Re: why are some atomic_t's not volatile, while most are?

From: Jerry Jiang
Date: Tue Aug 07 2007 - 22:32:44 EST


On Tue, 07 Aug 2007 16:32:23 -0400
Chris Snook <csnook@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> > It seems like this would fall more into the case of the arch providing
> > guarantees when using locked/atomic access rather than anything
> > SMP-related, no?.
>
> But if you're not using SMP, the only way you get a race condition is if your
> compiler is reordering instructions that have side effects which are invisible
> to the compiler. This can happen with MMIO registers, but it's not an issue
> with an atomic_t we're declaring in real memory.
>

Under non-SMP, some compilers would reordering instructions as they think
and C standard informally guarantees all operations on volatile data
are executed in the sequence in which they appear in the source code,
right?

So no reordering happens with volatile, right?

-- Jerry

> -- Chris
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