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- /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
- *
- * s_lock.h
- * Hardware-dependent implementation of spinlocks.
- *
- * NOTE: none of the macros in this file are intended to be called directly.
- * Call them through the hardware-independent macros in spin.h.
- *
- * The following hardware-dependent macros must be provided for each
- * supported platform:
- *
- * void S_INIT_LOCK(slock_t *lock)
- * Initialize a spinlock (to the unlocked state).
- *
- * int S_LOCK(slock_t *lock)
- * Acquire a spinlock, waiting if necessary.
- * Time out and abort() if unable to acquire the lock in a
- * "reasonable" amount of time --- typically ~ 1 minute.
- * Should return number of "delays"; see s_lock.c
- *
- * void S_UNLOCK(slock_t *lock)
- * Unlock a previously acquired lock.
- *
- * bool S_LOCK_FREE(slock_t *lock)
- * Tests if the lock is free. Returns TRUE if free, FALSE if locked.
- * This does *not* change the state of the lock.
- *
- * void SPIN_DELAY(void)
- * Delay operation to occur inside spinlock wait loop.
- *
- * Note to implementors: there are default implementations for all these
- * macros at the bottom of the file. Check if your platform can use
- * these or needs to override them.
- *
- * Usually, S_LOCK() is implemented in terms of even lower-level macros
- * TAS() and TAS_SPIN():
- *
- * int TAS(slock_t *lock)
- * Atomic test-and-set instruction. Attempt to acquire the lock,
- * but do *not* wait. Returns 0 if successful, nonzero if unable
- * to acquire the lock.
- *
- * int TAS_SPIN(slock_t *lock)
- * Like TAS(), but this version is used when waiting for a lock
- * previously found to be contended. By default, this is the
- * same as TAS(), but on some architectures it's better to poll a
- * contended lock using an unlocked instruction and retry the
- * atomic test-and-set only when it appears free.
- *
- * TAS() and TAS_SPIN() are NOT part of the API, and should never be called
- * directly.
- *
- * CAUTION: on some platforms TAS() and/or TAS_SPIN() may sometimes report
- * failure to acquire a lock even when the lock is not locked. For example,
- * on Alpha TAS() will "fail" if interrupted. Therefore a retry loop must
- * always be used, even if you are certain the lock is free.
- *
- * It is the responsibility of these macros to make sure that the compiler
- * does not re-order accesses to shared memory to precede the actual lock
- * acquisition, or follow the lock release. Prior to PostgreSQL 9.5, this
- * was the caller's responsibility, which meant that callers had to use
- * volatile-qualified pointers to refer to both the spinlock itself and the
- * shared data being accessed within the spinlocked critical section. This
- * was notationally awkward, easy to forget (and thus error-prone), and
- * prevented some useful compiler optimizations. For these reasons, we
- * now require that the macros themselves prevent compiler re-ordering,
- * so that the caller doesn't need to take special precautions.
- *
- * On platforms with weak memory ordering, the TAS(), TAS_SPIN(), and
- * S_UNLOCK() macros must further include hardware-level memory fence
- * instructions to prevent similar re-ordering at the hardware level.
- * TAS() and TAS_SPIN() must guarantee that loads and stores issued after
- * the macro are not executed until the lock has been obtained. Conversely,
- * S_UNLOCK() must guarantee that loads and stores issued before the macro
- * have been executed before the lock is released.
- *
- * On most supported platforms, TAS() uses a tas() function written
- * in assembly language to execute a hardware atomic-test-and-set
- * instruction. Equivalent OS-supplied mutex routines could be used too.
- *
- * If no system-specific TAS() is available (ie, HAVE_SPINLOCKS is not
- * defined), then we fall back on an emulation that uses SysV semaphores
- * (see spin.c). This emulation will be MUCH MUCH slower than a proper TAS()
- * implementation, because of the cost of a kernel call per lock or unlock.
- * An old report is that Postgres spends around 40% of its time in semop(2)
- * when using the SysV semaphore code.
- *
- *
- * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2016, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
- * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
- *
- * src/include/storage/s_lock.h
- *
- *-------------------------------------------------------------------------
- */
- #ifndef S_LOCK_H
- #define S_LOCK_H
- #ifdef FRONTEND
- #error "s_lock.h may not be included from frontend code"
- #endif
- #ifdef HAVE_SPINLOCKS /* skip spinlocks if requested */
- #if defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__INTEL_COMPILER)
- /*************************************************************************
- * All the gcc inlines
- * Gcc consistently defines the CPU as __cpu__.
