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STREAMS Programming Guide     Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library
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Document Information

Preface

Part I Application Programming Interface

1.  Overview of STREAMS

2.  STREAMS Application-Level Components

3.  STREAMS Application-Level Mechanisms

4.  Application Access to the STREAMS Driver and Module Interfaces

5.  STREAMS Administration

6.  Pipes and Queues

Part II Kernel Interface

7.  STREAMS Framework - Kernel Level

8.  STREAMS Kernel-Level Mechanisms

9.  STREAMS Drivers

10.  STREAMS Modules

11.  Configuring STREAMS Drivers and Modules

12.  Multithreaded STREAMS

Multithreaded (MT) STREAMS Overview

MT STREAMS Framework

STREAMS Framework Integrity

Message Ordering

MT STREAMS Perimeters

Inner Perimeters

Outer Perimeters

PERMOD Perimeter

Hot Perimeters

Defining Perimeter Types

Choosing a Perimeter Type

MT SAFE Modules and Drivers

MT SAFE Module

MT SAFE Driver

Routines Used Inside a Perimeter

qprocson/qprocsoff

qtimeout/qunbufcall

qwriter

qwait

Asynchronous Callback Functions

close() Race Conditions

Unloading a Module that Uses esballoc

Use of the q_next Field

MT SAFE Modules Using Explicit Locks

Constraints When Using Locks

Preserving Message Ordering

Preparing to Port

Porting to the SunOS 5 System

Sample Multithreaded Device Driver Using a Per Module Inner Perimeter

Sample Multithreaded Module With Outer Perimeter

13.  STREAMS Multiplex Drivers

Part III Advanced Topics

14.  Debugging STREAMS-based Applications

Part IV Appendixes

A.  Message Types

B.  Kernel Utility Interface Summary

C.  STREAMS-Based Terminal Subsystem

D.  STREAMS FAQ

Glossary

Index

MT SAFE Modules and Drivers

A module or a driver can be either MT SAFE or MT UNSAFE. A module or driver is MT SAFE when its data values are correct regardless of the order that multiple threads access and modify the data. For MT SAFE mode, use MT STREAMS perimeters to restrict the concurrency in a module or driver to:

MT SAFE Module

To configure a module as being MT SAFE, use the f_flag field in fmodsw(9S).

The easiest method is to initially implement your module and configure it to be per-module single threaded, and increase the level of concurrency as needed. Sample Multithreaded Device Driver Using a Per Module Inner Perimeter provides a complete example of using a per-module perimeter, and Sample Multithreaded Module With Outer Perimeter provides a complete example with a higher level of concurrency.

MT SAFE modules can use different MT STREAMS perimeters to restrict the concurrency in the module to a concurrency that is natural given the data structures that the module contains, thereby removing the need for module private locks (see MT STREAMS Perimeters for information on perimeters). A module that requires unrestricted concurrency can be configured to have no perimeters. Such modules have to use explicit locking primitives to protect their data structures. While such modules can exploit the maximum level of concurrency allowed by the underlying hardware platform, they are more complex to develop and support. See MT SAFE Modules Using Explicit Locks.

Independent of the perimeters, there will be at most one thread allowed within any given queue's service procedure.

Your MT SAFE modules should use perimeters and avoid using module private locks (mutex, condition variables, readers/writer, or semaphore). Should you opt to use module private locks, you need to read MT SAFE Modules Using Explicit Locks along with this section.


Note - MT UNSAFE mode for STREAMS modules was temporarily supported as an aid in porting SVR4 modules; however, MT UNSAFE is not supported after SVR4.



Note - Upper and lower multiplexors share the same perimeter type and concurrency level.


MT SAFE Driver

To configure a driver as being MT SAFE, initialize the cb_ops(9S) and dev_ops(9S) data structures. This code must be in the header section of your module. For more information, see Example 12-1, and dev_ops(9S).

The driver is configured to be MT SAFE by setting the cb_flag to D_MP. It also specifies any MT STREAMS perimeters by setting flags in the cb_flag field. (See mt-streams(9F).)