1/* -*- Mode: C; indent-tabs-mode:t ; c-basic-offset:8 -*- */ 2/* 3 * I/O functions for libusbx 4 * Copyright © 2007-2009 Daniel Drake <dsd@gentoo.org> 5 * Copyright © 2001 Johannes Erdfelt <johannes@erdfelt.com> 6 * 7 * This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or 8 * modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public 9 * License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either 10 * version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. 11 * 12 * This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 13 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 14 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU 15 * Lesser General Public License for more details. 16 * 17 * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public 18 * License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software 19 * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA 20 */ 21 22#include "config.h" 23#include <errno.h> 24#include <stdint.h> 25#include <stdlib.h> 26#include <string.h> 27#include <time.h> 28#ifdef HAVE_SIGNAL_H 29#include <signal.h> 30#endif 31#ifdef HAVE_SYS_TIME_H 32#include <sys/time.h> 33#endif 34#ifdef USBI_TIMERFD_AVAILABLE 35#include <sys/timerfd.h> 36#endif 37 38#include "libusbi.h" 39#include "hotplug.h" 40 41/** 42 * \page io Synchronous and asynchronous device I/O 43 * 44 * \section intro Introduction 45 * 46 * If you're using libusbx in your application, you're probably wanting to 47 * perform I/O with devices - you want to perform USB data transfers. 48 * 49 * libusbx offers two separate interfaces for device I/O. This page aims to 50 * introduce the two in order to help you decide which one is more suitable 51 * for your application. You can also choose to use both interfaces in your 52 * application by considering each transfer on a case-by-case basis. 53 * 54 * Once you have read through the following discussion, you should consult the 55 * detailed API documentation pages for the details: 56 * - \ref syncio 57 * - \ref asyncio 58 * 59 * \section theory Transfers at a logical level 60 * 61 * At a logical level, USB transfers typically happen in two parts. For 62 * example, when reading data from a endpoint: 63 * -# A request for data is sent to the device 64 * -# Some time later, the incoming data is received by the host 65 * 66 * or when writing data to an endpoint: 67 * 68 * -# The data is sent to the device 69 * -# Some time later, the host receives acknowledgement from the device that 70 * the data has been transferred. 71 * 72 * There may be an indefinite delay between the two steps. Consider a 73 * fictional USB input device with a button that the user can press. In order 74 * to determine when the button is pressed, you would likely submit a request 75 * to read data on a bulk or interrupt endpoint and wait for data to arrive. 76 * Data will arrive when the button is pressed by the user, which is 77 * potentially hours later. 78 * 79 * libusbx offers both a synchronous and an asynchronous interface to performing 80 * USB transfers. The main difference is that the synchronous interface 81 * combines both steps indicated above into a single function call, whereas 82 * the asynchronous interface separates them. 83 * 84 * \section sync The synchronous interface 85 * 86 * The synchronous I/O interface allows you to perform a USB transfer with 87 * a single function call. When the function call returns, the transfer has 88 * completed and you can parse the results. 89 * 90 * If you have used the libusb-0.1 before, this I/O style will seem familar to 91 * you. libusb-0.1 only offered a synchronous interface. 92 * 93 * In our input device example, to read button presses you might write code 94 * in the following style: 95\code 96unsigned char data[4]; 97int actual_length; 98int r = libusb_bulk_transfer(handle, LIBUSB_ENDPOINT_IN, data, sizeof(data), &actual_length, 0); 99if (r == 0 && actual_length == sizeof(data)) { 100 // results of the transaction can now be found in the data buffer 101 // parse them here and report button press 102} else { 103 error(); 104} 105\endcode 106 * 107 * The main advantage of this model is simplicity: you did everything with 108 * a single simple function call. 109 * 110 * However, this interface has its limitations. Your application will sleep 111 * inside libusb_bulk_transfer() until the transaction has completed. If it 112 * takes the user 3 hours to press the button, your application will be 113 * sleeping for that long. Execution will be tied up inside the library - 114 * the entire thread will be useless for that duration. 115 * 116 * Another issue is that by tieing up the thread with that single transaction 117 * there is no possibility of performing I/O with multiple endpoints and/or 118 * multiple devices simultaneously, unless you resort to creating one thread 119 * per transaction. 120 * 121 * Additionally, there is no opportunity to cancel the transfer after the 122 * request has been submitted. 123 * 124 * For details on how to use the synchronous API, see the 125 * \ref syncio "synchronous I/O API documentation" pages. 126 * 127 * \section async The asynchronous interface 128 * 129 * Asynchronous I/O is the most significant new feature in libusb-1.0. 130 * Although it is a more complex interface, it solves all the issues detailed 131 * above. 132 * 133 * Instead of providing which functions that block until the I/O has complete, 134 * libusbx's asynchronous interface presents non-blocking functions which 135 * begin a transfer and then return immediately. Your application passes a 136 * callback function pointer to this non-blocking function, which libusbx will 137 * call with the results of the transaction when it has completed. 138 * 139 * Transfers which have been submitted through the non-blocking functions 140 * can be cancelled with a separate function call. 141 * 142 * The non-blocking nature of this interface allows you to be simultaneously 143 * performing I/O to multiple endpoints on multiple devices, without having 144 * to use threads. 145 * 146 * This added flexibility does come with some complications though: 147 * - In the interest of being a lightweight library, libusbx does not create 148 * threads and can only operate when your application is calling into it. Your 149 * application must call into libusbx from it's main loop when events are ready 150 * to be handled, or you must use some other scheme to allow libusbx to 151 * undertake whatever work needs to be done. 152 * - libusbx also needs to be called into at certain fixed points in time in 153 * order to accurately handle transfer timeouts. 154 * - Memory handling becomes more complex. You cannot use stack memory unless 155 * the function with that stack is guaranteed not to return until the transfer 156 * callback has finished executing. 157 * - You generally lose some linearity from your code flow because submitting 158 * the transfer request is done in a separate function from where the transfer 159 * results are handled. This becomes particularly obvious when you want to 160 * submit a second transfer based on the results of an earlier transfer. 161 * 162 * Internally, libusbx's synchronous interface is expressed in terms of function 163 * calls to the asynchronous interface. 164 * 165 * For details on how to use the asynchronous API, see the 166 * \ref asyncio "asynchronous I/O API" documentation pages. 167 */ 168 169 170/** 171 * \page packetoverflow Packets and overflows 172 * 173 * \section packets Packet abstraction 174 * 175 * The USB specifications describe how data is transmitted in packets, with 176 * constraints on packet size defined by endpoint descriptors. The host must 177 * not send data payloads larger than the endpoint's maximum packet size. 178 * 179 * libusbx and the underlying OS abstract out the packet concept, allowing you 180 * to request transfers of any size. Internally, the request will be divided 181 * up into correctly-sized packets. You do not have to be concerned with 182 * packet sizes, but there is one exception when considering overflows. 183 * 184 * \section overflow Bulk/interrupt transfer overflows 185 * 186 * When requesting data on a bulk endpoint, libusbx requires you to supply a 187 * buffer and the maximum number of bytes of data that libusbx can put in that 188 * buffer. However, the size of the buffer is not communicated to the device - 189 * the device is just asked to send any amount of data. 190 * 191 * There is no problem if the device sends an amount of data that is less than 192 * or equal to the buffer size. libusbx reports this condition to you through 193 * the \ref libusb_transfer::actual_length "libusb_transfer.actual_length" 194 * field. 195 * 196 * Problems may occur if the device attempts to send more data than can fit in 197 * the buffer. libusbx reports LIBUSB_TRANSFER_OVERFLOW for this condition but 198 * other behaviour is largely undefined: actual_length may or may not be 199 * accurate, the chunk of data that can fit in the buffer (before overflow) 200 * may or may not have been transferred. 201 * 202 * Overflows are nasty, but can be avoided. Even though you were told to 203 * ignore packets above, think about the lower level details: each transfer is 204 * split into packets (typically small, with a maximum size of 512 bytes). 205 * Overflows can only happen if the final packet in an incoming data transfer 206 * is smaller than the actual packet that the device wants to transfer. 207 * Therefore, you will never see an overflow if your transfer buffer size is a 208 * multiple of the endpoint's packet size: the final packet will either 209 * fill up completely or will be only partially filled. 210 */ 211 212/** 213 * @defgroup asyncio Asynchronous device I/O 214 * 215 * This page details libusbx's asynchronous (non-blocking) API for USB device 216 * I/O. This interface is very powerful but is also quite complex - you will 217 * need to read this page carefully to understand the necessary considerations 218 * and issues surrounding use of this interface. Simplistic applications 219 * may wish to consider the \ref syncio "synchronous I/O API" instead. 220 * 221 * The asynchronous interface is built around the idea of separating transfer 222 * submission and handling of transfer completion (the synchronous model 223 * combines both of these into one). There may be a long delay between 224 * submission and completion, however the asynchronous submission function 225 * is non-blocking so will return control to your application during that 226 * potentially long delay. 227 * 228 * \section asyncabstraction Transfer abstraction 229 * 230 * For the asynchronous I/O, libusbx implements the concept of a generic 231 * transfer entity for all types of I/O (control, bulk, interrupt, 232 * isochronous). The generic transfer object must be treated slightly 233 * differently depending on which type of I/O you are performing with it. 234 * 235 * This is represented by the public libusb_transfer structure type. 236 * 237 * \section asynctrf Asynchronous transfers 238 * 239 * We can view asynchronous I/O as a 5 step process: 240 * -# <b>Allocation</b>: allocate a libusb_transfer 241 * -# <b>Filling</b>: populate the libusb_transfer instance with information 242 * about the transfer you wish to perform 243 * -# <b>Submission</b>: ask libusbx to submit the transfer 244 * -# <b>Completion handling</b>: examine transfer results in the 245 * libusb_transfer structure 246 * -# <b>Deallocation</b>: clean up resources 247 * 248 * 249 * \subsection asyncalloc Allocation 250 * 251 * This step involves allocating memory for a USB transfer. This is the 252 * generic transfer object mentioned above. At this stage, the transfer 253 * is "blank" with no details about what type of I/O it will be used for. 254 * 255 * Allocation is done with the libusb_alloc_transfer() function. You must use 256 * this function rather than allocating your own transfers. 257 * 258 * \subsection asyncfill Filling 259 * 260 * This step is where you take a previously allocated transfer and fill it 261 * with information to determine the message type and direction, data buffer, 262 * callback function, etc. 263 * 264 * You can either fill the required fields yourself or you can use the 265 * helper functions: libusb_fill_control_transfer(), libusb_fill_bulk_transfer() 266 * and libusb_fill_interrupt_transfer(). 267 * 268 * \subsection asyncsubmit Submission 269 * 270 * When you have allocated a transfer and filled it, you can submit it using 271 * libusb_submit_transfer(). This function returns immediately but can be 272 * regarded as firing off the I/O request in the background. 273 * 274 * \subsection asynccomplete Completion handling 275 * 276 * After a transfer has been submitted, one of four things can happen to it: 277 * 278 * - The transfer completes (i.e. some data was transferred) 279 * - The transfer has a timeout and the timeout expires before all data is 280 * transferred 281 * - The transfer fails due to an error 282 * - The transfer is cancelled 283 * 284 * Each of these will cause the user-specified transfer callback function to 285 * be invoked. It is up to the callback function to determine which of the 286 * above actually happened and to act accordingly. 287 * 288 * The user-specified callback is passed a pointer to the libusb_transfer 289 * structure which was used to setup and submit the transfer. At completion 290 * time, libusbx has populated this structure with results of the transfer: 291 * success or failure reason, number of bytes of data transferred, etc. See 292 * the libusb_transfer structure documentation for more information. 293 * 294 * \subsection Deallocation 295 * 296 * When a transfer has completed (i.e. the callback function has been invoked), 297 * you are advised to free the transfer (unless you wish to resubmit it, see 298 * below). Transfers are deallocated with libusb_free_transfer(). 299 * 300 * It is undefined behaviour to free a transfer which has not completed. 301 * 302 * \section asyncresubmit Resubmission 303 * 304 * You may be wondering why allocation, filling, and submission are all 305 * separated above where they could reasonably be combined into a single 306 * operation. 307 * 308 * The reason for separation is to allow you to resubmit transfers without 309 * having to allocate new ones every time. This is especially useful for 310 * common situations dealing with interrupt endpoints - you allocate one 311 * transfer, fill and submit it, and when it returns with results you just 312 * resubmit it for the next interrupt. 313 * 314 * \section asynccancel Cancellation 315 * 316 * Another advantage of using the asynchronous interface is that you have 317 * the ability to cancel transfers which have not yet completed. This is 318 * done by calling the libusb_cancel_transfer() function. 319 * 320 * libusb_cancel_transfer() is asynchronous/non-blocking in itself. When the 321 * cancellation actually completes, the transfer's callback function will 322 * be invoked, and the callback function should check the transfer status to 323 * determine that it was cancelled. 324 * 325 * Freeing the transfer after it has been cancelled but before cancellation 326 * has completed will result in undefined behaviour. 327 * 328 * When a transfer is cancelled, some of the data may have been transferred. 329 * libusbx will communicate this to you in the transfer callback. Do not assume 330 * that no data was transferred. 331 * 332 * \section bulk_overflows Overflows on device-to-host bulk/interrupt endpoints 333 * 334 * If your device does not have predictable transfer sizes (or it misbehaves), 335 * your application may submit a request for data on an IN endpoint which is 336 * smaller than the data that the device wishes to send. In some circumstances 337 * this will cause an overflow, which is a nasty condition to deal with. See 338 * the \ref packetoverflow page for discussion. 339 * 340 * \section asyncctrl Considerations for control transfers 341 * 342 * The <tt>libusb_transfer</tt> structure is generic and hence does not 343 * include specific fields for the control-specific setup packet structure. 344 * 345 * In order to perform a control transfer, you must place the 8-byte setup 346 * packet at the start of the data buffer. To simplify this, you could 347 * cast the buffer pointer to type struct libusb_control_setup, or you can 348 * use the helper function libusb_fill_control_setup(). 349 * 350 * The wLength field placed in the setup packet must be the length you would 351 * expect to be sent in the setup packet: the length of the payload that 352 * follows (or the expected maximum number of bytes to receive). However, 353 * the length field of the libusb_transfer object must be the length of 354 * the data buffer - i.e. it should be wLength <em>plus</em> the size of 355 * the setup packet (LIBUSB_CONTROL_SETUP_SIZE). 356 * 357 * If you use the helper functions, this is simplified for you: 358 * -# Allocate a buffer of size LIBUSB_CONTROL_SETUP_SIZE plus the size of the 359 * data you are sending/requesting. 360 * -# Call libusb_fill_control_setup() on the data buffer, using the transfer 361 * request size as the wLength value (i.e. do not include the extra space you 362 * allocated for the control setup). 363 * -# If this is a host-to-device transfer, place the data to be transferred 364 * in the data buffer, starting at offset LIBUSB_CONTROL_SETUP_SIZE. 365 * -# Call libusb_fill_control_transfer() to associate the data buffer with 366 * the transfer (and to set the remaining details such as callback and timeout). 367 * - Note that there is no parameter to set the length field of the transfer. 368 * The length is automatically inferred from the wLength field of the setup 369 * packet. 370 * -# Submit the transfer. 371 * 372 * The multi-byte control setup fields (wValue, wIndex and wLength) must 373 * be given in little-endian byte order (the endianness of the USB bus). 374 * Endianness conversion is transparently handled by 375 * libusb_fill_control_setup() which is documented to accept host-endian 376 * values. 377 * 378 * Further considerations are needed when handling transfer completion in 379 * your callback function: 380 * - As you might expect, the setup packet will still be sitting at the start 381 * of the data buffer. 382 * - If this was a device-to-host transfer, the received data will be sitting 383 * at offset LIBUSB_CONTROL_SETUP_SIZE into the buffer. 384 * - The actual_length field of the transfer structure is relative to the 385 * wLength of the setup packet, rather than the size of the data buffer. So, 386 * if your wLength was 4, your transfer's <tt>length</tt> was 12, then you 387 * should expect an <tt>actual_length</tt> of 4 to indicate that the data was 388 * transferred in entirity. 389 * 390 * To simplify parsing of setup packets and obtaining the data from the 391 * correct offset, you may wish to use the libusb_control_transfer_get_data() 392 * and libusb_control_transfer_get_setup() functions within your transfer 393 * callback. 394 * 395 * Even though control endpoints do not halt, a completed control transfer 396 * may have a LIBUSB_TRANSFER_STALL status code. This indicates the control 397 * request was not supported. 398 * 399 * \section asyncintr Considerations for interrupt transfers 400 * 401 * All interrupt transfers are performed using the polling interval presented 402 * by the bInterval value of the endpoint descriptor. 403 * 404 * \section asynciso Considerations for isochronous transfers 405 * 406 * Isochronous transfers are more complicated than transfers to 407 * non-isochronous endpoints. 408 * 409 * To perform I/O to an isochronous endpoint, allocate the transfer by calling 410 * libusb_alloc_transfer() with an appropriate number of isochronous packets. 411 * 412 * During filling, set \ref libusb_transfer::type "type" to 413 * \ref libusb_transfer_type::LIBUSB_TRANSFER_TYPE_ISOCHRONOUS 414 * "LIBUSB_TRANSFER_TYPE_ISOCHRONOUS", and set 415 * \ref libusb_transfer::num_iso_packets "num_iso_packets" to a value less than 416 * or equal to the number of packets you requested during allocation. 417 * libusb_alloc_transfer() does not set either of these fields for you, given 418 * that you might not even use the transfer on an isochronous endpoint. 419 * 420 * Next, populate the length field for the first num_iso_packets entries in 421 * the \ref libusb_transfer::iso_packet_desc "iso_packet_desc" array. Section 422 * 5.6.3 of the USB2 specifications describe how the maximum isochronous 423 * packet length is determined by the wMaxPacketSize field in the endpoint 424 * descriptor. 425 * Two functions can help you here: 426 * 427 * - libusb_get_max_iso_packet_size() is an easy way to determine the max 428 * packet size for an isochronous endpoint. Note that the maximum packet 429 * size is actually the maximum number of bytes that can be transmitted in 430 * a single microframe, therefore this function multiplies the maximum number 431 * of bytes per transaction by the number of transaction opportunities per 432 * microframe. 433 * - libusb_set_iso_packet_lengths() assigns the same length to all packets 434 * within a transfer, which is usually what you want. 435 * 436 * For outgoing transfers, you'll obviously fill the buffer and populate the 437 * packet descriptors in hope that all the data gets transferred. For incoming 438 * transfers, you must ensure the buffer has sufficient capacity for 439 * the situation where all packets transfer the full amount of requested data. 440 * 441 * Completion handling requires some extra consideration. The 442 * \ref libusb_transfer::actual_length "actual_length" field of the transfer 443 * is meaningless and should not be examined; instead you must refer to the 444 * \ref libusb_iso_packet_descriptor::actual_length "actual_length" field of 445 * each individual packet. 446 * 447 * The \ref libusb_transfer::status "status" field of the transfer is also a 448 * little misleading: 449 * - If the packets were submitted and the isochronous data microframes 450 * completed normally, status will have value 451 * \ref libusb_transfer_status::LIBUSB_TRANSFER_COMPLETED 452 * "LIBUSB_TRANSFER_COMPLETED". Note that bus errors and software-incurred 453 * delays are not counted as transfer errors; the transfer.status field may 454 * indicate COMPLETED even if some or all of the packets failed. Refer to 455 * the \ref libusb_iso_packet_descriptor::status "status" field of each 456 * individual packet to determine packet failures. 457 * - The status field will have value 458 * \ref libusb_transfer_status::LIBUSB_TRANSFER_ERROR 459 * "LIBUSB_TRANSFER_ERROR" only when serious errors were encountered. 460 * - Other transfer status codes occur with normal behaviour. 461 * 462 * The data for each packet will be found at an offset into the buffer that 463 * can be calculated as if each prior packet completed in full. The 464 * libusb_get_iso_packet_buffer() and libusb_get_iso_packet_buffer_simple() 465 * functions may help you here. 466 * 467 * \section asyncmem Memory caveats 468 * 469 * In most circumstances, it is not safe to use stack memory for transfer 470 * buffers. This is because the function that fired off the asynchronous 471 * transfer may return before libusbx has finished using the buffer, and when 472 * the function returns it's stack gets destroyed. This is true for both 473 * host-to-device and device-to-host transfers. 474 * 475 * The only case in which it is safe to use stack memory is where you can 476 * guarantee that the function owning the stack space for the buffer does not 477 * return until after the transfer's callback function has completed. In every 478 * other case, you need to use heap memory instead. 479 * 480 * \section asyncflags Fine control 481 * 482 * Through using this asynchronous interface, you may find yourself repeating 483 * a few simple operations many times. You can apply a bitwise OR of certain 484 * flags to a transfer to simplify certain things: 485 * - \ref libusb_transfer_flags::LIBUSB_TRANSFER_SHORT_NOT_OK 486 * "LIBUSB_TRANSFER_SHORT_NOT_OK" results in transfers which transferred 487 * less than the requested amount of data being marked with status 488 * \ref libusb_transfer_status::LIBUSB_TRANSFER_ERROR "LIBUSB_TRANSFER_ERROR" 489 * (they would normally be regarded as COMPLETED) 490 * - \ref libusb_transfer_flags::LIBUSB_TRANSFER_FREE_BUFFER 491 * "LIBUSB_TRANSFER_FREE_BUFFER" allows you to ask libusbx to free the transfer 492 * buffer when freeing the transfer. 493 * - \ref libusb_transfer_flags::LIBUSB_TRANSFER_FREE_TRANSFER 494 * "LIBUSB_TRANSFER_FREE_TRANSFER" causes libusbx to automatically free the 495 * transfer after the transfer callback returns. 496 * 497 * \section asyncevent Event handling 498 * 499 * An asynchronous model requires that libusbx perform work at various 500 * points in time - namely processing the results of previously-submitted 501 * transfers and invoking the user-supplied callback function. 502 * 503 * This gives rise to the libusb_handle_events() function which your 504 * application must call into when libusbx has work do to. This gives libusbx 505 * the opportunity to reap pending transfers, invoke callbacks, etc. 506 * 507 * There are 2 different approaches to dealing with libusb_handle_events: 508 * 509 * -# Repeatedly call libusb_handle_events() in blocking mode from a dedicated 510 * thread. 511 * -# Integrate libusbx with your application's main event loop. libusbx 512 * exposes a set of file descriptors which allow you to do this. 513 * 514 * The first approach has the big advantage that it will also work on Windows 515 * were libusbx' poll API for select / poll integration is not available. So 516 * if you want to support Windows and use the async API, you must use this 517 * approach, see the \ref eventthread "Using an event handling thread" section 518 * below for details. 519 * 520 * If you prefer a single threaded approach with a single central event loop, 521 * see the \ref poll "polling and timing" section for how to integrate libusbx 522 * into your application's main event loop. 523 * 524 * \section eventthread Using an event handling thread 525 * 526 * Lets begin with stating the obvious: If you're going to use a separate 527 * thread for libusbx event handling, your callback functions MUST be 528 * threadsafe. 529 * 530 * Other then that doing event handling from a separate thread, is mostly 531 * simple. You can use an event thread function as follows: 532\code 533void *event_thread_func(void *ctx) 534{ 535 while (event_thread_run) 536 libusb_handle_events(ctx); 537 538 return NULL; 539} 540\endcode 541 * 542 * There is one caveat though, stopping this thread requires setting the 543 * event_thread_run variable to 0, and after that libusb_handle_events() needs 544 * to return control to event_thread_func. But unless some event happens, 545 * libusb_handle_events() will not return. 546 * 547 * There are 2 different ways of dealing with this, depending on if your 548 * application uses libusbx' \ref hotplug "hotplug" support or not. 549 * 550 * Applications which do not use hotplug support, should not start the event 551 * thread until after their first call to libusb_open(), and should stop the 552 * thread when closing the last open device as follows: 553\code 554void my_close_handle(libusb_device_handle *handle) 555{ 556 if (open_devs == 1) 557 event_thread_run = 0; 558 559 libusb_close(handle); // This wakes up libusb_handle_events() 560 561 if (open_devs == 1) 562 pthread_join(event_thread); 563 564 open_devs--; 565} 566\endcode 567 * 568 * Applications using hotplug support should start the thread at program init, 569 * after having successfully called libusb_hotplug_register_callback(), and 570 * should stop the thread at program exit as follows: 571\code 572void my_libusb_exit(void) 573{ 574 event_thread_run = 0; 575 libusb_hotplug_deregister_callback(ctx, hotplug_cb_handle); // This wakes up libusb_handle_events() 576 pthread_join(event_thread); 577 libusb_exit(ctx); 578} 579\endcode 580 */ 581 582/** 583 * @defgroup poll Polling and timing 584 * 585 * This page documents libusbx's functions for polling events and timing. 586 * These functions are only necessary for users of the 587 * \ref asyncio "asynchronous API". If you are only using the simpler 588 * \ref syncio "synchronous API" then you do not need to ever call these 589 * functions. 590 * 591 * The justification for the functionality described here has already been 592 * discussed in the \ref asyncevent "event handling" section of the 593 * asynchronous API documentation. In summary, libusbx does not create internal 594 * threads for event processing and hence relies on your application calling 595 * into libusbx at certain points in time so that pending events can be handled. 596 * 597 * Your main loop is probably already calling poll() or select() or a 598 * variant on a set of file descriptors for other event sources (e.g. keyboard 599 * button presses, mouse movements, network sockets, etc). You then add 600 * libusbx's file descriptors to your poll()/select() calls, and when activity 601 * is detected on such descriptors you know it is time to call 602 * libusb_handle_events(). 603 * 604 * There is one final event handling complication. libusbx supports 605 * asynchronous transfers which time out after a specified time period. 606 * 607 * On some platforms a timerfd is used, so the timeout handling is just another 608 * fd, on other platforms this requires that libusbx is called into at or after 609 * the timeout to handle it. So, in addition to considering libusbx's file 610 * descriptors in your main event loop, you must also consider that libusbx 611 * sometimes needs to be called into at fixed points in time even when there 612 * is no file descriptor activity, see \ref polltime details. 613 * 614 * In order to know precisely when libusbx needs to be called into, libusbx 615 * offers you a set of pollable file descriptors and information about when 616 * the next timeout expires. 617 * 618 * If you are using the asynchronous I/O API, you must take one of the two 619 * following options, otherwise your I/O will not complete. 620 * 621 * \section pollsimple The simple option 622 * 623 * If your application revolves solely around libusbx and does not need to 624 * handle other event sources, you can have a program structure as follows: 625\code 626// initialize libusbx 627// find and open device 628// maybe fire off some initial async I/O 629 630while (user_has_not_requested_exit) 631 libusb_handle_events(ctx); 632 633// clean up and exit 634\endcode 635 * 636 * With such a simple main loop, you do not have to worry about managing 637 * sets of file descriptors or handling timeouts. libusb_handle_events() will 638 * handle those details internally. 639 * 640 * \section pollmain The more advanced option 641 * 642 * \note This functionality is currently only available on Unix-like platforms. 643 * On Windows, libusb_get_pollfds() simply returns NULL. Applications which 644 * want to support Windows are advised to use an \ref eventthread 645 * "event handling thread" instead. 646 * 647 * In more advanced applications, you will already have a main loop which 648 * is monitoring other event sources: network sockets, X11 events, mouse 649 * movements, etc. Through exposing a set of file descriptors, libusbx is 650 * designed to cleanly integrate into such main loops. 651 * 652 * In addition to polling file descriptors for the other event sources, you 653 * take a set of file descriptors from libusbx and monitor those too. When you 654 * detect activity on libusbx's file descriptors, you call 655 * libusb_handle_events_timeout() in non-blocking mode. 656 * 657 * What's more, libusbx may also need to handle events at specific moments in 658 * time. No file descriptor activity is generated at these times, so your 659 * own application needs to be continually aware of when the next one of these 660 * moments occurs (through calling libusb_get_next_timeout()), and then it 661 * needs to call libusb_handle_events_timeout() in non-blocking mode when 662 * these moments occur. This means that you need to adjust your 663 * poll()/select() timeout accordingly. 664 * 665 * libusbx provides you with a set of file descriptors to poll and expects you 666 * to poll all of them, treating them as a single entity. The meaning of each 667 * file descriptor in the set is an internal implementation detail, 668 * platform-dependent and may vary from release to release. Don't try and 669 * interpret the meaning of the file descriptors, just do as libusbx indicates, 670 * polling all of them at once. 671 * 672 * In pseudo-code, you want something that looks like: 673\code 674// initialise libusbx 675 676libusb_get_pollfds(ctx) 677while (user has not requested application exit) { 678 libusb_get_next_timeout(ctx); 679 poll(on libusbx file descriptors plus any other event sources of interest, 680 using a timeout no larger than the value libusbx just suggested) 681 if (poll() indicated activity on libusbx file descriptors) 682 libusb_handle_events_timeout(ctx, &zero_tv); 683 if (time has elapsed to or beyond the libusbx timeout) 684 libusb_handle_events_timeout(ctx, &zero_tv); 685 // handle events from other sources here 686} 687 688// clean up and exit 689\endcode 690 * 691 * \subsection polltime Notes on time-based events 692 * 693 * The above complication with having to track time and call into libusbx at 694 * specific moments is a bit of a headache. For maximum compatibility, you do 695 * need to write your main loop as above, but you may decide that you can 696 * restrict the supported platforms of your application and get away with 697 * a more simplistic scheme. 698 * 699 * These time-based event complications are \b not required on the following 700 * platforms: 701 * - Darwin 702 * - Linux, provided that the following version requirements are satisfied: 703 * - Linux v2.6.27 or newer, compiled with timerfd support 704 * - glibc v2.9 or newer 705 * - libusbx v1.0.5 or newer 706 * 707 * Under these configurations, libusb_get_next_timeout() will \em always return 708 * 0, so your main loop can be simplified to: 709\code 710// initialise libusbx 711 712libusb_get_pollfds(ctx) 713while (user has not requested application exit) { 714 poll(on libusbx file descriptors plus any other event sources of interest, 715 using any timeout that you like) 716 if (poll() indicated activity on libusbx file descriptors) 717 libusb_handle_events_timeout(ctx, &zero_tv); 718 // handle events from other sources here 719} 720 721// clean up and exit 722\endcode 723 * 724 * Do remember that if you simplify your main loop to the above, you will 725 * lose compatibility with some platforms (including legacy Linux platforms, 726 * and <em>any future platforms supported by libusbx which may have time-based 727 * event requirements</em>). The resultant problems will likely appear as 728 * strange bugs in your application. 729 * 730 * You can use the libusb_pollfds_handle_timeouts() function to do a runtime 731 * check to see if it is safe to ignore the time-based event complications. 732 * If your application has taken the shortcut of ignoring libusbx's next timeout 733 * in your main loop, then you are advised to check the return value of 734 * libusb_pollfds_handle_timeouts() during application startup, and to abort 735 * if the platform does suffer from these timing complications. 736 * 737 * \subsection fdsetchange Changes in the file descriptor set 738 * 739 * The set of file descriptors that libusbx uses as event sources may change 740 * during the life of your application. Rather than having to repeatedly 741 * call libusb_get_pollfds(), you can set up notification functions for when 742 * the file descriptor set changes using libusb_set_pollfd_notifiers(). 743 * 744 * \subsection mtissues Multi-threaded considerations 745 * 746 * Unfortunately, the situation is complicated further when multiple threads 747 * come into play. If two threads are monitoring the same file descriptors, 748 * the fact that only one thread will be woken up when an event occurs causes 749 * some headaches. 750 * 751 * The events lock, event waiters lock, and libusb_handle_events_locked() 752 * entities are added to solve these problems. You do not need to be concerned 753 * with these entities otherwise. 754 * 755 * See the extra documentation: \ref mtasync 756 */ 757 758/** \page mtasync Multi-threaded applications and asynchronous I/O 759 * 760 * libusbx is a thread-safe library, but extra considerations must be applied 761 * to applications which interact with libusbx from multiple threads. 762 * 763 * The underlying issue that must be addressed is that all libusbx I/O 764 * revolves around monitoring file descriptors through the poll()/select() 765 * system calls. This is directly exposed at the 766 * \ref asyncio "asynchronous interface" but it is important to note that the 767 * \ref syncio "synchronous interface" is implemented on top of the 768 * asynchonrous interface, therefore the same considerations apply. 769 * 770 * The issue is that if two or more threads are concurrently calling poll() 771 * or select() on libusbx's file descriptors then only one of those threads 772 * will be woken up when an event arrives. The others will be completely 773 * oblivious that anything has happened. 774 * 775 * Consider the following pseudo-code, which submits an asynchronous transfer 776 * then waits for its completion. This style is one way you could implement a 777 * synchronous interface on top of the asynchronous interface (and libusbx 778 * does something similar, albeit more advanced due to the complications 779 * explained on this page). 780 * 781\code 782void cb(struct libusb_transfer *transfer) 783{ 784 int *completed = transfer->user_data; 785 *completed = 1; 786} 787 788void myfunc() { 789 struct libusb_transfer *transfer; 790 unsigned char buffer[LIBUSB_CONTROL_SETUP_SIZE] __attribute__ ((aligned (2))); 791 int completed = 0; 792 793 transfer = libusb_alloc_transfer(0); 794 libusb_fill_control_setup(buffer, 795 LIBUSB_REQUEST_TYPE_VENDOR | LIBUSB_ENDPOINT_OUT, 0x04, 0x01, 0, 0); 796 libusb_fill_control_transfer(transfer, dev, buffer, cb, &completed, 1000); 797 libusb_submit_transfer(transfer); 798 799 while (!completed) { 800 poll(libusbx file descriptors, 120*1000); 801 if (poll indicates activity) 802 libusb_handle_events_timeout(ctx, &zero_tv); 803 } 804 printf("completed!"); 805 // other code here 806} 807\endcode 808 * 809 * Here we are <em>serializing</em> completion of an asynchronous event 810 * against a condition - the condition being completion of a specific transfer. 811 * The poll() loop has a long timeout to minimize CPU usage during situations 812 * when nothing is happening (it could reasonably be unlimited). 813 * 814 * If this is the only thread that is polling libusbx's file descriptors, there 815 * is no problem: there is no danger that another thread will swallow up the 816 * event that we are interested in. On the other hand, if there is another 817 * thread polling the same descriptors, there is a chance that it will receive 818 * the event that we were interested in. In this situation, <tt>myfunc()</tt> 819 * will only realise that the transfer has completed on the next iteration of 820 * the loop, <em>up to 120 seconds later.</em> Clearly a two-minute delay is 821 * undesirable, and don't even think about using short timeouts to circumvent 822 * this issue! 823 * 824 * The solution here is to ensure that no two threads are ever polling the 825 * file descriptors at the same time. A naive implementation of this would 826 * impact the capabilities of the library, so libusbx offers the scheme 827 * documented below to ensure no loss of functionality. 828 * 829 * Before we go any further, it is worth mentioning that all libusb-wrapped 830 * event handling procedures fully adhere to the scheme documented below. 831 * This includes libusb_handle_events() and its variants, and all the 832 * synchronous I/O functions - libusbx hides this headache from you. 833 * 834 * \section Using libusb_handle_events() from multiple threads 835 * 836 * Even when only using libusb_handle_events() and synchronous I/O functions, 837 * you can still have a race condition. You might be tempted to solve the 838 * above with libusb_handle_events() like so: 839 * 840\code 841 libusb_submit_transfer(transfer); 842 843 while (!completed) { 844 libusb_handle_events(ctx); 845 } 846 printf("completed!"); 847\endcode 848 * 849 * This however has a race between the checking of completed and 850 * libusb_handle_events() acquiring the events lock, so another thread 851 * could have completed the transfer, resulting in this thread hanging 852 * until either a timeout or another event occurs. See also commit 853 * 6696512aade99bb15d6792af90ae329af270eba6 which fixes this in the 854 * synchronous API implementation of libusb. 