qemu-e2k/include/qemu/stats64.h
Richard Henderson 9ef0c6d6a7 qemu/atomic: Add aligned_{int64,uint64}_t types
Use it to avoid some clang-12 -Watomic-alignment errors,
forcing some structures to be aligned and as a pointer when
we have ensured that the address is aligned.

Tested-by: Cole Robinson <crobinso@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <f4bug@amsat.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
2021-07-21 07:45:38 -10:00

194 lines
5.1 KiB
C

/*
* Atomic operations on 64-bit quantities.
*
* Copyright (C) 2017 Red Hat, Inc.
*
* Author: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
*
* This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or later.
* See the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
*/
#ifndef QEMU_STATS64_H
#define QEMU_STATS64_H
#include "qemu/atomic.h"
/* This provides atomic operations on 64-bit type, using a reader-writer
* spinlock on architectures that do not have 64-bit accesses. Even on
* those architectures, it tries hard not to take the lock.
*/
typedef struct Stat64 {
#ifdef CONFIG_ATOMIC64
aligned_uint64_t value;
#else
uint32_t low, high;
uint32_t lock;
#endif
} Stat64;
#ifdef CONFIG_ATOMIC64
static inline void stat64_init(Stat64 *s, uint64_t value)
{
/* This is not guaranteed to be atomic! */
*s = (Stat64) { value };
}
static inline uint64_t stat64_get(const Stat64 *s)
{
return qatomic_read__nocheck(&s->value);
}
static inline void stat64_add(Stat64 *s, uint64_t value)
{
qatomic_add(&s->value, value);
}
static inline void stat64_min(Stat64 *s, uint64_t value)
{
uint64_t orig = qatomic_read__nocheck(&s->value);
while (orig > value) {
orig = qatomic_cmpxchg__nocheck(&s->value, orig, value);
}
}
static inline void stat64_max(Stat64 *s, uint64_t value)
{
uint64_t orig = qatomic_read__nocheck(&s->value);
while (orig < value) {
orig = qatomic_cmpxchg__nocheck(&s->value, orig, value);
}
}
#else
uint64_t stat64_get(const Stat64 *s);
bool stat64_min_slow(Stat64 *s, uint64_t value);
bool stat64_max_slow(Stat64 *s, uint64_t value);
bool stat64_add32_carry(Stat64 *s, uint32_t low, uint32_t high);
static inline void stat64_init(Stat64 *s, uint64_t value)
{
/* This is not guaranteed to be atomic! */
*s = (Stat64) { .low = value, .high = value >> 32, .lock = 0 };
}
static inline void stat64_add(Stat64 *s, uint64_t value)
{
uint32_t low, high;
high = value >> 32;
low = (uint32_t) value;
if (!low) {
if (high) {
qatomic_add(&s->high, high);
}
return;
}
for (;;) {
uint32_t orig = s->low;
uint32_t result = orig + low;
uint32_t old;
if (result < low || high) {
/* If the high part is affected, take the lock. */
if (stat64_add32_carry(s, low, high)) {
return;
}
continue;
}
/* No carry, try with a 32-bit cmpxchg. The result is independent of
* the high 32 bits, so it can race just fine with stat64_add32_carry
* and even stat64_get!
*/
old = qatomic_cmpxchg(&s->low, orig, result);
if (orig == old) {
return;
}
}
}
static inline void stat64_min(Stat64 *s, uint64_t value)
{
uint32_t low, high;
uint32_t orig_low, orig_high;
high = value >> 32;
low = (uint32_t) value;
do {
orig_high = qatomic_read(&s->high);
if (orig_high < high) {
return;
}
if (orig_high == high) {
/* High 32 bits are equal. Read low after high, otherwise we
* can get a false positive (e.g. 0x1235,0x0000 changes to
* 0x1234,0x8000 and we read it as 0x1234,0x0000). Pairs with
* the write barrier in stat64_min_slow.
*/
smp_rmb();
orig_low = qatomic_read(&s->low);
if (orig_low <= low) {
return;
}
/* See if we were lucky and a writer raced against us. The
* barrier is theoretically unnecessary, but if we remove it
* we may miss being lucky.
*/
smp_rmb();
orig_high = qatomic_read(&s->high);
if (orig_high < high) {
return;
}
}
/* If the value changes in any way, we have to take the lock. */
} while (!stat64_min_slow(s, value));
}
static inline void stat64_max(Stat64 *s, uint64_t value)
{
uint32_t low, high;
uint32_t orig_low, orig_high;
high = value >> 32;
low = (uint32_t) value;
do {
orig_high = qatomic_read(&s->high);
if (orig_high > high) {
return;
}
if (orig_high == high) {
/* High 32 bits are equal. Read low after high, otherwise we
* can get a false positive (e.g. 0x1234,0x8000 changes to
* 0x1235,0x0000 and we read it as 0x1235,0x8000). Pairs with
* the write barrier in stat64_max_slow.
*/
smp_rmb();
orig_low = qatomic_read(&s->low);
if (orig_low >= low) {
return;
}
/* See if we were lucky and a writer raced against us. The
* barrier is theoretically unnecessary, but if we remove it
* we may miss being lucky.
*/
smp_rmb();
orig_high = qatomic_read(&s->high);
if (orig_high > high) {
return;
}
}
/* If the value changes in any way, we have to take the lock. */
} while (!stat64_max_slow(s, value));
}
#endif
#endif