gecko/tools/profiler/IOInterposer.h
Aaron Klotz 872f14f04a Bug 888534: Add support for Create, Stat and Close operations to IOInterposer. r=jonasfj
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 6b7e75ae35e3250383f3990dce2680df44f4ec68
2013-10-01 13:53:19 -06:00

256 lines
8.4 KiB
C++

/* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
* License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
* file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */
#ifndef mozilla_IOInterposer_h
#define mozilla_IOInterposer_h
#include "mozilla/Attributes.h"
#include "mozilla/TimeStamp.h"
#include "mozilla/XPCOM.h"
namespace mozilla {
/**
* Interface for I/O interposer observers. This is separate from the
* IOInterposer because we have multiple uses for these observations.
*/
class IOInterposeObserver
{
public:
enum Operation
{
OpNone = 0,
OpCreateOrOpen = (1 << 0),
OpRead = (1 << 1),
OpWrite = (1 << 2),
OpFSync = (1 << 3),
OpStat = (1 << 4),
OpClose = (1 << 5),
OpWriteFSync = (OpWrite | OpFSync),
OpAll = (OpCreateOrOpen | OpRead | OpWrite | OpFSync | OpStat | OpClose)
};
/** A representation of an I/O observation */
class Observation
{
protected:
Observation()
{
}
public:
Observation(Operation aOperation, const TimeStamp& aStart,
const TimeStamp& aEnd, const char* aReference)
: mOperation(aOperation), mStart(aStart), mEnd(aEnd),
mReference(aReference)
{
}
/**
* Operation observed, this is either OpRead, OpWrite or OpFSync,
* combinations of these flags are only used when registering observers.
*/
Operation ObservedOperation() const
{
return mOperation;
}
/** Time at which the I/O operation was started */
TimeStamp Start() const
{
return mStart;
}
/**
* Time at which the I/O operation ended, for asynchronous methods this is
* the time at which the call initiating the asynchronous request returned.
*/
TimeStamp End() const
{
return mEnd;
}
/**
* Duration of the operation, for asynchronous I/O methods this is the
* duration of the call initiating the asynchronous request.
*/
TimeDuration Duration() const
{
return mEnd - mStart;
}
/**
* IO reference, function name or name of component (sqlite) that did IO
* this is in addition the generic operation. This attribute may be platform
* specific, but should only take a finite number of distinct values.
* E.g. sqlite-commit, CreateFile, NtReadFile, fread, fsync, mmap, etc.
* I.e. typically the platform specific function that did the IO.
*/
const char* Reference() const
{
return mReference;
}
/** Request filename associated with the I/O operation, null if unknown */
virtual const char* Filename()
{
return nullptr;
}
virtual ~Observation()
{
}
protected:
Operation mOperation;
TimeStamp mStart;
TimeStamp mEnd;
const char* mReference;
};
/**
* Invoked whenever an implementation of the IOInterposeObserver should
* observe aObservation. Implement this and do your thing...
* But do consider if it is wise to use IO functions in this method, they are
* likely to cause recursion :)
* At least, see PoisonIOInterposer.h and register your handle as a debug file
* even, if you don't initialize the poison IO interposer, someone else might.
*
* Remark: Observations may occur on any thread.
*/
virtual void Observe(Observation& aObservation) = 0;
virtual ~IOInterposeObserver()
{
}
};
#ifdef MOZ_ENABLE_PROFILER_SPS
/**
* Class offering the public static IOInterposer API.
*
* This class is responsible for ensuring that events are routed to the
* appropriate observers. Methods Init() and Clear() should only be called from
* the main-thread at startup and shutdown, respectively.
*
* Remark: Instances of this class will never be created, you should consider it
* to be a namespace containing static functions. The class is created to
* facilitate to a private static instance variable sObservedOperations.
* As we want to access this from an inline static methods, we have to do this
* trick.
*/
class IOInterposer MOZ_FINAL
{
// Track whether or not a given type of observation is being observed
static IOInterposeObserver::Operation sObservedOperations;
// No instance of class should be created, they'd be empty anyway.
IOInterposer();
public:
/**
* This function must be called from the main-thread when no other threads are
* running before any of the other methods on this class may be used.
*
* IO reports can however, safely assume that IsObservedOperation() will
* return false, until the IOInterposer is initialized.
*
* Remark, it's safe to call this method multiple times, so just call it when
* you to utilize IO interposing.
*/
static void Init();
/**
* This function must be called from the main thread, and furthermore
* it must be called when no other threads are executing. Effectively
* restricting us to calling it only during shutdown.
*
* Callers should take care that no other consumers are subscribed to events,
* as these events will stop when this function is called.
*
* In practice, we don't use this method, as the IOInterposer is used for
* late-write checks.
*/
static void Clear();
/**
* Report IO to registered observers.
* Notice that the reported operation must be either OpRead, OpWrite or
* OpFSync. You are not allowed to report an observation with OpWriteFSync or
* OpAll, these are just auxiliary values for use with Register().
*
* If the IO call you're reporting does multiple things, write and fsync, you
* can choose to call Report() twice once with write and once with FSync. You
* may not call Report() with OpWriteFSync! The Observation::mOperation
* attribute is meant to be generic, not perfect.
*
* Notice that there is no reason to report an observation with an operation
* which is not being observed. Use IsObservedOperation() to check if the
* operation you are about to report is being observed. This is especially
* important if you are constructing expensive observations containing
* filename and full-path.
*
* Remark: Init() must be called before any IO is reported. But
* IsObservedOperation() will return false until Init() is called.
*/
static void Report(IOInterposeObserver::Observation& aObservation);
/**
* Return whether or not an operation is observed. Reporters should not
* report operations that are not being observed by anybody. This mechanism
* allows us to not report IO when no observers are registered.
*/
static inline bool IsObservedOperation(IOInterposeObserver::Operation aOp) {
// The quick reader may observe that no locks are being employed here,
// hence, the result of the operations is truly undefined. However, most
// computers will usually return either true or false, which is good enough.
// If we occasionally report more or less IO than is being observed than
// that is not a problem.
return (sObservedOperations & aOp);
}
/**
* Register IOInterposeObserver, the observer object will receive all
* observations for the given operation aOp.
*
* Remark: Init() must be called before observers are registered.
*/
static void Register(IOInterposeObserver::Operation aOp,
IOInterposeObserver* aObserver);
/**
* Unregister an IOInterposeObserver for a given operation
* Remark: It is always safe to unregister for all operations, even if yoú
* didn't register for them all.
* I.e. IOInterposer::Unregister(IOInterposeObserver::OpAll, aObserver)
*
* Remark: Init() must be called before observers are unregistered
*/
static void Unregister(IOInterposeObserver::Operation aOp,
IOInterposeObserver* aObserver);
};
#else /* MOZ_ENABLE_PROFILER_SPS */
class IOInterposer MOZ_FINAL
{
IOInterposer();
public:
static inline void Init() {}
static inline void Clear() {}
static inline void Report(IOInterposeObserver::Observation& aOb) {}
static inline void Register(IOInterposeObserver::Operation aOp,
IOInterposeObserver* aObserver) {}
static inline void Unregister(IOInterposeObserver::Operation aOp,
IOInterposeObserver* aObserver) {}
static inline bool IsObservedOperation(IOInterposeObserver::Operation aOp) {
return false;
}
};
#endif /* MOZ_ENABLE_PROFILER_SPS */
} // namespace mozilla
#endif // mozilla_IOInterposer_h