855 * 856 * Fixing this race requires checking the variable completed only after 857 * taking the event lock, which defeats the concept of just calling 858 * libusb_handle_events() without worrying about locking. This is why 859 * libusb-1.0.9 introduces the new libusb_handle_events_timeout_completed() 860 * and libusb_handle_events_completed() functions, which handles doing the 861 * completion check for you after they have acquired the lock: 862 * 863\code 864 libusb_submit_transfer(transfer); 865 866 while (!completed) { 867 libusb_handle_events_completed(ctx, &completed); 868 } 869 printf("completed!"); 870\endcode 871 * 872 * This nicely fixes the race in our example. Note that if all you want to 873 * do is submit a single transfer and wait for its completion, then using 874 * one of the synchronous I/O functions is much easier. 875 * 876 * \section eventlock The events lock 877 * 878 * The problem is when we consider the fact that libusbx exposes file 879 * descriptors to allow for you to integrate asynchronous USB I/O into 880 * existing main loops, effectively allowing you to do some work behind 881 * libusbx's back. If you do take libusbx's file descriptors and pass them to 882 * poll()/select() yourself, you need to be aware of the associated issues. 883 * 884 * The first concept to be introduced is the events lock. The events lock 885 * is used to serialize threads that want to handle events, such that only 886 * one thread is handling events at any one time. 887 * 888 * You must take the events lock before polling libusbx file descriptors, 889 * using libusb_lock_events(). You must release the lock as soon as you have 890 * aborted your poll()/select() loop, using libusb_unlock_events(). 891 * 892 * \section threadwait Letting other threads do the work for you 893 * 894 * Although the events lock is a critical part of the solution, it is not 895 * enough on it's own. You might wonder if the following is sufficient... 896\code 897 libusb_lock_events(ctx); 898 while (!completed) { 899 poll(libusbx file descriptors, 120*1000); 900 if (poll indicates activity) 901 libusb_handle_events_timeout(ctx, &zero_tv); 902 } 903 libusb_unlock_events(ctx); 904\endcode 905 * ...and the answer is that it is not. This is because the transfer in the 906 * code shown above may take a long time (say 30 seconds) to complete, and 907 * the lock is not released until the transfer is completed. 908 * 909 * Another thread with similar code that wants to do event handling may be 910 * working with a transfer that completes after a few milliseconds. Despite 911 * having such a quick completion time, the other thread cannot check that 912 * status of its transfer until the code above has finished (30 seconds later) 913 * due to contention on the lock. 914 * 915 * To solve this, libusbx offers you a mechanism to determine when another 916 * thread is handling events. It also offers a mechanism to block your thread 917 * until the event handling thread has completed an event (and this mechanism 918 * does not involve polling of file descriptors). 919 * 920 * After determining that another thread is currently handling events, you 921 * obtain the <em>event waiters</em> lock using libusb_lock_event_waiters(). 922 * You then re-check that some other thread is still handling events, and if 923 * so, you call libusb_wait_for_event(). 924 * 925 * libusb_wait_for_event() puts your application to sleep until an event 926 * occurs, or until a thread releases the events lock. When either of these 927 * things happen, your thread is woken up, and should re-check the condition 928 * it was waiting on. It should also re-check that another thread is handling 929 * events, and if not, it should start handling events itself. 930 * 931 * This looks like the following, as pseudo-code: 932\code 933retry: 934if (libusb_try_lock_events(ctx) == 0) { 935 // we obtained the event lock: do our own event handling 936 while (!completed) { 937 if (!libusb_event_handling_ok(ctx)) { 938 libusb_unlock_events(ctx); 939 goto retry; 940 } 941 poll(libusbx file descriptors, 120*1000); 942 if (poll indicates activity) 943 libusb_handle_events_locked(ctx, 0); 944 } 945 libusb_unlock_events(ctx); 946} else { 947 // another thread is doing event handling. wait for it to signal us that 948 // an event has completed 949 libusb_lock_event_waiters(ctx); 950 951 while (!completed) { 952 // now that we have the event waiters lock, double check that another 953 // thread is still handling events for us. (it may have ceased handling 954 // events in the time it took us to reach this point) 955 if (!libusb_event_handler_active(ctx)) { 956 // whoever was handling events is no longer doing so, try again 957 libusb_unlock_event_waiters(ctx); 958 goto retry; 959 } 960 961 libusb_wait_for_event(ctx, NULL); 962 } 963 libusb_unlock_event_waiters(ctx); 964} 965printf("completed!\n"); 966\endcode 967 * 968 * A naive look at the above code may suggest that this can only support 969 * one event waiter (hence a total of 2 competing threads, the other doing 970 * event handling), because the event waiter seems to have taken the event 971 * waiters lock while waiting for an event. However, the system does support 972 * multiple event waiters, because libusb_wait_for_event() actually drops 973 * the lock while waiting, and reaquires it before continuing. 974 * 975 * We have now implemented code which can dynamically handle situations where 976 * nobody is handling events (so we should do it ourselves), and it can also 977 * handle situations where another thread is doing event handling (so we can 978 * piggyback onto them). It is also equipped to handle a combination of 979 * the two, for example, another thread is doing event handling, but for 980 * whatever reason it stops doing so before our condition is met, so we take 981 * over the event handling. 982 * 983 * Four functions were introduced in the above pseudo-code. Their importance 984 * should be apparent from the code shown above. 985 * -# libusb_try_lock_events() is a non-blocking function which attempts 986 * to acquire the events lock but returns a failure code if it is contended. 987 * -# libusb_event_handling_ok() checks that libusbx is still happy for your 988 * thread to be performing event handling. Sometimes, libusbx needs to 989 * interrupt the event handler, and this is how you can check if you have 990 * been interrupted. If this function returns 0, the correct behaviour is 991 * for you to give up the event handling lock, and then to repeat the cycle. 992 * The following libusb_try_lock_events() will fail, so you will become an 993 * events waiter. For more information on this, read \ref fullstory below. 994 * -# libusb_handle_events_locked() is a variant of 995 * libusb_handle_events_timeout() that you can call while holding the 996 * events lock. libusb_handle_events_timeout() itself implements similar 997 * logic to the above, so be sure not to call it when you are 998 * "working behind libusbx's back", as is the case here. 999 * -# libusb_event_handler_active() determines if someone is currently 1000 * holding the events lock 1001 * 1002 * You might be wondering why there is no function to wake up all threads 1003 * blocked on libusb_wait_for_event(). This is because libusbx can do this 1004 * internally: it will wake up all such threads when someone calls 1005 * libusb_unlock_events() or when a transfer completes (at the point after its 1006 * callback has returned). 1007 * 1008 * \subsection fullstory The full story 1009 * 1010 * The above explanation should be enough to get you going, but if you're 1011 * really thinking through the issues then you may be left with some more 1012 * questions regarding libusbx's internals. If you're curious, read on, and if 1013 * not, skip to the next section to avoid confusing yourself! 1014 * 1015 * The immediate question that may spring to mind is: what if one thread 1016 * modifies the set of file descriptors that need to be polled while another 1017 * thread is doing event handling? 1018 * 1019 * There are 2 situations in which this may happen. 1020 * -# libusb_open() will add another file descriptor to the poll set, 1021 * therefore it is desirable to interrupt the event handler so that it 1022 * restarts, picking up the new descriptor. 1023 * -# libusb_close() will remove a file descriptor from the poll set. There 1024 * are all kinds of race conditions that could arise here, so it is 1025 * important that nobody is doing event handling at this time. 1026 * 1027 * libusbx handles these issues internally, so application developers do not 1028 * have to stop their event handlers while opening/closing devices. Here's how 1029 * it works, focusing on the libusb_close() situation first: 1030 * 1031 * -# During initialization, libusbx opens an internal pipe, and it adds the read 1032 * end of this pipe to the set of file descriptors to be polled. 1033 * -# During libusb_close(), libusbx writes some dummy data on this control pipe. 1034 * This immediately interrupts the event handler. libusbx also records 1035 * internally that it is trying to interrupt event handlers for this 1036 * high-priority event. 1037 * -# At this point, some of the functions described above start behaving 1038 * differently: 1039 * - libusb_event_handling_ok() starts returning 1, indicating that it is NOT 1040 * OK for event handling to continue. 1041 * - libusb_try_lock_events() starts returning 1, indicating that another 1042 * thread holds the event handling lock, even if the lock is uncontended. 1043 * - libusb_event_handler_active() starts returning 1, indicating that 1044 * another thread is doing event handling, even if that is not true. 1045 * -# The above changes in behaviour result in the event handler stopping and 1046 * giving up the events lock very quickly, giving the high-priority 1047 * libusb_close() operation a "free ride" to acquire the events lock. All 1048 * threads that are competing to do event handling become event waiters. 1049 * -# With the events lock held inside libusb_close(), libusbx can safely remove 1050 * a file descriptor from the poll set, in the safety of knowledge that 1051 * nobody is polling those descriptors or trying to access the poll set. 1052 * -# After obtaining the events lock, the close operation completes very 1053 * quickly (usually a matter of milliseconds) and then immediately releases 1054 * the events lock. 1055 * -# At the same time, the behaviour of libusb_event_handling_ok() and friends 1056 * reverts to the original, documented behaviour. 1057 * -# The release of the events lock causes the threads that are waiting for 1058 * events to be woken up and to start competing to become event handlers 1059 * again. One of them will succeed; it will then re-obtain the list of poll 1060 * descriptors, and USB I/O will then continue as normal. 1061 * 1062 * libusb_open() is similar, and is actually a more simplistic case. Upon a 1063 * call to libusb_open(): 1064 * 1065 * -# The device is opened and a file descriptor is added to the poll set. 1066 * -# libusbx sends some dummy data on the control pipe, and records that it 1067 * is trying to modify the poll descriptor set. 1068 * -# The event handler is interrupted, and the same behaviour change as for 1069 * libusb_close() takes effect, causing all event handling threads to become 1070 * event waiters. 1071 * -# The libusb_open() implementation takes its free ride to the events lock. 1072 * -# Happy that it has successfully paused the events handler, libusb_open() 1073 * releases the events lock. 1074 * -# The event waiter threads are all woken up and compete to become event 1075 * handlers again. The one that succeeds will obtain the list of poll 1076 * descriptors again, which will include the addition of the new device. 1077 * 1078 * \subsection concl Closing remarks 1079 * 1080 * The above may seem a little complicated, but hopefully I have made it clear 1081 * why such complications are necessary. Also, do not forget that this only 1082 * applies to applications that take libusbx's file descriptors and integrate 1083 * them into their own polling loops. 1084 * 1085 * You may decide that it is OK for your multi-threaded application to ignore 1086 * some of the rules and locks detailed above, because you don't think that 1087 * two threads can ever be polling the descriptors at the same time. If that 1088 * is the case, then that's good news for you because you don't have to worry. 1089 * But be careful here; remember that the synchronous I/O functions do event 1090 * handling internally. If you have one thread doing event handling in a loop 1091 * (without implementing the rules and locking semantics documented above) 1092 * and another trying to send a synchronous USB transfer, you will end up with 1093 * two threads monitoring the same descriptors, and the above-described 1094 * undesirable behaviour occuring. The solution is for your polling thread to 1095 * play by the rules; the synchronous I/O functions do so, and this will result 1096 * in them getting along in perfect harmony. 