From: "Paul E. McKenney" <paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
To: Chris Snook <csnook@redhat.com>
Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-arch@vger.kernel.org,
torvalds@linux-foundation.org, netdev@vger.kernel.org,
akpm@linux-foundation.org, ak@suse.de, heiko.carstens@de.ibm.com,
davem@davemloft.net, schwidefsky@de.ibm.com,
wensong@linux-vs.org, horms@verge.net.au, wjiang@resilience.com,
cfriesen@nortel.com, zlynx@acm.org, rpjday@mindspring.com,
jesper.juhl@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/24] make atomic_read() behave consistently on alpha
Date: Thu, 9 Aug 2007 10:41:50 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20070809174150.GE8424@linux.vnet.ibm.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <46BB4B7B.4070007@redhat.com>
On Thu, Aug 09, 2007 at 01:14:35PM -0400, Chris Snook wrote:
> Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> >On Thu, Aug 09, 2007 at 12:36:17PM -0400, Chris Snook wrote:
> >>Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> >>>The compiler is within its rights to read a 32-bit quantity 16 bits at
> >>>at time, even on a 32-bit machine. I would be glad to help pummel any
> >>>compiler writer that pulls such a dirty trick, but the C standard really
> >>>does permit this.
> >>Yes, but we don't write code for these compilers. There are countless
> >>pieces of kernel code which would break in this condition, and there
> >>doesn't seem to be any interest in fixing this.
> >>
> >>>Use of volatile does in fact save you from the compiler pushing stores
> >>>out
> >>>of loops regardless of whether you are also doing reads. The C standard
> >>>has the notion of sequence points, which occur at various places
> >>>including
> >>>the ends of statements and the control expressions for "if" and "while"
> >>>statements. The compiler is not permitted to move volatile references
> >>>across a sequence point. Therefore, the compiler is not allowed to
> >>>push a volatile store out of a loop. Now the CPU might well do such a
> >>>reordering, but that is a separate issue to be dealt with via memory
> >>>barriers. Note that it is the CPU and I/O system, not the compiler,
> >>>that is forcing you to use reads to flush writes to MMIO registers.
> >>Sequence points enforce read-after-write ordering, not write-after-write.
> >>We flush writes with reads for MMIO because of this effect as well as the
> >>CPU/bus effects.
> >
> >Neither volatile reads nor volatile writes may be moved across sequence
> >points.
>
> By the compiler, or by the CPU?
As mentioned in earlier emails, by the compiler. The CPU knows nothing
of C sequence points.
> If you're depending on volatile writes
> being visible to other CPUs, you're screwed either way, because the CPU can
> hold that data in cache as long as it wants before it writes it to memory.
> When this finally does happen, it will happen atomically, which is all that
> atomic_set guarantees. If you need to guarantee that the value is written
> to memory at a particular time in your execution sequence, you either have
> to read it from memory to force the compiler to store it first (and a
> volatile cast in atomic_read will suffice for this) or you have to use
> LOCK_PREFIX instructions which will invalidate remote cache lines
> containing the same variable. This patch doesn't change either of these
> cases.
The case that it -can- change is interactions with interrupt handlers.
And NMI/SMI handlers, for that matter.
> >>>And you would be amazed at what compiler writers will do in order to
> >>>get an additional fraction of a percent out of SpecCPU...
> >>Probably not :)
> >>
> >>>In short, please retain atomic_set()'s volatility, especially on those
> >>>architectures that declared the atomic_t's counter to be volatile.
> >>Like i386 and x86_64? These used to have volatile in the atomic_t
> >>declaration. We removed it, and the sky did not fall.
> >
> >Interesting. You tested all possible configs on all possible hardware?
>
> No, but I can reason about it and be confident that this won't break
> anything that isn't already broken. At worst, this patch will make any
> existing subtly incorrect uses of atomic_t much more obvious and easier to
> track down.
You took interrupt and NMI/SMI handlers into account?
Thanx, Paul
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-08-09 17:41 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 36+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2007-08-09 13:24 [PATCH 1/24] make atomic_read() behave consistently on alpha Chris Snook
2007-08-09 14:32 ` Paul E. McKenney
2007-08-09 14:53 ` Chris Snook
2007-08-09 15:04 ` Paul E. McKenney
2007-08-09 15:24 ` Chris Snook
2007-08-09 15:50 ` Segher Boessenkool
2007-08-09 16:20 ` Chris Snook
2007-08-09 18:38 ` Segher Boessenkool
2007-08-09 19:05 ` Chris Snook
2007-08-09 19:19 ` Segher Boessenkool
2007-08-09 19:25 ` Geert Uytterhoeven
2007-08-09 19:47 ` Chris Snook
2007-08-09 23:02 ` Segher Boessenkool
2007-08-09 16:10 ` Paul E. McKenney
2007-08-09 16:36 ` Chris Snook
2007-08-09 16:58 ` Paul E. McKenney
2007-08-09 17:14 ` Chris Snook
2007-08-09 17:41 ` Paul E. McKenney [this message]
2007-08-09 18:13 ` Chris Snook
2007-08-09 18:45 ` Paul E. McKenney
2007-08-09 19:24 ` Chris Snook
2007-08-10 1:28 ` Paul E. McKenney
2007-08-10 19:49 ` Chris Snook
2007-08-10 20:26 ` Paul E. McKenney
2007-08-09 19:17 ` Segher Boessenkool
2007-08-09 18:51 ` Segher Boessenkool
2007-08-09 19:30 ` Chris Snook
2007-08-10 8:21 ` Herbert Xu
2007-08-10 9:08 ` Andi Kleen
2007-08-10 15:02 ` Paul E. McKenney
2007-08-10 20:07 ` Segher Boessenkool
2007-08-11 0:00 ` Herbert Xu
2007-08-11 0:38 ` Segher Boessenkool
2007-08-11 0:43 ` Herbert Xu
2007-08-11 0:50 ` Segher Boessenkool
2007-08-11 4:38 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
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