stk/Tk/unix/tkUnixXId.c

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/*
* tkUnixXId.c --
*
* This file provides a replacement function for the default X
* resource allocator (_XAllocID). The problem with the default
* allocator is that it never re-uses ids, which causes long-lived
* applications to crash when X resource identifiers wrap around.
* The replacement functions in this file re-use old identifiers
* to prevent this problem.
*
* The code in this file is based on similar implementations by
* George C. Kaplan and Michael Hoegeman.
*
* Copyright (c) 1993 The Regents of the University of California.
* Copyright (c) 1994-1995 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
*
* See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution
* of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
*
* SCCS: @(#) tkUnixXId.c 1.22 97/06/25 13:16:47
*/
/*
* The definition below is needed on some systems so that we can access
* the resource_alloc field of Display structures in order to replace
* the resource allocator.
*/
#define XLIB_ILLEGAL_ACCESS 1
#include "tkInt.h"
#include "tkPort.h"
#include "tkUnixInt.h"
/*
* A structure of the following type is used to hold one or more
* available resource identifiers. There is a list of these structures
* for each display.
*/
#define IDS_PER_STACK 10
typedef struct TkIdStack {
XID ids[IDS_PER_STACK]; /* Array of free identifiers. */
int numUsed; /* Indicates how many of the entries
* in ids are currently in use. */
TkDisplay *dispPtr; /* Display to which ids belong. */
struct TkIdStack *nextPtr; /* Next bunch of free identifiers
* for the same display. */
} TkIdStack;
/*
* Forward declarations for procedures defined in this file:
*/
static XID AllocXId _ANSI_ARGS_((Display *display));
static Tk_RestrictAction CheckRestrictProc _ANSI_ARGS_((
ClientData clientData, XEvent *eventPtr));
static void WindowIdCleanup _ANSI_ARGS_((ClientData clientData));
static void WindowIdCleanup2 _ANSI_ARGS_((ClientData clientData));
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* TkInitXId --
*
* This procedure is called to initialize the id allocator for
* a given display.
*
* Results:
* None.
*
* Side effects:
* The official allocator for the display is set up to be Tk_AllocXID.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
void
TkInitXId(dispPtr)
TkDisplay *dispPtr; /* Tk's information about the
* display. */
{
dispPtr->idStackPtr = NULL;
dispPtr->defaultAllocProc = (XID (*) _ANSI_ARGS_((Display *display)))
dispPtr->display->resource_alloc;
dispPtr->display->resource_alloc = AllocXId;
dispPtr->windowStackPtr = NULL;
dispPtr->idCleanupScheduled = 0;
}
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* AllocXId --
*
* This procedure is invoked by Xlib as the resource allocator
* for a display.
*
* Results:
* The return value is an X resource identifier that isn't currently
* in use.
*
* Side effects:
* The identifier is removed from the stack of free identifiers,
* if it was previously on the stack.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
static XID
AllocXId(display)
Display *display; /* Display for which to allocate. */
{
TkDisplay *dispPtr;
TkIdStack *stackPtr;
/*
* Find Tk's information about the display.
*/
dispPtr = TkGetDisplay(display);
/*
* If the topmost chunk on the stack is empty then free it. Then
* check for a free id on the stack and return it if it exists.
*/
stackPtr = dispPtr->idStackPtr;
if (stackPtr != NULL) {
while (stackPtr->numUsed == 0) {
dispPtr->idStackPtr = stackPtr->nextPtr;
ckfree((char *) stackPtr);
stackPtr = dispPtr->idStackPtr;
if (stackPtr == NULL) {
goto defAlloc;
}
}
stackPtr->numUsed--;
return stackPtr->ids[stackPtr->numUsed];
}
/*
* No free ids in the stack: just get one from the default
* allocator.
*/
defAlloc:
return (*dispPtr->defaultAllocProc)(display);
}
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* Tk_FreeXId --
*
* This procedure is called to indicate that an X resource identifier
* is now free.
*
* Results:
* None.
*
* Side effects:
* The identifier is added to the stack of free identifiers for its
* display, so that it can be re-used.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
void
Tk_FreeXId(display, xid)
Display *display; /* Display for which xid was
* allocated. */
XID xid; /* Identifier that is no longer
* in use. */
{
TkDisplay *dispPtr;
TkIdStack *stackPtr;
/*
* Find Tk's information about the display.
*/
dispPtr = TkGetDisplay(display);
/*
* Add a new chunk to the stack if the current chunk is full.
