Merge branch 'x86-asm-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git...
[linux-2.6-block.git] / Documentation / memory-barriers.txt
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1 ============================
2 LINUX KERNEL MEMORY BARRIERS
3 ============================
4
5By: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
90fddabf 6 Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
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7 Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com>
8 Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
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10==========
11DISCLAIMER
12==========
13
14This document is not a specification; it is intentionally (for the sake of
15brevity) and unintentionally (due to being human) incomplete. This document is
16meant as a guide to using the various memory barriers provided by Linux, but
17in case of any doubt (and there are many) please ask.
18
19To repeat, this document is not a specification of what Linux expects from
20hardware.
21
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22The purpose of this document is twofold:
23
24 (1) to specify the minimum functionality that one can rely on for any
25 particular barrier, and
26
27 (2) to provide a guide as to how to use the barriers that are available.
28
29Note that an architecture can provide more than the minimum requirement
35bdc72a 30for any particular barrier, but if the architecture provides less than
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31that, that architecture is incorrect.
32
33Note also that it is possible that a barrier may be a no-op for an
34architecture because the way that arch works renders an explicit barrier
35unnecessary in that case.
36
37
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38========
39CONTENTS
40========
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41
42 (*) Abstract memory access model.
43
44 - Device operations.
45 - Guarantees.
46
47 (*) What are memory barriers?
48
49 - Varieties of memory barrier.
50 - What may not be assumed about memory barriers?
51 - Data dependency barriers.
52 - Control dependencies.
53 - SMP barrier pairing.
54 - Examples of memory barrier sequences.
670bd95e 55 - Read memory barriers vs load speculation.
241e6663 56 - Transitivity
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57
58 (*) Explicit kernel barriers.
59
60 - Compiler barrier.
81fc6323 61 - CPU memory barriers.
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62 - MMIO write barrier.
63
64 (*) Implicit kernel memory barriers.
65
166bda71 66 - Lock acquisition functions.
108b42b4 67 - Interrupt disabling functions.
50fa610a 68 - Sleep and wake-up functions.
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69 - Miscellaneous functions.
70
166bda71 71 (*) Inter-CPU acquiring barrier effects.
108b42b4 72
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73 - Acquires vs memory accesses.
74 - Acquires vs I/O accesses.
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75
76 (*) Where are memory barriers needed?
77
78 - Interprocessor interaction.
79 - Atomic operations.
80 - Accessing devices.
81 - Interrupts.
82
83 (*) Kernel I/O barrier effects.
84
85 (*) Assumed minimum execution ordering model.
86
87 (*) The effects of the cpu cache.
88
89 - Cache coherency.
90 - Cache coherency vs DMA.
91 - Cache coherency vs MMIO.
92
93 (*) The things CPUs get up to.
94
95 - And then there's the Alpha.
01e1cd6d 96 - Virtual Machine Guests.
108b42b4 97
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98 (*) Example uses.
99
100 - Circular buffers.
101
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102 (*) References.
103
104
105============================
106ABSTRACT MEMORY ACCESS MODEL
107============================
108
109Consider the following abstract model of the system:
110
111 : :
112 : :
113 : :
114 +-------+ : +--------+ : +-------+
115 | | : | | : | |
116 | | : | | : | |
117 | CPU 1 |<----->| Memory |<----->| CPU 2 |
118 | | : | | : | |
119 | | : | | : | |
120 +-------+ : +--------+ : +-------+
121 ^ : ^ : ^
122 | : | : |
123 | : | : |
124 | : v : |
125 | : +--------+ : |
126 | : | | : |
127 | : | | : |
128 +---------->| Device |<----------+
129 : | | :
130 : | | :
131 : +--------+ :
132 : :
133
134Each CPU executes a program that generates memory access operations. In the
135abstract CPU, memory operation ordering is very relaxed, and a CPU may actually
136perform the memory operations in any order it likes, provided program causality
137appears to be maintained. Similarly, the compiler may also arrange the
138instructions it emits in any order it likes, provided it doesn't affect the
139apparent operation of the program.
140
141So in the above diagram, the effects of the memory operations performed by a
142CPU are perceived by the rest of the system as the operations cross the
143interface between the CPU and rest of the system (the dotted lines).
144
145
146For example, consider the following sequence of events:
147
148 CPU 1 CPU 2
149 =============== ===============
150 { A == 1; B == 2 }
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151 A = 3; x = B;
152 B = 4; y = A;
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153
154The set of accesses as seen by the memory system in the middle can be arranged
155in 24 different combinations:
156
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157 STORE A=3, STORE B=4, y=LOAD A->3, x=LOAD B->4
158 STORE A=3, STORE B=4, x=LOAD B->4, y=LOAD A->3
159 STORE A=3, y=LOAD A->3, STORE B=4, x=LOAD B->4
160 STORE A=3, y=LOAD A->3, x=LOAD B->2, STORE B=4
161 STORE A=3, x=LOAD B->2, STORE B=4, y=LOAD A->3
162 STORE A=3, x=LOAD B->2, y=LOAD A->3, STORE B=4
163 STORE B=4, STORE A=3, y=LOAD A->3, x=LOAD B->4
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164 STORE B=4, ...
165 ...
166
167and can thus result in four different combinations of values:
168
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169 x == 2, y == 1
170 x == 2, y == 3
171 x == 4, y == 1
172 x == 4, y == 3
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173
174
175Furthermore, the stores committed by a CPU to the memory system may not be
176perceived by the loads made by another CPU in the same order as the stores were
177committed.
178
179
180As a further example, consider this sequence of events:
181
182 CPU 1 CPU 2
183 =============== ===============
3dbf0913 184 { A == 1, B == 2, C == 3, P == &A, Q == &C }
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185 B = 4; Q = P;
186 P = &B D = *Q;
187
188There is an obvious data dependency here, as the value loaded into D depends on
189the address retrieved from P by CPU 2. At the end of the sequence, any of the
190following results are possible:
191
192 (Q == &A) and (D == 1)
193 (Q == &B) and (D == 2)
194 (Q == &B) and (D == 4)
195
196Note that CPU 2 will never try and load C into D because the CPU will load P
197into Q before issuing the load of *Q.
198
199
200DEVICE OPERATIONS
201-----------------
202
203Some devices present their control interfaces as collections of memory
204locations, but the order in which the control registers are accessed is very
205important. For instance, imagine an ethernet card with a set of internal
206registers that are accessed through an address port register (A) and a data
207port register (D). To read internal register 5, the following code might then
208be used:
209
210 *A = 5;
211 x = *D;
212
213but this might show up as either of the following two sequences:
214
215 STORE *A = 5, x = LOAD *D
216 x = LOAD *D, STORE *A = 5
217
218the second of which will almost certainly result in a malfunction, since it set
219the address _after_ attempting to read the register.
220
221
222GUARANTEES
223----------
224
225There are some minimal guarantees that may be expected of a CPU:
226
227 (*) On any given CPU, dependent memory accesses will be issued in order, with
228 respect to itself. This means that for:
229
f84cfbb0 230 Q = READ_ONCE(P); smp_read_barrier_depends(); D = READ_ONCE(*Q);
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231
232 the CPU will issue the following memory operations:
233
234 Q = LOAD P, D = LOAD *Q
235
2ecf8101 236 and always in that order. On most systems, smp_read_barrier_depends()
9af194ce 237 does nothing, but it is required for DEC Alpha. The READ_ONCE()
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238 is required to prevent compiler mischief. Please note that you
239 should normally use something like rcu_dereference() instead of
240 open-coding smp_read_barrier_depends().
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241
242 (*) Overlapping loads and stores within a particular CPU will appear to be
243 ordered within that CPU. This means that for:
244
9af194ce 245 a = READ_ONCE(*X); WRITE_ONCE(*X, b);
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246
247 the CPU will only issue the following sequence of memory operations:
248
249 a = LOAD *X, STORE *X = b
250
251 And for:
252
9af194ce 253 WRITE_ONCE(*X, c); d = READ_ONCE(*X);
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254
255 the CPU will only issue:
256
257 STORE *X = c, d = LOAD *X
258
fa00e7e1 259 (Loads and stores overlap if they are targeted at overlapping pieces of
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260 memory).
261
262And there are a number of things that _must_ or _must_not_ be assumed:
263
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264 (*) It _must_not_ be assumed that the compiler will do what you want
265 with memory references that are not protected by READ_ONCE() and
266 WRITE_ONCE(). Without them, the compiler is within its rights to
267 do all sorts of "creative" transformations, which are covered in
895f5542 268 the COMPILER BARRIER section.
2ecf8101 269
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270 (*) It _must_not_ be assumed that independent loads and stores will be issued
271 in the order given. This means that for:
272
273 X = *A; Y = *B; *D = Z;
274
275 we may get any of the following sequences:
276
277 X = LOAD *A, Y = LOAD *B, STORE *D = Z
278 X = LOAD *A, STORE *D = Z, Y = LOAD *B
279 Y = LOAD *B, X = LOAD *A, STORE *D = Z
280 Y = LOAD *B, STORE *D = Z, X = LOAD *A
281 STORE *D = Z, X = LOAD *A, Y = LOAD *B
282 STORE *D = Z, Y = LOAD *B, X = LOAD *A
283
284 (*) It _must_ be assumed that overlapping memory accesses may be merged or
285 discarded. This means that for:
286
287 X = *A; Y = *(A + 4);
288
289 we may get any one of the following sequences:
290
291 X = LOAD *A; Y = LOAD *(A + 4);
292 Y = LOAD *(A + 4); X = LOAD *A;
293 {X, Y} = LOAD {*A, *(A + 4) };
294
295 And for:
296
f191eec5 297 *A = X; *(A + 4) = Y;
108b42b4 298
f191eec5 299 we may get any of:
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301 STORE *A = X; STORE *(A + 4) = Y;
302 STORE *(A + 4) = Y; STORE *A = X;
303 STORE {*A, *(A + 4) } = {X, Y};
108b42b4 304
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305And there are anti-guarantees:
306
307 (*) These guarantees do not apply to bitfields, because compilers often
308 generate code to modify these using non-atomic read-modify-write
309 sequences. Do not attempt to use bitfields to synchronize parallel
310 algorithms.
311
312 (*) Even in cases where bitfields are protected by locks, all fields
313 in a given bitfield must be protected by one lock. If two fields
314 in a given bitfield are protected by different locks, the compiler's
315 non-atomic read-modify-write sequences can cause an update to one
316 field to corrupt the value of an adjacent field.
317
318 (*) These guarantees apply only to properly aligned and sized scalar
319 variables. "Properly sized" currently means variables that are
320 the same size as "char", "short", "int" and "long". "Properly
321 aligned" means the natural alignment, thus no constraints for
322 "char", two-byte alignment for "short", four-byte alignment for
323 "int", and either four-byte or eight-byte alignment for "long",
324 on 32-bit and 64-bit systems, respectively. Note that these
325 guarantees were introduced into the C11 standard, so beware when
326 using older pre-C11 compilers (for example, gcc 4.6). The portion
327 of the standard containing this guarantee is Section 3.14, which
328 defines "memory location" as follows:
329
330 memory location
331 either an object of scalar type, or a maximal sequence
332 of adjacent bit-fields all having nonzero width
333
334 NOTE 1: Two threads of execution can update and access
335 separate memory locations without interfering with
336 each other.
337
338 NOTE 2: A bit-field and an adjacent non-bit-field member
339 are in separate memory locations. The same applies
340 to two bit-fields, if one is declared inside a nested
341 structure declaration and the other is not, or if the two
342 are separated by a zero-length bit-field declaration,
343 or if they are separated by a non-bit-field member
344 declaration. It is not safe to concurrently update two
345 bit-fields in the same structure if all members declared
346 between them are also bit-fields, no matter what the
347 sizes of those intervening bit-fields happen to be.
348
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349
350=========================
351WHAT ARE MEMORY BARRIERS?
352=========================
353
354As can be seen above, independent memory operations are effectively performed
355in random order, but this can be a problem for CPU-CPU interaction and for I/O.
356What is required is some way of intervening to instruct the compiler and the
357CPU to restrict the order.
358
359Memory barriers are such interventions. They impose a perceived partial
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360ordering over the memory operations on either side of the barrier.
361
362Such enforcement is important because the CPUs and other devices in a system
81fc6323 363can use a variety of tricks to improve performance, including reordering,
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364deferral and combination of memory operations; speculative loads; speculative
365branch prediction and various types of caching. Memory barriers are used to
366override or suppress these tricks, allowing the code to sanely control the
367interaction of multiple CPUs and/or devices.
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368
369
370VARIETIES OF MEMORY BARRIER
371---------------------------
372
373Memory barriers come in four basic varieties:
374
375 (1) Write (or store) memory barriers.
376
377 A write memory barrier gives a guarantee that all the STORE operations
378 specified before the barrier will appear to happen before all the STORE
379 operations specified after the barrier with respect to the other
380 components of the system.
381
382 A write barrier is a partial ordering on stores only; it is not required
383 to have any effect on loads.
384
6bc39274 385 A CPU can be viewed as committing a sequence of store operations to the
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386 memory system as time progresses. All stores before a write barrier will
387 occur in the sequence _before_ all the stores after the write barrier.
388
389 [!] Note that write barriers should normally be paired with read or data
390 dependency barriers; see the "SMP barrier pairing" subsection.
391
392
393 (2) Data dependency barriers.
394
395 A data dependency barrier is a weaker form of read barrier. In the case
396 where two loads are performed such that the second depends on the result
397 of the first (eg: the first load retrieves the address to which the second
398 load will be directed), a data dependency barrier would be required to
399 make sure that the target of the second load is updated before the address
400 obtained by the first load is accessed.
401
402 A data dependency barrier is a partial ordering on interdependent loads
403 only; it is not required to have any effect on stores, independent loads
404 or overlapping loads.
405
406 As mentioned in (1), the other CPUs in the system can be viewed as
407 committing sequences of stores to the memory system that the CPU being
408 considered can then perceive. A data dependency barrier issued by the CPU
409 under consideration guarantees that for any load preceding it, if that
410 load touches one of a sequence of stores from another CPU, then by the
411 time the barrier completes, the effects of all the stores prior to that
412 touched by the load will be perceptible to any loads issued after the data
413 dependency barrier.
414
415 See the "Examples of memory barrier sequences" subsection for diagrams
416 showing the ordering constraints.
417
418 [!] Note that the first load really has to have a _data_ dependency and
419 not a control dependency. If the address for the second load is dependent
420 on the first load, but the dependency is through a conditional rather than
421 actually loading the address itself, then it's a _control_ dependency and
422 a full read barrier or better is required. See the "Control dependencies"
423 subsection for more information.
424
425 [!] Note that data dependency barriers should normally be paired with
426 write barriers; see the "SMP barrier pairing" subsection.
427
428
429 (3) Read (or load) memory barriers.
430
431 A read barrier is a data dependency barrier plus a guarantee that all the
432 LOAD operations specified before the barrier will appear to happen before
433 all the LOAD operations specified after the barrier with respect to the
434 other components of the system.
435
436 A read barrier is a partial ordering on loads only; it is not required to
437 have any effect on stores.
438
439 Read memory barriers imply data dependency barriers, and so can substitute
440 for them.
441
442 [!] Note that read barriers should normally be paired with write barriers;
443 see the "SMP barrier pairing" subsection.
444
445
446 (4) General memory barriers.
447
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448 A general memory barrier gives a guarantee that all the LOAD and STORE
449 operations specified before the barrier will appear to happen before all
450 the LOAD and STORE operations specified after the barrier with respect to
451 the other components of the system.
452
453 A general memory barrier is a partial ordering over both loads and stores.
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454
455 General memory barriers imply both read and write memory barriers, and so
456 can substitute for either.
457
458
459And a couple of implicit varieties:
460
2e4f5382 461 (5) ACQUIRE operations.
