Account for the terminating null character. Use _POSIX_PATH_MAX instead
of NAME_MAX according to _POSIX_Semaphore_Manager_initialization() and
_POSIX_Message_queue_Manager_initialization().
The mq_open() function returns a descriptor to a POSIX message queue
object identified by a name. This is similar to sem_open(). In
contrast to the POSIX semaphore the POSIX message queues use a separate
object for the descriptor. This extra object is superfluous, since the
object identifier can be used directly for this purpose, just like for
the semaphores.
Update #2702.
Update #2555.
We must provide thread queue heads for the thread wait information for
each thread proxy (thread queue heads were introduced by
d7665823b2). The thread proxy must be
allocated before the enqueue operation.
Notepads where a feature of RTEMS' tasks that simply functioned in
the same way as POSIX keys or threaded local storage (TLS). They were
introduced well before per task variables, which are also deprecated,
and were barely used in favor of their POSIX alternatives.
In addition to their scarce usage, Notepads took up unnecessary memory.
For each task:
- 16 32-bit integers were allocated.
- A total of 64 bytes per task per thread.
This is especially critical in low memory and safety-critical applications.
They are also defined as uint32_t, and therefore are not guaranteed to
hold a pointer.
Lastly, they are not portable solutions for SMP and uniprocessor systems,
like POSIX keys and TLS.
updates #2493.
Make rtems_initialize_data_structures(),
rtems_initialize_before_drivers() and rtems_initialize_device_drivers()
static. Rename rtems_initialize_start_multitasking() to
rtems_initialize_executive() and call the registered system
initialization handlers in this function. Add system initialization API
available via #include <rtems/sysinit.h>. Update the documentation
accordingly.
This is no functional change, only the method to call the existing
initialization routines changes. Instead of direct function calls a
table of function pointers contained in the new RTEMS system
initialization linker set is used. This table looks like this (the
actual addresses depend on the target).
nm *.exe | grep _Linker | sort
0201a2d0 D _Linker_set__Sysinit_begin
0201a2d0 D _Linker_set__Sysinit_bsp_work_area_initialize
0201a2d4 D _Linker_set__Sysinit_bsp_start
0201a2d8 D _Linker_set__Sysinit_rtems_initialize_data_structures
0201a2dc D _Linker_set__Sysinit_bsp_libc_init
0201a2e0 D _Linker_set__Sysinit_rtems_initialize_before_drivers
0201a2e4 D _Linker_set__Sysinit_bsp_predriver_hook
0201a2e8 D _Linker_set__Sysinit_rtems_initialize_device_drivers
0201a2ec D _Linker_set__Sysinit_bsp_postdriver_hook
0201a2f0 D _Linker_set__Sysinit_end
Add test sptests/spsysinit01.
Update #2408.
Move the storage for the thread queue heads to the threads. Each thread
provides a set of thread queue heads allocated from a dedicated memory
pool. In case a thread blocks on a queue, then it lends its heads to
the queue. In case the thread unblocks, then it takes a free set of
threads from the queue. Since a thread can block on at most one queue
this works. This mechanism is used in FreeBSD. The motivation for this
change is to reduce the memory demands of the synchronization objects.
On a 32-bit uni-processor configuration the Thread_queue_Control size is
now 8 bytes, compared to 64 bytes in RTEMS 4.10 (other changes reduced
the size as well).