*/
stackPtr = dispPtr->idStackPtr;
if ((stackPtr == NULL) || (stackPtr->numUsed >= IDS_PER_STACK)) {
stackPtr = (TkIdStack *) ckalloc(sizeof(TkIdStack));
stackPtr->numUsed = 0;
stackPtr->dispPtr = dispPtr;
stackPtr->nextPtr = dispPtr->idStackPtr;
dispPtr->idStackPtr = stackPtr;
}
/*
* Add the id to the current chunk.
*/
stackPtr->ids[stackPtr->numUsed] = xid;
stackPtr->numUsed++;
}
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* TkFreeWindowId --
*
* This procedure is invoked instead of TkFreeXId for window ids.
* See below for the reason why.
*
* Results:
* None.
*
* Side effects:
* The id given by w will eventually be freed, so that it can be
* reused for other resources.
*
* Design:
* Freeing window ids is very tricky because there could still be
* events pending for a window in the event queue (or even in the
* server) at the time the window is destroyed. If the window
* id were to get reused immediately for another window, old
* events could "drop in" on the new window, causing unexpected
* behavior.
*
* Thus we have to wait to re-use a window id until we know that
* there are no events left for it. Right now this is done in
* two steps. First, we wait until we know that the server
* has seen the XDestroyWindow request, so we can be sure that
* it won't generate more events for the window and that any
* existing events are in our queue. Second, we make sure that
* there are no events whatsoever in our queue (this is conservative
* but safe).
*
* The first step is done by remembering the request id of the
* XDestroyWindow request and using LastKnownRequestProcessed to
* see what events the server has processed. If multiple windows
* get destroyed at about the same time, we just remember the
* most recent request number for any of them (again, conservative
* but safe).
*
* There are a few other complications as well. When Tk destroys a
* sub-tree of windows, it only issues a single XDestroyWindow call,
* at the very end for the root of the subtree. We can't free any of
* the window ids until the final XDestroyWindow call. To make sure
* that this happens, we have to keep track of deletions in progress,
* hence the need for the "destroyCount" field of the display.
*
* One final problem. Some servers, like Sun X11/News servers still
* seem to have problems with ids getting reused too quickly. I'm
* not completely sure why this is a problem, but delaying the
* recycling of ids appears to eliminate it. Therefore, we wait
* an additional few seconds, even after "the coast is clear"
* before reusing the ids.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
void
TkFreeWindowId(dispPtr, w)
TkDisplay *dispPtr; /* Display that w belongs to. */
Window w; /* X identifier for window on dispPtr. */
{
TkIdStack *stackPtr;
/*
* Put the window id on a separate stack of window ids, rather
* than the main stack, so it won't get reused right away. Add
* a new chunk to the stack if the current chunk is full.
*/
stackPtr = dispPtr->windowStackPtr;
if ((stackPtr == NULL) || (stackPtr->numUsed >= IDS_PER_STACK)) {
stackPtr = (TkIdStack *) ckalloc(sizeof(TkIdStack));
stackPtr->numUsed = 0;
stackPtr->dispPtr = dispPtr;
stackPtr->nextPtr = dispPtr->windowStackPtr;
dispPtr->windowStackPtr = stackPtr;
}
/*
* Add the id to the current chunk.
*/
stackPtr->ids[stackPtr->numUsed] = w;
stackPtr->numUsed++;
/*
* Schedule a call to WindowIdCleanup if one isn't already
* scheduled.
*/
if (!dispPtr->idCleanupScheduled) {
dispPtr->idCleanupScheduled = 1;
Tcl_CreateTimerHandler(100, WindowIdCleanup, (ClientData) dispPtr);
}
}
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* WindowIdCleanup --
*
* See if we can now free up all the accumulated ids of
* deleted windows.
*
* Results:
* None.
*
* Side effects:
* If it's safe to move the window ids back to the main free
* list, we schedule this to happen after a few mores seconds
* of delay. If it's not safe to move them yet, a timer handler
* gets invoked to try again later.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
static void
WindowIdCleanup(clientData)
ClientData clientData; /* Pointer to TkDisplay for display */
{
TkDisplay *dispPtr = (TkDisplay *) clientData;
int anyEvents, delta;
Tk_RestrictProc *oldProc;
ClientData oldData;
static Tcl_Time timeout = {0, 0};
dispPtr->idCleanupScheduled = 0;
/*
* See if it's safe to recycle the window ids. It's safe if:
* (a) no deletions are in progress.
* (b) the server has seen all of the requests up to the last
* XDestroyWindow request.
* (c) there are no events in the event queue; the only way to
* test for this right now is to create a restrict proc that
* will filter the events, then call Tcl_DoOneEvent to see if
* the procedure gets invoked.
