Logically, however, the counts (especially that
total) should precede the stacks array if we wished to
properly place a horse (total) before a cart (stacks).

So to enable relocating those counts we will no longer
embed that structure, but provide a pointer to it. And
this will make accessing syntax feel more natural too.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-28 21:11:25 +10:00
Jim Warner
ddb4754b33 library: partial revert of that numa 'fix', <STAT> api
This patch represents the partial revert of the commit
referenced below. And, so that yours truly (the author
for goodness sake) doesn't shoot his tootsies again in
the future, a cautionary programmer comment was added.

Reference(s):
commit dea4033418

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-28 21:11:25 +10:00
Jim Warner
8444a6fe0b library: a couple of miscellaneous changes, <PIDS> api
This patch represents the following minor adjustments:

. old PROCTAB used with select & reap more descriptive

. reformatted PROCPS_PIDS_VAL macro like other 3rd gen

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-21 20:58:09 +10:00
Jim Warner
e41b40e6b0 library: <SLABINFO> api, change that 'get' return type
The following commit message is shared with 4 patches.
------------------------------------------------------

Under the newlib interface most of our 'get' functions
represent a bit of a compromise in that the actual raw
values are coerced into one (probably ok) return type.

That approach creates the possibility of truncation at
best, and wouldn't serve future needs should something
other than numeric data be added to the 'get' results.

This commit trades the current compromise for a return
value guaranteed to satisfy all future needs, namely a
pointer to a particular api's specific results struct.

The impact on existing programs is minimal, especially
when using a new supplied macro. Otherwise, native 'C'
syntax could be used, but may feel somewhat unnatural.

[ as an aside, this new approach allows us to delete ]
[ all 'getsfunc' table entries & the supporting code ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-21 20:58:09 +10:00
Jim Warner
8f1fb67a78 library: <MEMINFO> api, changed that 'get' return type
The following commit message is shared with 4 patches.
------------------------------------------------------

Under the newlib interface most of our 'get' functions
represent a bit of a compromise in that the actual raw
values are coerced into one (probably ok) return type.

That approach creates the possibility of truncation at
best, and wouldn't serve future needs should something
other than numeric data be added to the 'get' results.

This commit trades the current compromise for a return
value guaranteed to satisfy all future needs, namely a
pointer to a particular api's specific results struct.

The impact on existing programs is minimal, especially
when using a new supplied macro. Otherwise, native 'C'
syntax could be used, but may feel somewhat unnatural.

[ as an aside, this new approach allows us to delete ]
[ all 'getsfunc' table entries & the supporting code ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-21 20:58:09 +10:00
Jim Warner
e8d7f869b5 library: <VMSTAT> api, change in the 'get' return type
The following commit message is shared with 4 patches.
------------------------------------------------------

Under the newlib interface most of our 'get' functions
represent a bit of a compromise in that the actual raw
values are coerced into one (probably ok) return type.

That approach creates the possibility of truncation at
best, and wouldn't serve future needs should something
other than numeric data be added to the 'get' results.

This commit trades the current compromise for a return
value guaranteed to satisfy all future needs, namely a
pointer to a particular api's specific results struct.

The impact on existing programs is minimal, especially
when using a new supplied macro. Otherwise, native 'C'
syntax could be used, but may feel somewhat unnatural.

[ as an aside, this new approach allows us to delete ]
[ all 'getsfunc' table entries & the supporting code ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-21 20:58:09 +10:00
Jim Warner
8c7f89ad8d library: <STAT> api, change for that 'get' return type
The following commit message is shared with 4 patches.
------------------------------------------------------

Under the newlib interface most of our 'get' functions
represent a bit of a compromise in that the actual raw
values are coerced into one (probably ok) return type.

That approach creates the possibility of truncation at
best, and wouldn't serve future needs should something
other than numeric data be added to the 'get' results.

This commit trades the current compromise for a return
value guaranteed to satisfy all future needs, namely a
pointer to a particular api's specific results struct.

The impact on existing programs is minimal, especially
when using a new supplied macro. Otherwise, native 'C'
syntax could be used, but may feel somewhat unnatural.