- * Other compilers use __cpu or __cpu__ so we test for both in those cases.
- */
- /*----------
- * Standard gcc asm format (assuming "volatile slock_t *lock"):
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " instruction \n"
- " instruction \n"
- " instruction \n"
- : "=r"(_res), "+m"(*lock) // return register, in/out lock value
- : "r"(lock) // lock pointer, in input register
- : "memory", "cc"); // show clobbered registers here
- * The output-operands list (after first colon) should always include
- * "+m"(*lock), whether or not the asm code actually refers to this
- * operand directly. This ensures that gcc believes the value in the
- * lock variable is used and set by the asm code. Also, the clobbers
- * list (after third colon) should always include "memory"; this prevents
- * gcc from thinking it can cache the values of shared-memory fields
- * across the asm code. Add "cc" if your asm code changes the condition
- * code register, and also list any temp registers the code uses.
- *----------
- */
- #ifdef __i386__ /* 32-bit i386 */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned char slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- register slock_t _res = 1;
- /*
- * Use a non-locking test before asserting the bus lock. Note that the
- * extra test appears to be a small loss on some x86 platforms and a small
- * win on others; it's by no means clear that we should keep it.
- *
- * When this was last tested, we didn't have separate TAS() and TAS_SPIN()
- * macros. Nowadays it probably would be better to do a non-locking test
- * in TAS_SPIN() but not in TAS(), like on x86_64, but no-one's done the
- * testing to verify that. Without some empirical evidence, better to
- * leave it alone.
- */
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " cmpb $0,%1 \n"
- " jne 1f \n"
- " lock \n"
- " xchgb %0,%1 \n"
- "1: \n"
- : "+q"(_res), "+m"(*lock)
- : /* no inputs */
- : "memory", "cc");
- return (int) _res;
- }
- #define SPIN_DELAY() spin_delay()
- static __inline__ void
- spin_delay(void)
- {
- /*
- * This sequence is equivalent to the PAUSE instruction ("rep" is
- * ignored by old IA32 processors if the following instruction is
- * not a string operation); the IA-32 Architecture Software
- * Developer's Manual, Vol. 3, Section 7.7.2 describes why using
- * PAUSE in the inner loop of a spin lock is necessary for good
- * performance:
- *
- * The PAUSE instruction improves the performance of IA-32
- * processors supporting Hyper-Threading Technology when
- * executing spin-wait loops and other routines where one
- * thread is accessing a shared lock or semaphore in a tight
- * polling loop. When executing a spin-wait loop, the
- * processor can suffer a severe performance penalty when
- * exiting the loop because it detects a possible memory order
- * violation and flushes the core processor's pipeline. The
- * PAUSE instruction provides a hint to the processor that the
- * code sequence is a spin-wait loop. The processor uses this
- * hint to avoid the memory order violation and prevent the
- * pipeline flush. In addition, the PAUSE instruction
- * de-pipelines the spin-wait loop to prevent it from
- * consuming execution resources excessively.
- */
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " rep; nop \n");
- }
- #endif /* __i386__ */
- #ifdef __x86_64__ /* AMD Opteron, Intel EM64T */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned char slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- /*
- * On Intel EM64T, it's a win to use a non-locking test before the xchg proper,
- * but only when spinning.
- *
- * See also Implementing Scalable Atomic Locks for Multi-Core Intel(tm) EM64T
- * and IA32, by Michael Chynoweth and Mary R. Lee. As of this writing, it is
- * available at:
- * http://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/implementing-scalable-atomic-locks-for-multi-core-intel-em64t-and-ia32-architectures
- */
- #define TAS_SPIN(lock) (*(lock) ? 1 : TAS(lock))
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- register slock_t _res = 1;
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " lock \n"
- " xchgb %0,%1 \n"
- : "+q"(_res), "+m"(*lock)
- : /* no inputs */
- : "memory", "cc");
- return (int) _res;
- }
- #define SPIN_DELAY() spin_delay()
- static __inline__ void
- spin_delay(void)
- {
- /*
- * Adding a PAUSE in the spin delay loop is demonstrably a no-op on
- * Opteron, but it may be of some use on EM64T, so we keep it.
- */
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " rep; nop \n");
- }
- #endif /* __x86_64__ */
- #if defined(__ia64__) || defined(__ia64)
- /*
- * Intel Itanium, gcc or Intel's compiler.
