Fix: use atomic load memory_order_consume for rcu_dereference on C11/C++11
authorMathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Fri, 16 Apr 2021 20:22:54 +0000 (16:22 -0400)
committerMathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Mon, 19 Apr 2021 17:21:15 +0000 (13:21 -0400)
Using volatile accesses for rcu_dereference may cause compiler LTO to
generate incorrectly ordered code starting from C11/C++11.

Link: https://lists.lttng.org/pipermail/lttng-dev/2021-April/029937.html
Signed-off-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
include/urcu/static/pointer.h

index 732f8c078d7dcf585bde531cdacd51154818a211..891daed2994ba8a58c0b7f1bdfe10d886d37f91c 100644 (file)
@@ -49,14 +49,29 @@ extern "C" {
  * Inserts memory barriers on architectures that require them (currently only
  * Alpha) and documents which pointers are protected by RCU.
  *
- * The compiler memory barrier in CMM_LOAD_SHARED() ensures that value-speculative
- * optimizations (e.g. VSS: Value Speculation Scheduling) does not perform the
- * data read before the pointer read by speculating the value of the pointer.
- * Correct ordering is ensured because the pointer is read as a volatile access.
- * This acts as a global side-effect operation, which forbids reordering of
- * dependent memory operations. Note that such concern about dependency-breaking
- * optimizations will eventually be taken care of by the "memory_order_consume"
- * addition to forthcoming C++ standard.
+ * With C standards prior to C11/C++11, the compiler memory barrier in
+ * CMM_LOAD_SHARED() ensures that value-speculative optimizations (e.g.
+ * VSS: Value Speculation Scheduling) does not perform the data read
+ * before the pointer read by speculating the value of the pointer.
+ * Correct ordering is ensured because the pointer is read as a volatile
+ * access. This acts as a global side-effect operation, which forbids
+ * reordering of dependent memory operations.
+ *
+ * With C standards C11/C++11, concerns about dependency-breaking
+ * optimizations are taken care of by the "memory_order_consume" atomic
+ * load.
+ *
+ * By defining URCU_DEREFERENCE_USE_VOLATILE, the user requires use of
+ * volatile access to implement rcu_dereference rather than
+ * memory_order_consume load from the C11/C++11 standards.
+ *
+ * This may improve performance on weakly-ordered architectures where
+ * the compiler implements memory_order_consume as a
+ * memory_order_acquire, which is stricter than required by the
+ * standard.
+ *
+ * Note that using volatile accesses for rcu_dereference may cause
+ * LTO to generate incorrectly ordered code starting from C11/C++11.
  *
  * Should match rcu_assign_pointer() or rcu_xchg_pointer().
  *
@@ -64,10 +79,31 @@ extern "C" {
  * meets the 10-line criterion in LGPL, allowing this function to be
  * expanded directly in non-LGPL code.
  */
+
+#ifdef URCU_DEREFERENCE_USE_VOLATILE
+# define __rcu_dereference(p)  CMM_LOAD_SHARED(p)
+#else
+# if defined (__cplusplus)
+#  if __cplusplus >= 201103L
+#   include <atomic>
+#   define __rcu_dereference(p)        ((std::atomic<__typeof__(p)>)(p)).load(std::memory_order_consume)
+#  else
+#   define __rcu_dereference(p)        CMM_LOAD_SHARED(x)
+#  endif
+# else
+#  if (defined (__STDC_VERSION__) && __STDC_VERSION__ >= 201112L)
+#   include <stdatomic.h>
+#   define __rcu_dereference(p)        atomic_load_explicit(&(p), memory_order_consume)
+#  else
+#   define __rcu_dereference(p)        CMM_LOAD_SHARED(p)
+#  endif
+# endif
+#endif
+
 #define _rcu_dereference(p)                                            \
                                __extension__                           \
                                ({                                      \
-                               __typeof__(p) _________p1 = CMM_LOAD_SHARED(p); \
+                               __typeof__(p) _________p1 = __rcu_dereference(p); \
                                cmm_smp_read_barrier_depends();         \
                                (_________p1);                          \
                                })
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