[ as an aside, this new approach allows us to delete ]
[ all 'getsfunc' table entries & the supporting code ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-21 20:58:09 +10:00
Jim Warner
dea4033418 library: bug fix if libnuma.so unavailable, <STAT> api
All our numa logic was well encapsulated under #ifndef
NUMA_DISABLE (as ./configure --disable-numa), with the
exception of 1 case label. The reason it didn't create
any problems is because the sole consumer (top) itself
responded to the presence of #define NUMA_DISABLE too.

But if that option wasn't used, an oops still awaited.

When experimenting with a 32-bit library plus a 64-bit
kernel, a bug was revealed should the numa library not
have been found. Our 'reap' function must tolerate the
potential of a 0 return from that stacks_fetch_tics().

Now, if numa is desired but not possible, we'll be ok.

[ and, we'll build numa history from fresher sources ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-21 20:58:09 +10:00
Craig Small
5a244c1095 library: rename clashing pwcache functions
On MacOS the system already has user_from_uid and group_from_gid.
These are renamed pwcache_get_user and pwcache_get_group.

They were also exported but did not appear in the symbol file
or used by any of the procps binaries. They are no longer exported.

References:
 https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/issues/34

Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
2016-06-18 08:17:45 +10:00
Jim Warner
d7100d071d library: optional parms protection missing, <PIDS> api
When those items were made dynamic at 'new' time, some
other functions, previously assured of their presence,
failed to verify a 'reset' had acually been requested.

This commit just corrects that oversight and avoids an
attempt to 'assign_results' when no items are present.

Reference(s):
. when items/numitems became optional
commit 9ebadc1438

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-17 21:44:29 +10:00
Jim Warner
4a0e974b7f library: more tweaks for code and/or comments, 3rd gen
Following is a summary of significant changes (if any)
to each of these now upgraded 3rd gen library modules.

<meminfo> ............................................
. eliminated duplicate decl of 'struct procps_meminfo'
. standardized/normalized results struct union members
. added 'std' & 'var' dividers in .c file, like <pids>
. how did i miss relocating all these friggin' #undefs
. cleanup 'get' return logic (remove a redundant 'if')

<pids> ...............................................
. repositioned the procps_pidsinfo structure in header
. removed the extra trailing comma from enum pids_item
. standardized/normalized results struct union members

<slabinfo> ...........................................
. corrected comment typo (jeeze, in an 'aligned' para)
. standardized/normalized results struct union members
. added 'std' & 'var' dividers in .c file, like <pids>
. removed an obsolete #undef from procps_slabinfo_sort
. cleanup 'get' return logic (remove a redundant 'if')

<stat> ...............................................
. how did i miss relocating all these friggin' #undefs
. corrected an initialization fencepost used with numa <=== see Craig, here's a bug fix
. removed the extra trailing comma from enum stat_item
. standardized/normalized results struct union members
. added 'std' & 'var' dividers in .c file, like <pids>
. strengthen those parm checks in procps_stat_get func
. cleanup 'get' return logic (remove a redundant 'if')

<vmstat> .............................................
. standardized/normalized results struct union members
. added 'std' & 'var' dividers in .c file, like <pids>
. cleanup 'get' return logic (remove a redundant 'if')

[ virtually all of these tweaks reflect the author's ]
[ continuing pursuit of an unreasonable goal -- that ]
[ of a 'perfect' (plus 'pretty') C language program! ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-17 21:44:29 +10:00
Jim Warner
92c72166db library: file now parsed with 'hsearch', <MEMINFO> api
After reviewing the hsearch code in glibc, performance
will almost certainly benefit from abandoning a strcmp
approach in favor of hashing, just like that <vmstat>.

