Pierre PEIFFER a écrit :
Ulrich Drepper a écrit :
There are no such situations anymore in an optimal userlevel
implementation. The last problem (in pthread_cond_signal) was fixed
by the addition of FUTEX_WAKE_OP. The userlevel code you're looking
at is simply not optimized for the modern kernels.
I think there is a misunderstanding here.
Hum... maybe Ulrich was answering to my own message (where I stated that most
existing multithreaded pay the price of context switches)
(To Ulrich : Most existing applications use glibc <= 2.3.6, where
FUTEX_WAKE_OP is not used yet AFAIK)
I think your analysis is correct Pierre, but you speak of 'task-switches',
where there is only a spinlock involved :
On UP case : a wake_up_all() wont preempt current thread : it will task-switch
only when current thread exits kernel mode.
On PREEMPT case : wake_up_all() wont preempt current thread (because current
thread is holding bh->lock).
On SMP : the awaken thread will spin some time on bh->lock, but not
task-switch again.
On RT kernel, this might be different of course...
FUTEX_WAKE_OP is implemented to handle simultaneously more than one
futex in some specific situations (such as pthread_cond_signal).
The scenario I've described occurred in futex_wake, futex_wake_op and
futex_requeue and is _independent_ of the userlevel code.
All these functions call wake_futex, and then wake_up_all, with the
futex_hash_bucket lock still held.
If the woken thread is immediately scheduled (in wake_up_all), and only
in this case (because of a higher priority, etc), it will try to take
this lock too (because of the "if (lock_ptr != 0)" statement in
unqueue_me), causing two task-switches to take this lock for nothing.
Otherwise, it will not: lock_ptr is set to NULL just after the
wake_up_all call)
This scenario happens at least in pthread_cond_signal,
pthread_cond_broadcast and probably all pthread_*_unlock functions.
The patch I've proposed should, at least in theory, solve this. But I'm
not sure of the correctness...
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