gcc/libjava/sysdep/arm/locks.h
Andrew Haley e8e76230ed locks.h: Use atomic builtins For Linux EABI.
2009-08-12  Andrew Haley  <aph@redhat.com>

	* sysdep/arm/locks.h: Use atomic builtins For Linux EABI.
	* configure.ac: Add ATOMICSPEC.
	* libgcj.spec.in: Likewise.
	* configure.host (arm*-linux*): Add -Wno-abi to cxxflags.
	(testsuite/libjava.jvmti/jvmti-interp.exp): Likewise.
	(testsuite/libjava.jvmti/jvmti.exp): Likewise.
	(testsuite/libjava.jni/jni.exp): Likewise.
	Set ATOMICSPEC.
	Set LDFLAGS to work around libtool feature.

From-SVN: r150702
2009-08-12 16:34:00 +00:00

134 lines
3.5 KiB
C

// locks.h - Thread synchronization primitives. ARM implementation.
/* Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation
This file is part of libgcj.
This software is copyrighted work licensed under the terms of the
Libgcj License. Please consult the file "LIBGCJ_LICENSE" for
details. */
#ifndef __SYSDEP_LOCKS_H__
#define __SYSDEP_LOCKS_H__
typedef size_t obj_addr_t; /* Integer type big enough for object */
/* address. */
#if (__ARM_EABI__ && __linux)
// Atomically replace *addr by new_val if it was initially equal to old.
// Return true if the comparison succeeded.
// Assumed to have acquire semantics, i.e. later memory operations
// cannot execute before the compare_and_swap finishes.
inline static bool
compare_and_swap(volatile obj_addr_t *addr,
obj_addr_t old,
obj_addr_t new_val)
{
return __sync_bool_compare_and_swap(addr, old, new_val);
}
// Set *addr to new_val with release semantics, i.e. making sure
// that prior loads and stores complete before this
// assignment.
inline static void
release_set(volatile obj_addr_t *addr, obj_addr_t new_val)
{
__sync_synchronize();
*(addr) = new_val;
}
// Compare_and_swap with release semantics instead of acquire semantics.
// On many architecture, the operation makes both guarantees, so the
// implementation can be the same.
inline static bool
compare_and_swap_release(volatile obj_addr_t *addr,
obj_addr_t old,
obj_addr_t new_val)
{
return __sync_bool_compare_and_swap(addr, old, new_val);
}
// Ensure that subsequent instructions do not execute on stale
// data that was loaded from memory before the barrier.
// On X86, the hardware ensures that reads are properly ordered.
inline static void
read_barrier()
{
__sync_synchronize();
}
// Ensure that prior stores to memory are completed with respect to other
// processors.
inline static void
write_barrier()
{
__sync_synchronize();
}
#else
/* Atomic compare and exchange. These sequences are not actually
atomic; there is a race if *ADDR != OLD_VAL and we are preempted
between the two swaps. However, they are very close to atomic, and
are the best that a pre-ARMv6 implementation can do without
operating system support. LinuxThreads has been using these
sequences for many years. */
inline static bool
compare_and_swap(volatile obj_addr_t *addr,
obj_addr_t old_val,
obj_addr_t new_val)
{
volatile obj_addr_t result, tmp;
__asm__ ("\n"
"0: ldr %[tmp],[%[addr]]\n"
" cmp %[tmp],%[old_val]\n"
" movne %[result],#0\n"
" bne 1f\n"
" swp %[result],%[new_val],[%[addr]]\n"
" cmp %[tmp],%[result]\n"
" swpne %[tmp],%[result],[%[addr]]\n"
" bne 0b\n"
" mov %[result],#1\n"
"1:"
: [result] "=&r" (result), [tmp] "=&r" (tmp)
: [addr] "r" (addr), [new_val] "r" (new_val), [old_val] "r" (old_val)
: "cc", "memory");
return result;
}
inline static void
release_set(volatile obj_addr_t *addr, obj_addr_t new_val)
{
__asm__ __volatile__("" : : : "memory");
*(addr) = new_val;
}
inline static bool
compare_and_swap_release(volatile obj_addr_t *addr,
obj_addr_t old,
obj_addr_t new_val)
{
return compare_and_swap(addr, old, new_val);
}
// Ensure that subsequent instructions do not execute on stale
// data that was loaded from memory before the barrier.
inline static void
read_barrier()
{
__asm__ __volatile__("" : : : "memory");
}
// Ensure that prior stores to memory are completed with respect to other
// processors.
inline static void
write_barrier()
{
__asm__ __volatile__("" : : : "memory");
}
#endif
#endif