[ As an aside, now having struggled toward that goal ]
[ of opaqueness & making our API as user friendly as ]
[ possible, haven't we earned the rights to evaluate ]
[ other implementations? For example, GNU's hsearch? ]

[ We expose none of our 'info' struct details to the ]
[ users, but GNU exposes their 'hsearch_data' thingy ]
[ right there in <search.h>. But worse, they require ]
[ the user to zero it out before 1st use. Jeeze, you ]
[ mean that a function called hcreate_r could not do ]
[ its own memset? Aw, come on GNU! What's with that? ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-13 10:33:37 +10:00
Jim Warner
876ec555c3 library: final tweaks to code and/or comments, 3rd gen
With the dust now settling on all those 3rd generation
upgrades, this patch tries to provide some consistency
among the separate modules involved. Someday we should
consider a 4th generation where all redundant code has
been removed and isolated in a new shared source file.

Following is a summary of significant changes (if any)
to each of these now upgraded 3rd gen library modules.

<meminfo> ............................................
. strictly formatting/comment changes, code unaffected

<pids> ...............................................
. replaced a local mkSTR macro with existing STRINGIFY
. added fetch narrative explaining duplicate addresses

<slabinfo> ...........................................
. rearranged some free logic for procps_slabinfo_unref
. added fetch narrative explaining duplicate addresses

<stat> ...............................................
. added #define ENFORCE_LOGICAL, just as in <slabinfo>
. replaced a local mkSTR macro with existing STRINGIFY
. alphabetized the function declarations in the header

<vmstat> .............................................
. made one coverity concession with read_vmstat_failed

[ several of these changes may reflect this author's ]
[ continuing pursuit of an unreasonable goal -- that ]
[ of a 'perfect' (plus 'pretty') C language program! ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-13 10:33:37 +10:00
Jim Warner
adfa2bc75a library: please keep procps-private.h free of #include
The 'procps.h' header includes all other headers which
contain exported (public) functions, while this header
has some (private) macros required for implementation.

If we mix the two, by including procps.h in this file,
we'll lose all hope of the compiler catching the kinds
of errors corrected in an immediately preceding patch.

[ we must be diligent, always constantly striving to ]
[ protect jimmy from ill effects due to copy & paste ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-11 11:50:37 +10:00
Jim Warner
6a70466ae5 library: overcome effect of copy/paste, <SLABINFO> api
Needless to say, when one copies and then pastes, it's
always better when those results are refined somewhat.

The qsort callback declarations used the wrong results
type and 2 of their 3 input parameters were wrong too.

So this patch will fix that & generalize declarations.

[ plus add comment guidance about noop & extra enums ]
[ & provide for 'noop' sorting, as is done in <PIDS> ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-11 11:50:37 +10:00
Jim Warner
f897a495ee library: adjust 'noop' callback definition, <PIDS> api
Though all those callback's parameters are ignored and
qsort treats them as pointers to void, it's wrong when
3rd parm is 'enum pids_item', not 'struct sort_parms'.

So we will fix it in a way that lessens the likelihood
of another such a mistake when some new type is added.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-11 11:50:37 +10:00
Jim Warner
aa9f00dcaf library: misc tweaks for code and comments, <PIDS> api
This commit simply tries to keep naming plus formating
conventions on a par with the continuing climb up that
learning curve. These changes were suggested following
<slabinfo> sources upgrade from 2nd to 3rd generation.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-09 20:51:06 +10:00
Jim Warner
335cbc2e61 library: make struct name more descriptive, <STAT> api
After normalizing the <SLABINFO> module, much of which
was based on this module, a structure which is crucial
to concurrent select/reap support is renamed the same.

Such a need for concurrent support was revealed during
slabtop testing. That program requests (select) global
data after calling for individual node data (reap) but
before those stacks have been accessed. Therefore, one
set of 'items'/'extents' could not possibly be shared.

So now we will know the former struct fetch_support as
ext_support. The former name was potentially confusing
since the struct was used by both 'select' and 'reap'.
However, only 'reap' ever called the 'fetch' function.

[ this <STAT> already accommodated concurrent usage. ]
[ in fact it contains 3 separate sets of items/exts. ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-09 20:51:06 +10:00
Jim Warner
8650518b5a library: fix upper bounds enum delimiter, <VMSTAT> api
Oops, the PROCPS_VMSTAT_logical_end enum reflected the
source state before all those DELTA enum's were added.