- *
- * Itanium has weak memory ordering, but we rely on the compiler to enforce
- * strict ordering of accesses to volatile data. In particular, while the
- * xchg instruction implicitly acts as a memory barrier with 'acquire'
- * semantics, we do not have an explicit memory fence instruction in the
- * S_UNLOCK macro. We use a regular assignment to clear the spinlock, and
- * trust that the compiler marks the generated store instruction with the
- * ".rel" opcode.
- *
- * Testing shows that assumption to hold on gcc, although I could not find
- * any explicit statement on that in the gcc manual. In Intel's compiler,
- * the -m[no-]serialize-volatile option controls that, and testing shows that
- * it is enabled by default.
- *
- * While icc accepts gcc asm blocks on x86[_64], this is not true on ia64
- * (at least not in icc versions before 12.x). So we have to carry a separate
- * compiler-intrinsic-based implementation for it.
- */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned int slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- /* On IA64, it's a win to use a non-locking test before the xchg proper */
- #define TAS_SPIN(lock) (*(lock) ? 1 : TAS(lock))
- #ifndef __INTEL_COMPILER
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- long int ret;
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " xchg4 %0=%1,%2 \n"
- : "=r"(ret), "+m"(*lock)
- : "r"(1)
- : "memory");
- return (int) ret;
- }
- #else /* __INTEL_COMPILER */
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- int ret;
- ret = _InterlockedExchange(lock,1); /* this is a xchg asm macro */
- return ret;
- }
- /* icc can't use the regular gcc S_UNLOCK() macro either in this case */
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) \
- do { __memory_barrier(); *(lock) = 0; } while (0)
- #endif /* __INTEL_COMPILER */
- #endif /* __ia64__ || __ia64 */
- /*
- * On ARM and ARM64, we use __sync_lock_test_and_set(int *, int) if available.
- *
- * We use the int-width variant of the builtin because it works on more chips
- * than other widths.
- */
- #if defined(__arm__) || defined(__arm) || defined(__aarch64__) || defined(__aarch64)
- #ifdef HAVE_GCC__SYNC_INT32_TAS
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- typedef int slock_t;
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- return __sync_lock_test_and_set(lock, 1);
- }
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) __sync_lock_release(lock)
- #endif /* HAVE_GCC__SYNC_INT32_TAS */
- #endif /* __arm__ || __arm || __aarch64__ || __aarch64 */
- /* S/390 and S/390x Linux (32- and 64-bit zSeries) */
- #if defined(__s390__) || defined(__s390x__)
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned int slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- int _res = 0;
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " cs %0,%3,0(%2) \n"
- : "+d"(_res), "+m"(*lock)
- : "a"(lock), "d"(1)
- : "memory", "cc");
- return _res;
- }
- #endif /* __s390__ || __s390x__ */
- #if defined(__sparc__) /* Sparc */
- /*
- * Solaris has always run sparc processors in TSO (total store) mode, but
- * linux didn't use to and the *BSDs still don't. So, be careful about
- * acquire/release semantics. The CPU will treat superfluous membars as
- * NOPs, so it's just code space.
- */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned char slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- register slock_t _res;
- /*
- * See comment in /pg/backend/port/tas/solaris_sparc.s for why this
- * uses "ldstub", and that file uses "cas". gcc currently generates
- * sparcv7-targeted binaries, so "cas" use isn't possible.
- */
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " ldstub [%2], %0 \n"
- : "=r"(_res), "+m"(*lock)
- : "r"(lock)
- : "memory");
- #if defined(__sparcv7) || defined(__sparc_v7__)
- /*
- * No stbar or membar available, luckily no actually produced hardware
- * requires a barrier.
- */
- #elif defined(__sparcv8) || defined(__sparc_v8__)
- /* stbar is available (and required for both PSO, RMO), membar isn't */
- __asm__ __volatile__ ("stbar \n":::"memory");
- #else
- /*
- * #LoadStore (RMO) | #LoadLoad (RMO) together are the appropriate acquire
- * barrier for sparcv8+ upwards.
- */
- __asm__ __volatile__ ("membar #LoadStore | #LoadLoad \n":::"memory");
- #endif
- return (int) _res;
- }
- #if defined(__sparcv7) || defined(__sparc_v7__)
- /*
- * No stbar or membar available, luckily no actually produced hardware
- * requires a barrier. We fall through to the default gcc definition of
- * S_UNLOCK in this case.
