On 11/19, Alan Stern wrote: > > On Sun, 19 Nov 2006, Oleg Nesterov wrote: > > > int xxx_read_lock(struct xxx_struct *sp) > > { > > int idx; > > > > idx = sp->completed & 0x1; > > atomic_inc(sp->ctr + idx); > > smp_mb__after_atomic_inc(); > > > > return idx; > > } > > > > void xxx_read_unlock(struct xxx_struct *sp, int idx) > > { > > if (atomic_dec_and_test(sp->ctr + idx)) > > wake_up(&sp->wq); > > } > > > > void synchronize_xxx(struct xxx_struct *sp) > > { > > wait_queue_t wait; > > int idx; > > > > init_wait(&wait); > > mutex_lock(&sp->mutex); > > > > idx = sp->completed++ & 0x1; > > > > for (;;) { > > prepare_to_wait(&sp->wq, &wait, TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE); > > > > if (!atomic_add_unless(sp->ctr + idx, -1, 1)) > > break; > > > > schedule(); > > atomic_inc(sp->ctr + idx); > > } > > finish_wait(&sp->wq, &wait); > > > > mutex_unlock(&sp->mutex); > > } > > > > Very simple. Note that synchronize_xxx() is O(1), doesn't poll, and could > > be optimized further. > > What happens if synchronize_xxx manages to execute inbetween > xxx_read_lock's > > idx = sp->completed & 0x1; > atomic_inc(sp->ctr + idx); > > statements?
Oops. I forgot about explicit mb() before sp->completed++ in synchronize_xxx(). So synchronize_xxx() should do smp_mb(); idx = sp->completed++ & 0x1; for (;;) { ... } > You see, there's no way around using synchronize_sched(). With this change I think we are safe. If synchronize_xxx() increments ->completed in between, the caller of xxx_read_lock() will see all memory ops (started before synchronize_xxx()) completed. It is ok that synchronize_xxx() returns immediately. Thanks! Oleg. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/