[ plus add a couple of overlooked #undef directives, ]
[ and whack an unneeded stacks_alloc assignment too! ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-09 20:51:06 +10:00
Jim Warner
b700d91f84 library: whack a superfluous assignment, <MEMINFO> api
This patch was prompted through work on the <slabinfo>
upgrade from 2nd gen to 3rd. And while this assignment
caused no real harm, it most certainly was misleading.

[ plus add a couple of overlooked #undef directives! ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-09 20:51:06 +10:00
Jim Warner
5d5a52a380 library: normalize/standardize the i/f, <SLABINFO> api
Before this major redesign, the slabs interface likely
was our messiest 2nd generation attempt at opaqueness.
Beyond the standard 'new', 'ref' & 'unref', there were
a total of 12 exported functions. Now, there are four.

The 1st step was to remove several of those functions.
These were quick to go since they were not used (yet):
. procps_slabnode_count
. procps_slabnode_getname
. procps_slabnode_getstack

Then, the following were internalized so users needn't
be burdened with implementation details in the future:
. procps_slabinfo_read (renamed: read_slabinfo_failed)
. procps_slabnode_stacks_alloc (renamed: stacks_alloc)

Still others evolved into the minimal interface we had
strived for in the other upgraded 3rd generation APIs:
. procps_slabnode_get -----------> procps_slabinfo_get
. separate stack_alloc/fill --> procps_slabinfo_select
. separate stacks_alloc/fill ---> procps_slabinfo_reap
. procps_slabnode_stacks_sort --> procps_slabinfo_sort

------------------------------------------------------
Beyond those reductions, the major modifications were:

. This API tries to be as forgiving as possible and as
such won't throw errors when a caller request makes no
sense. For example, if a 'get' or 'select' requested a
SLABNODE item (with no current means to id that node),
results will be zero. By the same token, should 'reap'
include a global SLABS item (meaning those values will
be duplicated in *every* node stack) it'll be allowed.

. If the above behavior is undesired, a new #define of
ENFORCE_LOGICAL can be used to restrict certain items.

. Permission problems will now be caught at 'new' time
thanks to a priming 'read' call. That read also serves
to make DELTA values potentially useful at 1st access.

. Separate slab/slabnode enumerators were consolidated
into one, simplifying validation & the results struct.

. Several internal parameter checks were relaxed since
they were already checked by the caller. Besides if we
cannot trust our own code we might as well hang it up.

. That sort provision was made more efficient and will
offer the ascending choice, in addition to descending.

------------------------------------------------------
Lastly, some additional thoughts regarding the future:

. It would not be difficult to expand 'select' to also
accept a nodeid, or to clone it as 'select_node'. And,
should the same be extended to 'get', a results struct
could be returned instead of signed long accommodating
the extra data type(s) like a node name (string data).

. The 'get' function is not currently affected by that
 define ENFORCE_LOGICAL. However, at some future point
perhaps -EINVAL would be more appropriate than a zero.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-09 20:51:06 +10:00
Jim Warner
5be4167782 library: rename the 'slab' sources as 'slabinfo' files
Where possible, libprocps files convey the name of the
actual source pseudo file under the '/proc' directory.

This patch brings slab into line with such a standard.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-09 20:51:06 +10:00
Craig Small
d2b29312bb library: fix new and unref pids test
The original test did not NULL the unallocated info pointer. This
was incorrectly calling the procps_pids_new() function.

Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
2016-06-07 21:13:57 +10:00
Jim Warner
d69a2b6899 library: normalize/standardize interface, <VMSTAT> api
This interface represented a 2nd generation attempt at
the opaque newlib approach. In other words, it did not
involve the 1st generation 'chains'. Instead, 'stacks'
were employed. But the interface wasn't user friendly.

Users were required to create their own stacks, before
calling 'getstack' to retrieve multiple results with a
single call. Even worse, sometimes 'read' was required
before calling 'get' when working with single results.