- */
- #elif defined(__sparcv8) || defined(__sparc_v8__)
- /* stbar is available (and required for both PSO, RMO), membar isn't */
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) \
- do \
- { \
- __asm__ __volatile__ ("stbar \n":::"memory"); \
- *((volatile slock_t *) (lock)) = 0; \
- } while (0)
- #else
- /*
- * #LoadStore (RMO) | #StoreStore (RMO, PSO) together are the appropriate
- * release barrier for sparcv8+ upwards.
- */
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) \
- do \
- { \
- __asm__ __volatile__ ("membar #LoadStore | #StoreStore \n":::"memory"); \
- *((volatile slock_t *) (lock)) = 0; \
- } while (0)
- #endif
- #endif /* __sparc__ */
- /* PowerPC */
- #if defined(__ppc__) || defined(__powerpc__) || defined(__ppc64__) || defined(__powerpc64__)
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned int slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- /* On PPC, it's a win to use a non-locking test before the lwarx */
- #define TAS_SPIN(lock) (*(lock) ? 1 : TAS(lock))
- /*
- * NOTE: per the Enhanced PowerPC Architecture manual, v1.0 dated 7-May-2002,
- * an isync is a sufficient synchronization barrier after a lwarx/stwcx loop.
- * On newer machines, we can use lwsync instead for better performance.
- *
- * Ordinarily, we'd code the branches here using GNU-style local symbols, that
- * is "1f" referencing "1:" and so on. But some people run gcc on AIX with
- * IBM's assembler as backend, and IBM's assembler doesn't do local symbols.
- * So hand-code the branch offsets; fortunately, all PPC instructions are
- * exactly 4 bytes each, so it's not too hard to count.
- */
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- slock_t _t;
- int _res;
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- #ifdef USE_PPC_LWARX_MUTEX_HINT
- " lwarx %0,0,%3,1 \n"
- #else
- " lwarx %0,0,%3 \n"
- #endif
- " cmpwi %0,0 \n"
- " bne $+16 \n" /* branch to li %1,1 */
- " addi %0,%0,1 \n"
- " stwcx. %0,0,%3 \n"
- " beq $+12 \n" /* branch to lwsync/isync */
- " li %1,1 \n"
- " b $+12 \n" /* branch to end of asm sequence */
- #ifdef USE_PPC_LWSYNC
- " lwsync \n"
- #else
- " isync \n"
- #endif
- " li %1,0 \n"
- : "=&r"(_t), "=r"(_res), "+m"(*lock)
- : "r"(lock)
- : "memory", "cc");
- return _res;
- }
- /*
- * PowerPC S_UNLOCK is almost standard but requires a "sync" instruction.
- * On newer machines, we can use lwsync instead for better performance.
- */
- #ifdef USE_PPC_LWSYNC
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) \
- do \
- { \
- __asm__ __volatile__ (" lwsync \n" ::: "memory"); \
- *((volatile slock_t *) (lock)) = 0; \
- } while (0)
- #else
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) \
- do \
- { \
- __asm__ __volatile__ (" sync \n" ::: "memory"); \
- *((volatile slock_t *) (lock)) = 0; \
- } while (0)
- #endif /* USE_PPC_LWSYNC */
- #endif /* powerpc */
- /* Linux Motorola 68k */
- #if (defined(__mc68000__) || defined(__m68k__)) && defined(__linux__)
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned char slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- register int rv;
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " clrl %0 \n"
- " tas %1 \n"
- " sne %0 \n"
- : "=d"(rv), "+m"(*lock)
- : /* no inputs */
- : "memory", "cc");
- return rv;
- }
- #endif /* (__mc68000__ || __m68k__) && __linux__ */
- /*
- * VAXen -- even multiprocessor ones
- * (thanks to Tom Ivar Helbekkmo)
- */
- #if defined(__vax__)
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned char slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- register int _res;
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " movl $1, %0 \n"
- " bbssi $0, (%2), 1f \n"
- " clrl %0 \n"
- "1: \n"
- : "=&r"(_res), "+m"(*lock)
- : "r"(lock)
- : "memory");
- return _res;
- }
- #endif /* __vax__ */
- #if defined(__mips__) && !defined(__sgi) /* non-SGI MIPS */
- /* Note: on SGI we use the OS' mutex ABI, see below */
- /* Note: R10000 processors require a separate SYNC */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned int slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- register volatile slock_t *_l = lock;
- register int _res;
- register int _tmp;
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " .set push \n"
- " .set mips2 \n"
- " .set noreorder \n"
- " .set nomacro \n"
- " ll %0, %2 \n"
