09-05-2015
The Way Systemd Handles System Calls
Hi everyone, I have a question about the process management, and deep level system functionality of system calls between SystemD and SystemV? Does SystemD use the same system calls (fork(), exec(), bind() etc...) as SystemV? or Vice Versa? If they both use the same or very very similar sys calls, do they handle them the same way? If a sys call is made in systemd, is it generally handled the same way on sysv? I know SystemD uses unit files for processes now, do these come into effect with system calls? Or are the differences between SystemV and SystemD more "higher level" than the low kernel level sys calls?
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LEARN ABOUT PLAN9
rendezvous
RENDEZVOUS(2) System Calls Manual RENDEZVOUS(2)
NAME
rendezvous - user level process synchronization
SYNOPSIS
#include <u.h>
#include <libc.h>
ulong rendezvous(ulong tag, ulong value)
DESCRIPTION
The rendezvous system call allows two processes to synchronize and exchange a value. In conjunction with the shared memory system calls
(see segattach(2) and fork(2)), it enables parallel programs to control their scheduling.
Two processes wishing to synchronize call rendezvous with a common tag, typically an address in memory they share. One process will arrive
at the rendezvous first; it suspends execution until a second arrives. When a second process meets the rendezvous the value arguments are
exchanged between the processes and returned as the result of the respective rendezvous system calls. Both processes are awakened when the
rendezvous succeeds.
The tag space is common to processes in the same file name space, so rendezvous only works between processes in the same file name space.
If a rendezvous is interrupted the return value is ~0, so that value should not be used in normal communication.
SOURCE
/sys/src/libc/9syscall
SEE ALSO
segattach(2), fork(2)
DIAGNOSTICS
Sets errstr.
BUGS
The correlation of rendezvous tags and file name space is a historical accident. If two unrelated processes happen to be in the same name
space and do a rendezvous, trouble will result. The solution is to call rfork(RFNAMEG) (see fork(2)) in programs that use rendezvous
unless they need to share the name space with their parent. This is especially important in Alef programs.
RENDEZVOUS(2)