So this commit represents the 3rd generation approach.
We eliminate the burden of 'read' and creating stacks.
Rather, beyond those standard 'new', 'ref' and 'unref'
functions, we'll offer just 'get' (single result) plus
a 'select' function (for multiple results in 1 stack).

And along the way, this commit vastly expands the data
extracted from /proc/vmstat. All values that currently
exist (and their delta equivalents) are now available.
Deltas were included for everything because there's no
real runtime costs beyond using a little extra memory.

The only problem is a lack of documentation for all of
those fields, as is reflected in the references below.
Oh well, maybe someday someone will dig through kernel
sources & finally plug that rather large document gap.

[ as an aside, rather than using a 'strcmp' approach ]
[ when parsing the /proc/vmstat file, as is found in ]
[ the <meminfo> module, we exploit those hash search ]
[ provisions that are found in the <search.h> header ]

Reference(s):
http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-man/msg09096.html
http://www.linuxinsight.com/proc_vmstat.html

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-07 21:04:43 +10:00
Jim Warner
2aaae6f29b library: improve internal 'get' processing, <STAT> api
With an eye to the future, rather than managing a long
switch/case construct in the procps_stat_get function,
we'll adopt the approach used in the <meminfo> module.

By making 'get' processing table driven too, just like
'select' is already, that may ease future maintenance.

Along the way a rather large boo-boo was fixed dealing
with that /proc/stat 'procs_running' field which crept
in with the commit referenced below. It wasn't spelled
correctly and thus was never captured as PROC_RUNNING.

Reference(s):
commit abc71a46ad

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-07 21:04:43 +10:00
Jim Warner
af0c65900b library: add parameter checks for 'get', <MEMINFO> api
When this interface was normalized/standardized, under
the commit referenced below, the parameters were never
validated in the 'get' function. Let's plug that hole.

Reference(s):
commit 407f1b71de

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-06-07 21:04:43 +10:00
Craig Small
b96c994390 library: Fix pids API tests
Update the pids tests for tweaked API. Unsure why the toomany
test doesn't work, may point to a problem in the change as it used
to trigger, or the library has flexibility.
2016-05-22 22:12:54 +10:00
Jim Warner
09503dc597 library: eliminated a final potential NULL, <PIDS> api
In that reference below a specific systemd problem was
fixed in the commit shown. However lurking deep within
the <pids> interface was yet one final case where NULL
could be returned, involving 'strv' and the following:

. a user requested both a single string vector (always
returned as a normal string) & the vectorized version,
as with PROCPS_PIDS_CMDLINE and PROCPS_PIDS_CMDLINE_V.

. a user simply duplicated some vectorized enum items.

The root of that NULL problem is the fact those single
string vectors shared the same proc_t field with their
true vectorized version. So while multiple occurrences
for most strings could be satisfied with strdup versus
the normal ownership usurpation, those true vectorized
fields could not be quite so easily copied/duplicated.

Thus newlib chose to return a NULL result.strv pointer
under either of the above scenarios (which perhaps was
just a user boo-boo in the first place). In any event,
the NULL was a potential for true string vectors only.

Now, since newlib is the sole caller into the readproc
module, separate fields have been created for what are
just normal strings (never vectorized) and those which
remain the true vectorized versions. And, former flags
which only worked if combined, now act as stand alone.

Thus, both PROCPS_PIDS_CMDLINE & PROCPS_PIDS_CMDLINE_V
can be used simultaneously (as they should have been).

Also with this patch, items which a user duplicates in
the stack (beyond the first such item) will return the
the string "[ duplicate ENUM_ID ]". This practice will
apply to both single strings and true vectorized ones.
In addition to informing users of their error, it will
also mean potential NULLs need now never be a concern.

Reference(s);
http://www.freelists.org/post/procps/systemd-binary-vs-library
commit 0580a7b4c6

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-22 21:59:18 +10:00
Craig Small
8d7945fd0c library: move QUICK_THREADS hack before return
Minor complaint where a line to stop GCC from complaining occured
after the return.
2016-05-17 21:56:21 +10:00
Jim Warner
0511ab0245 library: respond to coverity (reluctantly), <PIDS> api
Calls to free() have now been reintroduce in the new()
function to quiet coverity warnings. Those free's were
removed originally as that library 'new' was returning
with a fatal error and a caller should end abnormally.