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462
463 This acts as a one-way permeable barrier. It guarantees that all memory
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464 operations after the ACQUIRE operation will appear to happen after the
465 ACQUIRE operation with respect to the other components of the system.
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466 ACQUIRE operations include LOCK operations and both smp_load_acquire()
467 and smp_cond_acquire() operations. The later builds the necessary ACQUIRE
468 semantics from relying on a control dependency and smp_rmb().
108b42b4 469
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470 Memory operations that occur before an ACQUIRE operation may appear to
471 happen after it completes.
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473 An ACQUIRE operation should almost always be paired with a RELEASE
474 operation.
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475
476
2e4f5382 477 (6) RELEASE operations.
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478
479 This also acts as a one-way permeable barrier. It guarantees that all
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480 memory operations before the RELEASE operation will appear to happen
481 before the RELEASE operation with respect to the other components of the
482 system. RELEASE operations include UNLOCK operations and
483 smp_store_release() operations.
108b42b4 484
2e4f5382 485 Memory operations that occur after a RELEASE operation may appear to
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486 happen before it completes.
487
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488 The use of ACQUIRE and RELEASE operations generally precludes the need
489 for other sorts of memory barrier (but note the exceptions mentioned in
490 the subsection "MMIO write barrier"). In addition, a RELEASE+ACQUIRE
491 pair is -not- guaranteed to act as a full memory barrier. However, after
492 an ACQUIRE on a given variable, all memory accesses preceding any prior
493 RELEASE on that same variable are guaranteed to be visible. In other
494 words, within a given variable's critical section, all accesses of all
495 previous critical sections for that variable are guaranteed to have
496 completed.
17eb88e0 497
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498 This means that ACQUIRE acts as a minimal "acquire" operation and
499 RELEASE acts as a minimal "release" operation.
108b42b4 500
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501A subset of the atomic operations described in core-api/atomic_ops.rst have
502ACQUIRE and RELEASE variants in addition to fully-ordered and relaxed (no
503barrier semantics) definitions. For compound atomics performing both a load
504and a store, ACQUIRE semantics apply only to the load and RELEASE semantics
505apply only to the store portion of the operation.
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506
507Memory barriers are only required where there's a possibility of interaction
508between two CPUs or between a CPU and a device. If it can be guaranteed that
509there won't be any such interaction in any particular piece of code, then
510memory barriers are unnecessary in that piece of code.
511
512
513Note that these are the _minimum_ guarantees. Different architectures may give
514more substantial guarantees, but they may _not_ be relied upon outside of arch
515specific code.
516
517
518WHAT MAY NOT BE ASSUMED ABOUT MEMORY BARRIERS?
519----------------------------------------------
520
521There are certain things that the Linux kernel memory barriers do not guarantee:
522
523 (*) There is no guarantee that any of the memory accesses specified before a
524 memory barrier will be _complete_ by the completion of a memory barrier
525 instruction; the barrier can be considered to draw a line in that CPU's
526 access queue that accesses of the appropriate type may not cross.
527
528 (*) There is no guarantee that issuing a memory barrier on one CPU will have
529 any direct effect on another CPU or any other hardware in the system. The
530 indirect effect will be the order in which the second CPU sees the effects
531 of the first CPU's accesses occur, but see the next point:
532
6bc39274 533 (*) There is no guarantee that a CPU will see the correct order of effects
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534 from a second CPU's accesses, even _if_ the second CPU uses a memory
535 barrier, unless the first CPU _also_ uses a matching memory barrier (see
536 the subsection on "SMP Barrier Pairing").
537
538 (*) There is no guarantee that some intervening piece of off-the-CPU
539 hardware[*] will not reorder the memory accesses. CPU cache coherency
540 mechanisms should propagate the indirect effects of a memory barrier
541 between CPUs, but might not do so in order.
542
543 [*] For information on bus mastering DMA and coherency please read:
544
4b5ff469 545 Documentation/PCI/pci.txt
395cf969 546 Documentation/DMA-API-HOWTO.txt
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547 Documentation/DMA-API.txt
548
549
550DATA DEPENDENCY BARRIERS
551------------------------
552
553The usage requirements of data dependency barriers are a little subtle, and
554it's not always obvious that they're needed. To illustrate, consider the
555following sequence of events:
556
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557 CPU 1 CPU 2
558 =============== ===============
3dbf0913 559 { A == 1, B == 2, C == 3, P == &A, Q == &C }
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560 B = 4;
561 <write barrier>
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562 WRITE_ONCE(P, &B)
563 Q = READ_ONCE(P);
2ecf8101 564 D = *Q;
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565
566There's a clear data dependency here, and it would seem that by the end of the
567sequence, Q must be either &A or &B, and that:
568
569 (Q == &A) implies (D == 1)
570 (Q == &B) implies (D == 4)
571
81fc6323 572But! CPU 2's perception of P may be updated _before_ its perception of B, thus
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573leading to the following situation:
574
575 (Q == &B) and (D == 2) ????
576
577Whilst this may seem like a failure of coherency or causality maintenance, it
578isn't, and this behaviour can be observed on certain real CPUs (such as the DEC
579Alpha).
580
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581To deal with this, a data dependency barrier or better must be inserted
582between the address load and the data load:
108b42b4 583
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584 CPU 1 CPU 2
585 =============== ===============
3dbf0913 586 { A == 1, B == 2, C == 3, P == &A, Q == &C }
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587 B = 4;
588 <write barrier>
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589 WRITE_ONCE(P, &B);
590 Q = READ_ONCE(P);
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591 <data dependency barrier>
592 D = *Q;
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593
594This enforces the occurrence of one of the two implications, and prevents the
595third possibility from arising.
596
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597
598[!] Note that this extremely counterintuitive situation arises most easily on
599machines with split caches, so that, for example, one cache bank processes
600even-numbered cache lines and the other bank processes odd-numbered cache
601lines. The pointer P might be stored in an odd-numbered cache line, and the
602variable B might be stored in an even-numbered cache line. Then, if the
603even-numbered bank of the reading CPU's cache is extremely busy while the
604odd-numbered bank is idle, one can see the new value of the pointer P (&B),
605but the old value of the variable B (2).
606
607
608A data-dependency barrier is not required to order dependent writes
609because the CPUs that the Linux kernel supports don't do writes
610until they are certain (1) that the write will actually happen, (2)
611of the location of the write, and (3) of the value to be written.
612But please carefully read the "CONTROL DEPENDENCIES" section and the
613Documentation/RCU/rcu_dereference.txt file: The compiler can and does
614break dependencies in a great many highly creative ways.
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615
616 CPU 1 CPU 2
617 =============== ===============
618 { A == 1, B == 2, C = 3, P == &A, Q == &C }
619 B = 4;
620 <write barrier>
621 WRITE_ONCE(P, &B);
622 Q = READ_ONCE(P);
66ce3a4d 623 WRITE_ONCE(*Q, 5);
92a84dd2 624
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625Therefore, no data-dependency barrier is required to order the read into
626Q with the store into *Q. In other words, this outcome is prohibited,
627even without a data-dependency barrier:
92a84dd2 628
8b9e7715 629 (Q == &B) && (B == 4)
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630
631Please note that this pattern should be rare. After all, the whole point
632of dependency ordering is to -prevent- writes to the data structure, along
633with the expensive cache misses associated with those writes. This pattern
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634can be used to record rare error conditions and the like, and the CPUs'
635naturally occurring ordering prevents such records from being lost.
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636
637
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638The data dependency barrier is very important to the RCU system,
639for example. See rcu_assign_pointer() and rcu_dereference() in
640include/linux/rcupdate.h. This permits the current target of an RCU'd
641pointer to be replaced with a new modified target, without the replacement
642target appearing to be incompletely initialised.
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643
644See also the subsection on "Cache Coherency" for a more thorough example.
645
646
647CONTROL DEPENDENCIES
648--------------------
649
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650Control dependencies can be a bit tricky because current compilers do
651not understand them. The purpose of this section is to help you prevent
652the compiler's ignorance from breaking your code.
653
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654A load-load control dependency requires a full read memory barrier, not
655simply a data dependency barrier to make it work correctly. Consider the
656following bit of code:
108b42b4 657
9af194ce 658 q = READ_ONCE(a);
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659 if (q) {
660 <data dependency barrier> /* BUG: No data dependency!!! */
9af194ce 661 p = READ_ONCE(b);
45c8a36a 662 }
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663
664This will not have the desired effect because there is no actual data
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665dependency, but rather a control dependency that the CPU may short-circuit
666by attempting to predict the outcome in advance, so that other CPUs see
667the load from b as having happened before the load from a. In such a
668case what's actually required is:
108b42b4 669
9af194ce 670 q = READ_ONCE(a);
18c03c61 671 if (q) {
45c8a36a 672 <read barrier>
9af194ce 673 p = READ_ONCE(b);
45c8a36a 674 }
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675
676However, stores are not speculated. This means that ordering -is- provided
ff382810 677for load-store control dependencies, as in the following example:
18c03c61 678
105ff3cb 679 q = READ_ONCE(a);
18c03c61 680 if (q) {
c8241f85 681 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
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682 }
683
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684Control dependencies pair normally with other types of barriers.
685That said, please note that neither READ_ONCE() nor WRITE_ONCE()
686are optional! Without the READ_ONCE(), the compiler might combine the
687load from 'a' with other loads from 'a'. Without the WRITE_ONCE(),
688the compiler might combine the store to 'b' with other stores to 'b'.
689Either can result in highly counterintuitive effects on ordering.
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690
691Worse yet, if the compiler is able to prove (say) that the value of
692variable 'a' is always non-zero, it would be well within its rights
693to optimize the original example by eliminating the "if" statement
694as follows:
695
696 q = a;
c8241f85 697 b = 1; /* BUG: Compiler and CPU can both reorder!!! */
2456d2a6 698
105ff3cb 699So don't leave out the READ_ONCE().
18c03c61 700
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701It is tempting to try to enforce ordering on identical stores on both
702branches of the "if" statement as follows:
18c03c61 703
105ff3cb 704 q = READ_ONCE(a);
18c03c61 705 if (q) {
9b2b3bf5 706 barrier();
c8241f85 707 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
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708 do_something();
709 } else {
9b2b3bf5 710 barrier();
c8241f85 711 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
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712 do_something_else();
713 }
714
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715Unfortunately, current compilers will transform this as follows at high
716optimization levels:
18c03c61 717
105ff3cb 718 q = READ_ONCE(a);
2456d2a6 719 barrier();
c8241f85 720 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1); /* BUG: No ordering vs. load from a!!! */
18c03c61 721 if (q) {
c8241f85 722 /* WRITE_ONCE(b, 1); -- moved up, BUG!!! */
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723 do_something();
724 } else {
c8241f85 725 /* WRITE_ONCE(b, 1); -- moved up, BUG!!! */
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726 do_something_else();
727 }
728
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729Now there is no conditional between the load from 'a' and the store to
730'b', which means that the CPU is within its rights to reorder them:
731The conditional is absolutely required, and must be present in the
732assembly code even after all compiler optimizations have been applied.
733Therefore, if you need ordering in this example, you need explicit
734memory barriers, for example, smp_store_release():
18c03c61 735
9af194ce 736 q = READ_ONCE(a);
2456d2a6 737 if (q) {
c8241f85 738 smp_store_release(&b, 1);
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739 do_something();
740 } else {
c8241f85 741 smp_store_release(&b, 1);
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742 do_something_else();
743 }
744
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745In contrast, without explicit memory barriers, two-legged-if control
746ordering is guaranteed only when the stores differ, for example:
747
105ff3cb 748 q = READ_ONCE(a);
2456d2a6 749 if (q) {
c8241f85 750 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
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751 do_something();
752 } else {
c8241f85 753 WRITE_ONCE(b, 2);
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754 do_something_else();
755 }
756
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757The initial READ_ONCE() is still required to prevent the compiler from
758proving the value of 'a'.
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759
760In addition, you need to be careful what you do with the local variable 'q',
761otherwise the compiler might be able to guess the value and again remove
762the needed conditional. For example:
763
105ff3cb 764 q = READ_ONCE(a);
18c03c61 765 if (q % MAX) {
c8241f85 766 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
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767 do_something();
768 } else {
c8241f85 769 WRITE_ONCE(b, 2);
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770 do_something_else();
771 }
772
773If MAX is defined to be 1, then the compiler knows that (q % MAX) is
774equal to zero, in which case the compiler is within its rights to
775transform the above code into the following:
776
105ff3cb 777 q = READ_ONCE(a);
b26cfc48 778 WRITE_ONCE(b, 2);
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779 do_something_else();
780
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781Given this transformation, the CPU is not required to respect the ordering
782between the load from variable 'a' and the store to variable 'b'. It is
783tempting to add a barrier(), but this does not help. The conditional
784is gone, and the barrier won't bring it back. Therefore, if you are
785relying on this ordering, you should make sure that MAX is greater than
786one, perhaps as follows:
18c03c61 787
105ff3cb 788 q = READ_ONCE(a);
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789 BUILD_BUG_ON(MAX <= 1); /* Order load from a with store to b. */
790 if (q % MAX) {
c8241f85 791 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
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792 do_something();
793 } else {
c8241f85 794 WRITE_ONCE(b, 2);
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795 do_something_else();
796 }
797
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798Please note once again that the stores to 'b' differ. If they were
799identical, as noted earlier, the compiler could pull this store outside
800of the 'if' statement.
801
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802You must also be careful not to rely too much on boolean short-circuit
803evaluation. Consider this example:
804
105ff3cb 805 q = READ_ONCE(a);
57aecae9 806 if (q || 1 > 0)
9af194ce 807 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
8b19d1de 808
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809Because the first condition cannot fault and the second condition is
810always true, the compiler can transform this example as following,
811defeating control dependency:
8b19d1de 812
105ff3cb 813 q = READ_ONCE(a);
9af194ce 814 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
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815
816This example underscores the need to ensure that the compiler cannot
9af194ce 817out-guess your code. More generally, although READ_ONCE() does force
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818the compiler to actually emit code for a given load, it does not force
819the compiler to use the results.
820
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821In addition, control dependencies apply only to the then-clause and
822else-clause of the if-statement in question. In particular, it does
823not necessarily apply to code following the if-statement:
824
825 q = READ_ONCE(a);
826 if (q) {
c8241f85 827 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
ebff09a6 828 } else {
c8241f85 829 WRITE_ONCE(b, 2);
ebff09a6 830 }
c8241f85 831 WRITE_ONCE(c, 1); /* BUG: No ordering against the read from 'a'. */
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832
833It is tempting to argue that there in fact is ordering because the
834compiler cannot reorder volatile accesses and also cannot reorder
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835the writes to 'b' with the condition. Unfortunately for this line
836of reasoning, the compiler might compile the two writes to 'b' as
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837conditional-move instructions, as in this fanciful pseudo-assembly
838language:
839
840 ld r1,a
ebff09a6 841 cmp r1,$0
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842 cmov,ne r4,$1
843 cmov,eq r4,$2
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844 st r4,b
845 st $1,c
846
847A weakly ordered CPU would have no dependency of any sort between the load
c8241f85 848from 'a' and the store to 'c'. The control dependencies would extend
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849only to the pair of cmov instructions and the store depending on them.
850In short, control dependencies apply only to the stores in the then-clause
851and else-clause of the if-statement in question (including functions
852invoked by those two clauses), not to code following that if-statement.
