xref: /freebsd/share/man/man9/sx.9 (revision 4d846d26)
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27.\" $FreeBSD$
28.\"
29.Dd November 11, 2017
30.Dt SX 9
31.Os
32.Sh NAME
33.Nm sx ,
34.Nm sx_init ,
35.Nm sx_init_flags ,
36.Nm sx_destroy ,
37.Nm sx_slock ,
38.Nm sx_xlock ,
39.Nm sx_slock_sig ,
40.Nm sx_xlock_sig ,
41.Nm sx_try_slock ,
42.Nm sx_try_xlock ,
43.Nm sx_sunlock ,
44.Nm sx_xunlock ,
45.Nm sx_unlock ,
46.Nm sx_try_upgrade ,
47.Nm sx_downgrade ,
48.Nm sx_sleep ,
49.Nm sx_xholder ,
50.Nm sx_xlocked ,
51.Nm sx_assert ,
52.Nm SX_SYSINIT ,
53.Nm SX_SYSINIT_FLAGS
54.Nd kernel shared/exclusive lock
55.Sh SYNOPSIS
56.In sys/param.h
57.In sys/lock.h
58.In sys/sx.h
59.Ft void
60.Fn sx_init "struct sx *sx" "const char *description"
61.Ft void
62.Fn sx_init_flags "struct sx *sx" "const char *description" "int opts"
63.Ft void
64.Fn sx_destroy "struct sx *sx"
65.Ft void
66.Fn sx_slock "struct sx *sx"
67.Ft void
68.Fn sx_xlock "struct sx *sx"
69.Ft int
70.Fn sx_slock_sig "struct sx *sx"
71.Ft int
72.Fn sx_xlock_sig "struct sx *sx"
73.Ft int
74.Fn sx_try_slock "struct sx *sx"
75.Ft int
76.Fn sx_try_xlock "struct sx *sx"
77.Ft void
78.Fn sx_sunlock "struct sx *sx"
79.Ft void
80.Fn sx_xunlock "struct sx *sx"
81.Ft void
82.Fn sx_unlock "struct sx *sx"
83.Ft int
84.Fn sx_try_upgrade "struct sx *sx"
85.Ft void
86.Fn sx_downgrade "struct sx *sx"
87.Ft int
88.Fn sx_sleep "void *chan" "struct sx *sx" "int priority" "const char *wmesg" "int timo"
89.Ft "struct thread *"
90.Fn sx_xholder "struct sx *sx"
91.Ft int
92.Fn sx_xlocked "const struct sx *sx"
93.Pp
94.Cd "options INVARIANTS"
95.Cd "options INVARIANT_SUPPORT"
96.Ft void
97.Fn sx_assert "const struct sx *sx" "int what"
98.In sys/kernel.h
99.Fn SX_SYSINIT "name" "struct sx *sx" "const char *desc"
100.Fn SX_SYSINIT_FLAGS "name" "struct sx *sx" "const char *desc" "int flags"
101.Sh DESCRIPTION
102Shared/exclusive locks are used to protect data that are read far more often
103than they are written.
104Shared/exclusive locks do not implement priority propagation like mutexes and
105reader/writer locks to prevent priority inversions, so
106shared/exclusive locks should be used prudently.
107.Pp
108Shared/exclusive locks are created with either
109.Fn sx_init
110or
111.Fn sx_init_flags
112where
113.Fa sx
114is a pointer to space for a
115.Vt struct sx ,
116and
117.Fa description
118is a pointer to a null-terminated character string that describes the
119shared/exclusive lock.
120The
121.Fa opts
122argument to
123.Fn sx_init_flags
124specifies a set of optional flags to alter the behavior of
125.Fa sx .
126It contains one or more of the following flags:
127.Bl -tag -width SX_NOWITNESS
128.It Dv SX_DUPOK
129Witness should not log messages about duplicate locks being acquired.
130.It Dv SX_NOWITNESS
131Instruct
132.Xr witness 4
133to ignore this lock.
134.It Dv SX_NOPROFILE
135Do not profile this lock.
136.It Dv SX_RECURSE
137Allow threads to recursively acquire exclusive locks for
138.Fa sx .
139.It Dv SX_QUIET
140Do not log any operations for this lock via
141.Xr ktr 4 .
142.It Dv SX_NEW
143If the kernel has been compiled with
144.Cd "options INVARIANTS" ,
145.Fn sx_init
146will assert that the
147.Fa sx
148has not been initialized multiple times without intervening calls to
149.Fn sx_destroy
150unless this option is specified.
151.El
152.Pp
153Shared/exclusive locks are destroyed with
154.Fn sx_destroy .
155The lock
156.Fa sx
157must not be locked by any thread when it is destroyed.
158.Pp
159Threads acquire and release a shared lock by calling
160.Fn sx_slock ,
161.Fn sx_slock_sig
162or
163.Fn sx_try_slock
164and
165.Fn sx_sunlock
166or
167.Fn sx_unlock .
168Threads acquire and release an exclusive lock by calling
169.Fn sx_xlock ,
170.Fn sx_xlock_sig
171or
172.Fn sx_try_xlock
173and
174.Fn sx_xunlock
175or
176.Fn sx_unlock .
