Re: Compilers and RCU readers: Once more unto the breach!

From: Paul E. McKenney
Date: Tue May 19 2015 - 22:34:23 EST


On Tue, May 19, 2015 at 06:57:02PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> On Tue, May 19, 2015 at 5:55 PM, Paul E. McKenney
> <paulmck@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/RCU/consume.2015.05.18a.pdf
>
> >From a very quick read-through, the restricted dependency chain in 7.9
> seems to be reasonable, and essentially covers "thats' what hardware
> gives us anyway", making compiler writers happy.
>
> I would clarify the language somewhat:
>
> - it says that the result of a cast of a pointer is a dependency. You
> need to make an exception for casting to bool, methinks (because
> that's effectively just a test-against-NULL, which you later describe
> as terminating the dependency).
>
> Maybe get rid of the "any type", and just limit it to casts to
> types of size intptr_t, ie ones that don't drop significant bits. All
> the other rules talk about [u]intptr_t anyway.

Excellent point! I now say:

If a pointer is part of a dependency chain, then casting it
(either explicitly or implicitly) to any pointer-sized type
extends the chain to the result.

If this approach works out, the people in the Core Working Group will
come up with alternative language-lawyer-proof wording, but this informal
version will hopefully do for the moment.

> - you clarify that the trivial "& 0" and "| ~0" kill the dependency
> chain, but if you really want to be a stickler, you might want to
> extend it to a few more cases. Things like "& 1" (to extract a tag
> from the lot bit of a tagged pointer) should likely also drop the
> dependency, since a compiler would commonly end up using the end
> result as a conditional even if the code was written to then use
> casting etc to look like a dereference.

Ah, how about the following?

If a value of type intptr_t or uintptr_t is part of a dependency
chain, and if that value is one of the operands to an & or |
infix operator whose result has too few or too many bits set,
then the resulting value will not be part of any dependency
chain. For example, on a 64-bit system, if p is part of a
dependency chain, then (p & 0x7) provides just the tag bits,
and normally cannot even be legally dereferenced. Similarly,
(p | ~0) normally cannot be legally dereferenced.

> - the "you can add/subtract integral values" still opens you up to
> language lawyers claiming "(char *)ptr - (intptr_t)ptr" preserving the
> dependency, which it clearly doesn't. But language-lawyering it does,
> since all those operations (cast to pointer, cast to integer,
> subtracting an integer) claim to be dependency-preserving operations.

My thought was that the result of "(char *)ptr - (intptr_t)ptr" is a
NULL pointer in most environments, and dereferencing a NULL pointer
is undefined behavior. So it becomes irrelevant whether or not the
NULL pointer carries a dependency.

There are some stranger examples, such as "(char *)ptr - ((intptr_t)ptr)/7",
but in that case, if the resulting pointer happens by chance to reference
valid memory, I believe a dependency would still be carried. Of course,
if you are producing code like that, I am guessing that dependencies are
the very least of your concerns.

However, I will give this some more thought.

> So I think you want to limit the logical operators to things that
> don't mask off too many bits, and you should probably limit the
> add/subtract operations some way (maybe specify that the integer value
> you add/subtract cannot be related to the pointer). But I think
> limiting it to mostly pointer ops (and a _few_ integer operations to
> do offsets and remove tag bits) is otherwise a good approach.

Glad you mostly like it! ;-)

Thanx, Paul

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