| CPUs perform independent memory operations effectively in random order. |
| but this can be a problem for CPU-CPU interaction (including interactions |
| between QEMU and the guest). Multi-threaded programs use various tools |
| to instruct the compiler and the CPU to restrict the order to something |
| that is consistent with the expectations of the programmer. |
| |
| The most basic tool is locking. Mutexes, condition variables and |
| semaphores are used in QEMU, and should be the default approach to |
| synchronization. Anything else is considerably harder, but it's |
| also justified more often than one would like. The two tools that |
| are provided by qemu/atomic.h are memory barriers and atomic operations. |
| |
| Macros defined by qemu/atomic.h fall in three camps: |
| |
| - compiler barriers: barrier(); |
| |
| - weak atomic access and manual memory barriers: atomic_read(), |
| atomic_set(), smp_rmb(), smp_wmb(), smp_mb(), smp_read_barrier_depends(); |
| |
| - sequentially consistent atomic access: everything else. |
| |
| |
| COMPILER MEMORY BARRIER |
| ======================= |
| |
| barrier() prevents the compiler from moving the memory accesses either |
| side of it to the other side. The compiler barrier has no direct effect |
| on the CPU, which may then reorder things however it wishes. |
| |
| barrier() is mostly used within qemu/atomic.h itself. On some |
| architectures, CPU guarantees are strong enough that blocking compiler |
| optimizations already ensures the correct order of execution. In this |
| case, qemu/atomic.h will reduce stronger memory barriers to simple |
| compiler barriers. |
| |
| Still, barrier() can be useful when writing code that can be interrupted |
| by signal handlers. |
| |
| |
| SEQUENTIALLY CONSISTENT ATOMIC ACCESS |
| ===================================== |
| |
| Most of the operations in the qemu/atomic.h header ensure *sequential |
| consistency*, where "the result of any execution is the same as if the |
| operations of all the processors were executed in some sequential order, |
| and the operations of each individual processor appear in this sequence |
| in the order specified by its program". |
| |
| qemu/atomic.h provides the following set of atomic read-modify-write |
| operations: |
| |
| void atomic_inc(ptr) |
| void atomic_dec(ptr) |
| void atomic_add(ptr, val) |
| void atomic_sub(ptr, val) |
| void atomic_and(ptr, val) |
| void atomic_or(ptr, val) |
| |
| typeof(*ptr) atomic_fetch_inc(ptr) |
| typeof(*ptr) atomic_fetch_dec(ptr) |
| typeof(*ptr) atomic_fetch_add(ptr, val) |
| typeof(*ptr) atomic_fetch_sub(ptr, val) |
| typeof(*ptr) atomic_fetch_and(ptr, val) |
| typeof(*ptr) atomic_fetch_or(ptr, val) |
| typeof(*ptr) atomic_xchg(ptr, val) |
| typeof(*ptr) atomic_cmpxchg(ptr, old, new) |
| |
| all of which return the old value of *ptr. These operations are |
| polymorphic; they operate on any type that is as wide as an int. |
| |
| Sequentially consistent loads and stores can be done using: |
| |
| atomic_fetch_add(ptr, 0) for loads |
| atomic_xchg(ptr, val) for stores |
| |
| However, they are quite expensive on some platforms, notably POWER and |
| ARM. Therefore, qemu/atomic.h provides two primitives with slightly |
| weaker constraints: |
| |
| typeof(*ptr) atomic_mb_read(ptr) |
| void atomic_mb_set(ptr, val) |
| |
| The semantics of these primitives map to Java volatile variables, |
| and are strongly related to memory barriers as used in the Linux |
| kernel (see below). |
| |
| As long as you use atomic_mb_read and atomic_mb_set, accesses cannot |
| be reordered with each other, and it is also not possible to reorder |
| "normal" accesses around them. |
| |
| However, and this is the important difference between |
| atomic_mb_read/atomic_mb_set and sequential consistency, it is important |
| for both threads to access the same volatile variable. It is not the |
| case that everything visible to thread A when it writes volatile field f |
| becomes visible to thread B after it reads volatile field g. The store |
| and load have to "match" (i.e., be performed on the same volatile |
| field) to achieve the right semantics. |
| |
| |
| These operations operate on any type that is as wide as an int or smaller. |
| |
| |
| WEAK ATOMIC ACCESS AND MANUAL MEMORY BARRIERS |
| ============================================= |
| |
| Compared to sequentially consistent atomic access, programming with |
| weaker consistency models can be considerably more complicated. |
| In general, if the algorithm you are writing includes both writes |
| and reads on the same side, it is generally simpler to use sequentially |
| consistent primitives. |
| |
| When using this model, variables are accessed with atomic_read() and |
| atomic_set(), and restrictions to the ordering of accesses is enforced |
| using the smp_rmb(), smp_wmb(), smp_mb() and smp_read_barrier_depends() |
| memory barriers. |
| |
| atomic_read() and atomic_set() prevents the compiler from using |
| optimizations that might otherwise optimize accesses out of existence |
| on the one hand, or that might create unsolicited accesses on the other. |
| In general this should not have any effect, because the same compiler |
| barriers are already implied by memory barriers. However, it is useful |
