Robert Haas <robertmh...@gmail.com> writes: > What we did do that touched s_lock.h was attempt to ensure that > SpinLockAcquire() and SpinLockRelease() function as compiler barriers, > so that it should no longer be necessary to litter the code with > "volatile" in every function that uses those. It is possible that > this could be broken on HP-UX. If _Asm_sched_fence() doesn't > constraint the compiler appropriately, that could explain the problems > we're seeing here. But we're not the only one using that incantation, > so I'm left scratching my head.
AFAICS, on non-gcc IA64, 9.4's version of S_UNLOCK defaulted to #define S_UNLOCK(lock) (*((volatile slock_t *) (lock)) = 0) whereas in HEAD, we've got #define S_UNLOCK(lock) \ do { _Asm_sched_fence(); (*(lock)) = 0; } while (0) which immediately raises the question of why omitting the "volatile" cast is okay. The comments for the gcc/icc version make it clear that the volatile qual is pretty critical for those compilers. I also wonder if we don't need a second _Asm_sched_fence() after the lock release. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers