qemu-timer: introduce timer_deinit

In some cases, a timer was set to NULL so that we could check if it is
initialized.  Use the timer_list field instead, and add a timer_deinit
function that NULLs it.

It then makes sense that timer_del be a no-op (instead of a crasher) on
such a de-initialized timer.  It avoids the need to poke at the timerlist
field to check if the timers are initialized.

Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Paolo Bonzini 2014-12-24 10:57:04 +01:00
parent 65a81af8df
commit cd1bd53a66
2 changed files with 22 additions and 3 deletions

View File

@ -594,6 +594,17 @@ static inline QEMUTimer *timer_new_ms(QEMUClockType type, QEMUTimerCB *cb,
return timer_new(type, SCALE_MS, cb, opaque);
}
/**
* timer_deinit:
* @ts: the timer to be de-initialised
*
* Deassociate the timer from any timerlist. You should
* call timer_del before. After this call, any further
* timer_del call cannot cause dangling pointer accesses
* even if the previously used timerlist is freed.
*/
void timer_deinit(QEMUTimer *ts);
/**
* timer_free:
* @ts: the timer

View File

@ -342,6 +342,12 @@ void timer_init_tl(QEMUTimer *ts,
ts->expire_time = -1;
}
void timer_deinit(QEMUTimer *ts)
{
assert(ts->expire_time == -1);
ts->timer_list = NULL;
}
void timer_free(QEMUTimer *ts)
{
g_free(ts);
@ -398,9 +404,11 @@ void timer_del(QEMUTimer *ts)
{
QEMUTimerList *timer_list = ts->timer_list;
qemu_mutex_lock(&timer_list->active_timers_lock);
timer_del_locked(timer_list, ts);
qemu_mutex_unlock(&timer_list->active_timers_lock);
if (timer_list) {
qemu_mutex_lock(&timer_list->active_timers_lock);
timer_del_locked(timer_list, ts);
qemu_mutex_unlock(&timer_list->active_timers_lock);
}
}
/* modify the current timer so that it will be fired when current_time