TLS is already used in TSRM, the way exporting the tsrm cache through
a thread local variable is not portable. Additionally, the current
patch suffers from bugs which are hard to find, but prevent it to
be worky with apache. What is done here is mainly uses the idea
from the RFC patch, but
- __thread variable is removed
- offset math and declarations are removed
- extra macros and definitions are removed
What is done merely is
- use an inline function to access the tsrm cache. The function uses
the portable tsrm_tls_get macro which is cheap
- all the TSRM_* macros are set to placebo. Thus this opens the way
remove them later
Except that, the logic is old. TSRMLS_FETCH will have to be done once
per thread, then tsrm_get_ls_cache() can be used. Things seeming to be
worky are cli, cli server and apache. I also tried to enable bz2
shared and it has worked out of the box. The change is yet minimal
diffing to the current master bus is a worky start, IMHO. Though will
have to recheck the other previously done SAPIs - embed and cgi.
The offsets can be added to the tsrm_resource_type struct, then
it'll not be needed to declare them in the userspace. Even the
"done" member type can be changed to int16 or smaller, then adding
the offset as int16 will not change the struct size. As well on the
todo might be removing the hashed storage, thread_id != thread_id and
linked list logic in favour of the explicit TLS operations.
Removing redundant inclusion of headers for NetWare
ext/standard/lcg.c
NetWare LibC SDK sys/time.h implicitly includes sys/timval.h so nothing special needed for NetWare here.
--Kamesh
would be shared among the threads which is quite pointless. Also
use a function of the current time as one factor.
Use gettimeofday() instead of time(), because it is faster on some
operating systems.
- Move to the new ts_allocate_id() API
This patch is *bound* to break some files, as I must have had typos somewhere.
If you use any uncommon extension, please try to build it...
Added a few RCS $Id$ tags.
# Note: I have avoided changing any .h files if the corresponding .c file
# had not already been changed as I am not sure if there are any legal
# issues here. So some extensions still have PHP 3 headers.