- " or %1, %0, 1 \n"
- " sc %1, %2 \n"
- " xori %1, 1 \n"
- " or %0, %0, %1 \n"
- " sync \n"
- " .set pop "
- : "=&r" (_res), "=&r" (_tmp), "+R" (*_l)
- : /* no inputs */
- : "memory");
- return _res;
- }
- /* MIPS S_UNLOCK is almost standard but requires a "sync" instruction */
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) \
- do \
- { \
- __asm__ __volatile__( \
- " .set push \n" \
- " .set mips2 \n" \
- " .set noreorder \n" \
- " .set nomacro \n" \
- " sync \n" \
- " .set pop " \
- : /* no outputs */ \
- : /* no inputs */ \
- : "memory"); \
- *((volatile slock_t *) (lock)) = 0; \
- } while (0)
- #endif /* __mips__ && !__sgi */
- #if defined(__m32r__) && defined(HAVE_SYS_TAS_H) /* Renesas' M32R */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- #include <sys/tas.h>
- typedef int slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- #endif /* __m32r__ */
- #if defined(__sh__) /* Renesas' SuperH */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned char slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- register int _res;
- /*
- * This asm is coded as if %0 could be any register, but actually SuperH
- * restricts the target of xor-immediate to be R0. That's handled by
- * the "z" constraint on _res.
- */
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " tas.b @%2 \n"
- " movt %0 \n"
- " xor #1,%0 \n"
- : "=z"(_res), "+m"(*lock)
- : "r"(lock)
- : "memory", "t");
- return _res;
- }
- #endif /* __sh__ */
- /* These live in s_lock.c, but only for gcc */
- #if defined(__m68k__) && !defined(__linux__) /* non-Linux Motorola 68k */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned char slock_t;
- #endif
- /*
- * Default implementation of S_UNLOCK() for gcc/icc.
- *
- * Note that this implementation is unsafe for any platform that can reorder
- * a memory access (either load or store) after a following store. That
- * happens not to be possible on x86 and most legacy architectures (some are
- * single-processor!), but many modern systems have weaker memory ordering.
- * Those that do must define their own version of S_UNLOCK() rather than
- * relying on this one.
- */
- #if !defined(S_UNLOCK)
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) \
- do { __asm__ __volatile__("" : : : "memory"); *(lock) = 0; } while (0)
- #endif
- #endif /* defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__INTEL_COMPILER) */
- /*
- * ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- * Platforms that use non-gcc inline assembly:
- * ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- */
- #if !defined(HAS_TEST_AND_SET) /* We didn't trigger above, let's try here */
- #if defined(USE_UNIVEL_CC) /* Unixware compiler */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned char slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- asm int
- tas(volatile slock_t *s_lock)
- {
- /* UNIVEL wants %mem in column 1, so we don't pgindent this file */
- %mem s_lock
- pushl %ebx
- movl s_lock, %ebx
- movl $255, %eax
- lock
- xchgb %al, (%ebx)
- popl %ebx
- }
- #endif /* defined(USE_UNIVEL_CC) */
- #if defined(__hppa) || defined(__hppa__) /* HP PA-RISC, GCC and HP compilers */
- /*
- * HP's PA-RISC
- *
- * See src/backend/port/hpux/tas.c.template for details about LDCWX. Because
- * LDCWX requires a 16-byte-aligned address, we declare slock_t as a 16-byte
- * struct. The active word in the struct is whichever has the aligned address;
- * the other three words just sit at -1.
- *
- * When using gcc, we can inline the required assembly code.
- */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef struct
- {
- int sema[4];
- } slock_t;
- #define TAS_ACTIVE_WORD(lock) ((volatile int *) (((uintptr_t) (lock) + 15) & ~15))
- #if defined(__GNUC__)
- static __inline__ int
- tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
- {
- volatile int *lockword = TAS_ACTIVE_WORD(lock);
- register int lockval;
- __asm__ __volatile__(
- " ldcwx 0(0,%2),%0 \n"
- : "=r"(lockval), "+m"(*lockword)
- : "r"(lockword)
- : "memory");
- return (lockval == 0);
- }
- /*
- * The hppa implementation doesn't follow the rules of this files and provides
- * a gcc specific implementation outside of the above defined(__GNUC__). It
- * does so to avoid duplication between the HP compiler and gcc. So undefine
- * the generic fallback S_UNLOCK from above.
