The only reason the wait time in timer threads is capped at 100 ms is to
catch the daemon's shutdown. Since these threads already use a
condition variable to be woken up, we can use the same condition to wake
up the threads during a shutdown, allowing for a much longer (possibly
unlimited) sleep time in timer threads.
Change-Id: I3b5f280a4d502176a731e8b52b1b731022c8db4f
When a new timer object is scheduled to run in the future, we only need
to wake up one thread to notify about the new object as only one thread
is needed to handle it. The other threads can remain in the previous
sleep state.
Change-Id: I92ccec61a6c5a4a3cea5c5428c85f83707cf4d64
This makes sure all objects are cleaned up during shutdown even if the
respective timer hasn't run yet.
Change-Id: I197b930f1b6e407819cc5a8c4ebd92fcef21b2cd