> On Jul 17, 2019, at 4:59 AM, Peter Zijlstra <pet...@infradead.org> wrote:
> 
> On Wed, Jul 17, 2019 at 10:39:44AM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
>> On Tue, Jul 16, 2019 at 08:47:24PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> 
>>> My primary concern was readability; I find the above suggestion much
>>> more readable. Maybe it can be written differently; you'll have to play
>>> around a bit.
>> 
>> static void cna_splice_tail(struct cna_node *cn, struct cna_node *head, 
>> struct cna_node *tail)
>> {
>>      struct cna_node *list;
>> 
>>      /* remove [head,tail] */
>>      WRITE_ONCE(cn->mcs.next, tail->mcs.next);
>>      tail->mcs.next = NULL;
>> 
>>      /* stick [head,tail] on the secondary list tail */
>>      if (cn->mcs.locked <= 1) {
>>              /* create secondary list */
>>              head->tail = tail;
>>              cn->mcs.locked = head->encoded_tail;
>>      } else {
>>              /* add to tail */
>>              list = (struct cna_node *)decode_tail(cn->mcs.locked);
>>              list->tail->next = head;
>>              list->tail = tail;
>>      }
>> }
>> 
>> static struct cna_node *cna_find_next(struct mcs_spinlock *node)
>> {
>>      struct cna_node *cni, *cn = (struct cna_node *)node;
>>      struct cna_node *head, *tail = NULL;
>> 
>>      /* find any next lock from 'our' node */
>>      for (head = cni = (struct cna_node *)READ_ONCE(cn->mcs.next);
>>           cni && cni->node != cn->node;
>>           tail = cni, cni = (struct cna_node *)READ_ONCE(cni->mcs.next))
>>              ;
> 
> I think we can do away with those READ_ONCE()s, at this point those
> pointers should be stable. But please double check.

I think we can get rid of WRITE_ONCE above and the first READ_ONCE, as the 
“first” next pointer (in the node of the current lock holder) is stable at this
point, and is not read / written concurrently. We do need the second READ_ONCE
as we traverse the list and can come across a next pointer being changed.

— Alex

> 
>>      /* when found, splice any skipped locks onto the secondary list */
>>      if (cni && tail)
>>              cna_splice_tail(cn, head, tail);
>> 
>>      return cni;
>> }
>> 
>> How's that?

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