Since the timeval module now initializes itself on-demand, there is no
longer any need to initialize it explicitly, or to provide an interface to
do so.
Most of the timekeeping needs of OVS are simply to measure intervals,
which means that it is sensitive to changes in the clock. This commit
replaces the existing clocks with monotonic timers. An additional set
of wall clock timers are added and used in locations that need absolute
time.
Bug #1858
Without removing SA_RESTART from the SIGALRM handler, the fcntl call will
never return, even after the signal handler is invoked and returns.
We haven't seen a problem in practice, at least not recently, but that's
probably just luck combined with not holding the configuration file lock
for very long.
Open vSwitch uses an interval timer signal to tell it that its cached idea
of the current time has expired. However, this didn't work in a daemon
detached from the foreground session (invoked with --detach) because a
child created with fork() does not inherit the parent's interval timer and
we did not re-set it after calling fork().
This commit fixes the problem by setting the interval timer back up after
calling fork() from daemonize().
This fix is based on code inspection (which was then verified to be correct
through testing). It may not fix any actual problems in practice, because
time_refresh() is called every time through the poll loop, and the poll
loop typically runs more quickly than the periodic timer fires (1 ms or so
average in ovs-vswitchd, vs. 100 ms timer interval).