Plus, it is virtually impossible to fail a malloc call
under linux. And lastly, they required braces with the
if statement making the code considerably less pretty.

[ commit also includes 2 unrelated whitespace tweaks ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-17 21:13:34 +10:00
Jim Warner
0580a7b4c6 library: avoid any --with-systemd conflict, <PIDS> api
A potential conflict arises should should some program
attempt to access systemd data using our library built
without that support (--disable-systemd). And while we
could argue that all callers should check against NULL
string pointers, it's not expected of libprocps users.

So we'll guarantee 'em valid string consisting of "?".

Reference(s):
http://www.freelists.org/post/procps/systemd-binary-vs-library

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-16 21:36:54 +10:00
Jim Warner
f68dfabc35 library: try different alignment for types, <PIDS> api
Rather than adopt an approach offered below, involving
changing all enumerator names to convey types, perhaps
this much more modest change is a worthwhile 1st step.

By just changing the comments to 'right justification'
it dramatically improves readability, at least it does
to my eye.  Perhaps such an approach can postpone that
massive alternative effort for the foreseeable future.

Reference(s):
http://www.freelists.org/post/procps/newlib-drip-drip,4

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-16 19:58:20 +10:00
Jim Warner
540342620b library: try to minimize the results types, <PIDS> api
This is just beginning an effort to minimize/normalize
the sheer variety of results types in use for our API.

In taking these first baby steps, a few anomalies were
found. There'll no doubt be many more yet to discover.

. the _FLT_ (fault) fields were already signed long in
the proc_t (even though their sscanf format used %lu).

. although strtoul will alway return an unsigned long,
all of the _VM_ fields were made signed long just like
other memory fields (& signed sorts more efficiently).

Reference(s):
http://www.freelists.org/post/procps/newlib-drip-drip,4

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-16 19:58:20 +10:00
Jim Warner
9ebadc1438 library: standardize portions of interface, <PIDS> api
This represents a rather major interface redesign. The
following highlights most of the changes/enhancements.

. The 'read' interface (employed by pgrep & pidof) saw
the biggest change. The 'open', 'next' and 'shut' guys
all went bye-bye, replaced by a single 'get' function.

. The items specified at 'new' time no longer serve as
the maximum. In fact, items & numitems are now treated
as optional, should callers prefer to wait until later
when the 'reset' function would then become mandatory.

. Even at 'reset' time, the stacks are not tied to any
sort of maximum. They will grow dynamically as needed.

. The order of some parameters was changed to parallel
that found in our other APIs. Specifically, when items
& numitems are needed they're specified in that order.

. A user will no longer be prevented from concurrently
employing any accessor functions. In other words, that
'get' (old 'read') won't preclude 'reap' and 'select'.

. A duplicate enumerator was found dealing with locked
resident pages. So, the name VM_LOCK was eliminated in
favor of VM_RSS_LOCKED, which is way more descriptive.

. The struct address returned to callers following any
reap() or select() is now more sharable as pids_fetch.

. Some input parameter names were changed to make them
more descriptive of the intended purpose/requirements.

------------------------------------------------------
Internally, there were numerous implementation changes
made that did not directly impact any potential users.

. That #define FPRINT_STACKS was eliminated along with
the associated supporting function and its invocation.

. Addresses returned following 'reap' or 'select' will
now be NULL delimited, so one has the option of stacks
access via the total count or this new NULL fencepost.

. Input params were simplified and generalized in both
oldproc_open() & close() to enable more than 1 PROCTAB
to be open simultaneously, which was required for get.

. The PROCPS_PIDS_logical_end enum was relocated after
the Item_table making the need to keep it synchronized
more apparent (if the table expands it's right there).

