xref: /dragonfly/share/man/man9/atomic.9 (revision d4ef6694)
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24.\" $FreeBSD: src/share/man/man9/atomic.9,v 1.17 2010/05/27 13:56:27 uqs Exp $
25.\"
26.Dd June 13, 2012
27.Dt ATOMIC 9
28.Os
29.Sh NAME
30.Nm atomic_add ,
31.Nm atomic_clear ,
32.Nm atomic_cmpset ,
33.Nm atomic_fetchadd ,
34.Nm atomic_load ,
35.Nm atomic_readandclear ,
36.Nm atomic_set ,
37.Nm atomic_subtract ,
38.Nm atomic_store
39.Nd atomic operations
40.Sh SYNOPSIS
41.In sys/types.h
42.In machine/atomic.h
43.Ft void
44.Fn atomic_add_[acq_|rel_]<type> "volatile <type> *p" "<type> v"
45.Ft void
46.Fn atomic_clear_[acq_|rel_]<type> "volatile <type> *p" "<type> v"
47.Ft int
48.Fo atomic_cmpset_[acq_|rel_]<type>
49.Fa "volatile <type> *dst"
50.Fa "<type> old"
51.Fa "<type> new"
52.Fc
53.Ft <type>
54.Fn atomic_fetchadd_<type> "volatile <type> *p" "<type> v"
55.Ft <type>
56.Fn atomic_load_acq_<type> "volatile <type> *p"
57.Ft <type>
58.Fn atomic_readandclear_<type> "volatile <type> *p"
59.Ft void
60.Fn atomic_set_[acq_|rel_]<type> "volatile <type> *p" "<type> v"
61.Ft void
62.Fn atomic_subtract_[acq_|rel_]<type> "volatile <type> *p" "<type> v"
63.Ft void
64.Fn atomic_store_rel_<type> "volatile <type> *p" "<type> v"
65.Sh DESCRIPTION
66Each of the atomic operations is guaranteed to be atomic in the presence of
67interrupts.
68They can be used to implement reference counts or as building blocks for more
69advanced synchronization primitives such as mutexes.
70.Ss Types
71Each atomic operation operates on a specific
72.Fa type .
73The type to use is indicated in the function name.
74The available types that can be used are:
75.Pp
76.Bl -tag -offset indent -width short -compact
77.It Li cpumask
78CPU mask (cpumask_t)
79.It Li int
80unsigned integer
81.It Li long
82unsigned long integer
83.It Li ptr
84unsigned integer the size of a pointer
85.It Li 32
86unsigned 32-bit integer
87.\".It Li 64
88.\"unsigned 64-bit integer
89.El
90.Pp
91For example, the function to atomically add two integers is called
92.Fn atomic_add_int .
93.Pp
94Certain architectures also provide operations for types smaller than
95.Dq Li int .
96.Pp
97.Bl -tag -offset indent -width short -compact
98.It Li char
99unsigned character
100.It Li short
101unsigned short integer
102.It Li 8
103unsigned 8-bit integer
104.It Li 16
105unsigned 16-bit integer
106.El
107.Pp
108These must not be used in MI code because the instructions to implement them
109efficiently may not be available.
110.Ss Memory Barriers
111Memory barriers are used to guarantee the order of data accesses in
112two ways.
113First, they specify hints to the compiler to not re-order or optimize the
114operations.
115Second, on architectures that do not guarantee ordered data accesses,
116special instructions or special variants of instructions are used to indicate
117to the processor that data accesses need to occur in a certain order.
118As a result, most of the atomic operations have three variants in order to
119include optional memory barriers.
120The first form just performs the operation without any explicit barriers.
121The second form uses a read memory barrier, and the third variant uses a write
122memory barrier.
123.Pp
124The second variant of each operation includes a read memory barrier.
125This barrier ensures that the effects of this operation are completed before the
126effects of any later data accesses.
127As a result, the operation is said to have acquire semantics as it acquires a
128pseudo-lock requiring further operations to wait until it has completed.
129To denote this, the suffix
130.Dq Li _acq
131is inserted into the function name immediately prior to the
132.Dq Li _ Ns Aq Fa type
133suffix.
134For example, to subtract two integers ensuring that any later writes will
135happen after the subtraction is performed, use
136.Fn atomic_subtract_acq_int .
137.Pp
138The third variant of each operation includes a write memory barrier.
139This ensures that all effects of all previous data accesses are completed
140before this operation takes place.
141As a result, the operation is said to have release semantics as it releases
142any pending data accesses to be completed before its operation is performed.
143To denote this, the suffix
144.Dq Li _rel
145is inserted into the function name immediately prior to the
146.Dq Li _ Ns Aq Fa type
147suffix.
148For example, to add two long integers ensuring that all previous
149writes will happen first, use
150.Fn atomic_add_rel_long .
151.Pp
152A practical example of using memory barriers is to ensure that data accesses
153that are protected by a lock are all performed while the lock is held.
154To achieve this, one would use a read barrier when acquiring the lock to
155guarantee that the lock is held before any protected operations are performed.
156Finally, one would use a write barrier when releasing the lock to ensure that
157all of the protected operations are completed before the lock is released.
158.Ss Multiple Processors
159The current set of atomic operations do not necessarily guarantee atomicity
160across multiple processors.
161To guarantee atomicity across processors, not only does the individual
162operation need to be atomic on the processor performing the operation, but
163the result of the operation needs to be pushed out to stable storage and the
164caches of all other processors on the system need to invalidate any cache
165lines that include the affected memory region.
166On the
167.Tn i386
168architecture, the cache coherency model requires that the hardware perform
169this task, thus the atomic operations are atomic across multiple processors.
