Hi, On 2020-06-07 00:23:35 -0400, Tom Lane wrote: > I experimented with running "make check" on ARM64 under a reasonably > bleeding-edge valgrind (3.16.0). One thing I ran into is that > regress.c's test_atomic_ops fails; valgrind shows the stack trace > > fun:__aarch64_cas8_acq_rel > fun:pg_atomic_compare_exchange_u64_impl > fun:pg_atomic_exchange_u64_impl > fun:pg_atomic_write_u64_impl > fun:pg_atomic_init_u64_impl > fun:pg_atomic_init_u64 > fun:test_atomic_uint64 > fun:test_atomic_ops > fun:ExecInterpExpr > > Now, this is basically the same thing as is already memorialized in > src/tools/valgrind.supp: > > # Atomic writes to 64bit atomic vars uses compare/exchange to > # guarantee atomic writes of 64bit variables. pg_atomic_write is used > # during initialization of the atomic variable; that leads to an > # initial read of the old, undefined, memory value. But that's just to > # make sure the swap works correctly. > { > uninitialized_atomic_init_u64 > Memcheck:Cond > fun:pg_atomic_exchange_u64_impl > fun:pg_atomic_write_u64_impl > fun:pg_atomic_init_u64_impl > } > > so my first thought was that we just needed an architecture-specific > variant of that. But on thinking more about this, it seems like > generic.h's version of pg_atomic_init_u64_impl is just fundamentally > misguided. Why isn't it simply assigning the value with an ordinary > unlocked write? By definition, we had better not be using this function > in any circumstance where there might be conflicting accesses, so I don't > see why we should need to tolerate a valgrind exception here. Moreover, > if a simple assignment *isn't* good enough, then surely the spinlock > version in atomics.c is 100% broken.
Yea, it could just do that. It seemed slightly easier/clearer, back when I wrote it, to just use pg_atomic_write* for the initialization, but this seems enough of a reason to stop doing so. Will change it in all branches, unless somebody sees a reason to not do so? Greetings, Andres Freund