gcc/libitm/config/posix/rwlock.cc
2021-01-04 10:26:59 +01:00

329 lines
12 KiB
C++

/* Copyright (C) 2008-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Contributed by Richard Henderson <rth@redhat.com>.
This file is part of the GNU Transactional Memory Library (libitm).
Libitm is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
Libitm is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for
more details.
Under Section 7 of GPL version 3, you are granted additional
permissions described in the GCC Runtime Library Exception, version
3.1, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License and
a copy of the GCC Runtime Library Exception along with this program;
see the files COPYING3 and COPYING.RUNTIME respectively. If not, see
<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#include "libitm_i.h"
namespace GTM HIDDEN {
// Initialize a new RW lock.
// ??? Move this back to the header file when constexpr is implemented.
gtm_rwlock::gtm_rwlock()
: summary (0),
htm_fastpath (0),
mutex (PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER),
c_readers (PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER),
c_writers (PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER),
c_confirmed_writers (PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER),
a_readers (0),
w_readers (0),
w_writers (0)
{ }
gtm_rwlock::~gtm_rwlock()
{
pthread_mutex_destroy (&this->mutex);
pthread_cond_destroy (&this->c_readers);
pthread_cond_destroy (&this->c_writers);
}
// Acquire a RW lock for reading.
void
gtm_rwlock::read_lock (gtm_thread *tx)
{
// Fast path: first announce our intent to read, then check for conflicting
// intents to write. The fence ensure that this happens in exactly this
// order.
tx->shared_state.store (0, memory_order_relaxed);
atomic_thread_fence (memory_order_seq_cst);
unsigned int sum = this->summary.load (memory_order_relaxed);
if (likely(!(sum & (a_writer | w_writer))))
return;
// There seems to be an active, waiting, or confirmed writer, so enter the
// mutex-based slow path. To try to keep the number of readers small that
// the writer will see, we clear our read flag right away before entering
// the critical section. Otherwise, the writer would have to wait for us to
// get into the critical section. (Note that for correctness, this only has
// to happen before we leave the slow path and before we wait for any
// writer).
// ??? Add a barrier to enforce early visibility of this?
tx->shared_state.store(-1, memory_order_relaxed);
pthread_mutex_lock (&this->mutex);
// Read summary again after acquiring the mutex because it might have
// changed during waiting for the mutex to become free.
sum = this->summary.load (memory_order_relaxed);
// If there is a writer waiting for readers, wake it up. Only do that if we
// might be the last reader that could do the wake-up, otherwise skip the
// wake-up but decrease a_readers to show that we have entered the slow path.
// This has to happen before we wait for any writers or upgraders.
// See write_lock_generic() for further explanations.
if (this->a_readers > 0)
{
this->a_readers--;
if (this->a_readers == 0)
pthread_cond_signal(&this->c_confirmed_writers);
}
// If there is an active or waiting writer, we must wait.
while (sum & (a_writer | w_writer))
{
this->summary.store (sum | w_reader, memory_order_relaxed);
this->w_readers++;
pthread_cond_wait (&this->c_readers, &this->mutex);
sum = this->summary.load (memory_order_relaxed);
if (--this->w_readers == 0)
sum &= ~w_reader;
}
// Otherwise we can acquire the lock for read.
tx->shared_state.store(0, memory_order_relaxed);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&this->mutex);
}
// Acquire a RW lock for writing. Generic version that also works for
// upgrades.
// Note that an upgrade might fail (and thus waste previous work done during
// this transaction) if there is another thread that tried to go into serial
// mode earlier (i.e., upgrades do not have higher priority than pure writers).
// However, this seems rare enough to not consider it further as we need both
// a non-upgrade writer and a writer to happen to switch to serial mode
// concurrently. If we'd want to handle this, a writer waiting for readers
// would have to coordinate with later arriving upgrades and hand over the
// lock to them, including the the reader-waiting state. We can try to support
// this if this will actually happen often enough in real workloads.
bool
gtm_rwlock::write_lock_generic (gtm_thread *tx)
{
pthread_mutex_lock (&this->mutex);
unsigned int sum = this->summary.load (memory_order_relaxed);
// If there is an active writer, wait.
while (sum & a_writer)
{
if (tx != 0)
{
// If this is an upgrade, we must not wait for other writers or
// upgrades that already have gone in
pthread_mutex_unlock (&this->mutex);
return false;
}
this->summary.store (sum | w_writer, memory_order_relaxed);
this->w_writers++;
pthread_cond_wait (&this->c_writers, &this->mutex);
sum = this->summary.load (memory_order_relaxed);
if (--this->w_writers == 0)
sum &= ~w_writer;
}
// Otherwise we can acquire the lock for write. As a writer, we have
// priority, so we don't need to take this back.
this->summary.store (sum | a_writer, memory_order_relaxed);
// We still need to wait for active readers to finish. The barrier makes
// sure that we first set our write intent and check for active readers
// after that, in strictly this order (similar to the barrier in the fast
// path of read_lock()).
atomic_thread_fence(memory_order_seq_cst);
// Count the number of active readers to be able to decrease the number of
// wake-ups and wait calls that are necessary.
//
// This number is an upper bound of the number of readers that actually
// are still active and which we need to wait for:
// - We set our write flag before checking the reader flags, and readers
// check our write flag after clearing their read flags in read_unlock().
// Therefore, they will enter the slow path whenever we have seen them.
// - Readers will have cleared their read flags before leaving the slow
// path in read_lock() (prevents lost wake-ups), and before waiting for
// any writer (prevents deadlocks).
//
// However, this number is also just a lower bound of the number of readers
// that will actually enter the slow path in read_unlock() or read_lock():
// - Because the read flag is cleared outside of a critical section, writers
// can see it as cleared while the reader still goes into the slow path.
//
// Therefore, readers can skip (lower bound - 1) wake-ups, but we do need
// the following loop to check that the readers that we wanted to wait for
// are actually those that entered the slow path so far (and either skipped
// or sent a wake-up).
//
// ??? Do we need to optimize further? (The writer could publish a list of
// readers that it suspects to be active. Readers could check this list and
// only decrement a_readers if they are in this list.)
for (;;)
{
// ??? Keep a list of active readers that we saw and update it on the
// next retry instead? This might reduce the number of cache misses that
// we get when checking reader flags.
int readers = 0;
for (gtm_thread *it = gtm_thread::list_of_threads; it != 0;
it = it->next_thread)
{
// Don't count ourself if this is an upgrade.
if (it == tx)
continue;
if (it->shared_state.load(memory_order_relaxed) != (gtm_word)-1)
readers++;
}
// If we have not seen any readers, we will not wait.
if (readers == 0)
break;
// If this is an upgrade, we have to break deadlocks with
// privatization safety. This may fail on our side, in which
// case we need to cancel our attempt to upgrade. Also, we do not
// block using the convdar but just spin so that we never have to be
// woken.
// FIXME This is horribly inefficient -- but so is not being able
// to use futexes in this case.
if (tx != 0)
{
pthread_mutex_unlock (&this->mutex);
if (!abi_disp ()->snapshot_most_recent ())
{
write_unlock ();
return false;
}
pthread_mutex_lock (&this->mutex);
continue;
}
// We've seen a number of readers, so we publish this number and wait.
this->a_readers = readers;
pthread_cond_wait (&this->c_confirmed_writers, &this->mutex);
}
pthread_mutex_unlock (&this->mutex);
return true;
}
// Acquire a RW lock for writing.
void
gtm_rwlock::write_lock ()
{
write_lock_generic (0);
}
// Upgrade a RW lock that has been locked for reading to a writing lock.
// Do this without possibility of another writer incoming. Return false
// if this attempt fails (i.e. another thread also upgraded).
bool
gtm_rwlock::write_upgrade (gtm_thread *tx)
{
return write_lock_generic (tx);
}
// Has to be called iff the previous upgrade was successful and after it is
// safe for the transaction to not be marked as a reader anymore.
void
gtm_rwlock::write_upgrade_finish (gtm_thread *tx)
{
// We are not a reader anymore. This is only safe to do after we have
// acquired the writer lock.
tx->shared_state.store (-1, memory_order_release);
}
// Release a RW lock from reading.
void
gtm_rwlock::read_unlock (gtm_thread *tx)
{
// We only need release memory order here because of privatization safety
// (this ensures that marking the transaction as inactive happens after
// any prior data accesses by this transaction, and that neither the
// compiler nor the hardware order this store earlier).
// ??? We might be able to avoid this release here if the compiler can't
// merge the release fence with the subsequent seq_cst fence.
tx->shared_state.store (-1, memory_order_release);
// We need this seq_cst fence here to avoid lost wake-ups. Furthermore,
// the privatization safety implementation in gtm_thread::try_commit()
// relies on the existence of this seq_cst fence.
atomic_thread_fence (memory_order_seq_cst);
unsigned int sum = this->summary.load (memory_order_relaxed);
if (likely(!(sum & (a_writer | w_writer))))
return;
// There is a writer, either active or waiting for other readers or writers.
// Thus, enter the mutex-based slow path.
pthread_mutex_lock (&this->mutex);
// If there is a writer waiting for readers, wake it up. Only do that if we
// might be the last reader that could do the wake-up, otherwise skip the
// wake-up and decrease a_readers to publish that we have entered the slow
// path but skipped the wake-up.
if (this->a_readers > 0)
{
this->a_readers--;
if (this->a_readers == 0)
pthread_cond_signal(&this->c_confirmed_writers);
}
// We don't need to wake up any writers waiting for other writers. Active
// writers will take care of that.
pthread_mutex_unlock (&this->mutex);
}
// Release a RW lock from writing.
void
gtm_rwlock::write_unlock ()
{
pthread_mutex_lock (&this->mutex);
unsigned int sum = this->summary.load (memory_order_relaxed);
this->summary.store (sum & ~a_writer, memory_order_relaxed);
// If there is a waiting writer, wake it.
if (unlikely (sum & w_writer))
pthread_cond_signal (&this->c_writers);
// If there are waiting readers, wake them.
else if (unlikely (sum & w_reader))
pthread_cond_broadcast (&this->c_readers);
pthread_mutex_unlock (&this->mutex);
}
} // namespace GTM