Based on the guidelines at
https://opensource.google.com/docs/releasing/authors/.
1. $ rg -l "Google LLC" | xargs sed -i 's/Google LLC.*/The gVisor Authors./'
2. Manual fixup of "Google Inc" references.
3. Add AUTHORS file. Authors may request to be added to this file.
4. Point netstack AUTHORS to gVisor AUTHORS. Drop CONTRIBUTORS.
Fixes#209
PiperOrigin-RevId: 245823212
Change-Id: I64530b24ad021a7d683137459cafc510f5ee1de9
If there are thousands of threads, ThreadGroupsAppend becomes very
expensive as it must iterate over all Tasks to find the ThreadGroup
leaders.
Reduce the cost by maintaining a map of ThreadGroups which can be used
to grab them all directly.
The one somewhat visible change is to convert PID namespace init
children zapping to a group-directed SIGKILL, as Linux did in
82058d668465 "signal: Use group_send_sig_info to kill all processes in a
pid namespace".
In a benchmark that creates N threads which sleep for two minutes, we
see approximately this much CPU time in ThreadGroupsAppend:
Before:
1 thread: 0ms
1024 threads: 30ms - 9130ms
4096 threads: 50ms - 2000ms
8192 threads: 18160ms
16384 threads: 17210ms
After:
1 thread: 0ms
1024 threads: 0ms
4096 threads: 0ms
8192 threads: 0ms
16384 threads: 0ms
The profiling is actually extremely noisy (likely due to cache effects),
as some runs show almost no samples at 1024, 4096 threads, but obviously
this does not scale to lots of threads.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 241828039
Change-Id: I17827c90045df4b3c49b3174f3a05bca3026a72c
If a background process tries to read from a TTY, linux sends it a SIGTTIN
unless the signal is blocked or ignored, or the process group is an orphan, in
which case the syscall returns EIO.
See drivers/tty/n_tty.c:n_tty_read()=>job_control().
If a background process tries to write a TTY, set the termios, or set the
foreground process group, linux then sends a SIGTTOU. If the signal is ignored
or blocked, linux allows the write. If the process group is an orphan, the
syscall returns EIO.
See drivers/tty/tty_io.c:tty_check_change().
PiperOrigin-RevId: 234044367
Change-Id: I009461352ac4f3f11c5d42c43ac36bb0caa580f9
Terminal support in runsc relies on host tty file descriptors that are imported
into the sandbox. Application tty ioctls are sent directly to the host fd.
However, those host tty ioctls are associated in the host kernel with a host
process (in this case runsc), and the host kernel intercepts job control
characters like ^C and send signals to the host process. Thus, typing ^C into a
"runsc exec" shell will send a SIGINT to the runsc process.
This change makes "runsc exec" handle all signals, and forward them into the
sandbox via the "ContainerSignal" urpc method. Since the "runsc exec" is
associated with a particular container process in the sandbox, the signal must
be associated with the same container process.
One big difficulty is that the signal should not necessarily be sent to the
sandbox process started by "exec", but instead must be sent to the foreground
process group for the tty. For example, we may exec "bash", and from bash call
"sleep 100". A ^C at this point should SIGINT sleep, not bash.
To handle this, tty files inside the sandbox must keep track of their
foreground process group, which is set/get via ioctls. When an incoming
ContainerSignal urpc comes in, we look up the foreground process group via the
tty file. Unfortunately, this means we have to expose and cache the tty file in
the Loader.
Note that "runsc exec" now handles signals properly, but "runs run" does not.
That will come in a later CL, as this one is complex enough already.
Example:
root@:/usr/local/apache2# sleep 100
^C
root@:/usr/local/apache2# sleep 100
^Z
[1]+ Stopped sleep 100
root@:/usr/local/apache2# fg
sleep 100
^C
root@:/usr/local/apache2#
PiperOrigin-RevId: 215334554
Change-Id: I53cdce39653027908510a5ba8d08c49f9cf24f39
FIOASYNC and friends are used to send signals when a file is ready for IO.
This may or may not be needed by Nginx. While Nginx does use it, it is unclear
if the code that uses it has any effect.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 201550828
Change-Id: I7ba05a7db4eb2dfffde11e9bd9a35b65b98d7f50