* memory allocation when ... calling Ocaml from C called from multiple ocaml threads
@ 2004-10-31 13:19 Vincenzo Ciancia
0 siblings, 0 replies; only message in thread
From: Vincenzo Ciancia @ 2004-10-31 13:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
Hi all, I am fighting again in my infinite quest for a working,
multithreaded fuse binding for ocaml. It costed me a lot of free time
to get where I am, I already have code for all the fuse callbacks, and
single-threaded mainloop works well. When I use the multithreaded loop
explained below, I can't find a stable way to allocate memory for read
and write operations.
I have the following setup:
- ocaml starts
- ocaml calls fuse initialization
- ocaml starts an infinite loop where at each step
- C is called to retrieve a fuse command from kernel
- A ocaml thread is created, where
- C is called again to process the command (it's not that simple and
I would like to avoid implementing this in ocaml), and as a part
of this processing:
- (1) A C function for each filesystem operation is called, where
- OCaml is called back to implement the operation
It's not too complicated: this way I reuse all fuse code for reading
commands and send responses to the kernel, and process every fuse
command in a separate thread (of course, I will put a limit but it's
not so important right now). Threads are created in ocaml, since while
googling for enter_blocking_section and friends I found in this list
archives that it should be made that way. It would be much simpler if
threads could be created from C, but it just does not work. I use
leave_blocking_section when calling back ocaml.
I can't use CAMLparam, CAMLlocal and CAMLreturn when entering the C
callback named (1), they just segfault, I think because these functions
are called from C. Therefore I allocate needed temporaries needed to
call back ocaml using C declarations, like
value vtmp=copy_string(path);
value vres=callback(*closure,tmp);
Unexpectedly, this seems to work fine when hammering with parallel
filesystem requests, but every attempt to allocate a buffer for read
and write operations fails (in the following piece of code
string_create is a callback to String.create):
int read (const char *path, char *buf, size_t size, off_t offset)
{
[...]
vtmp=callback(*ocaml_string_create,Val_int(size));
vres=callback3(*read_closure,vpath,vtmp,copy_int64(offset));
[...]
res=Int_val(Field(vres,0)); /* vres has a sum type */
memcpy(buf,String_val(vtmp),min(size,res));
return res;
}
Obviously, vtmp will be garbage-collected before the callback will use
it, but also alloc_string in place of the callback to
ocaml_string_create will just segfault, and this is the whole point.
How can I get out of this all?
Also, it would be more efficient to just pass the already allocated C
buffer wrapped inside an ocaml string, even if it could be dangerous to
pass around it. Is there a way to do so?
Thanks
Vincenzo
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