1097 * 1098 * If you do have a dedicated thread doing event handling, it is perfectly 1099 * legal for it to take the event handling lock for long periods of time. Any 1100 * synchronous I/O functions you call from other threads will transparently 1101 * fall back to the "event waiters" mechanism detailed above. The only 1102 * consideration that your event handling thread must apply is the one related 1103 * to libusb_event_handling_ok(): you must call this before every poll(), and 1104 * give up the events lock if instructed. 1105 */ 1106 1107int usbi_io_init(struct libusb_context *ctx) 1108{ 1109 int r; 1110 1111 usbi_mutex_init(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock, NULL); 1112 usbi_mutex_init(&ctx->pollfds_lock, NULL); 1113 usbi_mutex_init(&ctx->pollfd_modify_lock, NULL); 1114 usbi_mutex_init_recursive(&ctx->events_lock, NULL); 1115 usbi_mutex_init(&ctx->event_waiters_lock, NULL); 1116 usbi_cond_init(&ctx->event_waiters_cond, NULL); 1117 list_init(&ctx->flying_transfers); 1118 list_init(&ctx->pollfds); 1119 1120 /* FIXME should use an eventfd on kernels that support it */ 1121 r = usbi_pipe(ctx->ctrl_pipe); 1122 if (r < 0) { 1123 r = LIBUSB_ERROR_OTHER; 1124 goto err; 1125 } 1126 1127 r = usbi_add_pollfd(ctx, ctx->ctrl_pipe[0], POLLIN); 1128 if (r < 0) 1129 goto err_close_pipe; 1130 1131 /* create hotplug pipe */ 1132 r = usbi_pipe(ctx->hotplug_pipe); 1133 if (r < 0) { 1134 r = LIBUSB_ERROR_OTHER; 1135 goto err; 1136 } 1137 1138 r = usbi_add_pollfd(ctx, ctx->hotplug_pipe[0], POLLIN); 1139 if (r < 0) 1140 goto err_close_hp_pipe; 1141 1142#ifdef USBI_TIMERFD_AVAILABLE 1143 ctx->timerfd = timerfd_create(usbi_backend->get_timerfd_clockid(), 1144 TFD_NONBLOCK); 1145 if (ctx->timerfd >= 0) { 1146 usbi_dbg("using timerfd for timeouts"); 1147 r = usbi_add_pollfd(ctx, ctx->timerfd, POLLIN); 1148 if (r < 0) { 1149 usbi_remove_pollfd(ctx, ctx->ctrl_pipe[0]); 1150 close(ctx->timerfd); 1151 goto err_close_hp_pipe; 1152 } 1153 } else { 1154 usbi_dbg("timerfd not available (code %d error %d)", ctx->timerfd, errno); 1155 ctx->timerfd = -1; 1156 } 1157#endif 1158 1159 return 0; 1160 1161err_close_hp_pipe: 1162 usbi_close(ctx->hotplug_pipe[0]); 1163 usbi_close(ctx->hotplug_pipe[1]); 1164err_close_pipe: 1165 usbi_close(ctx->ctrl_pipe[0]); 1166 usbi_close(ctx->ctrl_pipe[1]); 1167err: 1168 usbi_mutex_destroy(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 1169 usbi_mutex_destroy(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 1170 usbi_mutex_destroy(&ctx->pollfd_modify_lock); 1171 usbi_mutex_destroy(&ctx->events_lock); 1172 usbi_mutex_destroy(&ctx->event_waiters_lock); 1173 usbi_cond_destroy(&ctx->event_waiters_cond); 1174 return r; 1175} 1176 1177void usbi_io_exit(struct libusb_context *ctx) 1178{ 1179 usbi_remove_pollfd(ctx, ctx->ctrl_pipe[0]); 1180 usbi_close(ctx->ctrl_pipe[0]); 1181 usbi_close(ctx->ctrl_pipe[1]); 1182 usbi_remove_pollfd(ctx, ctx->hotplug_pipe[0]); 1183 usbi_close(ctx->hotplug_pipe[0]); 1184 usbi_close(ctx->hotplug_pipe[1]); 1185#ifdef USBI_TIMERFD_AVAILABLE 1186 if (usbi_using_timerfd(ctx)) { 1187 usbi_remove_pollfd(ctx, ctx->timerfd); 1188 close(ctx->timerfd); 1189 } 1190#endif 1191 usbi_mutex_destroy(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 1192 usbi_mutex_destroy(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 1193 usbi_mutex_destroy(&ctx->pollfd_modify_lock); 1194 usbi_mutex_destroy(&ctx->events_lock); 1195 usbi_mutex_destroy(&ctx->event_waiters_lock); 1196 usbi_cond_destroy(&ctx->event_waiters_cond); 1197} 1198 1199static int calculate_timeout(struct usbi_transfer *transfer) 1200{ 1201 int r; 1202 struct timespec current_time; 1203 unsigned int timeout = 1204 USBI_TRANSFER_TO_LIBUSB_TRANSFER(transfer)->timeout; 1205 1206 if (!timeout) 1207 return 0; 1208 1209 r = usbi_backend->clock_gettime(USBI_CLOCK_MONOTONIC, ¤t_time); 1210 if (r < 0) { 1211 usbi_err(ITRANSFER_CTX(transfer), 1212 "failed to read monotonic clock, errno=%d", errno); 1213 return r; 1214 } 1215 1216 current_time.tv_sec += timeout / 1000; 1217 current_time.tv_nsec += (timeout % 1000) * 1000000; 1218 1219 while (current_time.tv_nsec >= 1000000000) { 1220 current_time.tv_nsec -= 1000000000; 1221 current_time.tv_sec++; 1222 } 1223 1224 TIMESPEC_TO_TIMEVAL(&transfer->timeout, ¤t_time); 1225 return 0; 1226} 1227 1228/* add a transfer to the (timeout-sorted) active transfers list. 1229 * Callers of this function must hold the flying_transfers_lock. 1230 * This function *always* adds the transfer to the flying_transfers list, 1231 * it will return non 0 if it fails to update the timer, but even then the 1232 * transfer is added to the flying_transfers list. */ 1233static int add_to_flying_list(struct usbi_transfer *transfer) 1234{ 1235 struct usbi_transfer *cur; 1236 struct timeval *timeout = &transfer->timeout; 1237 struct libusb_context *ctx = ITRANSFER_CTX(transfer); 1238 int r = 0; 1239 int first = 1; 1240 1241 /* if we have no other flying transfers, start the list with this one */ 1242 if (list_empty(&ctx->flying_transfers)) { 1243 list_add(&transfer->list, &ctx->flying_transfers); 1244 goto out; 1245 } 1246 1247 /* if we have infinite timeout, append to end of list */ 1248 if (!timerisset(timeout)) { 1249 list_add_tail(&transfer->list, &ctx->flying_transfers); 1250 /* first is irrelevant in this case */ 1251 goto out; 1252 } 1253 1254 /* otherwise, find appropriate place in list */ 1255 list_for_each_entry(cur, &ctx->flying_transfers, list, struct usbi_transfer) { 1256 /* find first timeout that occurs after the transfer in question */ 1257 struct timeval *cur_tv = &cur->timeout; 1258 1259 if (!timerisset(cur_tv) || (cur_tv->tv_sec > timeout->tv_sec) || 1260 (cur_tv->tv_sec == timeout->tv_sec && 1261 cur_tv->tv_usec > timeout->tv_usec)) { 1262 list_add_tail(&transfer->list, &cur->list); 1263 goto out; 1264 } 1265 first = 0; 1266 } 1267 /* first is 0 at this stage (list not empty) */ 1268 1269 /* otherwise we need to be inserted at the end */ 1270 list_add_tail(&transfer->list, &ctx->flying_transfers); 1271out: 1272#ifdef USBI_TIMERFD_AVAILABLE 1273 if (first && usbi_using_timerfd(ctx) && timerisset(timeout)) { 1274 /* if this transfer has the lowest timeout of all active transfers, 1275 * rearm the timerfd with this transfer's timeout */ 1276 const struct itimerspec it = { {0, 0}, 1277 { timeout->tv_sec, timeout->tv_usec * 1000 } }; 1278 usbi_dbg("arm timerfd for timeout in %dms (first in line)", 1279 USBI_TRANSFER_TO_LIBUSB_TRANSFER(transfer)->timeout); 1280 r = timerfd_settime(ctx->timerfd, TFD_TIMER_ABSTIME, &it, NULL); 1281 if (r < 0) { 1282 usbi_warn(ctx, "failed to arm first timerfd (errno %d)", errno); 1283 r = LIBUSB_ERROR_OTHER; 1284 } 1285 } 1286#else 1287 UNUSED(first); 1288#endif 1289 1290 return r; 1291} 1292 1293/** \ingroup asyncio 1294 * Allocate a libusbx transfer with a specified number of isochronous packet 1295 * descriptors. The returned transfer is pre-initialized for you. When the new 1296 * transfer is no longer needed, it should be freed with 1297 * libusb_free_transfer(). 1298 * 1299 * Transfers intended for non-isochronous endpoints (e.g. control, bulk, 1300 * interrupt) should specify an iso_packets count of zero. 1301 * 1302 * For transfers intended for isochronous endpoints, specify an appropriate 1303 * number of packet descriptors to be allocated as part of the transfer. 1304 * The returned transfer is not specially initialized for isochronous I/O; 1305 * you are still required to set the 1306 * \ref libusb_transfer::num_iso_packets "num_iso_packets" and 1307 * \ref libusb_transfer::type "type" fields accordingly. 1308 * 1309 * It is safe to allocate a transfer with some isochronous packets and then 1310 * use it on a non-isochronous endpoint. If you do this, ensure that at time 1311 * of submission, num_iso_packets is 0 and that type is set appropriately. 1312 * 1313 * \param iso_packets number of isochronous packet descriptors to allocate 1314 * \returns a newly allocated transfer, or NULL on error 1315 */ 1316DEFAULT_VISIBILITY 1317struct libusb_transfer * LIBUSB_CALL libusb_alloc_transfer( 1318 int iso_packets) 1319{ 1320 size_t os_alloc_size = usbi_backend->transfer_priv_size 1321 + (usbi_backend->add_iso_packet_size * iso_packets); 1322 size_t alloc_size = sizeof(struct usbi_transfer) 1323 + sizeof(struct libusb_transfer) 1324 + (sizeof(struct libusb_iso_packet_descriptor) * iso_packets) 1325 + os_alloc_size; 1326 struct usbi_transfer *itransfer = calloc(1, alloc_size); 1327 if (!itransfer) 1328 return NULL; 1329 1330 itransfer->num_iso_packets = iso_packets; 1331 usbi_mutex_init(&itransfer->lock, NULL); 1332 return USBI_TRANSFER_TO_LIBUSB_TRANSFER(itransfer); 1333} 1334 1335/** \ingroup asyncio 1336 * Free a transfer structure. This should be called for all transfers 1337 * allocated with libusb_alloc_transfer(). 1338 * 1339 * If the \ref libusb_transfer_flags::LIBUSB_TRANSFER_FREE_BUFFER 1340 * "LIBUSB_TRANSFER_FREE_BUFFER" flag is set and the transfer buffer is 1341 * non-NULL, this function will also free the transfer buffer using the 1342 * standard system memory allocator (e.g. free()). 1343 * 1344 * It is legal to call this function with a NULL transfer. In this case, 1345 * the function will simply return safely. 1346 * 1347 * It is not legal to free an active transfer (one which has been submitted 1348 * and has not yet completed). 1349 * 1350 * \param transfer the transfer to free 1351 */ 1352void API_EXPORTED libusb_free_transfer(struct libusb_transfer *transfer) 1353{ 1354 struct usbi_transfer *itransfer; 1355 if (!transfer) 1356 return; 1357 1358 if (transfer->flags & LIBUSB_TRANSFER_FREE_BUFFER && transfer->buffer) 1359 free(transfer->buffer); 1360 1361 itransfer = LIBUSB_TRANSFER_TO_USBI_TRANSFER(transfer); 1362 usbi_mutex_destroy(&itransfer->lock); 1363 free(itransfer); 1364} 1365 1366#ifdef USBI_TIMERFD_AVAILABLE 1367static int disarm_timerfd(struct libusb_context *ctx) 1368{ 1369 const struct itimerspec disarm_timer = { { 0, 0 }, { 0, 0 } }; 1370 int r; 1371 1372 usbi_dbg(""); 1373 r = timerfd_settime(ctx->timerfd, 0, &disarm_timer, NULL); 1374 if (r < 0) 1375 return LIBUSB_ERROR_OTHER; 1376 else 1377 return 0; 1378} 1379 1380/* iterates through the flying transfers, and rearms the timerfd based on the 1381 * next upcoming timeout. 1382 * must be called with flying_list locked. 1383 * returns 0 if there was no timeout to arm, 1 if the next timeout was armed, 1384 * or a LIBUSB_ERROR code on failure. 1385 */ 1386static int arm_timerfd_for_next_timeout(struct libusb_context *ctx) 1387{ 1388 struct usbi_transfer *transfer; 1389 1390 list_for_each_entry(transfer, &ctx->flying_transfers, list, struct usbi_transfer) { 1391 struct timeval *cur_tv = &transfer->timeout; 1392 1393 /* if we've reached transfers of infinite timeout, then we have no 1394 * arming to do */ 1395 if (!timerisset(cur_tv)) 1396 goto disarm; 1397 1398 /* act on first transfer that is not already cancelled */ 1399 if (!(transfer->flags & USBI_TRANSFER_TIMED_OUT)) { 1400 int r; 1401 const struct itimerspec it = { {0, 0}, 1402 { cur_tv->tv_sec, cur_tv->tv_usec * 1000 } }; 1403 usbi_dbg("next timeout originally %dms", USBI_TRANSFER_TO_LIBUSB_TRANSFER(transfer)->timeout); 1404 r = timerfd_settime(ctx->timerfd, TFD_TIMER_ABSTIME, &it, NULL); 1405 if (r < 0) 1406 return LIBUSB_ERROR_OTHER; 1407 return 1; 1408 } 1409 } 1410 1411disarm: 1412 return disarm_timerfd(ctx); 1413} 1414#else 1415static int arm_timerfd_for_next_timeout(struct libusb_context *ctx) 1416{ 1417 (void)ctx; 1418 return 0; 1419} 1420#endif 1421 1422/** \ingroup asyncio 1423 * Submit a transfer. This function will fire off the USB transfer and then 1424 * return immediately. 1425 * 1426 * \param transfer the transfer to submit 1427 * \returns 0 on success 1428 * \returns LIBUSB_ERROR_NO_DEVICE if the device has been disconnected 1429 * \returns LIBUSB_ERROR_BUSY if the transfer has already been submitted. 1430 * \returns LIBUSB_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED if the transfer flags are not supported 1431 * by the operating system. 1432 * \returns another LIBUSB_ERROR code on other failure 1433 */ 1434int API_EXPORTED libusb_submit_transfer(struct libusb_transfer *transfer) 1435{ 1436 struct libusb_context *ctx = TRANSFER_CTX(transfer); 1437 struct usbi_transfer *itransfer = 1438 LIBUSB_TRANSFER_TO_USBI_TRANSFER(transfer); 1439 int r; 1440 int updated_fds; 1441 1442 usbi_mutex_lock(&itransfer->lock); 1443 itransfer->transferred = 0; 1444 itransfer->flags = 0; 1445 r = calculate_timeout(itransfer); 1446 if (r < 0) { 1447 r = LIBUSB_ERROR_OTHER; 1448 goto out; 1449 } 1450 1451 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 1452 r = add_to_flying_list(itransfer); 1453 if (r == LIBUSB_SUCCESS) { 1454 r = usbi_backend->submit_transfer(itransfer); 1455 } 1456 if (r != LIBUSB_SUCCESS) { 1457 list_del(&itransfer->list); 1458 arm_timerfd_for_next_timeout(ctx); 1459 } 1460 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 1461 1462 /* keep a reference to this device */ 1463 libusb_ref_device(transfer->dev_handle->dev); 1464out: 1465 updated_fds = (itransfer->flags & USBI_TRANSFER_UPDATED_FDS); 1466 usbi_mutex_unlock(&itransfer->lock); 1467 if (updated_fds) 1468 usbi_fd_notification(ctx); 1469 return r; 1470} 1471 1472/** \ingroup asyncio 1473 * Asynchronously cancel a previously submitted transfer. 1474 * This function returns immediately, but this does not indicate cancellation 1475 * is complete. Your callback function will be invoked at some later time 1476 * with a transfer status of 1477 * \ref libusb_transfer_status::LIBUSB_TRANSFER_CANCELLED 1478 * "LIBUSB_TRANSFER_CANCELLED." 