counters.rs |
|
6283 |
handle |
|
|
handle.rs |
|
1815 |
idle.rs |
Coordinates idling workers |
13214 |
mod.rs |
Multi-threaded runtime |
2137 |
overflow.rs |
|
567 |
park.rs |
Parks the runtime.
A combination of the various resource driver park handles. |
7561 |
queue.rs |
Run-queue structures to support a work-stealing scheduler |
19725 |
stats.rs |
|
5832 |
trace.rs |
|
1850 |
trace_mock.rs |
|
191 |
worker |
|
|
worker.rs |
A scheduler is initialized with a fixed number of workers. Each worker is
driven by a thread. Each worker has a "core" which contains data such as the
run queue and other state. When `block_in_place` is called, the worker's
"core" is handed off to a new thread allowing the scheduler to continue to
make progress while the originating thread blocks.
# Shutdown
Shutting down the runtime involves the following steps:
1. The Shared::close method is called. This closes the inject queue and
`OwnedTasks` instance and wakes up all worker threads.
2. Each worker thread observes the close signal next time it runs
Core::maintenance by checking whether the inject queue is closed.
The `Core::is_shutdown` flag is set to true.
3. The worker thread calls `pre_shutdown` in parallel. Here, the worker
will keep removing tasks from `OwnedTasks` until it is empty. No new
tasks can be pushed to the `OwnedTasks` during or after this step as it
was closed in step 1.
5. The workers call Shared::shutdown to enter the single-threaded phase of
shutdown. These calls will push their core to `Shared::shutdown_cores`,
and the last thread to push its core will finish the shutdown procedure.
6. The local run queue of each core is emptied, then the inject queue is
emptied.
At this point, shutdown has completed. It is not possible for any of the
collections to contain any tasks at this point, as each collection was
closed first, then emptied afterwards.
## Spawns during shutdown
When spawning tasks during shutdown, there are two cases:
* The spawner observes the `OwnedTasks` being open, and the inject queue is
closed.
* The spawner observes the `OwnedTasks` being closed and doesn't check the
inject queue.
The first case can only happen if the `OwnedTasks::bind` call happens before
or during step 1 of shutdown. In this case, the runtime will clean up the
task in step 3 of shutdown.
In the latter case, the task was not spawned and the task is immediately
cancelled by the spawner.
The correctness of shutdown requires both the inject queue and `OwnedTasks`
collection to have a closed bit. With a close bit on only the inject queue,
spawning could run in to a situation where a task is successfully bound long
after the runtime has shut down. With a close bit on only the `OwnedTasks`,
the first spawning situation could result in the notification being pushed
to the inject queue after step 6 of shutdown, which would leave a task in
the inject queue indefinitely. This would be a ref-count cycle and a memory
leak. |
53041 |