Test fixes and rebase problems

Note that this removes a number of run-pass tests which are exercising behavior
of the old runtime. This functionality no longer exists and is thoroughly tested
inside of libgreen and libnative. There isn't really the notion of "starting the
runtime" any more. The major notion now is "bootstrapping the initial task".
This commit is contained in:
Alex Crichton 2013-12-13 21:14:08 -08:00
parent 39dbcd7b01
commit 282f3d99a5
18 changed files with 134 additions and 107 deletions

View file

@ -113,3 +113,82 @@ fn base_port() -> u16 {
return final_base;
}
pub fn raise_fd_limit() {
unsafe { darwin_fd_limit::raise_fd_limit() }
}
#[cfg(target_os="macos")]
#[allow(non_camel_case_types)]
mod darwin_fd_limit {
/*!
* darwin_fd_limit exists to work around an issue where launchctl on Mac OS X defaults the
* rlimit maxfiles to 256/unlimited. The default soft limit of 256 ends up being far too low
* for our multithreaded scheduler testing, depending on the number of cores available.
*
* This fixes issue #7772.
*/
use libc;
type rlim_t = libc::uint64_t;
struct rlimit {
rlim_cur: rlim_t,
rlim_max: rlim_t
}
#[nolink]
extern {
// name probably doesn't need to be mut, but the C function doesn't specify const
fn sysctl(name: *mut libc::c_int, namelen: libc::c_uint,
oldp: *mut libc::c_void, oldlenp: *mut libc::size_t,
newp: *mut libc::c_void, newlen: libc::size_t) -> libc::c_int;
fn getrlimit(resource: libc::c_int, rlp: *mut rlimit) -> libc::c_int;
fn setrlimit(resource: libc::c_int, rlp: *rlimit) -> libc::c_int;
}
static CTL_KERN: libc::c_int = 1;
static KERN_MAXFILESPERPROC: libc::c_int = 29;
static RLIMIT_NOFILE: libc::c_int = 8;
pub unsafe fn raise_fd_limit() {
// The strategy here is to fetch the current resource limits, read the kern.maxfilesperproc
// sysctl value, and bump the soft resource limit for maxfiles up to the sysctl value.
use ptr::{to_unsafe_ptr, to_mut_unsafe_ptr, mut_null};
use mem::size_of_val;
use os::last_os_error;
// Fetch the kern.maxfilesperproc value
let mut mib: [libc::c_int, ..2] = [CTL_KERN, KERN_MAXFILESPERPROC];
let mut maxfiles: libc::c_int = 0;
let mut size: libc::size_t = size_of_val(&maxfiles) as libc::size_t;
if sysctl(to_mut_unsafe_ptr(&mut mib[0]), 2,
to_mut_unsafe_ptr(&mut maxfiles) as *mut libc::c_void,
to_mut_unsafe_ptr(&mut size),
mut_null(), 0) != 0 {
let err = last_os_error();
error!("raise_fd_limit: error calling sysctl: {}", err);
return;
}
// Fetch the current resource limits
let mut rlim = rlimit{rlim_cur: 0, rlim_max: 0};
if getrlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE, to_mut_unsafe_ptr(&mut rlim)) != 0 {
let err = last_os_error();
error!("raise_fd_limit: error calling getrlimit: {}", err);
return;
}
// Bump the soft limit to the smaller of kern.maxfilesperproc and the hard limit
rlim.rlim_cur = ::cmp::min(maxfiles as rlim_t, rlim.rlim_max);
// Set our newly-increased resource limit
if setrlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE, to_unsafe_ptr(&rlim)) != 0 {
let err = last_os_error();
error!("raise_fd_limit: error calling setrlimit: {}", err);
return;
}
}
}
#[cfg(not(target_os="macos"))]
mod darwin_fd_limit {
pub unsafe fn raise_fd_limit() {}
}