We now detect that a deadlock is likely when
CONFIG_DEBUG_QUTEX_DEADLOCK_TIMEOUT_MS has elapsed. This is the
preliminary work required to do a backtrace through the call
stack and figure out if a deadlock has really occured.
To do this, we'd have to go through the async call chain and
search for a previous caller which acquired the same qutex as
the one that first failed during this Lockvoker LockSet acquisition
attempt.
CONT_SET_EXC: Set exception on the continuation, to be rethrown
by the caller.
CONT_SET_EXC_AND_RET: Convenience which returns immediately
after setting the exception.
Implements: LockSet, SerializedAsynchronousContinuation,
LockerAndInvoker, LockerAndInvokerBase, Qutex.
Very big leap in functionality here. See qutexes.md for
an explanation of what we've done.
Async: Use new [Non]PostedAsyncCont and callOriginalCb
This new hierarchy of classes gives us a central mechanism for
managing both reply-posting and lockSpec unlocking.
* callOriginalCb: Now uses a modern C++ variadic template design
enabling it to handle both direct calling and std::bind()
re-binding of an arbitrary number of arguments from the caller.
This enables us to mostly eliminate the repeated, bespoke
definitions of callOriginalCb littered throughout the codebase.
We've also propagated these changes throughout the codebase in
this patch.
This class allows us to list a series of spinlocks that are all
acquired and released together. It has simple, primitive detection
for deadlocks and will throw if it detects one.
They are posted to Marionette.
* We also fixed callOriginCb invocations;
* Also made posted CBs use std::bind instead of greedily
early-invoking the CB on the servicing thread's stack.
We now have mind::initialize/finalizeReq post their requests
to Mrntt instead of executing on the caller's thread context.
We also fixed the way that we invoke callbacks by properly wrapping
it in a std::bind.
We no longer need them because we now have
mrntt::mrntt.finalizeReq(), which does a more holistic job of
shutting down Marionette (and thus, ultimately, Salmanoff).