* Pavel Machek ([email protected]) wrote:
> Hi!
>
> AFAICT this fails to mention... Is local_t as big as int? As big as
> long? Or perhaps smaller because high bits may be needed for locking?
>
> Pavel
>
Hi Pavel,
Here is an update that adds the information you mentionned in this reply and the
one to Andrew. Thanks for the comments.
Mathieu
index dfeec94..bd854b3 100644
--- a/Documentation/local_ops.txt
+++ b/Documentation/local_ops.txt
@@ -22,6 +22,13 @@ require disabling interrupts to protect from interrupt handlers and it permits
coherent counters in NMI handlers. It is especially useful for tracing purposes
and for various performance monitoring counters.
+Local atomic operations only guarantee variable modification atomicity wrt the
+CPU which owns the data. Therefore, care must taken to make sure that only one
+CPU writes to the local_t data. This is done by using per cpu data and making
+sure that we modify it from within a preemption safe context. It is however
+permitted to read local_t data from any CPU : it will then appear to be written
+out of order wrt other memory writes on the owner CPU.
+
* Implementation for a given architecture
@@ -31,6 +38,12 @@ i386 and x86_64) and any SMP sychronization barrier. If the architecture does
not have a different behavior between SMP and UP, including asm-generic/local.h
in your archtecture's local.h is sufficient.
+The local_t type is defined as an opaque signed long by embedding an
+atomic_long_t inside a structure. This is made so a cast from this type to a
+long fails. The definition looks like :
+
+typedef struct { atomic_long_t a; } local_t;
+
* How to use local atomic operations
@@ -42,6 +55,8 @@ static DEFINE_PER_CPU(local_t, counters) = LOCAL_INIT(0);
* Counting
+Counting is done on all the bits of a signed long.
+
In preemptible context, use get_cpu_var() and put_cpu_var() around local atomic
operations : it makes sure that preemption is disabled around write access to
the per cpu variable. For instance :
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