853
18c03c61 854Finally, control dependencies do -not- provide transitivity. This is
5646f7ac 855demonstrated by two related examples, with the initial values of
c8241f85 856'x' and 'y' both being zero:
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857
858 CPU 0 CPU 1
5af4692a 859 ======================= =======================
105ff3cb 860 r1 = READ_ONCE(x); r2 = READ_ONCE(y);
5646f7ac 861 if (r1 > 0) if (r2 > 0)
9af194ce 862 WRITE_ONCE(y, 1); WRITE_ONCE(x, 1);
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863
864 assert(!(r1 == 1 && r2 == 1));
865
866The above two-CPU example will never trigger the assert(). However,
867if control dependencies guaranteed transitivity (which they do not),
5646f7ac 868then adding the following CPU would guarantee a related assertion:
18c03c61 869
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870 CPU 2
871 =====================
9af194ce 872 WRITE_ONCE(x, 2);
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873
874 assert(!(r1 == 2 && r2 == 1 && x == 2)); /* FAILS!!! */
18c03c61 875
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876But because control dependencies do -not- provide transitivity, the above
877assertion can fail after the combined three-CPU example completes. If you
878need the three-CPU example to provide ordering, you will need smp_mb()
879between the loads and stores in the CPU 0 and CPU 1 code fragments,
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880that is, just before or just after the "if" statements. Furthermore,
881the original two-CPU example is very fragile and should be avoided.
18c03c61 882
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883These two examples are the LB and WWC litmus tests from this paper:
884http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/pes20/ppc-supplemental/test6.pdf and this
885site: https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~pes20/ppcmem/index.html.
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886
887In summary:
888
889 (*) Control dependencies can order prior loads against later stores.
890 However, they do -not- guarantee any other sort of ordering:
891 Not prior loads against later loads, nor prior stores against
892 later anything. If you need these other forms of ordering,
d87510c5 893 use smp_rmb(), smp_wmb(), or, in the case of prior stores and
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894 later loads, smp_mb().
895
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896 (*) If both legs of the "if" statement begin with identical stores to
897 the same variable, then those stores must be ordered, either by
898 preceding both of them with smp_mb() or by using smp_store_release()
899 to carry out the stores. Please note that it is -not- sufficient
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900 to use barrier() at beginning of each leg of the "if" statement
901 because, as shown by the example above, optimizing compilers can
902 destroy the control dependency while respecting the letter of the
903 barrier() law.
9b2b3bf5 904
18c03c61 905 (*) Control dependencies require at least one run-time conditional
586dd56a 906 between the prior load and the subsequent store, and this
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907 conditional must involve the prior load. If the compiler is able
908 to optimize the conditional away, it will have also optimized
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909 away the ordering. Careful use of READ_ONCE() and WRITE_ONCE()
910 can help to preserve the needed conditional.
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911
912 (*) Control dependencies require that the compiler avoid reordering the
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913 dependency into nonexistence. Careful use of READ_ONCE() or
914 atomic{,64}_read() can help to preserve your control dependency.
895f5542 915 Please see the COMPILER BARRIER section for more information.
18c03c61 916
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917 (*) Control dependencies apply only to the then-clause and else-clause
918 of the if-statement containing the control dependency, including
919 any functions that these two clauses call. Control dependencies
920 do -not- apply to code following the if-statement containing the
921 control dependency.
922
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923 (*) Control dependencies pair normally with other types of barriers.
924
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925 (*) Control dependencies do -not- provide transitivity. If you
926 need transitivity, use smp_mb().
108b42b4 927
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928 (*) Compilers do not understand control dependencies. It is therefore
929 your job to ensure that they do not break your code.
930
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931
932SMP BARRIER PAIRING
933-------------------
934
935When dealing with CPU-CPU interactions, certain types of memory barrier should
936always be paired. A lack of appropriate pairing is almost certainly an error.
937
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938General barriers pair with each other, though they also pair with most
939other types of barriers, albeit without transitivity. An acquire barrier
940pairs with a release barrier, but both may also pair with other barriers,
941including of course general barriers. A write barrier pairs with a data
942dependency barrier, a control dependency, an acquire barrier, a release
943barrier, a read barrier, or a general barrier. Similarly a read barrier,
944control dependency, or a data dependency barrier pairs with a write
945barrier, an acquire barrier, a release barrier, or a general barrier:
108b42b4 946
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947 CPU 1 CPU 2
948 =============== ===============
9af194ce 949 WRITE_ONCE(a, 1);
108b42b4 950 <write barrier>
9af194ce 951 WRITE_ONCE(b, 2); x = READ_ONCE(b);
2ecf8101 952 <read barrier>
9af194ce 953 y = READ_ONCE(a);
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954
955Or:
956
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957 CPU 1 CPU 2
958 =============== ===============================
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959 a = 1;
960 <write barrier>
9af194ce 961 WRITE_ONCE(b, &a); x = READ_ONCE(b);
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962 <data dependency barrier>
963 y = *x;
108b42b4 964
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965Or even:
966
967 CPU 1 CPU 2
968 =============== ===============================
9af194ce 969 r1 = READ_ONCE(y);
ff382810 970 <general barrier>
9af194ce 971 WRITE_ONCE(y, 1); if (r2 = READ_ONCE(x)) {
ff382810 972 <implicit control dependency>
9af194ce 973 WRITE_ONCE(y, 1);
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974 }
975
976 assert(r1 == 0 || r2 == 0);
977
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978Basically, the read barrier always has to be there, even though it can be of
979the "weaker" type.
980
670bd95e 981[!] Note that the stores before the write barrier would normally be expected to
81fc6323 982match the loads after the read barrier or the data dependency barrier, and vice
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983versa:
984
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985 CPU 1 CPU 2
986 =================== ===================
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987 WRITE_ONCE(a, 1); }---- --->{ v = READ_ONCE(c);
988 WRITE_ONCE(b, 2); } \ / { w = READ_ONCE(d);
2ecf8101 989 <write barrier> \ <read barrier>
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990 WRITE_ONCE(c, 3); } / \ { x = READ_ONCE(a);
991 WRITE_ONCE(d, 4); }---- --->{ y = READ_ONCE(b);
670bd95e 992
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993
994EXAMPLES OF MEMORY BARRIER SEQUENCES
995------------------------------------
996
81fc6323 997Firstly, write barriers act as partial orderings on store operations.
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998Consider the following sequence of events:
999
1000 CPU 1
1001 =======================
1002 STORE A = 1
1003 STORE B = 2
1004 STORE C = 3
1005 <write barrier>
1006 STORE D = 4
1007 STORE E = 5
1008
1009This sequence of events is committed to the memory coherence system in an order
1010that the rest of the system might perceive as the unordered set of { STORE A,
80f7228b 1011STORE B, STORE C } all occurring before the unordered set of { STORE D, STORE E
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1012}:
1013
1014 +-------+ : :
1015 | | +------+
1016 | |------>| C=3 | } /\
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1017 | | : +------+ }----- \ -----> Events perceptible to
1018 | | : | A=1 | } \/ the rest of the system
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1019 | | : +------+ }
1020 | CPU 1 | : | B=2 | }
1021 | | +------+ }
1022 | | wwwwwwwwwwwwwwww } <--- At this point the write barrier
1023 | | +------+ } requires all stores prior to the
1024 | | : | E=5 | } barrier to be committed before
81fc6323 1025 | | : +------+ } further stores may take place
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1026 | |------>| D=4 | }
1027 | | +------+
1028 +-------+ : :
1029 |
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1030 | Sequence in which stores are committed to the
1031 | memory system by CPU 1
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1032 V
1033
1034
81fc6323 1035Secondly, data dependency barriers act as partial orderings on data-dependent
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1036loads. Consider the following sequence of events:
1037
1038 CPU 1 CPU 2
1039 ======================= =======================
c14038c3 1040 { B = 7; X = 9; Y = 8; C = &Y }
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1041 STORE A = 1
1042 STORE B = 2
1043 <write barrier>
1044 STORE C = &B LOAD X
1045 STORE D = 4 LOAD C (gets &B)
1046 LOAD *C (reads B)
1047
1048Without intervention, CPU 2 may perceive the events on CPU 1 in some
1049effectively random order, despite the write barrier issued by CPU 1:
1050
1051 +-------+ : : : :
1052 | | +------+ +-------+ | Sequence of update
1053 | |------>| B=2 |----- --->| Y->8 | | of perception on
1054 | | : +------+ \ +-------+ | CPU 2
1055 | CPU 1 | : | A=1 | \ --->| C->&Y | V
1056 | | +------+ | +-------+
1057 | | wwwwwwwwwwwwwwww | : :
1058 | | +------+ | : :
1059 | | : | C=&B |--- | : : +-------+
1060 | | : +------+ \ | +-------+ | |
1061 | |------>| D=4 | ----------->| C->&B |------>| |
1062 | | +------+ | +-------+ | |
1063 +-------+ : : | : : | |
1064 | : : | |
1065 | : : | CPU 2 |
1066 | +-------+ | |
1067 Apparently incorrect ---> | | B->7 |------>| |
1068 perception of B (!) | +-------+ | |
1069 | : : | |
1070 | +-------+ | |
1071 The load of X holds ---> \ | X->9 |------>| |
1072 up the maintenance \ +-------+ | |
1073 of coherence of B ----->| B->2 | +-------+
1074 +-------+
1075 : :
1076
1077
1078In the above example, CPU 2 perceives that B is 7, despite the load of *C
670e9f34 1079(which would be B) coming after the LOAD of C.
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1080
1081If, however, a data dependency barrier were to be placed between the load of C
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1082and the load of *C (ie: B) on CPU 2:
1083
1084 CPU 1 CPU 2
1085 ======================= =======================
1086 { B = 7; X = 9; Y = 8; C = &Y }
1087 STORE A = 1
1088 STORE B = 2
1089 <write barrier>
1090 STORE C = &B LOAD X
1091 STORE D = 4 LOAD C (gets &B)
1092 <data dependency barrier>
1093 LOAD *C (reads B)
1094
1095then the following will occur:
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1096
1097 +-------+ : : : :
1098 | | +------+ +-------+
1099 | |------>| B=2 |----- --->| Y->8 |
1100 | | : +------+ \ +-------+
1101 | CPU 1 | : | A=1 | \ --->| C->&Y |
1102 | | +------+ | +-------+
1103 | | wwwwwwwwwwwwwwww | : :
1104 | | +------+ | : :
1105 | | : | C=&B |--- | : : +-------+
1106 | | : +------+ \ | +-------+ | |
1107 | |------>| D=4 | ----------->| C->&B |------>| |
1108 | | +------+ | +-------+ | |
1109 +-------+ : : | : : | |
1110 | : : | |
1111 | : : | CPU 2 |
1112 | +-------+ | |
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1113 | | X->9 |------>| |
1114 | +-------+ | |
1115 Makes sure all effects ---> \ ddddddddddddddddd | |
1116 prior to the store of C \ +-------+ | |
1117 are perceptible to ----->| B->2 |------>| |
1118 subsequent loads +-------+ | |
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1119 : : +-------+
1120
1121
1122And thirdly, a read barrier acts as a partial order on loads. Consider the
1123following sequence of events:
1124
1125 CPU 1 CPU 2
1126 ======================= =======================
670bd95e 1127 { A = 0, B = 9 }
108b42b4 1128 STORE A=1
108b42b4 1129 <write barrier>
670bd95e 1130 STORE B=2
108b42b4 1131 LOAD B
670bd95e 1132 LOAD A
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1133
1134Without intervention, CPU 2 may then choose to perceive the events on CPU 1 in
1135some effectively random order, despite the write barrier issued by CPU 1:
1136
670bd95e
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1137 +-------+ : : : :
1138 | | +------+ +-------+
1139 | |------>| A=1 |------ --->| A->0 |
1140 | | +------+ \ +-------+
1141 | CPU 1 | wwwwwwwwwwwwwwww \ --->| B->9 |
1142 | | +------+ | +-------+
1143 | |------>| B=2 |--- | : :
1144 | | +------+ \ | : : +-------+
1145 +-------+ : : \ | +-------+ | |
1146 ---------->| B->2 |------>| |
1147 | +-------+ | CPU 2 |
1148 | | A->0 |------>| |
1149 | +-------+ | |
1150 | : : +-------+
1151 \ : :
1152 \ +-------+
1153 ---->| A->1 |
1154 +-------+
1155 : :
108b42b4 1156
670bd95e 1157
6bc39274 1158If, however, a read barrier were to be placed between the load of B and the
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1159load of A on CPU 2:
1160
1161 CPU 1 CPU 2
1162 ======================= =======================
1163 { A = 0, B = 9 }
1164 STORE A=1
1165 <write barrier>
1166 STORE B=2
1167 LOAD B
1168 <read barrier>
1169 LOAD A
1170
1171then the partial ordering imposed by CPU 1 will be perceived correctly by CPU
11722:
1173
1174 +-------+ : : : :
1175 | | +------+ +-------+
1176 | |------>| A=1 |------ --->| A->0 |
1177 | | +------+ \ +-------+
1178 | CPU 1 | wwwwwwwwwwwwwwww \ --->| B->9 |
1179 | | +------+ | +-------+
1180 | |------>| B=2 |--- | : :
1181 | | +------+ \ | : : +-------+
1182 +-------+ : : \ | +-------+ | |
1183 ---------->| B->2 |------>| |
1184 | +-------+ | CPU 2 |
1185 | : : | |
1186 | : : | |
1187 At this point the read ----> \ rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr | |
1188 barrier causes all effects \ +-------+ | |
1189 prior to the storage of B ---->| A->1 |------>| |
1190 to be perceptible to CPU 2 +-------+ | |
1191 : : +-------+
1192
1193
1194To illustrate this more completely, consider what could happen if the code
1195contained a load of A either side of the read barrier:
1196
1197 CPU 1 CPU 2
1198 ======================= =======================
1199 { A = 0, B = 9 }
1200 STORE A=1
1201 <write barrier>
1202 STORE B=2
1203 LOAD B
1204 LOAD A [first load of A]
1205 <read barrier>
1206 LOAD A [second load of A]
1207
1208Even though the two loads of A both occur after the load of B, they may both
1209come up with different values:
1210
1211 +-------+ : : : :
1212 | | +------+ +-------+
1213 | |------>| A=1 |------ --->| A->0 |
1214 | | +------+ \ +-------+
1215 | CPU 1 | wwwwwwwwwwwwwwww \ --->| B->9 |
1216 | | +------+ | +-------+
1217 | |------>| B=2 |--- | : :
1218 | | +------+ \ | : : +-------+
1219 +-------+ : : \ | +-------+ | |
1220 ---------->| B->2 |------>| |
1221 | +-------+ | CPU 2 |
1222 | : : | |
1223 | : : | |
1224 | +-------+ | |
1225 | | A->0 |------>| 1st |
1226 | +-------+ | |
1227 At this point the read ----> \ rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr | |
1228 barrier causes all effects \ +-------+ | |
1229 prior to the storage of B ---->| A->1 |------>| 2nd |
1230 to be perceptible to CPU 2 +-------+ | |
1231 : : +-------+
1232
1233
1234But it may be that the update to A from CPU 1 becomes perceptible to CPU 2
1235before the read barrier completes anyway:
1236
1237 +-------+ : : : :
1238 | | +------+ +-------+
1239 | |------>| A=1 |------ --->| A->0 |
1240 | | +------+ \ +-------+
1241 | CPU 1 | wwwwwwwwwwwwwwww \ --->| B->9 |
1242 | | +------+ | +-------+
1243 | |------>| B=2 |--- | : :
1244 | | +------+ \ | : : +-------+
1245 +-------+ : : \ | +-------+ | |
1246 ---------->| B->2 |------>| |
1247 | +-------+ | CPU 2 |
1248 | : : | |
1249 \ : : | |
1250 \ +-------+ | |
1251 ---->| A->1 |------>| 1st |
1252 +-------+ | |
1253 rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr | |
1254 +-------+ | |
1255 | A->1 |------>| 2nd |
1256 +-------+ | |
1257 : : +-------+
1258
1259
1260The guarantee is that the second load will always come up with A == 1 if the
1261load of B came up with B == 2. No such guarantee exists for the first load of
1262A; that may come up with either A == 0 or A == 1.