| to do so, because it tells readers which variables are shared with |
| other threads, and which are local to the current thread or protected |
| by other, more mundane means. |
| |
| Memory barriers control the order of references to shared memory. |
| They come in four kinds: |
| |
| - smp_rmb() guarantees that all the LOAD operations specified before |
| the barrier will appear to happen before all the LOAD operations |
| specified after the barrier with respect to the other components of |
| the system. |
| |
| In other words, smp_rmb() puts a partial ordering on loads, but is not |
| required to have any effect on stores. |
| |
| - smp_wmb() guarantees that all the STORE operations specified before |
| the barrier will appear to happen before all the STORE operations |
| specified after the barrier with respect to the other components of |
| the system. |
| |
| In other words, smp_wmb() puts a partial ordering on stores, but is not |
| required to have any effect on loads. |
| |
| - smp_mb() guarantees that all the LOAD and STORE operations specified |
| before the barrier will appear to happen before all the LOAD and |
| STORE operations specified after the barrier with respect to the other |
| components of the system. |
| |
| smp_mb() puts a partial ordering on both loads and stores. It is |
| stronger than both a read and a write memory barrier; it implies both |
| smp_rmb() and smp_wmb(), but it also prevents STOREs coming before the |
| barrier from overtaking LOADs coming after the barrier and vice versa. |
| |
| - smp_read_barrier_depends() is a weaker kind of read barrier. On |
| most processors, whenever two loads are performed such that the |
| second depends on the result of the first (e.g., the first load |
| retrieves the address to which the second load will be directed), |
| the processor will guarantee that the first LOAD will appear to happen |
| before the second with respect to the other components of the system. |
| However, this is not always true---for example, it was not true on |
| Alpha processors. Whenever this kind of access happens to shared |
| memory (that is not protected by a lock), a read barrier is needed, |
| and smp_read_barrier_depends() can be used instead of smp_rmb(). |
| |
| Note that the first load really has to have a _data_ dependency and not |
| a control dependency. If the address for the second load is dependent |
| on the first load, but the dependency is through a conditional rather |
| than actually loading the address itself, then it's a _control_ |
| dependency and a full read barrier or better is required. |
| |
| |
| This is the set of barriers that is required *between* two atomic_read() |
| and atomic_set() operations to achieve sequential consistency: |
| |
| | 2nd operation | |
| |-----------------------------------------| |
| 1st operation | (after last) | atomic_read | atomic_set | |
| ---------------+--------------+-------------+------------| |
| (before first) | | none | smp_wmb() | |
| ---------------+--------------+-------------+------------| |
| atomic_read | smp_rmb() | smp_rmb()* | ** | |
| ---------------+--------------+-------------+------------| |
| atomic_set | none | smp_mb()*** | smp_wmb() | |
| ---------------+--------------+-------------+------------| |
| |
| * Or smp_read_barrier_depends(). |
| |
| ** This requires a load-store barrier. How to achieve this varies |
| depending on the machine, but in practice smp_rmb()+smp_wmb() |
| should have the desired effect. For example, on PowerPC the |
| lwsync instruction is a combined load-load, load-store and |
| store-store barrier. |
| |
| *** This requires a store-load barrier. On most machines, the only |
| way to achieve this is a full barrier. |
| |
| |
| You can see that the two possible definitions of atomic_mb_read() |
| and atomic_mb_set() are the following: |
| |
| 1) atomic_mb_read(p) = atomic_read(p); smp_rmb() |
| atomic_mb_set(p, v) = smp_wmb(); atomic_set(p, v); smp_mb() |
| |
| 2) atomic_mb_read(p) = smp_mb() atomic_read(p); smp_rmb() |
| atomic_mb_set(p, v) = smp_wmb(); atomic_set(p, v); |
| |
| Usually the former is used, because smp_mb() is expensive and a program |
| normally has more reads than writes. Therefore it makes more sense to |
| make atomic_mb_set() the more expensive operation. |
| |
| There are two common cases in which atomic_mb_read and atomic_mb_set |
| generate too many memory barriers, and thus it can be useful to manually |
| place barriers instead: |
| |
| - when a data structure has one thread that is always a writer |
| and one thread that is always a reader, manual placement of |
| memory barriers makes the write side faster. Furthermore, |
| correctness is easy to check for in this case using the "pairing" |
| trick that is explained below: |
| |
| thread 1 thread 1 |
| ------------------------- ------------------------ |
| (other writes) |
| smp_wmb() |
| atomic_mb_set(&a, x) atomic_set(&a, x) |
| smp_wmb() |
| atomic_mb_set(&b, y) atomic_set(&b, y) |
| |
| => |
| thread 2 thread 2 |
| ------------------------- ------------------------ |
| y = atomic_mb_read(&b) y = atomic_read(&b) |
| smp_rmb() |
| x = atomic_mb_read(&a) x = atomic_read(&a) |
| smp_rmb() |
| |
| - sometimes, a thread is accessing many variables that are otherwise |
| unrelated to each other (for example because, apart from the current |
