On Thu, Jun 22, 2006 at 01:28:36PM +0200, Jan Glauber wrote:
> On Wed, 2006-06-21 at 10:34 -0700, Mike Grundy wrote:
> > On Wed, Jun 21, 2006 at 06:38:40PM +0200, Martin Schwidefsky wrote:
> > > You misunderstood me here. I'm not talking about storing the same piece
> > > of data to memory on each processor. I'm talking about isolating all
> > > other cpus so that the initiating cpu can store the breakpoint to memory
> > > without running into the danger that another cpu is trying to execute it
> > > at the same time. But probably the store should be atomic in regard to
> > > instruction fetching on the other cpus. It is only two bytes and it
> > > should be aligned.
>
> Preemption disabling is not necessary around smp_call_function(), since
> smp_call_function() takes a spin lock. But smp_call_function() is wrong
> here, it calls the code on all other CPUs but not on our own. Please use
> on_each_cpu() instead.
But on_each_cpu() does:
preempt_disable();
ret = smp_call_function(func, info, retry, wait);
local_irq_disable();
func(info);
local_irq_enable();
preempt_enable();
I'm confused. I really don't need to swap the instruction on each cpu. I really
need to make sure each cpu is not fetching that instruction while I change it.
s390 doesn't have a flush_icache_range() (which the other arches use after the
swap). I thought that the synchronization that smp_call_function() does was the
primary reason for using it here, not repeatedly changing the same area of
memory. If you'd prefer I use on_each_cpu() instead of smp_call_function(),
no problem.
Thanks
Mike
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