1263
1264
1265READ MEMORY BARRIERS VS LOAD SPECULATION
1266----------------------------------------
1267
1268Many CPUs speculate with loads: that is they see that they will need to load an
1269item from memory, and they find a time where they're not using the bus for any
1270other loads, and so do the load in advance - even though they haven't actually
1271got to that point in the instruction execution flow yet. This permits the
1272actual load instruction to potentially complete immediately because the CPU
1273already has the value to hand.
1274
1275It may turn out that the CPU didn't actually need the value - perhaps because a
1276branch circumvented the load - in which case it can discard the value or just
1277cache it for later use.
1278
1279Consider:
1280
e0edc78f 1281 CPU 1 CPU 2
670bd95e 1282 ======================= =======================
e0edc78f
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1283 LOAD B
1284 DIVIDE } Divide instructions generally
1285 DIVIDE } take a long time to perform
1286 LOAD A
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1287
1288Which might appear as this:
1289
1290 : : +-------+
1291 +-------+ | |
1292 --->| B->2 |------>| |
1293 +-------+ | CPU 2 |
1294 : :DIVIDE | |
1295 +-------+ | |
1296 The CPU being busy doing a ---> --->| A->0 |~~~~ | |
1297 division speculates on the +-------+ ~ | |
1298 LOAD of A : : ~ | |
1299 : :DIVIDE | |
1300 : : ~ | |
1301 Once the divisions are complete --> : : ~-->| |
1302 the CPU can then perform the : : | |
1303 LOAD with immediate effect : : +-------+
1304
1305
1306Placing a read barrier or a data dependency barrier just before the second
1307load:
1308
e0edc78f 1309 CPU 1 CPU 2
670bd95e 1310 ======================= =======================
e0edc78f
IM
1311 LOAD B
1312 DIVIDE
1313 DIVIDE
670bd95e 1314 <read barrier>
e0edc78f 1315 LOAD A
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1316
1317will force any value speculatively obtained to be reconsidered to an extent
1318dependent on the type of barrier used. If there was no change made to the
1319speculated memory location, then the speculated value will just be used:
1320
1321 : : +-------+
1322 +-------+ | |
1323 --->| B->2 |------>| |
1324 +-------+ | CPU 2 |
1325 : :DIVIDE | |
1326 +-------+ | |
1327 The CPU being busy doing a ---> --->| A->0 |~~~~ | |
1328 division speculates on the +-------+ ~ | |
1329 LOAD of A : : ~ | |
1330 : :DIVIDE | |
1331 : : ~ | |
1332 : : ~ | |
1333 rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr~ | |
1334 : : ~ | |
1335 : : ~-->| |
1336 : : | |
1337 : : +-------+
1338
1339
1340but if there was an update or an invalidation from another CPU pending, then
1341the speculation will be cancelled and the value reloaded:
1342
1343 : : +-------+
1344 +-------+ | |
1345 --->| B->2 |------>| |
1346 +-------+ | CPU 2 |
1347 : :DIVIDE | |
1348 +-------+ | |
1349 The CPU being busy doing a ---> --->| A->0 |~~~~ | |
1350 division speculates on the +-------+ ~ | |
1351 LOAD of A : : ~ | |
1352 : :DIVIDE | |
1353 : : ~ | |
1354 : : ~ | |
1355 rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr | |
1356 +-------+ | |
1357 The speculation is discarded ---> --->| A->1 |------>| |
1358 and an updated value is +-------+ | |
1359 retrieved : : +-------+
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1360
1361
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1362TRANSITIVITY
1363------------
1364
1365Transitivity is a deeply intuitive notion about ordering that is not
1366always provided by real computer systems. The following example
f36fe1e7 1367demonstrates transitivity:
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1368
1369 CPU 1 CPU 2 CPU 3
1370 ======================= ======================= =======================
1371 { X = 0, Y = 0 }
1372 STORE X=1 LOAD X STORE Y=1
1373 <general barrier> <general barrier>
1374 LOAD Y LOAD X
1375
1376Suppose that CPU 2's load from X returns 1 and its load from Y returns 0.
1377This indicates that CPU 2's load from X in some sense follows CPU 1's
1378store to X and that CPU 2's load from Y in some sense preceded CPU 3's
1379store to Y. The question is then "Can CPU 3's load from X return 0?"
1380
1381Because CPU 2's load from X in some sense came after CPU 1's store, it
1382is natural to expect that CPU 3's load from X must therefore return 1.
1383This expectation is an example of transitivity: if a load executing on
1384CPU A follows a load from the same variable executing on CPU B, then
1385CPU A's load must either return the same value that CPU B's load did,
1386or must return some later value.
1387
1388In the Linux kernel, use of general memory barriers guarantees
1389transitivity. Therefore, in the above example, if CPU 2's load from X
1390returns 1 and its load from Y returns 0, then CPU 3's load from X must
1391also return 1.
1392
1393However, transitivity is -not- guaranteed for read or write barriers.
1394For example, suppose that CPU 2's general barrier in the above example
1395is changed to a read barrier as shown below:
1396
1397 CPU 1 CPU 2 CPU 3
1398 ======================= ======================= =======================
1399 { X = 0, Y = 0 }
1400 STORE X=1 LOAD X STORE Y=1
1401 <read barrier> <general barrier>
1402 LOAD Y LOAD X
1403
1404This substitution destroys transitivity: in this example, it is perfectly
1405legal for CPU 2's load from X to return 1, its load from Y to return 0,
1406and CPU 3's load from X to return 0.
1407
1408The key point is that although CPU 2's read barrier orders its pair
1409of loads, it does not guarantee to order CPU 1's store. Therefore, if
1410this example runs on a system where CPUs 1 and 2 share a store buffer
1411or a level of cache, CPU 2 might have early access to CPU 1's writes.
1412General barriers are therefore required to ensure that all CPUs agree
1413on the combined order of CPU 1's and CPU 2's accesses.
1414
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1415General barriers provide "global transitivity", so that all CPUs will
1416agree on the order of operations. In contrast, a chain of release-acquire
1417pairs provides only "local transitivity", so that only those CPUs on
1418the chain are guaranteed to agree on the combined order of the accesses.
1419For example, switching to C code in deference to Herman Hollerith:
1420
1421 int u, v, x, y, z;
1422
1423 void cpu0(void)
1424 {
1425 r0 = smp_load_acquire(&x);
1426 WRITE_ONCE(u, 1);
1427 smp_store_release(&y, 1);
1428 }
1429
1430 void cpu1(void)
1431 {
1432 r1 = smp_load_acquire(&y);
1433 r4 = READ_ONCE(v);
1434 r5 = READ_ONCE(u);
1435 smp_store_release(&z, 1);
1436 }
1437
1438 void cpu2(void)
1439 {
1440 r2 = smp_load_acquire(&z);
1441 smp_store_release(&x, 1);
1442 }
1443
1444 void cpu3(void)
1445 {
1446 WRITE_ONCE(v, 1);
1447 smp_mb();
1448 r3 = READ_ONCE(u);
1449 }
1450
1451Because cpu0(), cpu1(), and cpu2() participate in a local transitive
1452chain of smp_store_release()/smp_load_acquire() pairs, the following
1453outcome is prohibited:
1454
1455 r0 == 1 && r1 == 1 && r2 == 1
1456
1457Furthermore, because of the release-acquire relationship between cpu0()
1458and cpu1(), cpu1() must see cpu0()'s writes, so that the following
1459outcome is prohibited:
1460
1461 r1 == 1 && r5 == 0
1462
1463However, the transitivity of release-acquire is local to the participating
1464CPUs and does not apply to cpu3(). Therefore, the following outcome
1465is possible:
1466
1467 r0 == 0 && r1 == 1 && r2 == 1 && r3 == 0 && r4 == 0
1468
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1469As an aside, the following outcome is also possible:
1470
1471 r0 == 0 && r1 == 1 && r2 == 1 && r3 == 0 && r4 == 0 && r5 == 1
1472
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1473Although cpu0(), cpu1(), and cpu2() will see their respective reads and
1474writes in order, CPUs not involved in the release-acquire chain might
1475well disagree on the order. This disagreement stems from the fact that
1476the weak memory-barrier instructions used to implement smp_load_acquire()
1477and smp_store_release() are not required to order prior stores against
1478subsequent loads in all cases. This means that cpu3() can see cpu0()'s
1479store to u as happening -after- cpu1()'s load from v, even though
1480both cpu0() and cpu1() agree that these two operations occurred in the
1481intended order.
1482
1483However, please keep in mind that smp_load_acquire() is not magic.
1484In particular, it simply reads from its argument with ordering. It does
1485-not- ensure that any particular value will be read. Therefore, the
1486following outcome is possible:
1487
1488 r0 == 0 && r1 == 0 && r2 == 0 && r5 == 0
1489
1490Note that this outcome can happen even on a mythical sequentially
1491consistent system where nothing is ever reordered.
1492
1493To reiterate, if your code requires global transitivity, use general
1494barriers throughout.
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1495
1496
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1497========================
1498EXPLICIT KERNEL BARRIERS
1499========================
1500
1501The Linux kernel has a variety of different barriers that act at different
1502levels:
1503
1504 (*) Compiler barrier.
1505
1506 (*) CPU memory barriers.
1507
1508 (*) MMIO write barrier.
1509
1510
1511COMPILER BARRIER
1512----------------
1513
1514The Linux kernel has an explicit compiler barrier function that prevents the
1515compiler from moving the memory accesses either side of it to the other side:
1516
1517 barrier();
1518
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1519This is a general barrier -- there are no read-read or write-write
1520variants of barrier(). However, READ_ONCE() and WRITE_ONCE() can be
1521thought of as weak forms of barrier() that affect only the specific
1522accesses flagged by the READ_ONCE() or WRITE_ONCE().
108b42b4 1523
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1524The barrier() function has the following effects:
1525
1526 (*) Prevents the compiler from reordering accesses following the
1527 barrier() to precede any accesses preceding the barrier().
1528 One example use for this property is to ease communication between
1529 interrupt-handler code and the code that was interrupted.
1530
1531 (*) Within a loop, forces the compiler to load the variables used
1532 in that loop's conditional on each pass through that loop.
1533
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1534The READ_ONCE() and WRITE_ONCE() functions can prevent any number of
1535optimizations that, while perfectly safe in single-threaded code, can
1536be fatal in concurrent code. Here are some examples of these sorts
1537of optimizations:
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1539 (*) The compiler is within its rights to reorder loads and stores
1540 to the same variable, and in some cases, the CPU is within its
1541 rights to reorder loads to the same variable. This means that
1542 the following code:
1543
1544 a[0] = x;
1545 a[1] = x;
1546
1547 Might result in an older value of x stored in a[1] than in a[0].
1548 Prevent both the compiler and the CPU from doing this as follows:
1549
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1550 a[0] = READ_ONCE(x);
1551 a[1] = READ_ONCE(x);
449f7413 1552
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1553 In short, READ_ONCE() and WRITE_ONCE() provide cache coherence for
1554 accesses from multiple CPUs to a single variable.
449f7413 1555
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1556 (*) The compiler is within its rights to merge successive loads from
1557 the same variable. Such merging can cause the compiler to "optimize"
1558 the following code:
1559
1560 while (tmp = a)
1561 do_something_with(tmp);
1562
1563 into the following code, which, although in some sense legitimate
1564 for single-threaded code, is almost certainly not what the developer
1565 intended:
1566
1567 if (tmp = a)
1568 for (;;)
1569 do_something_with(tmp);
1570
9af194ce 1571 Use READ_ONCE() to prevent the compiler from doing this to you:
692118da 1572
9af194ce 1573 while (tmp = READ_ONCE(a))
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1574 do_something_with(tmp);
1575
1576 (*) The compiler is within its rights to reload a variable, for example,
1577 in cases where high register pressure prevents the compiler from
1578 keeping all data of interest in registers. The compiler might
1579 therefore optimize the variable 'tmp' out of our previous example:
1580
1581 while (tmp = a)
1582 do_something_with(tmp);
1583
1584 This could result in the following code, which is perfectly safe in
1585 single-threaded code, but can be fatal in concurrent code:
1586
1587 while (a)
1588 do_something_with(a);
1589
1590 For example, the optimized version of this code could result in
1591 passing a zero to do_something_with() in the case where the variable
1592 a was modified by some other CPU between the "while" statement and
1593 the call to do_something_with().
1594
9af194ce 1595 Again, use READ_ONCE() to prevent the compiler from doing this:
692118da 1596
9af194ce 1597 while (tmp = READ_ONCE(a))
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1598 do_something_with(tmp);
1599
1600 Note that if the compiler runs short of registers, it might save
1601 tmp onto the stack. The overhead of this saving and later restoring
1602 is why compilers reload variables. Doing so is perfectly safe for
1603 single-threaded code, so you need to tell the compiler about cases
1604 where it is not safe.
1605
1606 (*) The compiler is within its rights to omit a load entirely if it knows
1607 what the value will be. For example, if the compiler can prove that
1608 the value of variable 'a' is always zero, it can optimize this code:
1609
1610 while (tmp = a)
1611 do_something_with(tmp);
1612
1613 Into this:
1614
1615 do { } while (0);
1616
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1617 This transformation is a win for single-threaded code because it
1618 gets rid of a load and a branch. The problem is that the compiler
1619 will carry out its proof assuming that the current CPU is the only
1620 one updating variable 'a'. If variable 'a' is shared, then the
1621 compiler's proof will be erroneous. Use READ_ONCE() to tell the
1622 compiler that it doesn't know as much as it thinks it does:
692118da 1623
9af194ce 1624 while (tmp = READ_ONCE(a))
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1625 do_something_with(tmp);
1626
1627 But please note that the compiler is also closely watching what you
9af194ce 1628 do with the value after the READ_ONCE(). For example, suppose you
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1629 do the following and MAX is a preprocessor macro with the value 1:
1630
9af194ce 1631 while ((tmp = READ_ONCE(a)) % MAX)
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1632 do_something_with(tmp);
1633
1634 Then the compiler knows that the result of the "%" operator applied
1635 to MAX will always be zero, again allowing the compiler to optimize
1636 the code into near-nonexistence. (It will still load from the
1637 variable 'a'.)
1638
1639 (*) Similarly, the compiler is within its rights to omit a store entirely
1640 if it knows that the variable already has the value being stored.
1641 Again, the compiler assumes that the current CPU is the only one
1642 storing into the variable, which can cause the compiler to do the
1643 wrong thing for shared variables. For example, suppose you have
1644 the following:
1645
1646 a = 0;
65f95ff2 1647 ... Code that does not store to variable a ...
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1648 a = 0;
1649
1650 The compiler sees that the value of variable 'a' is already zero, so
1651 it might well omit the second store. This would come as a fatal
1652 surprise if some other CPU might have stored to variable 'a' in the
1653 meantime.
1654
9af194ce 1655 Use WRITE_ONCE() to prevent the compiler from making this sort of
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1656 wrong guess:
1657
9af194ce 1658 WRITE_ONCE(a, 0);
65f95ff2 1659 ... Code that does not store to variable a ...