- */
- #ifdef S_UNLOCK
- #undef S_UNLOCK
- #endif
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) \
- do { \
- __asm__ __volatile__("" : : : "memory"); \
- *TAS_ACTIVE_WORD(lock) = -1; \
- } while (0)
- #endif /* __GNUC__ */
- #define S_INIT_LOCK(lock) \
- do { \
- volatile slock_t *lock_ = (lock); \
- lock_->sema[0] = -1; \
- lock_->sema[1] = -1; \
- lock_->sema[2] = -1; \
- lock_->sema[3] = -1; \
- } while (0)
- #define S_LOCK_FREE(lock) (*TAS_ACTIVE_WORD(lock) != 0)
- #endif /* __hppa || __hppa__ */
- #if defined(__hpux) && defined(__ia64) && !defined(__GNUC__)
- /*
- * HP-UX on Itanium, non-gcc/icc compiler
- *
- * We assume that the compiler enforces strict ordering of loads/stores on
- * volatile data (see comments on the gcc-version earlier in this file).
- * Note that this assumption does *not* hold if you use the
- * +Ovolatile=__unordered option on the HP-UX compiler, so don't do that.
- *
- * See also Implementing Spinlocks on the Intel Itanium Architecture and
- * PA-RISC, by Tor Ekqvist and David Graves, for more information. As of
- * this writing, version 1.0 of the manual is available at:
- * http://h21007.www2.hp.com/portal/download/files/unprot/itanium/spinlocks.pdf
- */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- typedef unsigned int slock_t;
- #include <ia64/sys/inline.h>
- #define TAS(lock) _Asm_xchg(_SZ_W, lock, 1, _LDHINT_NONE)
- /* On IA64, it's a win to use a non-locking test before the xchg proper */
- #define TAS_SPIN(lock) (*(lock) ? 1 : TAS(lock))
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) \
- do { _Asm_mf(); (*(lock)) = 0; } while (0)
- #endif /* HPUX on IA64, non gcc/icc */
- #if defined(_AIX) /* AIX */
- /*
- * AIX (POWER)
- */
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- #include <sys/atomic_op.h>
- typedef int slock_t;
- #define TAS(lock) _check_lock((slock_t *) (lock), 0, 1)
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) _clear_lock((slock_t *) (lock), 0)
- #endif /* _AIX */
- /* These are in sunstudio_(sparc|x86).s */
- #if defined(__SUNPRO_C) && (defined(__i386) || defined(__x86_64__) || defined(__sparc__) || defined(__sparc))
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- #if defined(__i386) || defined(__x86_64__) || defined(__sparcv9) || defined(__sparcv8plus)
- typedef unsigned int slock_t;
- #else
- typedef unsigned char slock_t;
- #endif
- extern slock_t pg_atomic_cas(volatile slock_t *lock, slock_t with,
- slock_t cmp);
- #define TAS(a) (pg_atomic_cas((a), 1, 0) != 0)
- #endif
- #ifdef WIN32_ONLY_COMPILER
- typedef LONG slock_t;
- #define HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- #define TAS(lock) (InterlockedCompareExchange(lock, 1, 0))
- #define SPIN_DELAY() spin_delay()
- /* If using Visual C++ on Win64, inline assembly is unavailable.
- * Use a _mm_pause intrinsic instead of rep nop.
- */
- #if defined(_WIN64)
- static __forceinline void
- spin_delay(void)
- {
- _mm_pause();
- }
- #else
- static __forceinline void
- spin_delay(void)
- {
- /* See comment for gcc code. Same code, MASM syntax */
- __asm rep nop;
- }
- #endif
- #include <intrin.h>
- #pragma intrinsic(_ReadWriteBarrier)
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) \
- do { _ReadWriteBarrier(); (*(lock)) = 0; } while (0)
- #endif
- #endif /* !defined(HAS_TEST_AND_SET) */
- /* Blow up if we didn't have any way to do spinlocks */
- #ifndef HAS_TEST_AND_SET
- #error PostgreSQL does not have native spinlock support on this platform. To continue the compilation, rerun configure using --disable-spinlocks. However, performance will be poor. Please report this to pgsql-bugs@postgresql.org.
