Re: [PATCH 0/24] make atomic_read() behave consistently across allarchitectures

From: Satyam Sharma
Date: Sat Aug 18 2007 - 09:24:48 EST




On Fri, 17 Aug 2007, Linus Torvalds wrote:

> On Sat, 18 Aug 2007, Satyam Sharma wrote:
> >
> > No code does (or would do, or should do):
> >
> > x.counter++;
> >
> > on an "atomic_t x;" anyway.
>
> That's just an example of a general problem.
>
> No, you don't use "x.counter++". But you *do* use
>
> if (atomic_read(&x) <= 1)
>
> and loading into a register is stupid and pointless, when you could just
> do it as a regular memory-operand to the cmp instruction.

True, but that makes this a bad/poor code generation issue with the
compiler, not something that affects the _correctness_ of atomic ops if
"volatile" is used for that counter object (as was suggested), because
we'd always use the atomic_inc() etc primitives to do increments, which
are always (should be!) implemented to be atomic.


> And as far as the compiler is concerned, the problem is the 100% same:
> combining operations with the volatile memop.
>
> The fact is, a compiler that thinks that
>
> movl mem,reg
> cmpl $val,reg
>
> is any better than
>
> cmpl $val,mem
>
> is just not a very good compiler.

Absolutely, this is definitely a bug report worth opening with gcc. And
what you've said to explain this previously sounds definitely correct --
seeing "volatile" for any access does appear to just scare the hell out
of gcc and makes it generate such (poor) code.


Satyam
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