1479 * 1480 * \param transfer the transfer to cancel 1481 * \returns 0 on success 1482 * \returns LIBUSB_ERROR_NOT_FOUND if the transfer is already complete or 1483 * cancelled. 1484 * \returns a LIBUSB_ERROR code on failure 1485 */ 1486int API_EXPORTED libusb_cancel_transfer(struct libusb_transfer *transfer) 1487{ 1488 struct usbi_transfer *itransfer = 1489 LIBUSB_TRANSFER_TO_USBI_TRANSFER(transfer); 1490 int r; 1491 1492 usbi_dbg(""); 1493 usbi_mutex_lock(&itransfer->lock); 1494 r = usbi_backend->cancel_transfer(itransfer); 1495 if (r < 0) { 1496 if (r != LIBUSB_ERROR_NOT_FOUND && 1497 r != LIBUSB_ERROR_NO_DEVICE) 1498 usbi_err(TRANSFER_CTX(transfer), 1499 "cancel transfer failed error %d", r); 1500 else 1501 usbi_dbg("cancel transfer failed error %d", r); 1502 1503 if (r == LIBUSB_ERROR_NO_DEVICE) 1504 itransfer->flags |= USBI_TRANSFER_DEVICE_DISAPPEARED; 1505 } 1506 1507 itransfer->flags |= USBI_TRANSFER_CANCELLING; 1508 1509 usbi_mutex_unlock(&itransfer->lock); 1510 return r; 1511} 1512 1513/* Handle completion of a transfer (completion might be an error condition). 1514 * This will invoke the user-supplied callback function, which may end up 1515 * freeing the transfer. Therefore you cannot use the transfer structure 1516 * after calling this function, and you should free all backend-specific 1517 * data before calling it. 1518 * Do not call this function with the usbi_transfer lock held. User-specified 1519 * callback functions may attempt to directly resubmit the transfer, which 1520 * will attempt to take the lock. */ 1521int usbi_handle_transfer_completion(struct usbi_transfer *itransfer, 1522 enum libusb_transfer_status status) 1523{ 1524 struct libusb_transfer *transfer = 1525 USBI_TRANSFER_TO_LIBUSB_TRANSFER(itransfer); 1526 struct libusb_context *ctx = TRANSFER_CTX(transfer); 1527 struct libusb_device_handle *handle = transfer->dev_handle; 1528 uint8_t flags; 1529 int r = 0; 1530 1531 /* FIXME: could be more intelligent with the timerfd here. we don't need 1532 * to disarm the timerfd if there was no timer running, and we only need 1533 * to rearm the timerfd if the transfer that expired was the one with 1534 * the shortest timeout. */ 1535 1536 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 1537 list_del(&itransfer->list); 1538 if (usbi_using_timerfd(ctx)) 1539 r = arm_timerfd_for_next_timeout(ctx); 1540 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 1541 if (usbi_using_timerfd(ctx) && (r < 0)) 1542 return r; 1543 1544 if (status == LIBUSB_TRANSFER_COMPLETED 1545 && transfer->flags & LIBUSB_TRANSFER_SHORT_NOT_OK) { 1546 int rqlen = transfer->length; 1547 if (transfer->type == LIBUSB_TRANSFER_TYPE_CONTROL) 1548 rqlen -= LIBUSB_CONTROL_SETUP_SIZE; 1549 if (rqlen != itransfer->transferred) { 1550 usbi_dbg("interpreting short transfer as error"); 1551 status = LIBUSB_TRANSFER_ERROR; 1552 } 1553 } 1554 1555 flags = transfer->flags; 1556 transfer->status = status; 1557 transfer->actual_length = itransfer->transferred; 1558 usbi_dbg("transfer %p has callback %p", transfer, transfer->callback); 1559 if (transfer->callback) 1560 transfer->callback(transfer); 1561 /* transfer might have been freed by the above call, do not use from 1562 * this point. */ 1563 if (flags & LIBUSB_TRANSFER_FREE_TRANSFER) 1564 libusb_free_transfer(transfer); 1565 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->event_waiters_lock); 1566 usbi_cond_broadcast(&ctx->event_waiters_cond); 1567 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->event_waiters_lock); 1568 libusb_unref_device(handle->dev); 1569 return 0; 1570} 1571 1572/* Similar to usbi_handle_transfer_completion() but exclusively for transfers 1573 * that were asynchronously cancelled. The same concerns w.r.t. freeing of 1574 * transfers exist here. 1575 * Do not call this function with the usbi_transfer lock held. User-specified 1576 * callback functions may attempt to directly resubmit the transfer, which 1577 * will attempt to take the lock. */ 1578int usbi_handle_transfer_cancellation(struct usbi_transfer *transfer) 1579{ 1580 /* if the URB was cancelled due to timeout, report timeout to the user */ 1581 if (transfer->flags & USBI_TRANSFER_TIMED_OUT) { 1582 usbi_dbg("detected timeout cancellation"); 1583 return usbi_handle_transfer_completion(transfer, LIBUSB_TRANSFER_TIMED_OUT); 1584 } 1585 1586 /* otherwise its a normal async cancel */ 1587 return usbi_handle_transfer_completion(transfer, LIBUSB_TRANSFER_CANCELLED); 1588} 1589 1590/** \ingroup poll 1591 * Attempt to acquire the event handling lock. This lock is used to ensure that 1592 * only one thread is monitoring libusbx event sources at any one time. 1593 * 1594 * You only need to use this lock if you are developing an application 1595 * which calls poll() or select() on libusbx's file descriptors directly. 1596 * If you stick to libusbx's event handling loop functions (e.g. 1597 * libusb_handle_events()) then you do not need to be concerned with this 1598 * locking. 1599 * 1600 * While holding this lock, you are trusted to actually be handling events. 1601 * If you are no longer handling events, you must call libusb_unlock_events() 1602 * as soon as possible. 1603 * 1604 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 1605 * \returns 0 if the lock was obtained successfully 1606 * \returns 1 if the lock was not obtained (i.e. another thread holds the lock) 1607 * \see \ref mtasync 1608 */ 1609int API_EXPORTED libusb_try_lock_events(libusb_context *ctx) 1610{ 1611 int r; 1612 unsigned int ru; 1613 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 1614 1615 /* is someone else waiting to modify poll fds? if so, don't let this thread 1616 * start event handling */ 1617 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->pollfd_modify_lock); 1618 ru = ctx->pollfd_modify; 1619 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->pollfd_modify_lock); 1620 if (ru) { 1621 usbi_dbg("someone else is modifying poll fds"); 1622 return 1; 1623 } 1624 1625 r = usbi_mutex_trylock(&ctx->events_lock); 1626 if (r) 1627 return 1; 1628 1629 ctx->event_handler_active = 1; 1630 return 0; 1631} 1632 1633/** \ingroup poll 1634 * Acquire the event handling lock, blocking until successful acquisition if 1635 * it is contended. This lock is used to ensure that only one thread is 1636 * monitoring libusbx event sources at any one time. 1637 * 1638 * You only need to use this lock if you are developing an application 1639 * which calls poll() or select() on libusbx's file descriptors directly. 1640 * If you stick to libusbx's event handling loop functions (e.g. 1641 * libusb_handle_events()) then you do not need to be concerned with this 1642 * locking. 1643 * 1644 * While holding this lock, you are trusted to actually be handling events. 1645 * If you are no longer handling events, you must call libusb_unlock_events() 1646 * as soon as possible. 1647 * 1648 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 1649 * \see \ref mtasync 1650 */ 1651void API_EXPORTED libusb_lock_events(libusb_context *ctx) 1652{ 1653 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 1654 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->events_lock); 1655 ctx->event_handler_active = 1; 1656} 1657 1658/** \ingroup poll 1659 * Release the lock previously acquired with libusb_try_lock_events() or 1660 * libusb_lock_events(). Releasing this lock will wake up any threads blocked 1661 * on libusb_wait_for_event(). 1662 * 1663 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 1664 * \see \ref mtasync 1665 */ 1666void API_EXPORTED libusb_unlock_events(libusb_context *ctx) 1667{ 1668 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 1669 ctx->event_handler_active = 0; 1670 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->events_lock); 1671 1672 /* FIXME: perhaps we should be a bit more efficient by not broadcasting 1673 * the availability of the events lock when we are modifying pollfds 1674 * (check ctx->pollfd_modify)? */ 1675 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->event_waiters_lock); 1676 usbi_cond_broadcast(&ctx->event_waiters_cond); 1677 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->event_waiters_lock); 1678} 1679 1680/** \ingroup poll 1681 * Determine if it is still OK for this thread to be doing event handling. 1682 * 1683 * Sometimes, libusbx needs to temporarily pause all event handlers, and this 1684 * is the function you should use before polling file descriptors to see if 1685 * this is the case. 1686 * 1687 * If this function instructs your thread to give up the events lock, you 1688 * should just continue the usual logic that is documented in \ref mtasync. 1689 * On the next iteration, your thread will fail to obtain the events lock, 1690 * and will hence become an event waiter. 1691 * 1692 * This function should be called while the events lock is held: you don't 1693 * need to worry about the results of this function if your thread is not 1694 * the current event handler. 1695 * 1696 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 1697 * \returns 1 if event handling can start or continue 1698 * \returns 0 if this thread must give up the events lock 1699 * \see \ref fullstory "Multi-threaded I/O: the full story" 1700 */ 1701int API_EXPORTED libusb_event_handling_ok(libusb_context *ctx) 1702{ 1703 unsigned int r; 1704 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 1705 1706 /* is someone else waiting to modify poll fds? if so, don't let this thread 1707 * continue event handling */ 1708 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->pollfd_modify_lock); 1709 r = ctx->pollfd_modify; 1710 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->pollfd_modify_lock); 1711 if (r) { 1712 usbi_dbg("someone else is modifying poll fds"); 1713 return 0; 1714 } 1715 1716 return 1; 1717} 1718 1719 1720/** \ingroup poll 1721 * Determine if an active thread is handling events (i.e. if anyone is holding 1722 * the event handling lock). 1723 * 1724 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 1725 * \returns 1 if a thread is handling events 1726 * \returns 0 if there are no threads currently handling events 1727 * \see \ref mtasync 1728 */ 1729int API_EXPORTED libusb_event_handler_active(libusb_context *ctx) 1730{ 1731 unsigned int r; 1732 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 1733 1734 /* is someone else waiting to modify poll fds? if so, don't let this thread 1735 * start event handling -- indicate that event handling is happening */ 1736 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->pollfd_modify_lock); 1737 r = ctx->pollfd_modify; 1738 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->pollfd_modify_lock); 1739 if (r) { 1740 usbi_dbg("someone else is modifying poll fds"); 1741 return 1; 1742 } 1743 1744 return ctx->event_handler_active; 1745} 1746 1747/** \ingroup poll 1748 * Acquire the event waiters lock. This lock is designed to be obtained under 1749 * the situation where you want to be aware when events are completed, but 1750 * some other thread is event handling so calling libusb_handle_events() is not 1751 * allowed. 1752 * 1753 * You then obtain this lock, re-check that another thread is still handling 1754 * events, then call libusb_wait_for_event(). 1755 * 1756 * You only need to use this lock if you are developing an application 1757 * which calls poll() or select() on libusbx's file descriptors directly, 1758 * <b>and</b> may potentially be handling events from 2 threads simultaenously. 1759 * If you stick to libusbx's event handling loop functions (e.g. 1760 * libusb_handle_events()) then you do not need to be concerned with this 1761 * locking. 1762 * 1763 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 1764 * \see \ref mtasync 1765 */ 1766void API_EXPORTED libusb_lock_event_waiters(libusb_context *ctx) 1767{ 1768 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 1769 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->event_waiters_lock); 1770} 1771 1772/** \ingroup poll 1773 * Release the event waiters lock. 1774 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 1775 * \see \ref mtasync 1776 */ 1777void API_EXPORTED libusb_unlock_event_waiters(libusb_context *ctx) 1778{ 1779 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 1780 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->event_waiters_lock); 1781} 1782 1783/** \ingroup poll 1784 * Wait for another thread to signal completion of an event. Must be called 1785 * with the event waiters lock held, see libusb_lock_event_waiters(). 1786 * 1787 * This function will block until any of the following conditions are met: 1788 * -# The timeout expires 1789 * -# A transfer completes 1790 * -# A thread releases the event handling lock through libusb_unlock_events() 1791 * 1792 * Condition 1 is obvious. Condition 2 unblocks your thread <em>after</em> 1793 * the callback for the transfer has completed. Condition 3 is important 1794 * because it means that the thread that was previously handling events is no 1795 * longer doing so, so if any events are to complete, another thread needs to 1796 * step up and start event handling. 1797 * 1798 * This function releases the event waiters lock before putting your thread 1799 * to sleep, and reacquires the lock as it is being woken up. 1800 * 1801 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 1802 * \param tv maximum timeout for this blocking function. A NULL value 1803 * indicates unlimited timeout. 