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("doc: Convert to rcu_dereference.txt to rcu_dereference.rst") renamed: Documentation/RCU/rcu_dereference.txt to: Documentation/RCU/rcu_dereference.rst. Update its cross-reference accordingly. Fixes:b00aedf978
("doc: Convert to rcu_dereference.txt to rcu_dereference.rst") Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+huawei@kernel.org>
178 lines
7.3 KiB
Text
178 lines
7.3 KiB
Text
This document contains brief definitions of LKMM-related terms. Like most
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glossaries, it is not intended to be read front to back (except perhaps
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as a way of confirming a diagnosis of OCD), but rather to be searched
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for specific terms.
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Address Dependency: When the address of a later memory access is computed
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based on the value returned by an earlier load, an "address
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dependency" extends from that load extending to the later access.
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Address dependencies are quite common in RCU read-side critical
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sections:
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1 rcu_read_lock();
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2 p = rcu_dereference(gp);
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3 do_something(p->a);
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4 rcu_read_unlock();
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In this case, because the address of "p->a" on line 3 is computed
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from the value returned by the rcu_dereference() on line 2, the
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address dependency extends from that rcu_dereference() to that
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"p->a". In rare cases, optimizing compilers can destroy address
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dependencies. Please see Documentation/RCU/rcu_dereference.rst
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for more information.
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See also "Control Dependency" and "Data Dependency".
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Acquire: With respect to a lock, acquiring that lock, for example,
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using spin_lock(). With respect to a non-lock shared variable,
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a special operation that includes a load and which orders that
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load before later memory references running on that same CPU.
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An example special acquire operation is smp_load_acquire(),
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but atomic_read_acquire() and atomic_xchg_acquire() also include
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acquire loads.
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When an acquire load returns the value stored by a release store
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to that same variable, (in other words, the acquire load "reads
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from" the release store), then all operations preceding that
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store "happen before" any operations following that load acquire.
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See also "Happens-Before", "Reads-From", "Relaxed", and "Release".
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Coherence (co): When one CPU's store to a given variable overwrites
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either the value from another CPU's store or some later value,
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there is said to be a coherence link from the second CPU to
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the first.
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It is also possible to have a coherence link within a CPU, which
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is a "coherence internal" (coi) link. The term "coherence
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external" (coe) link is used when it is necessary to exclude
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the coi case.
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See also "From-reads" and "Reads-from".
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Control Dependency: When a later store's execution depends on a test
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of a value computed from a value returned by an earlier load,
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a "control dependency" extends from that load to that store.
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For example:
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1 if (READ_ONCE(x))
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2 WRITE_ONCE(y, 1);
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Here, the control dependency extends from the READ_ONCE() on
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line 1 to the WRITE_ONCE() on line 2. Control dependencies are
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fragile, and can be easily destroyed by optimizing compilers.
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Please see control-dependencies.txt for more information.
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See also "Address Dependency" and "Data Dependency".
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Cycle: Memory-barrier pairing is restricted to a pair of CPUs, as the
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name suggests. And in a great many cases, a pair of CPUs is all
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that is required. In other cases, the notion of pairing must be
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extended to additional CPUs, and the result is called a "cycle".
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In a cycle, each CPU's ordering interacts with that of the next:
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CPU 0 CPU 1 CPU 2
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WRITE_ONCE(x, 1); WRITE_ONCE(y, 1); WRITE_ONCE(z, 1);
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smp_mb(); smp_mb(); smp_mb();
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r0 = READ_ONCE(y); r1 = READ_ONCE(z); r2 = READ_ONCE(x);
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CPU 0's smp_mb() interacts with that of CPU 1, which interacts
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with that of CPU 2, which in turn interacts with that of CPU 0
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to complete the cycle. Because of the smp_mb() calls between
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each pair of memory accesses, the outcome where r0, r1, and r2
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are all equal to zero is forbidden by LKMM.
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See also "Pairing".
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Data Dependency: When the data written by a later store is computed based
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on the value returned by an earlier load, a "data dependency"
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extends from that load to that later store. For example:
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1 r1 = READ_ONCE(x);
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2 WRITE_ONCE(y, r1 + 1);
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In this case, the data dependency extends from the READ_ONCE()
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on line 1 to the WRITE_ONCE() on line 2. Data dependencies are
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fragile and can be easily destroyed by optimizing compilers.
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Because optimizing compilers put a great deal of effort into
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working out what values integer variables might have, this is
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especially true in cases where the dependency is carried through
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an integer.
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See also "Address Dependency" and "Control Dependency".
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From-Reads (fr): When one CPU's store to a given variable happened
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too late to affect the value returned by another CPU's
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load from that same variable, there is said to be a from-reads
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link from the load to the store.
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It is also possible to have a from-reads link within a CPU, which
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is a "from-reads internal" (fri) link. The term "from-reads
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external" (fre) link is used when it is necessary to exclude
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the fri case.
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See also "Coherence" and "Reads-from".
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Fully Ordered: An operation such as smp_mb() that orders all of
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its CPU's prior accesses with all of that CPU's subsequent
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accesses, or a marked access such as atomic_add_return()
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that orders all of its CPU's prior accesses, itself, and
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all of its CPU's subsequent accesses.
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Happens-Before (hb): A relation between two accesses in which LKMM
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guarantees the first access precedes the second. For more
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detail, please see the "THE HAPPENS-BEFORE RELATION: hb"
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section of explanation.txt.
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Marked Access: An access to a variable that uses an special function or
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macro such as "r1 = READ_ONCE(x)" or "smp_store_release(&a, 1)".
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See also "Unmarked Access".
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Pairing: "Memory-barrier pairing" reflects the fact that synchronizing
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data between two CPUs requires that both CPUs their accesses.
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Memory barriers thus tend to come in pairs, one executed by
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one of the CPUs and the other by the other CPU. Of course,
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pairing also occurs with other types of operations, so that a
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smp_store_release() pairs with an smp_load_acquire() that reads
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the value stored.
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See also "Cycle".
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Reads-From (rf): When one CPU's load returns the value stored by some other
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CPU, there is said to be a reads-from link from the second
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CPU's store to the first CPU's load. Reads-from links have the
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nice property that time must advance from the store to the load,
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which means that algorithms using reads-from links can use lighter
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weight ordering and synchronization compared to algorithms using
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coherence and from-reads links.
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It is also possible to have a reads-from link within a CPU, which
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is a "reads-from internal" (rfi) link. The term "reads-from
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external" (rfe) link is used when it is necessary to exclude
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the rfi case.
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See also Coherence" and "From-reads".
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Relaxed: A marked access that does not imply ordering, for example, a
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READ_ONCE(), WRITE_ONCE(), a non-value-returning read-modify-write
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operation, or a value-returning read-modify-write operation whose
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name ends in "_relaxed".
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See also "Acquire" and "Release".
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Release: With respect to a lock, releasing that lock, for example,
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using spin_unlock(). With respect to a non-lock shared variable,
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a special operation that includes a store and which orders that
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store after earlier memory references that ran on that same CPU.
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An example special release store is smp_store_release(), but
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atomic_set_release() and atomic_cmpxchg_release() also include
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release stores.
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See also "Acquire" and "Relaxed".
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Unmarked Access: An access to a variable that uses normal C-language
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syntax, for example, "a = b[2]";
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See also "Marked Access".
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