Re: [PATCH 0/24] make atomic_read() behave consistently across allarchitectures

From: Satyam Sharma
Date: Fri Aug 17 2007 - 04:35:56 EST




On Fri, 17 Aug 2007, Nick Piggin wrote:

> Satyam Sharma wrote:
>
> > #define atomic_read_volatile(v) \
> > ({ \
> > forget((v)->counter); \
> > ((v)->counter); \
> > })
> >
> > where:
>
> *vomit* :)

I wonder if this'll generate smaller and better code than _both_ the
other atomic_read_volatile() variants. Would need to build allyesconfig
on lots of diff arch's etc to test the theory though.


> Not only do I hate the keyword volatile, but the barrier is only a
> one-sided affair so its probable this is going to have slightly
> different allowed reorderings than a real volatile access.

True ...


> Also, why would you want to make these insane accessors for atomic_t
> types? Just make sure everybody knows the basics of barriers, and they
> can apply that knowledge to atomic_t and all other lockless memory
> accesses as well.

Code that looks like:

while (!atomic_read(&v)) {
...
cpu_relax_no_barrier();
forget(v.counter);
^^^^^^^^
}

would be uglier. Also think about code such as:

a = atomic_read();
if (!a)
do_something();

forget();
a = atomic_read();
... /* some code that depends on value of a, obviously */

forget();
a = atomic_read();
...

So much explicit sprinkling of "forget()" looks ugly.

atomic_read_volatile()

on the other hand, looks neater. The "_volatile()" suffix makes it also
no less explicit than an explicit barrier-like macro that this primitive
is something "special", for code clarity purposes.


> > #define forget(a) __asm__ __volatile__ ("" :"=m" (a) :"m" (a))
>
> I like order(x) better, but it's not the most perfect name either.

forget(x) is just a stupid-placeholder-for-a-better-name. order(x) sounds
good but we could leave quibbling about function or macro names for later,
this thread is noisy as it is :-)
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