inspircd/include/threadengines/threadengine_win32.h
ChrisTX 5b9682275e Windows: In-depth cleanup (see details)
-Fix x64 builds for Windows. Now all configurations compile.
-Remove the non-working rebase stuff.
-Remove the Windows fork hack and instead use FreeConsole() to emulate the behavior. This directly allows us to compile with ASLR, which is turned on now.
-Remove the old IPC mechanism for the removed GUI. This is not needed anymore as the GUI wasn't ever supported on anything newer than 1.2
-Remove the WIN32/WINDOWS macros. _WIN32 is supported on all x86-based VC++ targets, so that's what we need.
-Enable optimizations for release builds.
-De-duplicate printf_c(), it was previously copy-pasted into colors.h for configure
-Add the VC++ specific bad files in .gitignore
-Disable PID writing on Windows. This is only making sense for *nix builds.
-Replace the CPU usage retrieval with an algorithm analogous to the *nix behavior. Also supports separated now/total values. (Tested with a dummy busy loop - seems working)
-Removed certain unused functions and variables
-Remove stdint defines from the windows wrapper
-Remove CRT debug alloc. This is a bad idea as it would define a macro to replace free which breaks builds.
-Re-evaluated the warnings list, commented it.
-Moved inspircd_config/_version to include/ to match *nix
-Removed the creation of inspircd_se_config, as it isn't used at all.
-Made non-git builds show as "r0" instead of "r" (thanks to @SaberUK for pointing this out)
-Fixed up m_spanningtree's project paths. Now all configurations (debug/release x86/x64) have been tested and build properly.
-Moved FindDNS out of the wrapper and matched its log behavior with *nix. (It's pointless having it in the wrapper after the recent slimming down)
-Replaced random/srandom wrappers with a mechanism that tries to use Windows' Random API first is no SSL module is loaded.
-Removed more old junk from support for compilers older than VC++ 2010 (we don't have project files for these, so compiling them would be hard anyways)
-Removed the unused ClearConsole()
-Removed unused includes from the wrapper. Also, do not include psapi.h here if we don't link psapi.lib. This should be done where appropriate.
-Made inet_aton an inline function for increased performance
-C4800, performance warning about bool forcing, resolved at all occurrences.
-C4701, uninitialized variable 'cached', resolved at all occurrences.
-dlerror() was migrated out of the wrapper for more thread safety (no global buffer being shared) and increased performance.
-Removed the wrong CRT debug flags. This drains a lot of performance.
-Removed the clock_gettime/gettimeofday wrappers
-Replaced all TCHAR/ANSI mix-ups of functions with the correct respective function.
-Added a block of C4355 for < VS2012
-Update project files for c870714
2012-10-12 22:31:38 +02:00

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C++

/*
* InspIRCd -- Internet Relay Chat Daemon
*
* Copyright (C) 2009 Daniel De Graaf <danieldg@inspircd.org>
* Copyright (C) 2008 Craig Edwards <craigedwards@brainbox.cc>
*
* This file is part of InspIRCd. InspIRCd is free software: you can
* redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation, version 2.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
* FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more
* details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#ifndef THREADENGINE_WIN32_H
#define THREADENGINE_WIN32_H
#include "inspircd_config.h"
#include "base.h"
class Thread;
/** The ThreadEngine class has the responsibility of initialising
* Thread derived classes. It does this by creating operating system
* level threads which are then associated with the class transparently.
* This allows Thread classes to be derived without needing to know how
* the OS implements threads. You should ensure that any sections of code
* that use threads are threadsafe and do not interact with any other
* parts of the code which are NOT known threadsafe! If you really MUST
* access non-threadsafe code from a Thread, use the Mutex class to wrap
* access to the code carefully.
*/
class CoreExport ThreadEngine
{
public:
ThreadEngine();
virtual ~ThreadEngine();
static DWORD WINAPI Entry(void* parameter);
/** Create a new thread. This takes an already allocated
* Thread* pointer and initializes it to use this threading
* engine. On failure, this function may throw a CoreException.
* @param thread_to_init Pointer to a newly allocated Thread
* derived object.
*/
void Start(Thread* thread_to_init);
/** Returns the thread engine's name for display purposes
* @return The thread engine name
*/
const std::string GetName()
{
return "windows-thread";
}
};
class CoreExport ThreadData
{
public:
HANDLE handle;
void FreeThread(Thread* toFree);
};
/** The Mutex class represents a mutex, which can be used to keep threads
* properly synchronised. Use mutexes sparingly, as they are a good source
* of thread deadlocks etc, and should be avoided except where absolutely
* neccessary. Note that the internal behaviour of the mutex varies from OS
* to OS depending on the thread engine, for example in windows a Mutex
* in InspIRCd uses critical sections, as they are faster and simpler to
* manage.
*/
class CoreExport Mutex
{
private:
CRITICAL_SECTION wutex;
public:
Mutex()
{
InitializeCriticalSection(&wutex);
}
void Lock()
{
EnterCriticalSection(&wutex);
}
void Unlock()
{
LeaveCriticalSection(&wutex);
}
~Mutex()
{
DeleteCriticalSection(&wutex);
}
};
class ThreadQueueData
{
CRITICAL_SECTION mutex;
HANDLE event;
public:
ThreadQueueData()
{
event = CreateEvent(NULL, false, false, NULL);
if (event == NULL)
throw CoreException("CreateEvent() failed in ThreadQueueData::ThreadQueueData()!");
InitializeCriticalSection(&mutex);
}
~ThreadQueueData()
{
CloseHandle(event);
DeleteCriticalSection(&mutex);
}
void Lock()
{
EnterCriticalSection(&mutex);
}
void Unlock()
{
LeaveCriticalSection(&mutex);
}
void Wakeup()
{
PulseEvent(event);
}
void Wait()
{
LeaveCriticalSection(&mutex);
WaitForSingleObject(event, INFINITE);
EnterCriticalSection(&mutex);
}
};
class ThreadSignalData
{
public:
int connFD;
ThreadSignalData()
{
connFD = -1;
}
};
#endif