| thread, exactly one other thread will read or write each of these |
| variables). In this case, it is possible to "hoist" the implicit |
| barriers provided by atomic_mb_read() and atomic_mb_set() outside |
| a loop. For example, the above definition atomic_mb_read() gives |
| the following transformation: |
| |
| n = 0; n = 0; |
| for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) => for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) |
| n += atomic_mb_read(&a[i]); n += atomic_read(&a[i]); |
| smp_rmb(); |
| |
| Similarly, atomic_mb_set() can be transformed as follows: |
| smp_mb(): |
| |
| smp_wmb(); |
| for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) => for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) |
| atomic_mb_set(&a[i], false); atomic_set(&a[i], false); |
| smp_mb(); |
| |
| |
| The two tricks can be combined. In this case, splitting a loop in |
| two lets you hoist the barriers out of the loops _and_ eliminate the |
| expensive smp_mb(): |
| |
| smp_wmb(); |
| for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) { => for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) |
| atomic_mb_set(&a[i], false); atomic_set(&a[i], false); |
| atomic_mb_set(&b[i], false); smb_wmb(); |
| } for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) |
| atomic_set(&a[i], false); |
| smp_mb(); |
| |
| The other thread can still use atomic_mb_read()/atomic_mb_set() |
| |
| |
| Memory barrier pairing |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| A useful rule of thumb is that memory barriers should always, or almost |
| always, be paired with another barrier. In the case of QEMU, however, |
| note that the other barrier may actually be in a driver that runs in |
| the guest! |
| |
| For the purposes of pairing, smp_read_barrier_depends() and smp_rmb() |
| both count as read barriers. A read barrier shall pair with a write |
| barrier or a full barrier; a write barrier shall pair with a read |
| barrier or a full barrier. A full barrier can pair with anything. |
| For example: |
| |
| thread 1 thread 2 |
| =============== =============== |
| a = 1; |
| smp_wmb(); |
| b = 2; x = b; |
| smp_rmb(); |
| y = a; |
| |
| Note that the "writing" thread is accessing the variables in the |
| opposite order as the "reading" thread. This is expected: stores |
| before the write barrier will normally match the loads after the |
| read barrier, and vice versa. The same is true for more than 2 |
| access and for data dependency barriers: |
| |
| thread 1 thread 2 |
| =============== =============== |
| b[2] = 1; |
| smp_wmb(); |
| x->i = 2; |
| smp_wmb(); |
| a = x; x = a; |
| smp_read_barrier_depends(); |
| y = x->i; |
| smp_read_barrier_depends(); |
| z = b[y]; |
| |
| smp_wmb() also pairs with atomic_mb_read(), and smp_rmb() also pairs |
| with atomic_mb_set(). |
| |
| |
| COMPARISON WITH LINUX KERNEL MEMORY BARRIERS |
| ============================================ |
| |
| Here is a list of differences between Linux kernel atomic operations |
| and memory barriers, and the equivalents in QEMU: |
| |
| - atomic operations in Linux are always on a 32-bit int type and |
| use a boxed atomic_t type; atomic operations in QEMU are polymorphic |
| and use normal C types. |
| |
| - Originally, atomic_read and atomic_set in Linux gave no guarantee |
| at all. Linux 4.1 updated them to implement volatile |
| semantics via ACCESS_ONCE (or the more recent READ/WRITE_ONCE). |
| |
| QEMU's atomic_read/set implement, if the compiler supports it, C11 |
| atomic relaxed semantics, and volatile semantics otherwise. |
| Both semantics prevent the compiler from doing certain transformations; |
| the difference is that atomic accesses are guaranteed to be atomic, |
| while volatile accesses aren't. Thus, in the volatile case we just cross |
| our fingers hoping that the compiler will generate atomic accesses, |
| since we assume the variables passed are machine-word sized and |
| properly aligned. |
| No barriers are implied by atomic_read/set in either Linux or QEMU. |
| |
| - atomic read-modify-write operations in Linux are of three kinds: |
| |
| atomic_OP returns void |
| atomic_OP_return returns new value of the variable |
| atomic_fetch_OP returns the old value of the variable |
| atomic_cmpxchg returns the old value of the variable |
| |
| In QEMU, the second kind does not exist. Currently Linux has |
| atomic_fetch_or only. QEMU provides and, or, inc, dec, add, sub. |
| |
| - different atomic read-modify-write operations in Linux imply |
| a different set of memory barriers; in QEMU, all of them enforce |
| sequential consistency, which means they imply full memory barriers |
| before and after the operation. |
| |
| - Linux does not have an equivalent of atomic_mb_set(). In particular, |
| note that smp_store_mb() is a little weaker than atomic_mb_set(). |
| atomic_mb_read() compiles to the same instructions as Linux's |
| smp_load_acquire(), but this should be treated as an implementation |
| detail. If required, QEMU might later add atomic_load_acquire() and |
| atomic_store_release() macros. |
| |
| |
| SOURCES |
| ======= |
| |
| * Documentation/memory-barriers.txt from the Linux kernel |
| |
| * "The JSR-133 Cookbook for Compiler Writers", available at |
| http://g.oswego.edu/dl/jmm/cookbook.html |