. The 'Public function' section of the source file was
subdivided into 1) the three basic required functions;
and 2) functions that can sometimes vary between APIs.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-16 19:58:20 +10:00
Craig Small
bfb7361980 library: oldproc_open has always yes check
if (info->flags | PROC_UID)
Something OR a non-zero constant is always true.
Looks like it should be and'ed for the standard flag masking
pattern.

References:
  Coverity #99118

Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
2016-05-14 22:55:16 +10:00
Craig Small
f85d9a2b95 library: Remove dead branch in file2strvec
A while loop used n >=0
A branch inside the loop had a test for n<0
That's never going to happen!
So the branch must go. There is similiar code outside
the branch. Yes, I miss pythons while else here.

Also cleaned up the ***-awful indentation this function had.
No wonder that branch lived for so long there.

References:
 Coverity #99119

Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
2016-05-14 22:43:19 +10:00
Craig Small
4f6b8c9c60 library: slab sort derefence after check
procps_slabnode_stacks_sort() would check if stacks was NULL
*after* the pointer was derefenced in the initialisation of
the variable p.

p is now assigned after the check.

References:
 Coverity #99160
2016-05-14 22:32:35 +10:00
Jim Warner
90753e2d5b library: remove the ull_int result type, <MEMINFO> api
Because of the vast quantities of virtual memory which
may be allocated, it initially seemed like a good idea
to provide for a widest possible range through the use
of a 'ull_int' result type. However, on second thought
the implementation was a bit flawed for these reasons:

. that underlying meminfo_data variable 'VmallocTotal'
is 'unsigned long' not a required 'unsigned long long'

. there wasn't a convenient way to value it since each
variable was set with a strtoul() call, not strtoull()

So this patch will standardize on the 'ul_int' results
type (and reduce the associated delta to 's_int' too).
For now, we'll rely on protections under a 64-bit arch
where a 'ull_int' & 'ul_int' yield identical capacity.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-12 21:15:01 +10:00
Jim Warner
fac5e6fea0 library: allow negative delta values for 2, <STAT> api
A recent buglet in the <meminfo> interface, where many
delta values could legitimately be negative, suggested
a review of this module where a minus was forced to 0.

As it turns out, there are two delta items that indeed
could be negative. They involve the current processes.

So henceforth, DELTA_PROC_BLOCKED & DELTA_PROC_RUNNING
will now be allowed to go negative. I believe that all
other items can only grow. But, if we find more later,
at least the adaptation approach has been established.

[ this whole business of checking for less than zero ]
[ harks back to an old kernel anomaly where negative ]
[ tics were sometimes experienced. top was affected. ]

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-12 21:13:47 +10:00
Jim Warner
93a60022dc library: ain't like your father's delta, <MEMINFO> api
When the code for DELTA values (among other stuff) was
stolen from the recently revised <stat> interface, the
concept of ever growing values was propagated too. But
here we must manage both growing and shrinking values.

Thus former protections against a negative delta don't
have any place in this module and are hereby banished.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-12 21:13:47 +10:00
Craig Small
b4beb162fd library: minor fix for procps_meminfo_select
Thus function returns a pointer, not an int, so if there is
an error return NULL and not -errno.

proc/meminfo.c: In function ‘procps_meminfo_select’:
proc/meminfo.c:994:20: warning: return makes pointer from integer
without a cast [-Wint-conversion]
             return -ENOMEM;

References:
 commit 407f1b71de
2016-05-12 07:52:36 +10:00
Jim Warner
407f1b71de library: improve/normalize an interface, <MEMINFO> api
This represents the refinement of this interface after
the <stat> API was redesigned. We now follow a pattern
of 'get' for single item retrieval & 'select' for when
multiple items are desired, with just 1 function call.

And again following the <stat> lead this interface now
provides for delta values encompassing most items. The
reason I went cuckoo nuts with those deltas is because
they are essentially free. At the cost of a little RAM
and just one memcpy there's no other price to be paid.

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-12 07:51:10 +10:00
Jim Warner
5ec5002b0d library: lift item restrictions on 'get()', <STAT> api
In the commit referenced below it was acknowledged the
procps_stat_get() function will intentionally restrict
returned values by excluding DELTA items among others.

