On Thu, 15 Feb 2001, Kanoj Sarcar wrote:
> No. All architectures do not have this problem. For example, if the
> Linux "dirty" (not the pte dirty) bit is managed by software, a fault
> will actually be taken when processor 2 tries to do the write. The fault
> is solely to make sure that the Linux "dirty" bit can be tracked. As long
> as the fault handler grabs the right locks before updating the Linux "dirty"
> bit, things should be okay. This is the case with mips, for example.
>
> The problem with x86 is that we depend on automatic x86 dirty bit
> update to manage the Linux "dirty" bit (they are the same!). So appropriate
> locks are not grabbed.
Will you please go off and prove that this "problem" exists on some x86
processor before continuing this rant? None of the PII, PIII, Athlon,
K6-2 or 486s I checked exhibited the worrisome behaviour you're
speculating about, plus it is logically consistent with the statements the
manual does make about updating ptes; otherwise how could an smp os
perform a reliable shootdown by doing an atomic bit clear on the present
bit of a pte?
-ben
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Thu Feb 15 2001 - 21:00:27 EST