9af194ce 1660 WRITE_ONCE(a, 0);
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1661
1662 (*) The compiler is within its rights to reorder memory accesses unless
1663 you tell it not to. For example, consider the following interaction
1664 between process-level code and an interrupt handler:
1665
1666 void process_level(void)
1667 {
1668 msg = get_message();
1669 flag = true;
1670 }
1671
1672 void interrupt_handler(void)
1673 {
1674 if (flag)
1675 process_message(msg);
1676 }
1677
df5cbb27 1678 There is nothing to prevent the compiler from transforming
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1679 process_level() to the following, in fact, this might well be a
1680 win for single-threaded code:
1681
1682 void process_level(void)
1683 {
1684 flag = true;
1685 msg = get_message();
1686 }
1687
1688 If the interrupt occurs between these two statement, then
9af194ce 1689 interrupt_handler() might be passed a garbled msg. Use WRITE_ONCE()
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1690 to prevent this as follows:
1691
1692 void process_level(void)
1693 {
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1694 WRITE_ONCE(msg, get_message());
1695 WRITE_ONCE(flag, true);
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1696 }
1697
1698 void interrupt_handler(void)
1699 {
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1700 if (READ_ONCE(flag))
1701 process_message(READ_ONCE(msg));
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1702 }
1703
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1704 Note that the READ_ONCE() and WRITE_ONCE() wrappers in
1705 interrupt_handler() are needed if this interrupt handler can itself
1706 be interrupted by something that also accesses 'flag' and 'msg',
1707 for example, a nested interrupt or an NMI. Otherwise, READ_ONCE()
1708 and WRITE_ONCE() are not needed in interrupt_handler() other than
1709 for documentation purposes. (Note also that nested interrupts
1710 do not typically occur in modern Linux kernels, in fact, if an
1711 interrupt handler returns with interrupts enabled, you will get a
1712 WARN_ONCE() splat.)
1713
1714 You should assume that the compiler can move READ_ONCE() and
1715 WRITE_ONCE() past code not containing READ_ONCE(), WRITE_ONCE(),
1716 barrier(), or similar primitives.
1717
1718 This effect could also be achieved using barrier(), but READ_ONCE()
1719 and WRITE_ONCE() are more selective: With READ_ONCE() and
1720 WRITE_ONCE(), the compiler need only forget the contents of the
1721 indicated memory locations, while with barrier() the compiler must
1722 discard the value of all memory locations that it has currented
1723 cached in any machine registers. Of course, the compiler must also
1724 respect the order in which the READ_ONCE()s and WRITE_ONCE()s occur,
1725 though the CPU of course need not do so.
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1726
1727 (*) The compiler is within its rights to invent stores to a variable,
1728 as in the following example:
1729
1730 if (a)
1731 b = a;
1732 else
1733 b = 42;
1734
1735 The compiler might save a branch by optimizing this as follows:
1736
1737 b = 42;
1738 if (a)
1739 b = a;
1740
1741 In single-threaded code, this is not only safe, but also saves
1742 a branch. Unfortunately, in concurrent code, this optimization
1743 could cause some other CPU to see a spurious value of 42 -- even
1744 if variable 'a' was never zero -- when loading variable 'b'.
9af194ce 1745 Use WRITE_ONCE() to prevent this as follows:
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1746
1747 if (a)
9af194ce 1748 WRITE_ONCE(b, a);
692118da 1749 else
9af194ce 1750 WRITE_ONCE(b, 42);
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1751
1752 The compiler can also invent loads. These are usually less
1753 damaging, but they can result in cache-line bouncing and thus in
9af194ce 1754 poor performance and scalability. Use READ_ONCE() to prevent
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1755 invented loads.
1756
1757 (*) For aligned memory locations whose size allows them to be accessed
1758 with a single memory-reference instruction, prevents "load tearing"
1759 and "store tearing," in which a single large access is replaced by
1760 multiple smaller accesses. For example, given an architecture having
1761 16-bit store instructions with 7-bit immediate fields, the compiler
1762 might be tempted to use two 16-bit store-immediate instructions to
1763 implement the following 32-bit store:
1764
1765 p = 0x00010002;
1766
1767 Please note that GCC really does use this sort of optimization,
1768 which is not surprising given that it would likely take more
1769 than two instructions to build the constant and then store it.
1770 This optimization can therefore be a win in single-threaded code.
1771 In fact, a recent bug (since fixed) caused GCC to incorrectly use
1772 this optimization in a volatile store. In the absence of such bugs,
9af194ce 1773 use of WRITE_ONCE() prevents store tearing in the following example:
692118da 1774
9af194ce 1775 WRITE_ONCE(p, 0x00010002);
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1776
1777 Use of packed structures can also result in load and store tearing,
1778 as in this example:
1779
1780 struct __attribute__((__packed__)) foo {
1781 short a;
1782 int b;
1783 short c;
1784 };
1785 struct foo foo1, foo2;
1786 ...
1787
1788 foo2.a = foo1.a;
1789 foo2.b = foo1.b;
1790 foo2.c = foo1.c;
1791
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1792 Because there are no READ_ONCE() or WRITE_ONCE() wrappers and no
1793 volatile markings, the compiler would be well within its rights to
1794 implement these three assignment statements as a pair of 32-bit
1795 loads followed by a pair of 32-bit stores. This would result in
1796 load tearing on 'foo1.b' and store tearing on 'foo2.b'. READ_ONCE()
1797 and WRITE_ONCE() again prevent tearing in this example:
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1798
1799 foo2.a = foo1.a;
9af194ce 1800 WRITE_ONCE(foo2.b, READ_ONCE(foo1.b));
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1801 foo2.c = foo1.c;
1802
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1803All that aside, it is never necessary to use READ_ONCE() and
1804WRITE_ONCE() on a variable that has been marked volatile. For example,
1805because 'jiffies' is marked volatile, it is never necessary to
1806say READ_ONCE(jiffies). The reason for this is that READ_ONCE() and
1807WRITE_ONCE() are implemented as volatile casts, which has no effect when
1808its argument is already marked volatile.
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1809
1810Please note that these compiler barriers have no direct effect on the CPU,
1811which may then reorder things however it wishes.
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1812
1813
1814CPU MEMORY BARRIERS
1815-------------------
1816
1817The Linux kernel has eight basic CPU memory barriers:
1818
1819 TYPE MANDATORY SMP CONDITIONAL
1820 =============== ======================= ===========================
1821 GENERAL mb() smp_mb()
1822 WRITE wmb() smp_wmb()
1823 READ rmb() smp_rmb()
1824 DATA DEPENDENCY read_barrier_depends() smp_read_barrier_depends()
1825
1826
73f10281 1827All memory barriers except the data dependency barriers imply a compiler
0b6fa347 1828barrier. Data dependencies do not impose any additional compiler ordering.
73f10281 1829
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1830Aside: In the case of data dependencies, the compiler would be expected
1831to issue the loads in the correct order (eg. `a[b]` would have to load
1832the value of b before loading a[b]), however there is no guarantee in
1833the C specification that the compiler may not speculate the value of b
1834(eg. is equal to 1) and load a before b (eg. tmp = a[1]; if (b != 1)
0b6fa347
SP
1835tmp = a[b]; ). There is also the problem of a compiler reloading b after
1836having loaded a[b], thus having a newer copy of b than a[b]. A consensus
9af194ce
PM
1837has not yet been reached about these problems, however the READ_ONCE()
1838macro is a good place to start looking.
108b42b4
DH
1839
1840SMP memory barriers are reduced to compiler barriers on uniprocessor compiled
81fc6323 1841systems because it is assumed that a CPU will appear to be self-consistent,
108b42b4 1842and will order overlapping accesses correctly with respect to itself.
6a65d263 1843However, see the subsection on "Virtual Machine Guests" below.
108b42b4
DH
1844
1845[!] Note that SMP memory barriers _must_ be used to control the ordering of
1846references to shared memory on SMP systems, though the use of locking instead
1847is sufficient.
1848
1849Mandatory barriers should not be used to control SMP effects, since mandatory
6a65d263
MT
1850barriers impose unnecessary overhead on both SMP and UP systems. They may,
1851however, be used to control MMIO effects on accesses through relaxed memory I/O
1852windows. These barriers are required even on non-SMP systems as they affect
1853the order in which memory operations appear to a device by prohibiting both the
1854compiler and the CPU from reordering them.
108b42b4
DH
1855
1856
1857There are some more advanced barrier functions:
1858
b92b8b35 1859 (*) smp_store_mb(var, value)
108b42b4 1860
75b2bd55 1861 This assigns the value to the variable and then inserts a full memory
2d142e59
DB
1862 barrier after it. It isn't guaranteed to insert anything more than a
1863 compiler barrier in a UP compilation.
108b42b4
DH
1864
1865
1b15611e
PZ
1866 (*) smp_mb__before_atomic();
1867 (*) smp_mb__after_atomic();
108b42b4 1868
1b15611e
PZ
1869 These are for use with atomic (such as add, subtract, increment and
1870 decrement) functions that don't return a value, especially when used for
1871 reference counting. These functions do not imply memory barriers.
1872
1873 These are also used for atomic bitop functions that do not return a
1874 value (such as set_bit and clear_bit).
108b42b4
DH
1875
1876 As an example, consider a piece of code that marks an object as being dead
1877 and then decrements the object's reference count:
1878
1879 obj->dead = 1;
1b15611e 1880 smp_mb__before_atomic();
108b42b4
DH
1881 atomic_dec(&obj->ref_count);
1882
1883 This makes sure that the death mark on the object is perceived to be set
1884 *before* the reference counter is decremented.
1885
3afadfd9
SP
1886 See Documentation/core-api/atomic_ops.rst for more information. See the
1887 "Atomic operations" subsection for information on where to use these.
108b42b4
DH
1888
1889
ad2ad5d3 1890 (*) lockless_dereference();
0b6fa347 1891
ad2ad5d3
PM
1892 This can be thought of as a pointer-fetch wrapper around the
1893 smp_read_barrier_depends() data-dependency barrier.
1894
1895 This is also similar to rcu_dereference(), but in cases where
1896 object lifetime is handled by some mechanism other than RCU, for
1897 example, when the objects removed only when the system goes down.
1898 In addition, lockless_dereference() is used in some data structures
1899 that can be used both with and without RCU.
1900
1901
1077fa36
AD
1902 (*) dma_wmb();
1903 (*) dma_rmb();
1904
1905 These are for use with consistent memory to guarantee the ordering
1906 of writes or reads of shared memory accessible to both the CPU and a
1907 DMA capable device.
1908
1909 For example, consider a device driver that shares memory with a device
1910 and uses a descriptor status value to indicate if the descriptor belongs
1911 to the device or the CPU, and a doorbell to notify it when new
1912 descriptors are available:
1913
1914 if (desc->status != DEVICE_OWN) {
1915 /* do not read data until we own descriptor */
1916 dma_rmb();
1917
1918 /* read/modify data */
1919 read_data = desc->data;
1920 desc->data = write_data;
1921
1922 /* flush modifications before status update */
1923 dma_wmb();
1924
1925 /* assign ownership */
1926 desc->status = DEVICE_OWN;
1927
1928 /* force memory to sync before notifying device via MMIO */
1929 wmb();
1930
1931 /* notify device of new descriptors */
1932 writel(DESC_NOTIFY, doorbell);
1933 }
1934
1935 The dma_rmb() allows us guarantee the device has released ownership
7a458007 1936 before we read the data from the descriptor, and the dma_wmb() allows
1077fa36
AD
1937 us to guarantee the data is written to the descriptor before the device
1938 can see it now has ownership. The wmb() is needed to guarantee that the
1939 cache coherent memory writes have completed before attempting a write to
1940 the cache incoherent MMIO region.
1941
1942 See Documentation/DMA-API.txt for more information on consistent memory.
1943
dfeccea6 1944
108b42b4
DH
1945MMIO WRITE BARRIER
1946------------------
1947
1948The Linux kernel also has a special barrier for use with memory-mapped I/O
1949writes:
1950
1951 mmiowb();
1952
1953This is a variation on the mandatory write barrier that causes writes to weakly
1954ordered I/O regions to be partially ordered. Its effects may go beyond the
1955CPU->Hardware interface and actually affect the hardware at some level.
1956
166bda71 1957See the subsection "Acquires vs I/O accesses" for more information.
108b42b4
DH
1958
1959
1960===============================
1961IMPLICIT KERNEL MEMORY BARRIERS
1962===============================
1963
1964Some of the other functions in the linux kernel imply memory barriers, amongst
670bd95e 1965which are locking and scheduling functions.
108b42b4
DH
1966
1967This specification is a _minimum_ guarantee; any particular architecture may
1968provide more substantial guarantees, but these may not be relied upon outside
1969of arch specific code.
1970
1971
166bda71
SP
1972LOCK ACQUISITION FUNCTIONS
1973--------------------------
108b42b4
DH
1974
1975The Linux kernel has a number of locking constructs:
1976
1977 (*) spin locks
1978 (*) R/W spin locks
1979 (*) mutexes
1980 (*) semaphores
1981 (*) R/W semaphores
108b42b4 1982
2e4f5382 1983In all cases there are variants on "ACQUIRE" operations and "RELEASE" operations
108b42b4
DH
1984for each construct. These operations all imply certain barriers:
1985
2e4f5382 1986 (1) ACQUIRE operation implication:
108b42b4 1987
2e4f5382
PZ
1988 Memory operations issued after the ACQUIRE will be completed after the
1989 ACQUIRE operation has completed.
108b42b4 1990
8dd853d7
PM
1991 Memory operations issued before the ACQUIRE may be completed after
1992 the ACQUIRE operation has completed. An smp_mb__before_spinlock(),
d956028e 1993 combined with a following ACQUIRE, orders prior stores against
0b6fa347 1994 subsequent loads and stores. Note that this is weaker than smp_mb()!
d956028e 1995 The smp_mb__before_spinlock() primitive is free on many architectures.
108b42b4 1996
2e4f5382 1997 (2) RELEASE operation implication:
108b42b4 1998
2e4f5382
PZ
1999 Memory operations issued before the RELEASE will be completed before the
2000 RELEASE operation has completed.
108b42b4 2001
2e4f5382
PZ
2002 Memory operations issued after the RELEASE may be completed before the
2003 RELEASE operation has completed.
108b42b4 2004
2e4f5382 2005 (3) ACQUIRE vs ACQUIRE implication:
108b42b4 2006
2e4f5382
PZ
2007 All ACQUIRE operations issued before another ACQUIRE operation will be
2008 completed before that ACQUIRE operation.
108b42b4 2009
2e4f5382 2010 (4) ACQUIRE vs RELEASE implication:
108b42b4 2011
2e4f5382
PZ
2012 All ACQUIRE operations issued before a RELEASE operation will be
2013 completed before the RELEASE operation.
108b42b4 2014
2e4f5382 2015 (5) Failed conditional ACQUIRE implication:
108b42b4 2016
2e4f5382
PZ
2017 Certain locking variants of the ACQUIRE operation may fail, either due to
2018 being unable to get the lock immediately, or due to receiving an unblocked
108b42b4
DH
2019 signal whilst asleep waiting for the lock to become available. Failed
2020 locks do not imply any sort of barrier.
2021
2e4f5382
PZ
2022[!] Note: one of the consequences of lock ACQUIREs and RELEASEs being only
2023one-way barriers is that the effects of instructions outside of a critical
2024section may seep into the inside of the critical section.
108b42b4 2025
2e4f5382
PZ
2026An ACQUIRE followed by a RELEASE may not be assumed to be full memory barrier
2027because it is possible for an access preceding the ACQUIRE to happen after the
2028ACQUIRE, and an access following the RELEASE to happen before the RELEASE, and
2029the two accesses can themselves then cross:
670bd95e
DH
2030
2031 *A = a;
2e4f5382
PZ
2032 ACQUIRE M
2033 RELEASE M
670bd95e
DH
2034 *B = b;
2035
2036may occur as:
2037
2e4f5382 2038 ACQUIRE M, STORE *B, STORE *A, RELEASE M
17eb88e0 2039
8dd853d7
PM
2040When the ACQUIRE and RELEASE are a lock acquisition and release,
2041respectively, this same reordering can occur if the lock's ACQUIRE and
2042RELEASE are to the same lock variable, but only from the perspective of
2043another CPU not holding that lock. In short, a ACQUIRE followed by an
2044RELEASE may -not- be assumed to be a full memory barrier.
2045
12d560f4
PM
2046Similarly, the reverse case of a RELEASE followed by an ACQUIRE does
2047not imply a full memory barrier. Therefore, the CPU's execution of the
2048critical sections corresponding to the RELEASE and the ACQUIRE can cross,
2049so that:
17eb88e0
PM
2050
2051 *A = a;
2e4f5382
PZ
2052 RELEASE M
2053 ACQUIRE N
17eb88e0
PM
2054 *B = b;
2055
2056could occur as:
2057
2e4f5382 2058 ACQUIRE N, STORE *B, STORE *A, RELEASE M
17eb88e0 2059
8dd853d7
PM
2060It might appear that this reordering could introduce a deadlock.
2061However, this cannot happen because if such a deadlock threatened,
2062the RELEASE would simply complete, thereby avoiding the deadlock.
2063
2064 Why does this work?
2065
2066 One key point is that we are only talking about the CPU doing
2067 the reordering, not the compiler. If the compiler (or, for
2068 that matter, the developer) switched the operations, deadlock
2069 -could- occur.
2070
2071 But suppose the CPU reordered the operations. In this case,
2072 the unlock precedes the lock in the assembly code. The CPU
2073 simply elected to try executing the later lock operation first.
2074 If there is a deadlock, this lock operation will simply spin (or
2075 try to sleep, but more on that later). The CPU will eventually
2076 execute the unlock operation (which preceded the lock operation
2077 in the assembly code), which will unravel the potential deadlock,
2078 allowing the lock operation to succeed.
2079
2080 But what if the lock is a sleeplock? In that case, the code will
2081 try to enter the scheduler, where it will eventually encounter
2082 a memory barrier, which will force the earlier unlock operation
2083 to complete, again unraveling the deadlock. There might be
2084 a sleep-unlock race, but the locking primitive needs to resolve
2085 such races properly in any case.
2086
108b42b4
DH
2087Locks and semaphores may not provide any guarantee of ordering on UP compiled
2088systems, and so cannot be counted on in such a situation to actually achieve
2089anything at all - especially with respect to I/O accesses - unless combined
2090with interrupt disabling operations.
2091
d7cab36d 2092See also the section on "Inter-CPU acquiring barrier effects".
108b42b4
DH
2093
2094
2095As an example, consider the following:
2096
2097 *A = a;
2098 *B = b;
2e4f5382 2099 ACQUIRE
108b42b4
DH
2100 *C = c;
2101 *D = d;
2e4f5382 2102 RELEASE
108b42b4
DH
2103 *E = e;
2104 *F = f;
2105
2106The following sequence of events is acceptable:
2107
2e4f5382 2108 ACQUIRE, {*F,*A}, *E, {*C,*D}, *B, RELEASE
108b42b4
DH
2109
2110 [+] Note that {*F,*A} indicates a combined access.
2111
2112But none of the following are:
2113
2e4f5382
PZ
2114 {*F,*A}, *B, ACQUIRE, *C, *D, RELEASE, *E
2115 *A, *B, *C, ACQUIRE, *D, RELEASE, *E, *F
2116 *A, *B, ACQUIRE, *C, RELEASE, *D, *E, *F
2117 *B, ACQUIRE, *C, *D, RELEASE, {*F,*A}, *E
108b42b4
DH
2118
2119
2120
2121INTERRUPT DISABLING FUNCTIONS
2122-----------------------------
2123
2e4f5382
PZ
2124Functions that disable interrupts (ACQUIRE equivalent) and enable interrupts
2125(RELEASE equivalent) will act as compiler barriers only. So if memory or I/O
108b42b4
DH
2126barriers are required in such a situation, they must be provided from some
2127other means.
2128
2129
50fa610a
DH
2130SLEEP AND WAKE-UP FUNCTIONS
2131---------------------------
2132
2133Sleeping and waking on an event flagged in global data can be viewed as an
2134interaction between two pieces of data: the task state of the task waiting for
2135the event and the global data used to indicate the event. To make sure that
2136these appear to happen in the right order, the primitives to begin the process
2137of going to sleep, and the primitives to initiate a wake up imply certain
2138barriers.
2139
2140Firstly, the sleeper normally follows something like this sequence of events:
2141
2142 for (;;) {
2143 set_current_state(TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE);
2144 if (event_indicated)
2145 break;
2146 schedule();
2147 }
2148
2149A general memory barrier is interpolated automatically by set_current_state()
2150after it has altered the task state:
2151
2152 CPU 1
2153 ===============================
2154 set_current_state();
b92b8b35 2155 smp_store_mb();
50fa610a
DH
2156 STORE current->state
2157 <general barrier>
2158 LOAD event_indicated
2159
2160set_current_state() may be wrapped by:
2161
2162 prepare_to_wait();
2163 prepare_to_wait_exclusive();
2164
2165which therefore also imply a general memory barrier after setting the state.
2166The whole sequence above is available in various canned forms, all of which
2167interpolate the memory barrier in the right place:
2168
2169 wait_event();
2170 wait_event_interruptible();
2171 wait_event_interruptible_exclusive();
2172 wait_event_interruptible_timeout();
2173 wait_event_killable();
2174 wait_event_timeout();
2175 wait_on_bit();
2176 wait_on_bit_lock();
2177
2178
2179Secondly, code that performs a wake up normally follows something like this:
2180
2181 event_indicated = 1;
2182 wake_up(&event_wait_queue);
2183
2184or:
2185
2186 event_indicated = 1;
2187 wake_up_process(event_daemon);
2188
0b6fa347
SP
2189A write memory barrier is implied by wake_up() and co. if and only if they
2190wake something up. The barrier occurs before the task state is cleared, and so
2191sits between the STORE to indicate the event and the STORE to set TASK_RUNNING:
50fa610a
DH
2192
2193 CPU 1 CPU 2
2194 =============================== ===============================
2195 set_current_state(); STORE event_indicated
b92b8b35 2196 smp_store_mb(); wake_up();
50fa610a
DH
2197 STORE current->state <write barrier>
2198 <general barrier> STORE current->state
2199 LOAD event_indicated
2200
5726ce06
PM
2201To repeat, this write memory barrier is present if and only if something
2202is actually awakened. To see this, consider the following sequence of
2203events, where X and Y are both initially zero:
2204
2205 CPU 1 CPU 2
2206 =============================== ===============================
2207 X = 1; STORE event_indicated
2208 smp_mb(); wake_up();
2209 Y = 1; wait_event(wq, Y == 1);
2210 wake_up(); load from Y sees 1, no memory barrier
2211 load from X might see 0
2212
2213In contrast, if a wakeup does occur, CPU 2's load from X would be guaranteed
2214to see 1.
2215
50fa610a
DH
2216The available waker functions include:
2217
2218 complete();
2219 wake_up();
2220 wake_up_all();
2221 wake_up_bit();
2222 wake_up_interruptible();
2223 wake_up_interruptible_all();
2224 wake_up_interruptible_nr();
2225 wake_up_interruptible_poll();
2226 wake_up_interruptible_sync();
2227 wake_up_interruptible_sync_poll();
2228 wake_up_locked();
2229 wake_up_locked_poll();
2230 wake_up_nr();
2231 wake_up_poll();
2232 wake_up_process();
2233
2234
2235[!] Note that the memory barriers implied by the sleeper and the waker do _not_
2236order multiple stores before the wake-up with respect to loads of those stored
2237values after the sleeper has called set_current_state(). For instance, if the
2238sleeper does:
2239
2240 set_current_state(TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE);
2241 if (event_indicated)
2242 break;
2243 __set_current_state(TASK_RUNNING);
2244 do_something(my_data);
2245
2246and the waker does:
2247
2248 my_data = value;
2249 event_indicated = 1;
2250 wake_up(&event_wait_queue);
2251
2252there's no guarantee that the change to event_indicated will be perceived by
2253the sleeper as coming after the change to my_data. In such a circumstance, the
2254code on both sides must interpolate its own memory barriers between the
2255separate data accesses. Thus the above sleeper ought to do:
2256
2257 set_current_state(TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE);
2258 if (event_indicated) {
2259 smp_rmb();
2260 do_something(my_data);
2261 }
2262
2263and the waker should do:
2264
2265 my_data = value;
2266 smp_wmb();
2267 event_indicated = 1;
2268 wake_up(&event_wait_queue);
2269
2270
108b42b4
DH
2271MISCELLANEOUS FUNCTIONS
2272-----------------------
2273
2274Other functions that imply barriers:
2275
2276 (*) schedule() and similar imply full memory barriers.
2277
108b42b4 2278
2e4f5382
PZ
2279===================================
2280INTER-CPU ACQUIRING BARRIER EFFECTS
2281===================================
108b42b4
DH
2282
2283On SMP systems locking primitives give a more substantial form of barrier: one
2284that does affect memory access ordering on other CPUs, within the context of
2285conflict on any particular lock.
2286
2287
2e4f5382
PZ
2288ACQUIRES VS MEMORY ACCESSES
2289---------------------------
108b42b4 2290
79afecfa 2291Consider the following: the system has a pair of spinlocks (M) and (Q), and
108b42b4
DH
2292three CPUs; then should the following sequence of events occur:
2293
2294 CPU 1 CPU 2
2295 =============================== ===============================
9af194ce 2296 WRITE_ONCE(*A, a); WRITE_ONCE(*E, e);
2e4f5382 2297 ACQUIRE M ACQUIRE Q
9af194ce
PM
2298 WRITE_ONCE(*B, b); WRITE_ONCE(*F, f);
2299 WRITE_ONCE(*C, c); WRITE_ONCE(*G, g);
2e4f5382 2300 RELEASE M RELEASE Q
9af194ce 2301 WRITE_ONCE(*D, d); WRITE_ONCE(*H, h);
108b42b4 2302
81fc6323 2303Then there is no guarantee as to what order CPU 3 will see the accesses to *A
108b42b4 2304through *H occur in, other than the constraints imposed by the separate locks
0b6fa347 2305on the separate CPUs. It might, for example, see:
108b42b4 2306
2e4f5382 2307 *E, ACQUIRE M, ACQUIRE Q, *G, *C, *F, *A, *B, RELEASE Q, *D, *H, RELEASE M
108b42b4
DH
2308
2309But it won't see any of:
2310
2e4f5382
PZ
2311 *B, *C or *D preceding ACQUIRE M
2312 *A, *B or *C following RELEASE M
2313 *F, *G or *H preceding ACQUIRE Q
2314 *E, *F or *G following RELEASE Q
108b42b4
DH
2315
2316
108b42b4 2317
2e4f5382
PZ
2318ACQUIRES VS I/O ACCESSES
2319------------------------
108b42b4
DH
2320
2321Under certain circumstances (especially involving NUMA), I/O accesses within
2322two spinlocked sections on two different CPUs may be seen as interleaved by the
2323PCI bridge, because the PCI bridge does not necessarily participate in the
2324cache-coherence protocol, and is therefore incapable of issuing the required
2325read memory barriers.
2326
2327For example:
2328
2329 CPU 1 CPU 2
2330 =============================== ===============================
2331 spin_lock(Q)
2332 writel(0, ADDR)
2333 writel(1, DATA);
2334 spin_unlock(Q);
2335 spin_lock(Q);
2336 writel(4, ADDR);
2337 writel(5, DATA);
2338 spin_unlock(Q);
2339
2340may be seen by the PCI bridge as follows:
2341
2342 STORE *ADDR = 0, STORE *ADDR = 4, STORE *DATA = 1, STORE *DATA = 5
2343
2344which would probably cause the hardware to malfunction.
2345
2346
2347What is necessary here is to intervene with an mmiowb() before dropping the
2348spinlock, for example:
2349
2350 CPU 1 CPU 2
2351 =============================== ===============================
2352 spin_lock(Q)
2353 writel(0, ADDR)
2354 writel(1, DATA);
2355 mmiowb();
2356 spin_unlock(Q);
2357 spin_lock(Q);
2358 writel(4, ADDR);
2359 writel(5, DATA);
2360 mmiowb();
2361 spin_unlock(Q);
2362
81fc6323
JP
2363this will ensure that the two stores issued on CPU 1 appear at the PCI bridge
2364before either of the stores issued on CPU 2.
108b42b4
DH
2365
2366
81fc6323
JP
2367Furthermore, following a store by a load from the same device obviates the need
2368for the mmiowb(), because the load forces the store to complete before the load
108b42b4
DH
2369is performed:
2370
2371 CPU 1 CPU 2
2372 =============================== ===============================
2373 spin_lock(Q)
2374 writel(0, ADDR)
2375 a = readl(DATA);
2376 spin_unlock(Q);
2377 spin_lock(Q);
2378 writel(4, ADDR);
2379 b = readl(DATA);
2380 spin_unlock(Q);
2381
2382
0fe397f0 2383See Documentation/driver-api/device-io.rst for more information.
108b42b4
DH
2384
2385
2386=================================
2387WHERE ARE MEMORY BARRIERS NEEDED?
2388=================================
2389
2390Under normal operation, memory operation reordering is generally not going to
2391be a problem as a single-threaded linear piece of code will still appear to
50fa610a 2392work correctly, even if it's in an SMP kernel. There are, however, four
108b42b4
DH
2393circumstances in which reordering definitely _could_ be a problem:
2394
2395 (*) Interprocessor interaction.
2396
2397 (*) Atomic operations.
2398
81fc6323 2399 (*) Accessing devices.
108b42b4
DH
2400
2401 (*) Interrupts.
2402
2403
2404INTERPROCESSOR INTERACTION
2405--------------------------
2406
2407When there's a system with more than one processor, more than one CPU in the
2408system may be working on the same data set at the same time. This can cause
2409synchronisation problems, and the usual way of dealing with them is to use
2410locks. Locks, however, are quite expensive, and so it may be preferable to
2411operate without the use of a lock if at all possible. In such a case
2412operations that affect both CPUs may have to be carefully ordered to prevent
2413a malfunction.
2414
2415Consider, for example, the R/W semaphore slow path. Here a waiting process is
2416queued on the semaphore, by virtue of it having a piece of its stack linked to
2417the semaphore's list of waiting processes:
2418
2419 struct rw_semaphore {
2420 ...
2421 spinlock_t lock;
2422 struct list_head waiters;
2423 };
2424
2425 struct rwsem_waiter {
2426 struct list_head list;
2427 struct task_struct *task;
2428 };
2429
2430To wake up a particular waiter, the up_read() or up_write() functions have to:
2431
2432 (1) read the next pointer from this waiter's record to know as to where the
2433 next waiter record is;
2434
81fc6323 2435 (2) read the pointer to the waiter's task structure;
108b42b4
DH
2436
2437 (3) clear the task pointer to tell the waiter it has been given the semaphore;
2438
2439 (4) call wake_up_process() on the task; and
2440
2441 (5) release the reference held on the waiter's task struct.
2442
81fc6323 2443In other words, it has to perform this sequence of events:
108b42b4
DH
2444
2445 LOAD waiter->list.next;
2446 LOAD waiter->task;
2447 STORE waiter->task;
2448 CALL wakeup
2449 RELEASE task
2450
2451and if any of these steps occur out of order, then the whole thing may
2452malfunction.
2453
2454Once it has queued itself and dropped the semaphore lock, the waiter does not
2455get the lock again; it instead just waits for its task pointer to be cleared
2456before proceeding. Since the record is on the waiter's stack, this means that
2457if the task pointer is cleared _before_ the next pointer in the list is read,
2458another CPU might start processing the waiter and might clobber the waiter's
2459stack before the up*() function has a chance to read the next pointer.
2460
2461Consider then what might happen to the above sequence of events:
2462
2463 CPU 1 CPU 2
2464 =============================== ===============================
2465 down_xxx()
2466 Queue waiter
2467 Sleep
2468 up_yyy()
2469 LOAD waiter->task;
2470 STORE waiter->task;
2471 Woken up by other event
2472 <preempt>
2473 Resume processing
2474 down_xxx() returns
2475 call foo()
2476 foo() clobbers *waiter
2477 </preempt>
2478 LOAD waiter->list.next;
2479 --- OOPS ---
2480
2481This could be dealt with using the semaphore lock, but then the down_xxx()
2482function has to needlessly get the spinlock again after being woken up.