177A thread can attempt to upgrade a currently held shared lock to an exclusive
178lock by calling
179.Fn sx_try_upgrade .
180A thread that has an exclusive lock can downgrade it to a shared lock by
181calling
182.Fn sx_downgrade .
183.Pp
184.Fn sx_try_slock
185and
186.Fn sx_try_xlock
187will return 0 if the shared/exclusive lock cannot be acquired immediately;
188otherwise the shared/exclusive lock will be acquired and a non-zero value will
189be returned.
190.Pp
191.Fn sx_try_upgrade
192will return 0 if the shared lock cannot be upgraded to an exclusive lock
193immediately; otherwise the exclusive lock will be acquired and a non-zero value
194will be returned.
195.Pp
196.Fn sx_slock_sig
197and
198.Fn sx_xlock_sig
199do the same as their normal versions but performing an interruptible sleep.
200They return a non-zero value if the sleep has been interrupted by a signal
201or an interrupt, otherwise 0.
202.Pp
203A thread can atomically release a shared/exclusive lock while waiting for an
204event by calling
205.Fn sx_sleep .
206For more details on the parameters to this function,
207see
208.Xr sleep 9 .
209.Pp
210When compiled with
211.Cd "options INVARIANTS"
212and
213.Cd "options INVARIANT_SUPPORT" ,
214the
215.Fn sx_assert
216function tests
217.Fa sx
218for the assertions specified in
219.Fa what ,
220and panics if they are not met.
221One of the following assertions must be specified:
222.Bl -tag -width ".Dv SA_UNLOCKED"
223.It Dv SA_LOCKED
224Assert that the current thread has either a shared or an exclusive lock on the
225.Vt sx
226lock pointed to by the first argument.
227.It Dv SA_SLOCKED
228Assert that the current thread has a shared lock on the
229.Vt sx
230lock pointed to by
231the first argument.
232.It Dv SA_XLOCKED
233Assert that the current thread has an exclusive lock on the
234.Vt sx
235lock pointed to
236by the first argument.
237.It Dv SA_UNLOCKED
238Assert that the current thread has no lock on the
239.Vt sx
240lock pointed to
241by the first argument.
242.El
243.Pp
244In addition, one of the following optional assertions may be included with
245either an
246.Dv SA_LOCKED ,
247.Dv SA_SLOCKED ,
248or
249.Dv SA_XLOCKED
250assertion:
251.Bl -tag -width ".Dv SA_NOTRECURSED"
252.It Dv SA_RECURSED
253Assert that the current thread has a recursed lock on
254.Fa sx .
255.It Dv SA_NOTRECURSED
256Assert that the current thread does not have a recursed lock on
257.Fa sx .
258.El
259.Pp
260.Fn sx_xholder
261will return a pointer to the thread which currently holds an exclusive lock on
262.Fa sx .
263If no thread holds an exclusive lock on
264.Fa sx ,
265then
266.Dv NULL
267is returned instead.
268.Pp
269.Fn sx_xlocked
270will return non-zero if the current thread holds the exclusive lock;
271otherwise, it will return zero.
272.Pp
273For ease of programming,
274.Fn sx_unlock
275is provided as a macro frontend to the respective functions,
276.Fn sx_sunlock
277and
278.Fn sx_xunlock .
279Algorithms that are aware of what state the lock is in should use either
280of the two specific functions for a minor performance benefit.
281.Pp
282The
283.Fn SX_SYSINIT
284macro is used to generate a call to the
285.Fn sx_sysinit
286routine at system startup in order to initialize a given
287.Fa sx
288lock.
289The parameters are the same as
290.Fn sx_init
291but with an additional argument,
292.Fa name ,
293that is used in generating unique variable names for the related
294structures associated with the lock and the sysinit routine.
295The
296.Fn SX_SYSINIT_FLAGS
297macro can similarly be used to initialize a given
298.Fa sx
299lock using
300.Fn sx_init_flags .
301.Pp
302A thread may not hold both a shared lock and an exclusive lock on the same
303lock simultaneously;
304attempting to do so will result in deadlock.
305.Sh CONTEXT
306A thread may hold a shared or exclusive lock on an
307.Nm
308lock while sleeping.
309As a result, an
310.Nm
311lock may not be acquired while holding a mutex.
312Otherwise, if one thread slept while holding an
313.Nm
314lock while another thread blocked on the same
315.Nm
316lock after acquiring a mutex, then the second thread would effectively
317end up sleeping while holding a mutex, which is not allowed.
318.Sh SEE ALSO
319.Xr lock 9 ,
320.Xr locking 9 ,
321.Xr mutex 9 ,
322.Xr panic 9 ,
323.Xr rwlock 9 ,
324.Xr sema 9
325.Sh BUGS
326A kernel without
327.Dv WITNESS
328cannot assert whether the current thread does or does not hold a shared lock.
329.Dv SA_LOCKED
330and
331.Dv SA_SLOCKED
332can only assert that
333.Em any
334thread holds a shared lock.
335They cannot ensure that the current thread holds a shared lock.
336Further,
337.Dv SA_UNLOCKED
338can only assert that the current thread does not hold an exclusive lock.
339