1804 * \returns 0 after a transfer completes or another thread stops event handling 1805 * \returns 1 if the timeout expired 1806 * \see \ref mtasync 1807 */ 1808int API_EXPORTED libusb_wait_for_event(libusb_context *ctx, struct timeval *tv) 1809{ 1810 struct timespec timeout; 1811 int r; 1812 1813 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 1814 if (tv == NULL) { 1815 usbi_cond_wait(&ctx->event_waiters_cond, &ctx->event_waiters_lock); 1816 return 0; 1817 } 1818 1819 r = usbi_backend->clock_gettime(USBI_CLOCK_REALTIME, &timeout); 1820 if (r < 0) { 1821 usbi_err(ctx, "failed to read realtime clock, error %d", errno); 1822 return LIBUSB_ERROR_OTHER; 1823 } 1824 1825 timeout.tv_sec += tv->tv_sec; 1826 timeout.tv_nsec += tv->tv_usec * 1000; 1827 while (timeout.tv_nsec >= 1000000000) { 1828 timeout.tv_nsec -= 1000000000; 1829 timeout.tv_sec++; 1830 } 1831 1832 r = usbi_cond_timedwait(&ctx->event_waiters_cond, 1833 &ctx->event_waiters_lock, &timeout); 1834 return (r == ETIMEDOUT); 1835} 1836 1837static void handle_timeout(struct usbi_transfer *itransfer) 1838{ 1839 struct libusb_transfer *transfer = 1840 USBI_TRANSFER_TO_LIBUSB_TRANSFER(itransfer); 1841 int r; 1842 1843 itransfer->flags |= USBI_TRANSFER_TIMED_OUT; 1844 r = libusb_cancel_transfer(transfer); 1845 if (r < 0) 1846 usbi_warn(TRANSFER_CTX(transfer), 1847 "async cancel failed %d errno=%d", r, errno); 1848} 1849 1850static int handle_timeouts_locked(struct libusb_context *ctx) 1851{ 1852 int r; 1853 struct timespec systime_ts; 1854 struct timeval systime; 1855 struct usbi_transfer *transfer; 1856 1857 if (list_empty(&ctx->flying_transfers)) 1858 return 0; 1859 1860 /* get current time */ 1861 r = usbi_backend->clock_gettime(USBI_CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &systime_ts); 1862 if (r < 0) 1863 return r; 1864 1865 TIMESPEC_TO_TIMEVAL(&systime, &systime_ts); 1866 1867 /* iterate through flying transfers list, finding all transfers that 1868 * have expired timeouts */ 1869 list_for_each_entry(transfer, &ctx->flying_transfers, list, struct usbi_transfer) { 1870 struct timeval *cur_tv = &transfer->timeout; 1871 1872 /* if we've reached transfers of infinite timeout, we're all done */ 1873 if (!timerisset(cur_tv)) 1874 return 0; 1875 1876 /* ignore timeouts we've already handled */ 1877 if (transfer->flags & (USBI_TRANSFER_TIMED_OUT | USBI_TRANSFER_OS_HANDLES_TIMEOUT)) 1878 continue; 1879 1880 /* if transfer has non-expired timeout, nothing more to do */ 1881 if ((cur_tv->tv_sec > systime.tv_sec) || 1882 (cur_tv->tv_sec == systime.tv_sec && 1883 cur_tv->tv_usec > systime.tv_usec)) 1884 return 0; 1885 1886 /* otherwise, we've got an expired timeout to handle */ 1887 handle_timeout(transfer); 1888 } 1889 return 0; 1890} 1891 1892static int handle_timeouts(struct libusb_context *ctx) 1893{ 1894 int r; 1895 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 1896 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 1897 r = handle_timeouts_locked(ctx); 1898 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 1899 return r; 1900} 1901 1902#ifdef USBI_TIMERFD_AVAILABLE 1903static int handle_timerfd_trigger(struct libusb_context *ctx) 1904{ 1905 int r; 1906 1907 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 1908 1909 /* process the timeout that just happened */ 1910 r = handle_timeouts_locked(ctx); 1911 if (r < 0) 1912 goto out; 1913 1914 /* arm for next timeout*/ 1915 r = arm_timerfd_for_next_timeout(ctx); 1916 1917out: 1918 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 1919 return r; 1920} 1921#endif 1922 1923/* do the actual event handling. assumes that no other thread is concurrently 1924 * doing the same thing. */ 1925static int handle_events(struct libusb_context *ctx, struct timeval *tv) 1926{ 1927 int r; 1928 struct usbi_pollfd *ipollfd; 1929 POLL_NFDS_TYPE nfds = 0; 1930 struct pollfd *fds = NULL; 1931 int i = -1; 1932 int timeout_ms; 1933 1934 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 1935 list_for_each_entry(ipollfd, &ctx->pollfds, list, struct usbi_pollfd) 1936 nfds++; 1937 1938 /* TODO: malloc when number of fd's changes, not on every poll */ 1939 if (nfds != 0) 1940 fds = malloc(sizeof(*fds) * nfds); 1941 if (!fds) { 1942 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 1943 return LIBUSB_ERROR_NO_MEM; 1944 } 1945 1946 list_for_each_entry(ipollfd, &ctx->pollfds, list, struct usbi_pollfd) { 1947 struct libusb_pollfd *pollfd = &ipollfd->pollfd; 1948 int fd = pollfd->fd; 1949 i++; 1950 fds[i].fd = fd; 1951 fds[i].events = pollfd->events; 1952 fds[i].revents = 0; 1953 } 1954 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 1955 1956 timeout_ms = (int)(tv->tv_sec * 1000) + (tv->tv_usec / 1000); 1957 1958 /* round up to next millisecond */ 1959 if (tv->tv_usec % 1000) 1960 timeout_ms++; 1961 1962 usbi_dbg("poll() %d fds with timeout in %dms", nfds, timeout_ms); 1963 r = usbi_poll(fds, nfds, timeout_ms); 1964 usbi_dbg("poll() returned %d", r); 1965 if (r == 0) { 1966 free(fds); 1967 return handle_timeouts(ctx); 1968 } else if (r == -1 && errno == EINTR) { 1969 free(fds); 1970 return LIBUSB_ERROR_INTERRUPTED; 1971 } else if (r < 0) { 1972 free(fds); 1973 usbi_err(ctx, "poll failed %d err=%d\n", r, errno); 1974 return LIBUSB_ERROR_IO; 1975 } 1976 1977 /* fd[0] is always the ctrl pipe */ 1978 if (fds[0].revents) { 1979 /* another thread wanted to interrupt event handling, and it succeeded! 1980 * handle any other events that cropped up at the same time, and 1981 * simply return */ 1982 usbi_dbg("caught a fish on the control pipe"); 1983 1984 if (r == 1) { 1985 r = 0; 1986 goto handled; 1987 } else { 1988 /* prevent OS backend from trying to handle events on ctrl pipe */ 1989 fds[0].revents = 0; 1990 r--; 1991 } 1992 } 1993 1994 /* fd[1] is always the hotplug pipe */ 1995 if (libusb_has_capability(LIBUSB_CAP_HAS_HOTPLUG) && fds[1].revents) { 1996 libusb_hotplug_message message; 1997 ssize_t ret; 1998 1999 usbi_dbg("caught a fish on the hotplug pipe"); 2000 2001 /* read the message from the hotplug thread */ 2002 ret = usbi_read(ctx->hotplug_pipe[0], &message, sizeof (message)); 2003 if (ret != sizeof(message)) { 2004 usbi_err(ctx, "hotplug pipe read error %d != %u", 2005 ret, sizeof(message)); 2006 r = LIBUSB_ERROR_OTHER; 2007 goto handled; 2008 } 2009 2010 usbi_hotplug_match(ctx, message.device, message.event); 2011 2012 /* the device left. dereference the device */ 2013 if (LIBUSB_HOTPLUG_EVENT_DEVICE_LEFT == message.event) 2014 libusb_unref_device(message.device); 2015 2016 fds[1].revents = 0; 2017 if (1 == r--) 2018 goto handled; 2019 } /* else there shouldn't be anything on this pipe */ 2020 2021#ifdef USBI_TIMERFD_AVAILABLE 2022 /* on timerfd configurations, fds[2] is the timerfd */ 2023 if (usbi_using_timerfd(ctx) && fds[2].revents) { 2024 /* timerfd indicates that a timeout has expired */ 2025 int ret; 2026 usbi_dbg("timerfd triggered"); 2027 2028 ret = handle_timerfd_trigger(ctx); 2029 if (ret < 0) { 2030 /* return error code */ 2031 r = ret; 2032 goto handled; 2033 } else if (r == 1) { 2034 /* no more active file descriptors, nothing more to do */ 2035 r = 0; 2036 goto handled; 2037 } else { 2038 /* more events pending... 2039 * prevent OS backend from trying to handle events on timerfd */ 2040 fds[2].revents = 0; 2041 r--; 2042 } 2043 } 2044#endif 2045 2046 r = usbi_backend->handle_events(ctx, fds, nfds, r); 2047 if (r) 2048 usbi_err(ctx, "backend handle_events failed with error %d", r); 2049 2050handled: 2051 free(fds); 2052 return r; 2053} 2054 2055/* returns the smallest of: 2056 * 1. timeout of next URB 2057 * 2. user-supplied timeout 2058 * returns 1 if there is an already-expired timeout, otherwise returns 0 2059 * and populates out 2060 */ 2061static int get_next_timeout(libusb_context *ctx, struct timeval *tv, 2062 struct timeval *out) 2063{ 2064 struct timeval timeout; 2065 int r = libusb_get_next_timeout(ctx, &timeout); 2066 if (r) { 2067 /* timeout already expired? */ 2068 if (!timerisset(&timeout)) 2069 return 1; 2070 2071 /* choose the smallest of next URB timeout or user specified timeout */ 2072 if (timercmp(&timeout, tv, <)) 2073 *out = timeout; 2074 else 2075 *out = *tv; 2076 } else { 2077 *out = *tv; 2078 } 2079 return 0; 2080} 2081 2082/** \ingroup poll 2083 * Handle any pending events. 2084 * 2085 * libusbx determines "pending events" by checking if any timeouts have expired 2086 * and by checking the set of file descriptors for activity. 2087 * 2088 * If a zero timeval is passed, this function will handle any already-pending 2089 * events and then immediately return in non-blocking style. 2090 * 2091 * If a non-zero timeval is passed and no events are currently pending, this 2092 * function will block waiting for events to handle up until the specified 2093 * timeout. If an event arrives or a signal is raised, this function will 2094 * return early. 2095 * 2096 * If the parameter completed is not NULL then <em>after obtaining the event 2097 * handling lock</em> this function will return immediately if the integer 2098 * pointed to is not 0. This allows for race free waiting for the completion 2099 * of a specific transfer. 2100 * 2101 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 2102 * \param tv the maximum time to block waiting for events, or an all zero 2103 * timeval struct for non-blocking mode 2104 * \param completed pointer to completion integer to check, or NULL 2105 * \returns 0 on success, or a LIBUSB_ERROR code on failure 2106 * \see \ref mtasync 2107 */ 2108int API_EXPORTED libusb_handle_events_timeout_completed(libusb_context *ctx, 2109 struct timeval *tv, int *completed) 2110{ 2111 int r; 2112 struct timeval poll_timeout; 2113 2114 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 2115 r = get_next_timeout(ctx, tv, &poll_timeout); 2116 if (r) { 2117 /* timeout already expired */ 2118 return handle_timeouts(ctx); 2119 } 2120 2121retry: 2122 if (libusb_try_lock_events(ctx) == 0) { 2123 if (completed == NULL || !*completed) { 2124 /* we obtained the event lock: do our own event handling */ 2125 usbi_dbg("doing our own event handling"); 2126 r = handle_events(ctx, &poll_timeout); 2127 } 2128 libusb_unlock_events(ctx); 2129 return r; 2130 } 2131 2132 /* another thread is doing event handling. wait for thread events that 2133 * notify event completion. */ 2134 libusb_lock_event_waiters(ctx); 2135 2136 if (completed && *completed) 2137 goto already_done; 2138 2139 if (!libusb_event_handler_active(ctx)) { 2140 /* we hit a race: whoever was event handling earlier finished in the 2141 * time it took us to reach this point. try the cycle again. */ 2142 libusb_unlock_event_waiters(ctx); 2143 usbi_dbg("event handler was active but went away, retrying"); 2144 goto retry; 2145 } 2146 2147 usbi_dbg("another thread is doing event handling"); 2148 r = libusb_wait_for_event(ctx, &poll_timeout); 2149 2150already_done: 2151 libusb_unlock_event_waiters(ctx); 2152 2153 if (r < 0) 2154 return r; 2155 else if (r == 1) 2156 return handle_timeouts(ctx); 2157 else 2158 return 0; 2159} 2160 2161/** \ingroup poll 2162 * Handle any pending events 2163 * 2164 * Like libusb_handle_events_timeout_completed(), but without the completed 2165 * parameter, calling this function is equivalent to calling 2166 * libusb_handle_events_timeout_completed() with a NULL completed parameter. 2167 * 2168 * This function is kept primarily for backwards compatibility. 2169 * All new code should call libusb_handle_events_completed() or 2170 * libusb_handle_events_timeout_completed() to avoid race conditions. 2171 * 2172 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 2173 * \param tv the maximum time to block waiting for events, or an all zero 2174 * timeval struct for non-blocking mode 2175 * \returns 0 on success, or a LIBUSB_ERROR code on failure 2176 */ 2177int API_EXPORTED libusb_handle_events_timeout(libusb_context *ctx, 2178 struct timeval *tv) 2179{ 2180 return libusb_handle_events_timeout_completed(ctx, tv, NULL); 2181} 2182 2183/** \ingroup poll 2184 * Handle any pending events in blocking mode. There is currently a timeout 2185 * hardcoded at 60 seconds but we plan to make it unlimited in future. For 2186 * finer control over whether this function is blocking or non-blocking, or 2187 * for control over the timeout, use libusb_handle_events_timeout_completed() 2188 * instead. 2189 * 2190 * This function is kept primarily for backwards compatibility. 2191 * All new code should call libusb_handle_events_completed() or 2192 * libusb_handle_events_timeout_completed() to avoid race conditions. 2193 * 2194 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 2195 * \returns 0 on success, or a LIBUSB_ERROR code on failure 2196 */ 2197int API_EXPORTED libusb_handle_events(libusb_context *ctx) 2198{ 2199 struct timeval tv; 2200 tv.tv_sec = 60; 2201 tv.tv_usec = 0; 2202 return libusb_handle_events_timeout_completed(ctx, &tv, NULL); 2203} 2204 2205/** \ingroup poll 2206 * Handle any pending events in blocking mode. 2207 * 2208 * Like libusb_handle_events(), with the addition of a completed parameter 2209 * to allow for race free waiting for the completion of a specific transfer. 2210 * 2211 * See libusb_handle_events_timeout_completed() for details on the completed 2212 * parameter. 