The code in this module was derived from the one in driver/tty. However,
the driver uses a shared lock between the master and slave side of a
TTY, and this was changed to use two separate locks. The approach with
two locks does not work. It seems the change was unfinished and the
second TTY was never locked. But attempting to lock it will result in
lock inversion problems, unless we do complicated things (try to find
which of the two TTY is the master side, and lock that first, for
example). It is simpler to restore the shared lock as used in the
driver.
To set up the shared lock, I modified the tty_create function to take a
pointer to the master TTY when creating the slave. Maybe it makes more
sense to create both sides in the same call, create_tty_pair?
However, this does not work as easily as I wanted, because there is some
recursion going on: at least in one case, the tty_control function is
calling the driver's tty_service function, which in turns attempts to
call back into tty_control for the "other side" TTY. To handle this
case, replace the mutex with a recursive_lock.
Fixes#17091, where the root problem was access to
other_tty->select_pool without locking. This was also made unconvenient
to debug because select_pool objects are self-deleting, when the last
item in the pool is removed. As a result, the code accessing it without
log would suddenly find out that the data it was accessing had been
freed and erased.
This also makes the TTY code in driver/tty and generic/tty a bit more
similar than it was before, and brings us one step closer to merging the
two together. There are still two main differences and I don't know
enough about TTY to decide if they are important, and which version
should be kept:
- The driver has extra code for "background" read and write. I don't
know what this is used for.
- The driver has a single "settings" instance shared by a master and
slave TTY, while the module has two separate instances, but seems to
copy one to the other. I'm not sure which approach is correct.
Change-Id: Ie2daddd027859ce32ba395af76b4f109f8b984b0
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/4604
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
This is probably incomplete. Is locking needed? Should we notify the
next writer (if any) that the port is writable when flushing the output?
Change-Id: I2566e2d036a61af4819894a44f57603179aa27df
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2516
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
available as a module function as well.
* Remove some unneeded resetting from tty_destroy_cookie.
* Move the public module functions to the public API section of the file and
order them by their declaration order in the module info.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@42154 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
and doesn't come with BeOS backwards compatibility. It also has the BeOS
compatibility ioctl ops removed and such. I've actually made this back in april,
so I don't really remember any more details.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@39760 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- use the dano version by default
- s/ddraquire/ddaquire/
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@25203 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- the dano version is exposed as v1.1 so drivers can use select with a simple ifdef
- add copyrights from the tty driver as I'll be copying code from it.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@25201 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96