I wrote: > Anyway, I don't have a big objection to applying this. My concern > is more that we need to be taking a harder look at other parts of > the atomics infrastructure, because tweaks there are likely to buy > much more.
I went ahead and pushed these patches, adding __sync_fetch_and_sub since gcc seems to provide that on the same footing as these other functions. Looking at these generic functions a bit closer, I notice that most of them are coded like old = pg_atomic_read_u32_impl(ptr); while (!pg_atomic_compare_exchange_u32_impl(ptr, &old, old | or_)) /* skip */; but there's an exception: pg_atomic_exchange_u64_impl just does old = ptr->value; while (!pg_atomic_compare_exchange_u64_impl(ptr, &old, xchg_)) /* skip */; That's interesting. Why not pg_atomic_read_u64_impl there? I think that the simple read is actually okay as it stands: if we are unlucky enough to get a torn read, the first compare/exchange will fail to compare equal, and it will replace "old" with a valid atomically-read value, and then the next loop iteration has a chance to succeed. Therefore there's no need to pay the extra cost of a locked read instead of an unlocked one. However, if that's the reasoning, why don't we make all of these use simple reads? It seems unlikely that a locked read is free. If there's actually a reason for pg_atomic_exchange_u64_impl to be different from the rest, it needs to have a comment explaining why. 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