Re: [PATCH] It may not be assumed that wake_up(), finish_wait()and co. imply a memory barrier

From: Paul E. McKenney
Date: Fri Apr 24 2009 - 13:43:19 EST


On Fri, Apr 24, 2009 at 07:08:30PM +0200, Oleg Nesterov wrote:
> On 04/24, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> >
> > One question, assuming that this documentation intends to guide the
> > reader on where to put the locking and/or memory-barrier primitives...
> >
> > Suppose we have the following sequence of events:
> >
> > 1. The waiter does "set_current_state(TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE);".
> > This implies a full memory barrier.
> >
> > 2. The awakener updates some shared state.
> >
> > 3. The awakener does "event_indicated = 1;".
> >
> > 4. The waiter does "if (event_indicated)", and, finding that
> > the event has in fact been indicated, does "break".
> >
> > 5. The waiter accesses the shared state set in #2 above.
> >
> > 6. Some time later, the awakener does "wake_up(&event_wait_queue);"
> > This does not awaken anyone, so no memory barrier.
> >
> > Because there is no memory barrier between #2 and #3, reordering by
> > either the compiler or the CPU might cause the awakener to update the
> > event_indicated flag in #3 -before- completing its update of shared
> > state in #2. Less likely (but still possible) optimizations might
> > cause the waiter to access the shared state in #5 before checking
> > the event_indicated flag in #4.
>
> Do you mean something like
>
> awakener:
>
> DATA = value;
> DATA_IS_READY = true;
> wake_up(wq);
>
>
> waiter:
>
> set_current_state(UNINTERRUPTIBLE);
> if (DATA_IS_READY)
> do_something(DATA);
>
> ?
>
> Imho, the code above is just buggy and should be ignored by documentation ;)
>
> Or do I miss your point?

I was hoping that this sort of code might be actively discouraged by the
documentation. ;-)

Thanx, Paul
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