- #endif
- #else /* !HAVE_SPINLOCKS */
- /*
- * Fake spinlock implementation using semaphores --- slow and prone
- * to fall foul of kernel limits on number of semaphores, so don't use this
- * unless you must! The subroutines appear in spin.c.
- */
- typedef int slock_t;
- extern bool s_lock_free_sema(volatile slock_t *lock);
- extern void s_unlock_sema(volatile slock_t *lock);
- extern void s_init_lock_sema(volatile slock_t *lock, bool nested);
- extern int tas_sema(volatile slock_t *lock);
- #define S_LOCK_FREE(lock) s_lock_free_sema(lock)
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) s_unlock_sema(lock)
- #define S_INIT_LOCK(lock) s_init_lock_sema(lock, false)
- #define TAS(lock) tas_sema(lock)
- #endif /* HAVE_SPINLOCKS */
- /*
- * Default Definitions - override these above as needed.
- */
- #if !defined(S_LOCK)
- #define S_LOCK(lock) \
- (TAS(lock) ? s_lock((lock), __FILE__, __LINE__, PG_FUNCNAME_MACRO) : 0)
- #endif /* S_LOCK */
- #if !defined(S_LOCK_FREE)
- #define S_LOCK_FREE(lock) (*(lock) == 0)
- #endif /* S_LOCK_FREE */
- #if !defined(S_UNLOCK)
- /*
- * Our default implementation of S_UNLOCK is essentially *(lock) = 0. This
- * is unsafe if the platform can reorder a memory access (either load or
- * store) after a following store; platforms where this is possible must
- * define their own S_UNLOCK. But CPU reordering is not the only concern:
- * if we simply defined S_UNLOCK() as an inline macro, the compiler might
- * reorder instructions from inside the critical section to occur after the
- * lock release. Since the compiler probably can't know what the external
- * function s_unlock is doing, putting the same logic there should be adequate.
- * A sufficiently-smart globally optimizing compiler could break that
- * assumption, though, and the cost of a function call for every spinlock
- * release may hurt performance significantly, so we use this implementation
- * only for platforms where we don't know of a suitable intrinsic. For the
- * most part, those are relatively obscure platform/compiler combinations to
- * which the PostgreSQL project does not have access.
- */
- #define USE_DEFAULT_S_UNLOCK
- extern void s_unlock(volatile slock_t *lock);
- #define S_UNLOCK(lock) s_unlock(lock)
- #endif /* S_UNLOCK */
- #if !defined(S_INIT_LOCK)
- #define S_INIT_LOCK(lock) S_UNLOCK(lock)
- #endif /* S_INIT_LOCK */
- #if !defined(SPIN_DELAY)
- #define SPIN_DELAY() ((void) 0)
- #endif /* SPIN_DELAY */
- #if !defined(TAS)
- extern int tas(volatile slock_t *lock); /* in port/.../tas.s, or
- * s_lock.c */
- #define TAS(lock) tas(lock)
- #endif /* TAS */
- #if !defined(TAS_SPIN)
- #define TAS_SPIN(lock) TAS(lock)
- #endif /* TAS_SPIN */
- extern slock_t dummy_spinlock;
- /*
- * Platform-independent out-of-line support routines
- */
- extern int s_lock(volatile slock_t *lock, const char *file, int line, const char *func);
- /* Support for dynamic adjustment of spins_per_delay */
- #define DEFAULT_SPINS_PER_DELAY 100
- extern void set_spins_per_delay(int shared_spins_per_delay);
- extern int update_spins_per_delay(int shared_spins_per_delay);
- /*
- * Support for spin delay which is useful in various places where
- * spinlock-like procedures take place.
- */
- typedef struct
- {
- int spins;
- int delays;
- int cur_delay;
- const char *file;
- int line;
- const char *func;
- } SpinDelayStatus;
- static inline void
- init_spin_delay(SpinDelayStatus *status,
- const char *file, int line, const char *func)
- {
- status->spins = 0;
- status->delays = 0;
- status->cur_delay = 0;
- status->file = file;
- status->line = line;
- status->func = func;
- }
- #define init_local_spin_delay(status) init_spin_delay(status, __FILE__, __LINE__, PG_FUNCNAME_MACRO)
- void perform_spin_delay(SpinDelayStatus *status);
- void finish_spin_delay(SpinDelayStatus *status);
- #endif /* S_LOCK_H */
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