Re: [GIT PULL rcu/next] RCU commits for 4.13

From: Boqun Feng
Date: Wed Jun 28 2017 - 23:25:11 EST


On Wed, Jun 28, 2017 at 05:45:56PM -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 28, 2017 at 05:05:46PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> > On Wed, Jun 28, 2017 at 4:54 PM, Paul E. McKenney
> > <paulmck@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > > Linus, are you dead-set against defining spin_unlock_wait() to be
> > > spin_lock + spin_unlock? For example, is the current x86 implementation
> > > of spin_unlock_wait() really a non-negotiable hard requirement? Or
> > > would you be willing to live with the spin_lock + spin_unlock semantics?
> >
> > So I think the "same as spin_lock + spin_unlock" semantics are kind of insane.
> >
> > One of the issues is that the same as "spin_lock + spin_unlock" is
> > basically now architecture-dependent. Is it really the
> > architecture-dependent ordering you want to define this as?
> >
> > So I just think it's a *bad* definition. If somebody wants something
> > that is exactly equivalent to spin_lock+spin_unlock, then dammit, just
> > do *THAT*. It's completely pointless to me to define
> > spin_unlock_wait() in those terms.
> >
> > And if it's not equivalent to the *architecture* behavior of
> > spin_lock+spin_unlock, then I think it should be descibed in terms
> > that aren't about the architecture implementation (so you shouldn't
> > describe it as "spin_lock+spin_unlock", you should describe it in
> > terms of memory barrier semantics.
> >
> > And if we really have to use the spin_lock+spinunlock semantics for
> > this, then what is the advantage of spin_unlock_wait at all, if it
> > doesn't fundamentally avoid some locking overhead of just taking the
> > spinlock in the first place?
> >
> > And if we can't use a cheaper model, maybe we should just get rid of
> > it entirely?
> >
> > Finally: if the memory barrier semantics are exactly the same, and
> > it's purely about avoiding some nasty contention case, I think the
> > concept is broken - contention is almost never an actual issue, and if
> > it is, the problem is much deeper than spin_unlock_wait().
>
> All good points!
>
> I must confess that your sentence about getting rid of spin_unlock_wait()
> entirely does resonate with me, especially given the repeated bouts of
> "but what -exactly- is it -supposed- to do?" over the past 18 months
> or so. ;-)
>
> Just for completeness, here is a list of the definitions that have been
> put forward, just in case it inspires someone to come up with something
> better:
>
> 1. spin_unlock_wait() provides only acquire semantics. Code
> placed after the spin_unlock_wait() will see the effects of
> all previous critical sections, but there is no guarantees for
> subsequent critical sections. The x86 implementation provides
> this. I -think- that the ARM and PowerPC implementations could
> get rid of a memory-barrier instruction and still provide this.
>

Yes, except we still need a smp_lwsync() in powerpc's
spin_unlock_wait().

And FWIW, the two smp_mb()s in spin_unlock_wait() on PowerPC exist there
just because when Peter worked on commit 726328d92a42, we decided to let
the fix for spin_unlock_wait() on PowerPC(i.e. commit 6262db7c088bb ) go
into the tree first to avoid some possible conflicts. And.. I forgot to
do the clean-up for an aquire-semantics spin_unlock_wait() later.. ;-)

I could send out the necessary fix once we have a conclusion for the
semantics part.

Regards,
Boqun

> 2. As #1 above, but a "smp_mb();spin_unlock_wait();" provides the
> additional guarantee that code placed before this construct is
> seen by all subsequent critical sections. The x86 implementation
> provides this, as do ARM and PowerPC, but it is not clear that all
> architectures do. As Alan noted, this is an extremely unnatural
> definition for the current memory model.
>
> 3. [ Just for completeness, yes, this is off the table! ] The
> spin_unlock_wait() has the same semantics as a spin_lock()
> followed immediately by a spin_unlock().
>
> 4. spin_unlock_wait() is analogous to synchronize_rcu(), where
> spin_unlock_wait()'s "read-side critical sections" are the lock's
> normal critical sections. This was the first definition I heard
> that made any sense to me, but it turns out to be equivalent
> to #3. Thus, also off the table.
>
> Does anyone know of any other possible definitions?
>
> Thanx, Paul
>

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