2213 * 2214 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 2215 * \param completed pointer to completion integer to check, or NULL 2216 * \returns 0 on success, or a LIBUSB_ERROR code on failure 2217 * \see \ref mtasync 2218 */ 2219int API_EXPORTED libusb_handle_events_completed(libusb_context *ctx, 2220 int *completed) 2221{ 2222 struct timeval tv; 2223 tv.tv_sec = 60; 2224 tv.tv_usec = 0; 2225 return libusb_handle_events_timeout_completed(ctx, &tv, completed); 2226} 2227 2228/** \ingroup poll 2229 * Handle any pending events by polling file descriptors, without checking if 2230 * any other threads are already doing so. Must be called with the event lock 2231 * held, see libusb_lock_events(). 2232 * 2233 * This function is designed to be called under the situation where you have 2234 * taken the event lock and are calling poll()/select() directly on libusbx's 2235 * file descriptors (as opposed to using libusb_handle_events() or similar). 2236 * You detect events on libusbx's descriptors, so you then call this function 2237 * with a zero timeout value (while still holding the event lock). 2238 * 2239 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 2240 * \param tv the maximum time to block waiting for events, or zero for 2241 * non-blocking mode 2242 * \returns 0 on success, or a LIBUSB_ERROR code on failure 2243 * \see \ref mtasync 2244 */ 2245int API_EXPORTED libusb_handle_events_locked(libusb_context *ctx, 2246 struct timeval *tv) 2247{ 2248 int r; 2249 struct timeval poll_timeout; 2250 2251 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 2252 r = get_next_timeout(ctx, tv, &poll_timeout); 2253 if (r) { 2254 /* timeout already expired */ 2255 return handle_timeouts(ctx); 2256 } 2257 2258 return handle_events(ctx, &poll_timeout); 2259} 2260 2261/** \ingroup poll 2262 * Determines whether your application must apply special timing considerations 2263 * when monitoring libusbx's file descriptors. 2264 * 2265 * This function is only useful for applications which retrieve and poll 2266 * libusbx's file descriptors in their own main loop (\ref pollmain). 2267 * 2268 * Ordinarily, libusbx's event handler needs to be called into at specific 2269 * moments in time (in addition to times when there is activity on the file 2270 * descriptor set). The usual approach is to use libusb_get_next_timeout() 2271 * to learn about when the next timeout occurs, and to adjust your 2272 * poll()/select() timeout accordingly so that you can make a call into the 2273 * library at that time. 2274 * 2275 * Some platforms supported by libusbx do not come with this baggage - any 2276 * events relevant to timing will be represented by activity on the file 2277 * descriptor set, and libusb_get_next_timeout() will always return 0. 2278 * This function allows you to detect whether you are running on such a 2279 * platform. 2280 * 2281 * Since v1.0.5. 2282 * 2283 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 2284 * \returns 0 if you must call into libusbx at times determined by 2285 * libusb_get_next_timeout(), or 1 if all timeout events are handled internally 2286 * or through regular activity on the file descriptors. 2287 * \see \ref pollmain "Polling libusbx file descriptors for event handling" 2288 */ 2289int API_EXPORTED libusb_pollfds_handle_timeouts(libusb_context *ctx) 2290{ 2291#if defined(USBI_TIMERFD_AVAILABLE) 2292 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 2293 return usbi_using_timerfd(ctx); 2294#else 2295 (void)ctx; 2296 return 0; 2297#endif 2298} 2299 2300/** \ingroup poll 2301 * Determine the next internal timeout that libusbx needs to handle. You only 2302 * need to use this function if you are calling poll() or select() or similar 2303 * on libusbx's file descriptors yourself - you do not need to use it if you 2304 * are calling libusb_handle_events() or a variant directly. 2305 * 2306 * You should call this function in your main loop in order to determine how 2307 * long to wait for select() or poll() to return results. libusbx needs to be 2308 * called into at this timeout, so you should use it as an upper bound on 2309 * your select() or poll() call. 2310 * 2311 * When the timeout has expired, call into libusb_handle_events_timeout() 2312 * (perhaps in non-blocking mode) so that libusbx can handle the timeout. 2313 * 2314 * This function may return 1 (success) and an all-zero timeval. If this is 2315 * the case, it indicates that libusbx has a timeout that has already expired 2316 * so you should call libusb_handle_events_timeout() or similar immediately. 2317 * A return code of 0 indicates that there are no pending timeouts. 2318 * 2319 * On some platforms, this function will always returns 0 (no pending 2320 * timeouts). See \ref polltime. 2321 * 2322 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 2323 * \param tv output location for a relative time against the current 2324 * clock in which libusbx must be called into in order to process timeout events 2325 * \returns 0 if there are no pending timeouts, 1 if a timeout was returned, 2326 * or LIBUSB_ERROR_OTHER on failure 2327 */ 2328int API_EXPORTED libusb_get_next_timeout(libusb_context *ctx, 2329 struct timeval *tv) 2330{ 2331 struct usbi_transfer *transfer; 2332 struct timespec cur_ts; 2333 struct timeval cur_tv; 2334 struct timeval *next_timeout; 2335 int r; 2336 int found = 0; 2337 2338 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 2339 if (usbi_using_timerfd(ctx)) 2340 return 0; 2341 2342 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 2343 if (list_empty(&ctx->flying_transfers)) { 2344 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 2345 usbi_dbg("no URBs, no timeout!"); 2346 return 0; 2347 } 2348 2349 /* find next transfer which hasn't already been processed as timed out */ 2350 list_for_each_entry(transfer, &ctx->flying_transfers, list, struct usbi_transfer) { 2351 if (transfer->flags & (USBI_TRANSFER_TIMED_OUT | USBI_TRANSFER_OS_HANDLES_TIMEOUT)) 2352 continue; 2353 2354 /* no timeout for this transfer? */ 2355 if (!timerisset(&transfer->timeout)) 2356 continue; 2357 2358 found = 1; 2359 break; 2360 } 2361 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->flying_transfers_lock); 2362 2363 if (!found) { 2364 usbi_dbg("no URB with timeout or all handled by OS; no timeout!"); 2365 return 0; 2366 } 2367 2368 next_timeout = &transfer->timeout; 2369 2370 r = usbi_backend->clock_gettime(USBI_CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &cur_ts); 2371 if (r < 0) { 2372 usbi_err(ctx, "failed to read monotonic clock, errno=%d", errno); 2373 return 0; 2374 } 2375 TIMESPEC_TO_TIMEVAL(&cur_tv, &cur_ts); 2376 2377 if (!timercmp(&cur_tv, next_timeout, <)) { 2378 usbi_dbg("first timeout already expired"); 2379 timerclear(tv); 2380 } else { 2381 timersub(next_timeout, &cur_tv, tv); 2382 usbi_dbg("next timeout in %d.%06ds", tv->tv_sec, tv->tv_usec); 2383 } 2384 2385 return 1; 2386} 2387 2388/** \ingroup poll 2389 * Register notification functions for file descriptor additions/removals. 2390 * These functions will be invoked for every new or removed file descriptor 2391 * that libusbx uses as an event source. 2392 * 2393 * To remove notifiers, pass NULL values for the function pointers. 2394 * 2395 * Note that file descriptors may have been added even before you register 2396 * these notifiers (e.g. at libusb_init() time). 2397 * 2398 * Additionally, note that the removal notifier may be called during 2399 * libusb_exit() (e.g. when it is closing file descriptors that were opened 2400 * and added to the poll set at libusb_init() time). If you don't want this, 2401 * remove the notifiers immediately before calling libusb_exit(). 2402 * 2403 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 2404 * \param added_cb pointer to function for addition notifications 2405 * \param removed_cb pointer to function for removal notifications 2406 * \param user_data User data to be passed back to callbacks (useful for 2407 * passing context information) 2408 */ 2409void API_EXPORTED libusb_set_pollfd_notifiers(libusb_context *ctx, 2410 libusb_pollfd_added_cb added_cb, libusb_pollfd_removed_cb removed_cb, 2411 void *user_data) 2412{ 2413 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 2414 ctx->fd_added_cb = added_cb; 2415 ctx->fd_removed_cb = removed_cb; 2416 ctx->fd_cb_user_data = user_data; 2417} 2418 2419/* Add a file descriptor to the list of file descriptors to be monitored. 2420 * events should be specified as a bitmask of events passed to poll(), e.g. 2421 * POLLIN and/or POLLOUT. */ 2422int usbi_add_pollfd(struct libusb_context *ctx, int fd, short events) 2423{ 2424 struct usbi_pollfd *ipollfd = malloc(sizeof(*ipollfd)); 2425 if (!ipollfd) 2426 return LIBUSB_ERROR_NO_MEM; 2427 2428 usbi_dbg("add fd %d events %d", fd, events); 2429 ipollfd->pollfd.fd = fd; 2430 ipollfd->pollfd.events = events; 2431 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 2432 list_add_tail(&ipollfd->list, &ctx->pollfds); 2433 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 2434 2435 if (ctx->fd_added_cb) 2436 ctx->fd_added_cb(fd, events, ctx->fd_cb_user_data); 2437 return 0; 2438} 2439 2440/* Remove a file descriptor from the list of file descriptors to be polled. */ 2441void usbi_remove_pollfd(struct libusb_context *ctx, int fd) 2442{ 2443 struct usbi_pollfd *ipollfd; 2444 int found = 0; 2445 2446 usbi_dbg("remove fd %d", fd); 2447 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 2448 list_for_each_entry(ipollfd, &ctx->pollfds, list, struct usbi_pollfd) 2449 if (ipollfd->pollfd.fd == fd) { 2450 found = 1; 2451 break; 2452 } 2453 2454 if (!found) { 2455 usbi_dbg("couldn't find fd %d to remove", fd); 2456 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 2457 return; 2458 } 2459 2460 list_del(&ipollfd->list); 2461 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 2462 free(ipollfd); 2463 if (ctx->fd_removed_cb) 2464 ctx->fd_removed_cb(fd, ctx->fd_cb_user_data); 2465} 2466 2467/** \ingroup poll 2468 * Retrieve a list of file descriptors that should be polled by your main loop 2469 * as libusbx event sources. 2470 * 2471 * The returned list is NULL-terminated and should be freed with free() when 2472 * done. The actual list contents must not be touched. 2473 * 2474 * As file descriptors are a Unix-specific concept, this function is not 2475 * available on Windows and will always return NULL. 2476 * 2477 * \param ctx the context to operate on, or NULL for the default context 2478 * \returns a NULL-terminated list of libusb_pollfd structures 2479 * \returns NULL on error 2480 * \returns NULL on platforms where the functionality is not available 2481 */ 2482DEFAULT_VISIBILITY 2483const struct libusb_pollfd ** LIBUSB_CALL libusb_get_pollfds( 2484 libusb_context *ctx) 2485{ 2486#ifndef OS_WINDOWS 2487 struct libusb_pollfd **ret = NULL; 2488 struct usbi_pollfd *ipollfd; 2489 size_t i = 0; 2490 size_t cnt = 0; 2491 USBI_GET_CONTEXT(ctx); 2492 2493 usbi_mutex_lock(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 2494 list_for_each_entry(ipollfd, &ctx->pollfds, list, struct usbi_pollfd) 2495 cnt++; 2496 2497 ret = calloc(cnt + 1, sizeof(struct libusb_pollfd *)); 2498 if (!ret) 2499 goto out; 2500 2501 list_for_each_entry(ipollfd, &ctx->pollfds, list, struct usbi_pollfd) 2502 ret[i++] = (struct libusb_pollfd *) ipollfd; 2503 ret[cnt] = NULL; 2504 2505out: 2506 usbi_mutex_unlock(&ctx->pollfds_lock); 2507 return (const struct libusb_pollfd **) ret; 2508#else 2509 usbi_err(ctx, "external polling of libusbx's internal descriptors "\ 2510 "is not yet supported on Windows platforms"); 2511 return NULL; 2512#endif 2513} 2514 2515/* Backends may call this from handle_events to report disconnection of a 2516 * device. This function ensures transfers get cancelled appropriately. 2517 * Callers of this function must hold the events_lock. 2518 */ 2519void usbi_handle_disconnect(struct libusb_device_handle *handle) 2520{ 2521 struct usbi_transfer *cur; 2522 struct usbi_transfer *to_cancel; 2523 2524 usbi_dbg("device %d.%d", 2525 handle->dev->bus_number, handle->dev->device_address); 2526 2527 /* terminate all pending transfers with the LIBUSB_TRANSFER_NO_DEVICE 2528 * status code. 2529 * 2530 * this is a bit tricky because: 2531 * 1. we can't do transfer completion while holding flying_transfers_lock 2532 * because the completion handler may try to re-submit the transfer 2533 * 2. the transfers list can change underneath us - if we were to build a 2534 * list of transfers to complete (while holding lock), the situation 2535 * might be different by the time we come to free them 2536 * 2537 * so we resort to a loop-based approach as below 2538 * 2539 * This is safe because transfers are only removed from the 2540 * flying_transfer list by usbi_handle_transfer_completion and 2541 * libusb_close, both of which hold the events_lock while doing so, 2542 * so usbi_handle_disconnect cannot be running at the same time. 2543 * 2544 * Note that libusb_submit_transfer also removes the transfer from 2545 * the flying_transfer list on submission failure, but it keeps the 2546 * flying_transfer list locked between addition and removal, so 2547 * usbi_handle_disconnect never sees such transfers. 2548 */ 2549 2550 while (1) { 2551 usbi_mutex_lock(&HANDLE_CTX(handle)->flying_transfers_lock); 2552 to_cancel = NULL; 2553 list_for_each_entry(cur, &HANDLE_CTX(handle)->flying_transfers, list, struct usbi_transfer) 2554 if (USBI_TRANSFER_TO_LIBUSB_TRANSFER(cur)->dev_handle == handle) { 2555 to_cancel = cur; 2556 break; 2557 } 2558 usbi_mutex_unlock(&HANDLE_CTX(handle)->flying_transfers_lock); 2559 2560 if (!to_cancel) 2561 break; 2562 2563 usbi_dbg("cancelling transfer %p from disconnect", 2564 USBI_TRANSFER_TO_LIBUSB_TRANSFER(to_cancel)); 2565 2566 usbi_backend->clear_transfer_priv(to_cancel); 2567 usbi_handle_transfer_completion(to_cancel, LIBUSB_TRANSFER_NO_DEVICE); 2568 } 2569 2570} 2571