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From: Chris Snook <csnook@redhat.com>
To: Heiko Carstens <heiko.carstens@de.ibm.com>, andi@firstfloor.org
Cc: David Miller <davem@davemloft.net>,
	akpm@linux-foundation.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org,
	netdev@vger.kernel.org, schwidefsky@de.ibm.com,
	wensong@linux-vs.org, horms@verge.net.au
Subject: Re: [patch] ipvs: force read of atomic_t in while loop
Date: Wed, 08 Aug 2007 17:08:44 -0400	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <46BA30DC.20207@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20070808102835.GC14530@osiris.boeblingen.de.ibm.com>

Heiko Carstens wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 08, 2007 at 03:21:31AM -0700, David Miller wrote:
>> From: Heiko Carstens <heiko.carstens@de.ibm.com>
>> Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2007 11:33:00 +0200
>>
>>> Just saw this while grepping for atomic_reads in a while loops.
>>> Maybe we should re-add the volatile to atomic_t. Not sure.
>> I think whatever the choice, it should be done consistently
>> on every architecture.
>>
>> It's just asking for trouble if your arch does it differently from
>> every other.
> 
> Well..currently it's i386/x86_64 and s390 which have no volatile
> in atomic_t. And yes, of course I agree it should be consistent
> across all architectures. But it isn't.

Based on recent discussion, it's pretty clear that there's a lot of 
confusion about this.  A lot of people (myself included, until I thought 
about it long and hard) will reasonably assume that calling 
atomic_read() will actually read the value from memory.  Leaving out the 
volatile declaration seems like a pessimization to me.  If you force 
people to use barrier() everywhere they're working with atomic_t, it 
will force re-reads of all the non-atomic data in use as well, which 
will cause more memory fetches of things that generally don't need 
barrier().  That and it's a bug waiting to happen.

Andi -- your thoughts on the matter?

  reply	other threads:[~2007-08-08 21:14 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 13+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2007-08-08  9:33 [patch] ipvs: force read of atomic_t in while loop Heiko Carstens
2007-08-08  9:45 ` Horms
2007-08-08 10:21 ` David Miller
2007-08-08 10:28   ` Heiko Carstens
2007-08-08 21:08     ` Chris Snook [this message]
2007-08-08 21:31       ` Andrew Morton
2007-08-08 22:27         ` Heiko Carstens
2007-08-08 22:38           ` Chris Snook
2007-08-09  0:15       ` Andi Kleen
2007-08-09 12:35         ` Michael Buesch
2007-08-09 12:40           ` Chris Snook
2007-08-09 12:49             ` Martin Schwidefsky
2007-08-09 13:36           ` Andi Kleen

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