170.\"On the
171.\".Tn ia64
172.\"architecture, coherency is only guaranteed for pages that are configured to
173.\"using a caching policy of either uncached or write back.
174.Ss Semantics
175This section describes the semantics of each operation using a C like notation.
176.Bl -hang
177.It Fn atomic_add p v
178.Bd -literal -compact
179*p += v;
180.Ed
181.El
182.Pp
183The
184.Fn atomic_add
185functions are not implemented for the type
186.Dq Li cpumask .
187.Bl -hang
188.It Fn atomic_clear p v
189.Bd -literal -compact
190*p &= ~v;
191.Ed
192.It Fn atomic_cmpset dst old new
193.Bd -literal -compact
194if (*dst == old) {
195	*dst = new;
196	return 1;
197} else {
198	return 0;
199}
200.Ed
201.El
202.Pp
203The
204.Fn atomic_cmpset
205functions are not implemented for the types
206.Dq Li char ,
207.Dq Li short ,
208.Dq Li 8 ,
209and
210.Dq Li 16 .
211.Bl -hang
212.It Fn atomic_fetchadd p v
213.Bd -literal -compact
214tmp = *p;
215*p += v;
216return tmp;
217.Ed
218.El
219.Pp
220The
221.Fn atomic_fetchadd
222functions are only implemented for the types
223.Dq Li int ,
224.Dq Li long
225and
226.Dq Li 32
227and do not have any variants with memory barriers at this time.
228.Bl -hang
229.It Fn atomic_load addr
230.Bd -literal -compact
231return (*addr)
232.Ed
233.El
234.Pp
235The
236.Fn atomic_load
237functions are only provided with acquire memory barriers.
238.Bl -hang
239.It Fn atomic_readandclear addr
240.Bd -literal -compact
241temp = *addr;
242*addr = 0;
243return (temp);
244.Ed
245.El
246.Pp
247The
248.Fn atomic_readandclear
249functions are not implemented for the types
250.Dq Li char ,
251.Dq Li short ,
252.Dq Li ptr ,
253.Dq Li 8 ,
254.Dq Li 16 ,
255and
256.Dq Li cpumask
257and do
258not have any variants with memory barriers at this time.
259.Bl -hang
260.It Fn atomic_set p v
261.Bd -literal -compact
262*p |= v;
263.Ed
264.It Fn atomic_subtract p v
265.Bd -literal -compact
266*p -= v;
267.Ed
268.El
269.Pp
270The
271.Fn atomic_subtract
272functions are not implemented for the type
273.Dq Li cpumask .
274.Bl -hang
275.It Fn atomic_store p v
276.Bd -literal -compact
277*p = v;
278.Ed
279.El
280.Pp
281The
282.Fn atomic_store
283functions are only provided with release memory barriers.
284.\".Pp
285.\"The type
286.\".Dq Li 64
287.\"is currently not implemented for any of the atomic operations on the
288.\".Tn arm ,
289.\".Tn i386 ,
290.\"and
291.\".Tn powerpc
292.\"architectures.
293.Sh RETURN VALUES
294The
295.Fn atomic_cmpset
296function
297returns the result of the compare operation.
298The
299.Fn atomic_fetchadd ,
300.Fn atomic_load ,
301and
302.Fn atomic_readandclear
303functions
304return the value at the specified address.
305.\".Sh EXAMPLES
306.\"This example uses the
307.\".Fn atomic_cmpset_acq_ptr
308.\"and
309.\".Fn atomic_set_ptr
310.\"functions to obtain a sleep mutex and handle recursion.
311.\"Since the
312.\".Va mtx_lock
313.\"member of a
314.\".Vt "struct mtx"
315.\"is a pointer, the
316.\".Dq Li ptr
317.\"type is used.
318.\".Bd -literal
319.\"/* Try to obtain mtx_lock once. */
320.\"#define _obtain_lock(mp, tid)						\\
321.\"	atomic_cmpset_acq_ptr(&(mp)->mtx_lock, MTX_UNOWNED, (tid))
322.\"
323.\"/* Get a sleep lock, deal with recursion inline. */
324.\"#define _get_sleep_lock(mp, tid, opts, file, line) do {			\\
325.\"	uintptr_t _tid = (uintptr_t)(tid);				\\
326.\"									\\
327.\"	if (!_obtain_lock(mp, tid)) {					\\
328.\"		if (((mp)->mtx_lock & MTX_FLAGMASK) != _tid)		\\
329.\"			_mtx_lock_sleep((mp), _tid, (opts), (file), (line));\\
330.\"		else {							\\
331.\"			atomic_set_ptr(&(mp)->mtx_lock, MTX_RECURSE);	\\
332.\"			(mp)->mtx_recurse++;				\\
333.\"		}							\\
334.\"	}								\\
335.\"} while (0)
336.\".Ed
337.Sh HISTORY
338The
339.Fn atomic_add ,
340.Fn atomic_clear ,
341.Fn atomic_set ,
342and
343.Fn atomic_subtract
344operations were first introduced in
345.Fx 3.0 .
346This first set only supported the types
347.Dq Li char ,
348.Dq Li short ,
349.Dq Li int ,
350and
351.Dq Li long .
352The
353.Fn atomic_cmpset ,
354.Fn atomic_load ,
355.Fn atomic_readandclear ,
356and
357.Fn atomic_store
358operations were added in
359.Fx 5.0 .
360The types
361.Dq Li 8 ,
362.Dq Li 16 ,
363.Dq Li 32 ,
364.\".Dq Li 64 ,
365and
366.Dq Li ptr
367and all of the acquire and release variants
368were added in
369.Fx 5.0
370as well.
371The
372.Fn atomic_fetchadd
373operations were added in
374.Fx 6.0 .
375