2483
2484The way to deal with this is to insert a general SMP memory barrier:
2485
2486 LOAD waiter->list.next;
2487 LOAD waiter->task;
2488 smp_mb();
2489 STORE waiter->task;
2490 CALL wakeup
2491 RELEASE task
2492
2493In this case, the barrier makes a guarantee that all memory accesses before the
2494barrier will appear to happen before all the memory accesses after the barrier
2495with respect to the other CPUs on the system. It does _not_ guarantee that all
2496the memory accesses before the barrier will be complete by the time the barrier
2497instruction itself is complete.
2498
2499On a UP system - where this wouldn't be a problem - the smp_mb() is just a
2500compiler barrier, thus making sure the compiler emits the instructions in the
6bc39274
DH
2501right order without actually intervening in the CPU. Since there's only one
2502CPU, that CPU's dependency ordering logic will take care of everything else.
108b42b4
DH
2503
2504
2505ATOMIC OPERATIONS
2506-----------------
2507
dbc8700e
DH
2508Whilst they are technically interprocessor interaction considerations, atomic
2509operations are noted specially as some of them imply full memory barriers and
2510some don't, but they're very heavily relied on as a group throughout the
2511kernel.
2512
2513Any atomic operation that modifies some state in memory and returns information
2514about the state (old or new) implies an SMP-conditional general memory barrier
26333576
NP
2515(smp_mb()) on each side of the actual operation (with the exception of
2516explicit lock operations, described later). These include:
108b42b4
DH
2517
2518 xchg();
fb2b5819 2519 atomic_xchg(); atomic_long_xchg();
fb2b5819
PM
2520 atomic_inc_return(); atomic_long_inc_return();
2521 atomic_dec_return(); atomic_long_dec_return();
2522 atomic_add_return(); atomic_long_add_return();
2523 atomic_sub_return(); atomic_long_sub_return();
2524 atomic_inc_and_test(); atomic_long_inc_and_test();
2525 atomic_dec_and_test(); atomic_long_dec_and_test();
2526 atomic_sub_and_test(); atomic_long_sub_and_test();
2527 atomic_add_negative(); atomic_long_add_negative();
dbc8700e
DH
2528 test_and_set_bit();
2529 test_and_clear_bit();
2530 test_and_change_bit();
2531
ed2de9f7
WD
2532 /* when succeeds */
2533 cmpxchg();
2534 atomic_cmpxchg(); atomic_long_cmpxchg();
fb2b5819
PM
2535 atomic_add_unless(); atomic_long_add_unless();
2536
2e4f5382 2537These are used for such things as implementing ACQUIRE-class and RELEASE-class
dbc8700e
DH
2538operations and adjusting reference counters towards object destruction, and as
2539such the implicit memory barrier effects are necessary.
108b42b4 2540
108b42b4 2541
81fc6323 2542The following operations are potential problems as they do _not_ imply memory
2e4f5382 2543barriers, but might be used for implementing such things as RELEASE-class
dbc8700e 2544operations:
108b42b4 2545
dbc8700e 2546 atomic_set();
108b42b4
DH
2547 set_bit();
2548 clear_bit();
2549 change_bit();
dbc8700e
DH
2550
2551With these the appropriate explicit memory barrier should be used if necessary
1b15611e 2552(smp_mb__before_atomic() for instance).
108b42b4
DH
2553
2554
dbc8700e 2555The following also do _not_ imply memory barriers, and so may require explicit
1b15611e 2556memory barriers under some circumstances (smp_mb__before_atomic() for
81fc6323 2557instance):
108b42b4
DH
2558
2559 atomic_add();
2560 atomic_sub();
2561 atomic_inc();
2562 atomic_dec();
2563
2564If they're used for statistics generation, then they probably don't need memory
2565barriers, unless there's a coupling between statistical data.
2566
2567If they're used for reference counting on an object to control its lifetime,
2568they probably don't need memory barriers because either the reference count
2569will be adjusted inside a locked section, or the caller will already hold
2570sufficient references to make the lock, and thus a memory barrier unnecessary.
2571
2572If they're used for constructing a lock of some description, then they probably
2573do need memory barriers as a lock primitive generally has to do things in a
2574specific order.
2575
108b42b4 2576Basically, each usage case has to be carefully considered as to whether memory
dbc8700e
DH
2577barriers are needed or not.
2578
26333576
NP
2579The following operations are special locking primitives:
2580
2581 test_and_set_bit_lock();
2582 clear_bit_unlock();
2583 __clear_bit_unlock();
2584
0b6fa347
SP
2585These implement ACQUIRE-class and RELEASE-class operations. These should be
2586used in preference to other operations when implementing locking primitives,
2587because their implementations can be optimised on many architectures.
26333576 2588
dbc8700e
DH
2589[!] Note that special memory barrier primitives are available for these
2590situations because on some CPUs the atomic instructions used imply full memory
2591barriers, and so barrier instructions are superfluous in conjunction with them,
2592and in such cases the special barrier primitives will be no-ops.
108b42b4 2593
3afadfd9 2594See Documentation/core-api/atomic_ops.rst for more information.
108b42b4
DH
2595
2596
2597ACCESSING DEVICES
2598-----------------
2599
2600Many devices can be memory mapped, and so appear to the CPU as if they're just
2601a set of memory locations. To control such a device, the driver usually has to
2602make the right memory accesses in exactly the right order.
2603
2604However, having a clever CPU or a clever compiler creates a potential problem
2605in that the carefully sequenced accesses in the driver code won't reach the
2606device in the requisite order if the CPU or the compiler thinks it is more
2607efficient to reorder, combine or merge accesses - something that would cause
2608the device to malfunction.
2609
2610Inside of the Linux kernel, I/O should be done through the appropriate accessor
2611routines - such as inb() or writel() - which know how to make such accesses
2612appropriately sequential. Whilst this, for the most part, renders the explicit
2613use of memory barriers unnecessary, there are a couple of situations where they
2614might be needed:
2615
2616 (1) On some systems, I/O stores are not strongly ordered across all CPUs, and
2617 so for _all_ general drivers locks should be used and mmiowb() must be
2618 issued prior to unlocking the critical section.
2619
2620 (2) If the accessor functions are used to refer to an I/O memory window with
2621 relaxed memory access properties, then _mandatory_ memory barriers are
2622 required to enforce ordering.
2623
0fe397f0 2624See Documentation/driver-api/device-io.rst for more information.
108b42b4
DH
2625
2626
2627INTERRUPTS
2628----------
2629
2630A driver may be interrupted by its own interrupt service routine, and thus the
2631two parts of the driver may interfere with each other's attempts to control or
2632access the device.
2633
2634This may be alleviated - at least in part - by disabling local interrupts (a
2635form of locking), such that the critical operations are all contained within
2636the interrupt-disabled section in the driver. Whilst the driver's interrupt
2637routine is executing, the driver's core may not run on the same CPU, and its
2638interrupt is not permitted to happen again until the current interrupt has been
2639handled, thus the interrupt handler does not need to lock against that.
2640
2641However, consider a driver that was talking to an ethernet card that sports an
2642address register and a data register. If that driver's core talks to the card
2643under interrupt-disablement and then the driver's interrupt handler is invoked:
2644
2645 LOCAL IRQ DISABLE
2646 writew(ADDR, 3);
2647 writew(DATA, y);
2648 LOCAL IRQ ENABLE
2649 <interrupt>
2650 writew(ADDR, 4);
2651 q = readw(DATA);
2652 </interrupt>
2653
2654The store to the data register might happen after the second store to the
2655address register if ordering rules are sufficiently relaxed:
2656
2657 STORE *ADDR = 3, STORE *ADDR = 4, STORE *DATA = y, q = LOAD *DATA
2658
2659
2660If ordering rules are relaxed, it must be assumed that accesses done inside an
2661interrupt disabled section may leak outside of it and may interleave with
2662accesses performed in an interrupt - and vice versa - unless implicit or
2663explicit barriers are used.
2664
2665Normally this won't be a problem because the I/O accesses done inside such
2666sections will include synchronous load operations on strictly ordered I/O
0b6fa347 2667registers that form implicit I/O barriers. If this isn't sufficient then an
108b42b4
DH
2668mmiowb() may need to be used explicitly.
2669
2670
2671A similar situation may occur between an interrupt routine and two routines
0b6fa347 2672running on separate CPUs that communicate with each other. If such a case is
108b42b4
DH
2673likely, then interrupt-disabling locks should be used to guarantee ordering.
2674
2675
2676==========================
2677KERNEL I/O BARRIER EFFECTS
2678==========================
2679
2680When accessing I/O memory, drivers should use the appropriate accessor
2681functions:
2682
2683 (*) inX(), outX():
2684
2685 These are intended to talk to I/O space rather than memory space, but
0b6fa347
SP
2686 that's primarily a CPU-specific concept. The i386 and x86_64 processors
2687 do indeed have special I/O space access cycles and instructions, but many
108b42b4
DH
2688 CPUs don't have such a concept.
2689
81fc6323
JP
2690 The PCI bus, amongst others, defines an I/O space concept which - on such
2691 CPUs as i386 and x86_64 - readily maps to the CPU's concept of I/O
6bc39274
DH
2692 space. However, it may also be mapped as a virtual I/O space in the CPU's
2693 memory map, particularly on those CPUs that don't support alternate I/O
2694 spaces.
108b42b4
DH
2695
2696 Accesses to this space may be fully synchronous (as on i386), but
2697 intermediary bridges (such as the PCI host bridge) may not fully honour
2698 that.
2699
2700 They are guaranteed to be fully ordered with respect to each other.
2701
2702 They are not guaranteed to be fully ordered with respect to other types of
2703 memory and I/O operation.
2704
2705 (*) readX(), writeX():
2706
2707 Whether these are guaranteed to be fully ordered and uncombined with
2708 respect to each other on the issuing CPU depends on the characteristics
0b6fa347 2709 defined for the memory window through which they're accessing. On later
108b42b4
DH
2710 i386 architecture machines, for example, this is controlled by way of the
2711 MTRR registers.
2712
81fc6323 2713 Ordinarily, these will be guaranteed to be fully ordered and uncombined,
108b42b4
DH
2714 provided they're not accessing a prefetchable device.
2715
2716 However, intermediary hardware (such as a PCI bridge) may indulge in
2717 deferral if it so wishes; to flush a store, a load from the same location
2718 is preferred[*], but a load from the same device or from configuration
2719 space should suffice for PCI.
2720
2721 [*] NOTE! attempting to load from the same location as was written to may
e0edc78f
IM
2722 cause a malfunction - consider the 16550 Rx/Tx serial registers for
2723 example.
108b42b4
DH
2724
2725 Used with prefetchable I/O memory, an mmiowb() barrier may be required to
2726 force stores to be ordered.
2727
2728 Please refer to the PCI specification for more information on interactions
2729 between PCI transactions.
2730
a8e0aead
WD
2731 (*) readX_relaxed(), writeX_relaxed()
2732
2733 These are similar to readX() and writeX(), but provide weaker memory
0b6fa347 2734 ordering guarantees. Specifically, they do not guarantee ordering with
a8e0aead 2735 respect to normal memory accesses (e.g. DMA buffers) nor do they guarantee
0b6fa347
SP
2736 ordering with respect to LOCK or UNLOCK operations. If the latter is
2737 required, an mmiowb() barrier can be used. Note that relaxed accesses to
a8e0aead
WD
2738 the same peripheral are guaranteed to be ordered with respect to each
2739 other.
108b42b4
DH
2740
2741 (*) ioreadX(), iowriteX()
2742
81fc6323 2743 These will perform appropriately for the type of access they're actually
108b42b4
DH
2744 doing, be it inX()/outX() or readX()/writeX().
2745
2746
2747========================================
2748ASSUMED MINIMUM EXECUTION ORDERING MODEL
2749========================================
2750
2751It has to be assumed that the conceptual CPU is weakly-ordered but that it will
2752maintain the appearance of program causality with respect to itself. Some CPUs
2753(such as i386 or x86_64) are more constrained than others (such as powerpc or
2754frv), and so the most relaxed case (namely DEC Alpha) must be assumed outside
2755of arch-specific code.
2756
2757This means that it must be considered that the CPU will execute its instruction
2758stream in any order it feels like - or even in parallel - provided that if an
81fc6323 2759instruction in the stream depends on an earlier instruction, then that
108b42b4
DH
2760earlier instruction must be sufficiently complete[*] before the later
2761instruction may proceed; in other words: provided that the appearance of
2762causality is maintained.
2763
2764 [*] Some instructions have more than one effect - such as changing the
2765 condition codes, changing registers or changing memory - and different
2766 instructions may depend on different effects.
2767
2768A CPU may also discard any instruction sequence that winds up having no
2769ultimate effect. For example, if two adjacent instructions both load an
2770immediate value into the same register, the first may be discarded.
2771
2772
2773Similarly, it has to be assumed that compiler might reorder the instruction
2774stream in any way it sees fit, again provided the appearance of causality is
2775maintained.
2776
2777
2778============================
2779THE EFFECTS OF THE CPU CACHE
2780============================
2781
2782The way cached memory operations are perceived across the system is affected to
2783a certain extent by the caches that lie between CPUs and memory, and by the
2784memory coherence system that maintains the consistency of state in the system.
2785
2786As far as the way a CPU interacts with another part of the system through the
2787caches goes, the memory system has to include the CPU's caches, and memory
2788barriers for the most part act at the interface between the CPU and its cache
2789(memory barriers logically act on the dotted line in the following diagram):
2790
2791 <--- CPU ---> : <----------- Memory ----------->
2792 :
2793 +--------+ +--------+ : +--------+ +-----------+
2794 | | | | : | | | | +--------+
e0edc78f
IM
2795 | CPU | | Memory | : | CPU | | | | |
2796 | Core |--->| Access |----->| Cache |<-->| | | |
108b42b4 2797 | | | Queue | : | | | |--->| Memory |
e0edc78f
IM
2798 | | | | : | | | | | |
2799 +--------+ +--------+ : +--------+ | | | |
108b42b4
DH
2800 : | Cache | +--------+
2801 : | Coherency |
2802 : | Mechanism | +--------+
2803 +--------+ +--------+ : +--------+ | | | |
2804 | | | | : | | | | | |
2805 | CPU | | Memory | : | CPU | | |--->| Device |
e0edc78f
IM
2806 | Core |--->| Access |----->| Cache |<-->| | | |
2807 | | | Queue | : | | | | | |
108b42b4
DH
2808 | | | | : | | | | +--------+
2809 +--------+ +--------+ : +--------+ +-----------+
2810 :
2811 :
2812
2813Although any particular load or store may not actually appear outside of the
2814CPU that issued it since it may have been satisfied within the CPU's own cache,
2815it will still appear as if the full memory access had taken place as far as the
2816other CPUs are concerned since the cache coherency mechanisms will migrate the
2817cacheline over to the accessing CPU and propagate the effects upon conflict.
2818
2819The CPU core may execute instructions in any order it deems fit, provided the
2820expected program causality appears to be maintained. Some of the instructions
2821generate load and store operations which then go into the queue of memory
2822accesses to be performed. The core may place these in the queue in any order
2823it wishes, and continue execution until it is forced to wait for an instruction
2824to complete.
2825
2826What memory barriers are concerned with is controlling the order in which
2827accesses cross from the CPU side of things to the memory side of things, and
2828the order in which the effects are perceived to happen by the other observers
2829in the system.
2830
2831[!] Memory barriers are _not_ needed within a given CPU, as CPUs always see
2832their own loads and stores as if they had happened in program order.
2833
2834[!] MMIO or other device accesses may bypass the cache system. This depends on
2835the properties of the memory window through which devices are accessed and/or
2836the use of any special device communication instructions the CPU may have.
2837
2838
2839CACHE COHERENCY
2840---------------
2841
2842Life isn't quite as simple as it may appear above, however: for while the
2843caches are expected to be coherent, there's no guarantee that that coherency
2844will be ordered. This means that whilst changes made on one CPU will
2845eventually become visible on all CPUs, there's no guarantee that they will
2846become apparent in the same order on those other CPUs.
2847
2848
81fc6323
JP
2849Consider dealing with a system that has a pair of CPUs (1 & 2), each of which
2850has a pair of parallel data caches (CPU 1 has A/B, and CPU 2 has C/D):
108b42b4
DH
2851
2852 :
2853 : +--------+
2854 : +---------+ | |
2855 +--------+ : +--->| Cache A |<------->| |
2856 | | : | +---------+ | |
2857 | CPU 1 |<---+ | |
2858 | | : | +---------+ | |
2859 +--------+ : +--->| Cache B |<------->| |
2860 : +---------+ | |
2861 : | Memory |
2862 : +---------+ | System |
2863 +--------+ : +--->| Cache C |<------->| |
2864 | | : | +---------+ | |
2865 | CPU 2 |<---+ | |
2866 | | : | +---------+ | |
2867 +--------+ : +--->| Cache D |<------->| |
2868 : +---------+ | |
2869 : +--------+
2870 :
2871
2872Imagine the system has the following properties:
2873
2874 (*) an odd-numbered cache line may be in cache A, cache C or it may still be
2875 resident in memory;
2876
2877 (*) an even-numbered cache line may be in cache B, cache D or it may still be
2878 resident in memory;
2879
2880 (*) whilst the CPU core is interrogating one cache, the other cache may be
2881 making use of the bus to access the rest of the system - perhaps to
2882 displace a dirty cacheline or to do a speculative load;
2883
2884 (*) each cache has a queue of operations that need to be applied to that cache
2885 to maintain coherency with the rest of the system;
2886
2887 (*) the coherency queue is not flushed by normal loads to lines already
2888 present in the cache, even though the contents of the queue may
81fc6323 2889 potentially affect those loads.
108b42b4
DH
2890
2891Imagine, then, that two writes are made on the first CPU, with a write barrier
2892between them to guarantee that they will appear to reach that CPU's caches in
2893the requisite order:
2894
2895 CPU 1 CPU 2 COMMENT
2896 =============== =============== =======================================
2897 u == 0, v == 1 and p == &u, q == &u
2898 v = 2;
81fc6323 2899 smp_wmb(); Make sure change to v is visible before
108b42b4
DH
2900 change to p
2901 <A:modify v=2> v is now in cache A exclusively
2902 p = &v;
2903 <B:modify p=&v> p is now in cache B exclusively
2904
2905The write memory barrier forces the other CPUs in the system to perceive that
2906the local CPU's caches have apparently been updated in the correct order. But
81fc6323 2907now imagine that the second CPU wants to read those values:
108b42b4
DH
2908
2909 CPU 1 CPU 2 COMMENT
2910 =============== =============== =======================================
2911 ...
2912 q = p;
2913 x = *q;
2914
81fc6323 2915The above pair of reads may then fail to happen in the expected order, as the
108b42b4
DH
2916cacheline holding p may get updated in one of the second CPU's caches whilst
2917the update to the cacheline holding v is delayed in the other of the second
2918CPU's caches by some other cache event:
2919
2920 CPU 1 CPU 2 COMMENT
2921 =============== =============== =======================================
2922 u == 0, v == 1 and p == &u, q == &u
2923 v = 2;
2924 smp_wmb();
2925 <A:modify v=2> <C:busy>
2926 <C:queue v=2>
79afecfa 2927 p = &v; q = p;
108b42b4
DH
2928 <D:request p>
2929 <B:modify p=&v> <D:commit p=&v>
e0edc78f 2930 <D:read p>
108b42b4
DH
2931 x = *q;
2932 <C:read *q> Reads from v before v updated in cache
2933 <C:unbusy>
2934 <C:commit v=2>
2935
2936Basically, whilst both cachelines will be updated on CPU 2 eventually, there's
2937no guarantee that, without intervention, the order of update will be the same
2938as that committed on CPU 1.
2939
2940
2941To intervene, we need to interpolate a data dependency barrier or a read
2942barrier between the loads. This will force the cache to commit its coherency
2943queue before processing any further requests:
2944
2945 CPU 1 CPU 2 COMMENT
2946 =============== =============== =======================================
2947 u == 0, v == 1 and p == &u, q == &u
2948 v = 2;
2949 smp_wmb();
2950 <A:modify v=2> <C:busy>
2951 <C:queue v=2>
3fda982c 2952 p = &v; q = p;
108b42b4
DH
2953 <D:request p>
2954 <B:modify p=&v> <D:commit p=&v>
e0edc78f 2955 <D:read p>
108b42b4
DH
2956 smp_read_barrier_depends()
2957 <C:unbusy>
2958 <C:commit v=2>
2959 x = *q;
2960 <C:read *q> Reads from v after v updated in cache
2961
2962
2963This sort of problem can be encountered on DEC Alpha processors as they have a
2964split cache that improves performance by making better use of the data bus.
2965Whilst most CPUs do imply a data dependency barrier on the read when a memory
2966access depends on a read, not all do, so it may not be relied on.
2967
2968Other CPUs may also have split caches, but must coordinate between the various
3f6dee9b 2969cachelets for normal memory accesses. The semantics of the Alpha removes the
81fc6323 2970need for coordination in the absence of memory barriers.
108b42b4
DH
2971
2972
2973CACHE COHERENCY VS DMA
2974----------------------
2975
2976Not all systems maintain cache coherency with respect to devices doing DMA. In
2977such cases, a device attempting DMA may obtain stale data from RAM because
2978dirty cache lines may be resident in the caches of various CPUs, and may not
2979have been written back to RAM yet. To deal with this, the appropriate part of
2980the kernel must flush the overlapping bits of cache on each CPU (and maybe
2981invalidate them as well).
2982
2983In addition, the data DMA'd to RAM by a device may be overwritten by dirty
2984cache lines being written back to RAM from a CPU's cache after the device has
81fc6323
JP
2985installed its own data, or cache lines present in the CPU's cache may simply
2986obscure the fact that RAM has been updated, until at such time as the cacheline
2987is discarded from the CPU's cache and reloaded. To deal with this, the
2988appropriate part of the kernel must invalidate the overlapping bits of the
108b42b4
DH
2989cache on each CPU.
2990
2991See Documentation/cachetlb.txt for more information on cache management.
2992
2993
2994CACHE COHERENCY VS MMIO
2995-----------------------
2996
2997Memory mapped I/O usually takes place through memory locations that are part of
81fc6323 2998a window in the CPU's memory space that has different properties assigned than
108b42b4
DH
2999the usual RAM directed window.
3000
3001Amongst these properties is usually the fact that such accesses bypass the
3002caching entirely and go directly to the device buses. This means MMIO accesses
3003may, in effect, overtake accesses to cached memory that were emitted earlier.
3004A memory barrier isn't sufficient in such a case, but rather the cache must be
3005flushed between the cached memory write and the MMIO access if the two are in
3006any way dependent.
3007
3008
3009=========================
3010THE THINGS CPUS GET UP TO
3011=========================
3012
3013A programmer might take it for granted that the CPU will perform memory
81fc6323 3014operations in exactly the order specified, so that if the CPU is, for example,
108b42b4
DH
3015given the following piece of code to execute:
3016
9af194ce
PM
3017 a = READ_ONCE(*A);
3018 WRITE_ONCE(*B, b);
3019 c = READ_ONCE(*C);
3020 d = READ_ONCE(*D);
3021 WRITE_ONCE(*E, e);
108b42b4 3022
81fc6323 3023they would then expect that the CPU will complete the memory operation for each
108b42b4
DH
3024instruction before moving on to the next one, leading to a definite sequence of
3025operations as seen by external observers in the system:
3026
3027 LOAD *A, STORE *B, LOAD *C, LOAD *D, STORE *E.
3028
3029
3030Reality is, of course, much messier. With many CPUs and compilers, the above
3031assumption doesn't hold because:
3032
3033 (*) loads are more likely to need to be completed immediately to permit
3034 execution progress, whereas stores can often be deferred without a
3035 problem;
3036
3037 (*) loads may be done speculatively, and the result discarded should it prove
3038 to have been unnecessary;
3039
81fc6323
JP
3040 (*) loads may be done speculatively, leading to the result having been fetched
3041 at the wrong time in the expected sequence of events;
108b42b4
DH
3042
3043 (*) the order of the memory accesses may be rearranged to promote better use
3044 of the CPU buses and caches;
3045
3046 (*) loads and stores may be combined to improve performance when talking to
3047 memory or I/O hardware that can do batched accesses of adjacent locations,
3048 thus cutting down on transaction setup costs (memory and PCI devices may
3049 both be able to do this); and
3050
3051 (*) the CPU's data cache may affect the ordering, and whilst cache-coherency
3052 mechanisms may alleviate this - once the store has actually hit the cache
3053 - there's no guarantee that the coherency management will be propagated in
3054 order to other CPUs.
3055
3056So what another CPU, say, might actually observe from the above piece of code
3057is:
3058
3059 LOAD *A, ..., LOAD {*C,*D}, STORE *E, STORE *B
3060
3061 (Where "LOAD {*C,*D}" is a combined load)
3062
3063
3064However, it is guaranteed that a CPU will be self-consistent: it will see its
3065_own_ accesses appear to be correctly ordered, without the need for a memory
3066barrier. For instance with the following code:
3067
9af194ce
PM
3068 U = READ_ONCE(*A);
3069 WRITE_ONCE(*A, V);
3070 WRITE_ONCE(*A, W);
3071 X = READ_ONCE(*A);
3072 WRITE_ONCE(*A, Y);
3073 Z = READ_ONCE(*A);
108b42b4
DH
3074
3075and assuming no intervention by an external influence, it can be assumed that
3076the final result will appear to be:
3077
3078 U == the original value of *A
3079 X == W
3080 Z == Y
3081 *A == Y
3082
3083The code above may cause the CPU to generate the full sequence of memory
3084accesses:
3085
3086 U=LOAD *A, STORE *A=V, STORE *A=W, X=LOAD *A, STORE *A=Y, Z=LOAD *A
3087
3088in that order, but, without intervention, the sequence may have almost any
9af194ce
PM
3089combination of elements combined or discarded, provided the program's view
3090of the world remains consistent. Note that READ_ONCE() and WRITE_ONCE()
3091are -not- optional in the above example, as there are architectures
3092where a given CPU might reorder successive loads to the same location.
3093On such architectures, READ_ONCE() and WRITE_ONCE() do whatever is
3094necessary to prevent this, for example, on Itanium the volatile casts
3095used by READ_ONCE() and WRITE_ONCE() cause GCC to emit the special ld.acq
3096and st.rel instructions (respectively) that prevent such reordering.
108b42b4
DH
3097
3098The compiler may also combine, discard or defer elements of the sequence before
3099the CPU even sees them.
3100
3101For instance:
3102
3103 *A = V;
3104 *A = W;
3105
3106may be reduced to:
3107
3108 *A = W;
3109
9af194ce 3110since, without either a write barrier or an WRITE_ONCE(), it can be
2ecf8101 3111assumed that the effect of the storage of V to *A is lost. Similarly:
108b42b4
DH
3112
3113 *A = Y;
3114 Z = *A;
3115
9af194ce
PM
3116may, without a memory barrier or an READ_ONCE() and WRITE_ONCE(), be
3117reduced to:
108b42b4
DH
3118
3119 *A = Y;
3120 Z = Y;
3121
3122and the LOAD operation never appear outside of the CPU.
3123
3124
3125AND THEN THERE'S THE ALPHA
3126--------------------------
3127
3128The DEC Alpha CPU is one of the most relaxed CPUs there is. Not only that,
3129some versions of the Alpha CPU have a split data cache, permitting them to have
81fc6323 3130two semantically-related cache lines updated at separate times. This is where
108b42b4
DH
3131the data dependency barrier really becomes necessary as this synchronises both
3132caches with the memory coherence system, thus making it seem like pointer
3133changes vs new data occur in the right order.
3134
81fc6323 3135The Alpha defines the Linux kernel's memory barrier model.
108b42b4
DH
3136
3137See the subsection on "Cache Coherency" above.
3138
0b6fa347 3139
6a65d263 3140VIRTUAL MACHINE GUESTS
3dbf0913 3141----------------------
6a65d263
MT
3142
3143Guests running within virtual machines might be affected by SMP effects even if
3144the guest itself is compiled without SMP support. This is an artifact of
3145interfacing with an SMP host while running an UP kernel. Using mandatory
3146barriers for this use-case would be possible but is often suboptimal.
3147
3148To handle this case optimally, low-level virt_mb() etc macros are available.
3149These have the same effect as smp_mb() etc when SMP is enabled, but generate
0b6fa347 3150identical code for SMP and non-SMP systems. For example, virtual machine guests
6a65d263
MT
3151should use virt_mb() rather than smp_mb() when synchronizing against a
3152(possibly SMP) host.
3153
3154These are equivalent to smp_mb() etc counterparts in all other respects,
3155in particular, they do not control MMIO effects: to control
3156MMIO effects, use mandatory barriers.
108b42b4 3157
0b6fa347 3158
90fddabf
DH
3159============
3160EXAMPLE USES
3161============
3162
3163CIRCULAR BUFFERS
3164----------------
3165
3166Memory barriers can be used to implement circular buffering without the need
3167of a lock to serialise the producer with the consumer. See:
3168
3169 Documentation/circular-buffers.txt
3170
3171for details.
3172
3173
108b42b4
DH
3174==========
3175REFERENCES
3176==========
3177
3178Alpha AXP Architecture Reference Manual, Second Edition (Sites & Witek,
3179Digital Press)
3180 Chapter 5.2: Physical Address Space Characteristics
3181 Chapter 5.4: Caches and Write Buffers
3182 Chapter 5.5: Data Sharing
3183 Chapter 5.6: Read/Write Ordering
3184
3185AMD64 Architecture Programmer's Manual Volume 2: System Programming
3186 Chapter 7.1: Memory-Access Ordering
3187 Chapter 7.4: Buffering and Combining Memory Writes
3188
3189IA-32 Intel Architecture Software Developer's Manual, Volume 3:
3190System Programming Guide
3191 Chapter 7.1: Locked Atomic Operations
3192 Chapter 7.2: Memory Ordering
3193 Chapter 7.4: Serializing Instructions
3194
3195The SPARC Architecture Manual, Version 9
3196 Chapter 8: Memory Models
3197 Appendix D: Formal Specification of the Memory Models
3198 Appendix J: Programming with the Memory Models
3199
3200UltraSPARC Programmer Reference Manual
3201 Chapter 5: Memory Accesses and Cacheability
3202 Chapter 15: Sparc-V9 Memory Models
3203
3204UltraSPARC III Cu User's Manual
3205 Chapter 9: Memory Models
3206
3207UltraSPARC IIIi Processor User's Manual
3208 Chapter 8: Memory Models
3209
3210UltraSPARC Architecture 2005
3211 Chapter 9: Memory
3212 Appendix D: Formal Specifications of the Memory Models
3213
3214UltraSPARC T1 Supplement to the UltraSPARC Architecture 2005
3215 Chapter 8: Memory Models
3216 Appendix F: Caches and Cache Coherency
3217
3218Solaris Internals, Core Kernel Architecture, p63-68:
3219 Chapter 3.3: Hardware Considerations for Locks and
3220 Synchronization
3221
3222Unix Systems for Modern Architectures, Symmetric Multiprocessing and Caching
3223for Kernel Programmers:
3224 Chapter 13: Other Memory Models
3225
3226Intel Itanium Architecture Software Developer's Manual: Volume 1:
3227 Section 2.6: Speculation
3228 Section 4.4: Memory Access