Upon reflection that decision seemed rather arbitrary,
and so has now been lifted. And, while the initial use
of a DELTA will return 0, subsequent calls to that get
function will now return the difference (providing one
second, at least, has elapsed between any such calls).

Reference(s):
. reference to design decisions
commit abc71a46ad

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-12 07:51:10 +10:00
Jim Warner
1417ba56b5 library; add more of my gratuitous changes, <STAT> api
This commit is just my usual tweaking after an initial
submission, once the dust has settled & some more desk
checking was performed. Here are the changes included:

. get function need not check the 'stat_was_read' flag
( first time in save_sec == 0 so branch always taken )

. some table logic appeared outside the proper section
. cleanup_stack's loop made to work like assign_result
. eliminated an include of procps.h from stat.h header
. removed 'ext_numitems' from the stacks_extent struct
. changed the alignment of three prototypes for stat.h
. reorganized the pointers for 'stacks_extents' struct
. improved types indentation in header for readability

. lastly, some really gratuitous changes made to align
- comments within that private 'stacks_alloc' function

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net
2016-05-12 07:51:10 +10:00
Jim Warner
abc71a46ad library: improve/standardize one interface, <STAT> api
This commit represents a complete redesign of the stat
interface. Gone are the confusing 8 separate accessors
along with their 2 additional read functions. In their
place we have just 3 accessors, with no read required.

That old interface also suffered an inflexibility with
respect to structures.  Now we deal with an unchanging
standard 'result' struct enabling future changes where
the binary interface will no longer need to be broken.

And gone is that former unnecessary typedef, used when
dealing with jiffies. Now the standard C type is used.

Our new API also adds some brand new functionality. If
a caller plans to employ successive 'select' or 'reap'
invocations, then delta values are available (which is
actually only what that top program is interested in).

At some future point a 'sort' function could be easily
introduced to complement the 'reap' function. However,
I saw no need for it at present and so it was omitted.

There were several design decisions which everyone may
not agree with. In support I'll offer these rationals:

. The 'get' function returns a signed long long result
which means a potential loss of some significance. But
I felt the ability to distinguish actual errors (minus
values) from true zero results were worth such a risk.

. The DELTA item enumerators were also made signed and
smaller than their parents. And they are intentionally
grouped as last so as to emphasize those distinctions.

. The SYS type items were excluded from the new 'reap'
function. It would not make sense to duplicate them in
each results stack. They're limited to 'get'/'select'.

. By the same token, some items (DELTA, etc.) will not
be allowed under that 'get' routine. That function was
already open to significant internal overhead (through
subsequent calls like in vmstat.c). That is why it has
been limited via 1 second between reads of /proc/stat.

Lastly, when we finally get around to documenting this
interface there's a real potential toe stubber when it
comes to the numa node portion. The libnuma.so doesn't
really provide any means to retrieve the active nodes.
Thus, any total reported by <stat> is just the highest
node number plus one, as reported by the numa library.

Any unused/inactive nodes are identified through these
. PROCPS_STAT_TIC_ID shows as PROCPS_STAT_NODE_INVALID

By the same token after the STAT_REAP_CPUS_ONLY 'reap'
. PROCPS_STAT_TIC_NUMA_NODE = PROCPS_STAT_NODE_INVALID

Reference(s):
http://www.freelists.org/post/procps/newlib-stat-interface

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-08 21:12:22 +10:00
Jim Warner
5854f2d956 library: remove an obsolete 'jiffs' typedef in sysinfo
During work on the new <stat> interface the typedef of
jiffs was eliminated along with the clang warning. The
exact same warning in sysinfo.h now goes bye-bye also.

Reference(s):
./proc/sysinfo.h:16:28: warning: redefinition of typedef 'jiff' is a C11 feature [-Wtypedef-redefinition]
typedef unsigned long long jiff;

Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
2016-05-08 21:12:22 +10:00
Craig Small
d2df396ba9 misc: Few more resource leak fixes
free after malloc in signals.c
closedir after opendir in diskstat
2016-05-03 21:58:13 +10:00