*/
if (dispPtr->destroyCount > 0) {
goto tryAgain;
}
delta = LastKnownRequestProcessed(dispPtr->display)
- dispPtr->lastDestroyRequest;
if (delta < 0) {
XSync(dispPtr->display, False);
}
anyEvents = 0;
oldProc = Tk_RestrictEvents(CheckRestrictProc, (ClientData) &anyEvents,
&oldData);
TkUnixDoOneXEvent(&timeout);
Tk_RestrictEvents(oldProc, oldData, &oldData);
if (anyEvents) {
goto tryAgain;
}
/*
* These ids look safe to recycle, but we still need to delay a bit
* more (see comments for TkFreeWindowId). Schedule the final freeing.
*/
if (dispPtr->windowStackPtr != NULL) {
Tcl_CreateTimerHandler(5000, WindowIdCleanup2,
(ClientData) dispPtr->windowStackPtr);
dispPtr->windowStackPtr = NULL;
}
return;
/*
* It's still not safe to free up the ids. Try again a bit later.
*/
tryAgain:
dispPtr->idCleanupScheduled = 1;
Tcl_CreateTimerHandler(500, WindowIdCleanup, (ClientData) dispPtr);
}
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* WindowIdCleanup2 --
*
* This procedure is the last one in the chain that recycles
* window ids. It takes all of the ids indicated by its
* argument and adds them back to the main id free list.
*
* Results:
* None.
*
* Side effects:
* Window ids get added to the main free list for their display.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
static void
WindowIdCleanup2(clientData)
ClientData clientData; /* Pointer to TkIdStack list. */
{
TkIdStack *stackPtr = (TkIdStack *) clientData;
TkIdStack *lastPtr;
lastPtr = stackPtr;
while (lastPtr->nextPtr != NULL) {
lastPtr = lastPtr->nextPtr;
}
lastPtr->nextPtr = stackPtr->dispPtr->idStackPtr;
stackPtr->dispPtr->idStackPtr = stackPtr;
}
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* CheckRestrictProc --
*
* This procedure is a restrict procedure, called by Tcl_DoOneEvent
* to filter X events. All it does is to set a flag to indicate
* that there are X events present.
*
* Results:
* Sets the integer pointed to by the argument, then returns
* TK_DEFER_EVENT.
*
* Side effects:
* None.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
static Tk_RestrictAction
CheckRestrictProc(clientData, eventPtr)
ClientData clientData; /* Pointer to flag to set. */
XEvent *eventPtr; /* Event to filter; not used. */
{
int *flag = (int *) clientData;
*flag = 1;
return TK_DEFER_EVENT;
}
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* Tk_GetPixmap --
*
* Same as the XCreatePixmap procedure except that it manages
* resource identifiers better.
*
* Results:
* Returns a new pixmap.
*
* Side effects:
* None.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
Pixmap
Tk_GetPixmap(display, d, width, height, depth)
Display *display; /* Display for new pixmap. */
Drawable d; /* Drawable where pixmap will be used. */
int width, height; /* Dimensions of pixmap. */
int depth; /* Bits per pixel for pixmap. */
{
return XCreatePixmap(display, d, (unsigned) width, (unsigned) height,
(unsigned) depth);
}
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* Tk_FreePixmap --
*
* Same as the XFreePixmap procedure except that it also marks
* the resource identifier as free.
*
* Results:
* None.
*
* Side effects:
* The pixmap is freed in the X server and its resource identifier
* is saved for re-use.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
void
Tk_FreePixmap(display, pixmap)
Display *display; /* Display for which pixmap was allocated. */
Pixmap pixmap; /* Identifier for pixmap. */
{
XFreePixmap(display, pixmap);
Tk_FreeXId(display, (XID) pixmap);
}
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* TkpWindowWasRecentlyDeleted --
*
* Checks whether the window was recently deleted. This is called
* by the generic error handler to detect asynchronous notification
* of errors due to operations by Tk on a window that was already
* deleted by the server.
*
* Results:
* 1 if the window was deleted recently, 0 otherwise.
*
* Side effects:
* None.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
int
TkpWindowWasRecentlyDeleted(win, dispPtr)
Window win; /* The window to check for. */
TkDisplay *dispPtr; /* The window belongs to this display. */
{
TkIdStack *stackPtr;
int i;
for (stackPtr = dispPtr->windowStackPtr;
stackPtr != NULL;
stackPtr = stackPtr->nextPtr) {
for (i = 0; i < stackPtr->numUsed; i++) {
if ((Window) stackPtr->ids[i] == win) {
return 1;
}
}
}
return 0;
}