rust: sync: add CondVar::notify_sync

Wake up another thread synchronously.

This method behaves like `notify_one`, except that it hints to the
scheduler that the current thread is about to go to sleep, so it should
schedule the target thread on the same CPU.

This is used by Rust Binder as a performance optimization. When sending
a transaction to a different process, we usually know which thread will
handle it, so we can schedule that thread for execution next on this
CPU for better cache locality.

Reviewed-by: Benno Lossin <benno.lossin@proton.me>
Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <yakoyoku@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tiago Lam <tiagolam@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Boqun Feng <boqun.feng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240108-rb-new-condvar-methods-v4-1-88e0c871cc05@google.com
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
This commit is contained in:
Alice Ryhl 2024-01-08 14:49:57 +00:00 committed by Miguel Ojeda
parent 6b1b2326b2
commit 3e6454177f

View file

@ -159,6 +159,16 @@ fn notify(&self, count: i32, flags: u32) {
};
}
/// Calls the kernel function to notify one thread synchronously.
///
/// This method behaves like `notify_one`, except that it hints to the scheduler that the
/// current thread is about to go to sleep, so it should schedule the target thread on the same
/// CPU.
pub fn notify_sync(&self) {
// SAFETY: `wait_queue_head` points to valid memory.
unsafe { bindings::__wake_up_sync(self.wait_queue_head.get(), bindings::TASK_NORMAL) };
}
/// Wakes a single waiter up, if any.
///
/// This is not 'sticky' in the sense that if no thread is waiting, the notification is lost