jehanne/qa/lib/c/sleep.c
Giacomo Tesio e70feee4a3 libc: introduce "jehanne_" namespace
With this commit all functions declared in libc.h have been renamed
with the "jehanne_" prefix. This is done for several reason:

- it removes conflicts during symbol resolution when linking
  standard C libraries like newlib or musl
- it allows programs depending on a standard C library to directly
  link to a library depending on our non standard libc (eg libsec).

To ease transiction two files are provided:

- sys/include/lib9.h that can be included instead of <libc.h> to use
  the old names (via a simple set of macros)
- sys/src/lib/c/lib9.c that can be compiled with a program where the
  macro provided by lib9.h are too dumb (see for example rc or grep).

In the kernel port/lib.h has been modified accordingly and some of
the functions it directly provides has been renamed too (eg malloc
in qmalloc.c and print in devcons.c).
2017-04-19 23:48:21 +02:00

91 lines
2.2 KiB
C

/*
* This file is part of Jehanne.
*
* Copyright (C) 2015 Giacomo Tesio <giacomo@tesio.it>
*
* Jehanne 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 of the License.
*
* Jehanne 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 Jehanne. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include <u.h>
#include <lib9.h>
/* Test sleep(2):
* - sleep cannot be interrupted
* - sleep give back the control (more or less) on time
*
* Given we have two clocks at work here, we can use one to
* check the other:
* - nsec() is an high resolution clock from RDTSC instruction
* (see sysproc.c, portclock.c and tod.c in sys/src/9/port)
* - sys->ticks incremented by hzclock (in portclock.c) that
* is used by alarm (and sleep and the kernel scheduler)
*/
int verbose = 0;
int
printFirst(void *v, char *s)
{
/* just not exit, please */
if(strcmp(s, "alarm") == 0){
if(verbose)
fprint(2, "%d: noted: %s at %lld\n", getpid(), s, nsec());
atnotify(printFirst, 0);
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
int
failOnSecond(void *v, char *s)
{
/* just not exit, please */
if(strcmp(s, "alarm") == 0){
print("FAIL\n");
exits("FAIL");
}
return 0;
}
void
main(void)
{
int64_t a2000, a500, tStart, tEnd;
if (!atnotify(printFirst, 1) || !atnotify(failOnSecond, 1)){
fprint(2, "%r\n");
exits("atnotify fails");
}
alarm(2000);
a2000 = nsec();
alarm(500);
a500 = nsec();
tStart = nsec();
sleep(1000);
tEnd = nsec();
if(verbose)
fprint(2, "%d: set alarm(2000)@%lld then alarm(500)@%lld; elapsed in sleep() %lld nanosecond\n", getpid(), a2000, a500, tEnd-tStart);
if(tEnd-tStart > 1200 * 1000 * 1000){
print("FAIL: should sleep less\n");
exits("FAIL");
}
if(tEnd-tStart < 800 * 1000 * 1000){
print("FAIL: should sleep more\n");
exits("FAIL");
}
print("PASS\n");
exits("PASS");
}