1 =================== 2 this_cpu operations 3 =================== 4 5 :Author: Christoph Lameter, August 4th, 2014 6 :Author: Pranith Kumar, Aug 2nd, 2014 7 8 this_cpu operations are a way of optimizing access to per cpu 9 variables associated with the *currently* executing processor. This is 10 done through the use of segment registers (or a dedicated register where 11 the cpu permanently stored the beginning of the per cpu area for a 12 specific processor). 13 14 this_cpu operations add a per cpu variable offset to the processor 15 specific per cpu base and encode that operation in the instruction 16 operating on the per cpu variable. 17 18 This means that there are no atomicity issues between the calculation of 19 the offset and the operation on the data. Therefore it is not 20 necessary to disable preemption or interrupts to ensure that the 21 processor is not changed between the calculation of the address and 22 the operation on the data. 23 24 Read-modify-write operations are of particular interest. Frequently 25 processors have special lower latency instructions that can operate 26 without the typical synchronization overhead, but still provide some 27 sort of relaxed atomicity guarantees. The x86, for example, can execute 28 RMW (Read Modify Write) instructions like inc/dec/cmpxchg without the 29 lock prefix and the associated latency penalty. 30 31 Access to the variable without the lock prefix is not synchronized but 32 synchronization is not necessary since we are dealing with per cpu 33 data specific to the currently executing processor. Only the current 34 processor should be accessing that variable and therefore there are no 35 concurrency issues with other processors in the system. 36 37 Please note that accesses by remote processors to a per cpu area are 38 exceptional situations and may impact performance and/or correctness 39 (remote write operations) of local RMW operations via this_cpu_*. 40 41 The main use of the this_cpu operations has been to optimize counter 42 operations. 43 44 The following this_cpu() operations with implied preemption protection 45 are defined. These operations can be used without worrying about 46 preemption and interrupts:: 47 48 this_cpu_read(pcp) 49 this_cpu_write(pcp, val) 50 this_cpu_add(pcp, val) 51 this_cpu_and(pcp, val) 52 this_cpu_or(pcp, val) 53 this_cpu_add_return(pcp, val) 54 this_cpu_xchg(pcp, nval) 55 this_cpu_cmpxchg(pcp, oval, nval) 56 this_cpu_sub(pcp, val) 57 this_cpu_inc(pcp) 58 this_cpu_dec(pcp) 59 this_cpu_sub_return(pcp, val) 60 this_cpu_inc_return(pcp) 61 this_cpu_dec_return(pcp) 62 63 64 Inner working of this_cpu operations 65 ------------------------------------ 66 67 On x86 the fs: or the gs: segment registers contain the base of the 68 per cpu area. It is then possible to simply use the segment override 69 to relocate a per cpu relative address to the proper per cpu area for 70 the processor. So the relocation to the per cpu base is encoded in the 71 instruction via a segment register prefix. 72 73 For example:: 74 75 DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, x); 76 int z; 77 78 z = this_cpu_read(x); 79 80 results in a single instruction:: 81 82 mov ax, gs:[x] 83 84 instead of a sequence of calculation of the address and then a fetch 85 from that address which occurs with the per cpu operations. Before 86 this_cpu_ops such sequence also required preempt disable/enable to 87 prevent the kernel from moving the thread to a different processor 88 while the calculation is performed. 89 90 Consider the following this_cpu operation:: 91 92 this_cpu_inc(x) 93 94 The above results in the following single instruction (no lock prefix!):: 95 96 inc gs:[x] 97 98 instead of the following operations required if there is no segment 99 register:: 100 101 int *y; 102 int cpu; 103 104 cpu = get_cpu(); 105 y = per_cpu_ptr(&x, cpu); 106 (*y)++; 107 put_cpu(); 108 109 Note that these operations can only be used on per cpu data that is 110 reserved for a specific processor. Without disabling preemption in the 111 surrounding code this_cpu_inc() will only guarantee that one of the 112 per cpu counters is correctly incremented. However, there is no 113 guarantee that the OS will not move the process directly before or 114 after the this_cpu instruction is executed. In general this means that 115 the value of the individual counters for each processor are 116 meaningless. The sum of all the per cpu counters is the only value 117 that is of interest. 118 119 Per cpu variables are used for performance reasons. Bouncing cache 120 lines can be avoided if multiple processors concurrently go through 121 the same code paths. Since each processor has its own per cpu 122 variables no concurrent cache line updates take place. The price that 123 has to be paid for this optimization is the need to add up the per cpu 124 counters when the value of a counter is needed. 125 126 127 Special operations 128 ------------------ 129 130 :: 131 132 y = this_cpu_ptr(&x) 133 134 Takes the offset of a per cpu variable (&x !) and returns the address 135 of the per cpu variable that belongs to the currently executing 136 processor. this_cpu_ptr avoids multiple steps that the common 137 get_cpu/put_cpu sequence requires. No processor number is 138 available. Instead, the offset of the local per cpu area is simply 139 added to the per cpu offset. 140 141 Note that this operation is usually used in a code segment when 142 preemption has been disabled. The pointer is then used to 143 access local per cpu data in a critical section. When preemption 144 is re-enabled this pointer is usually no longer useful since it may 145 no longer point to per cpu data of the current processor. 146 147 148 Per cpu variables and offsets 149 ----------------------------- 150 151 Per cpu variables have *offsets* to the beginning of the per cpu 152 area. They do not have addresses although they look like that in the 153 code. Offsets cannot be directly dereferenced. The offset must be 154 added to a base pointer of a per cpu area of a processor in order to 155 form a valid address. 156 157 Therefore the use of x or &x outside of the context of per cpu 158 operations is invalid and will generally be treated like a NULL 159 pointer dereference. 160 161 :: 162 163 DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, x); 164 165 In the context of per cpu operations the above implies that x is a per 166 cpu variable. Most this_cpu operations take a cpu variable. 167 168 :: 169 170 int __percpu *p = &x; 171 172 &x and hence p is the *offset* of a per cpu variable. this_cpu_ptr() 173 takes the offset of a per cpu variable which makes this look a bit 174 strange. 175 176 177 Operations on a field of a per cpu structure 178 -------------------------------------------- 179 180 Let's say we have a percpu structure:: 181 182 struct s { 183 int n,m; 184 }; 185 186 DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct s, p); 187 188 189 Operations on these fields are straightforward:: 190 191 this_cpu_inc(p.m) 192 193 z = this_cpu_cmpxchg(p.m, 0, 1); 194 195 196 If we have an offset to struct s:: 197 198 struct s __percpu *ps = &p; 199 200 this_cpu_dec(ps->m); 201 202 z = this_cpu_inc_return(ps->n); 203 204 205 The calculation of the pointer may require the use of this_cpu_ptr() 206 if we do not make use of this_cpu ops later to manipulate fields:: 207 208 struct s *pp; 209 210 pp = this_cpu_ptr(&p); 211 212 pp->m--; 213 214 z = pp->n++; 215 216 217 Variants of this_cpu ops 218 ------------------------ 219 220 this_cpu ops are interrupt safe. Some architectures do not support 221 these per cpu local operations. In that case the operation must be 222 replaced by code that disables interrupts, then does the operations 223 that are guaranteed to be atomic and then re-enable interrupts. Doing 224 so is expensive. If there are other reasons why the scheduler cannot 225 change the processor we are executing on then there is no reason to 226 disable interrupts. For that purpose the following __this_cpu operations 227 are provided. 228 229 These operations have no guarantee against concurrent interrupts or 230 preemption. If a per cpu variable is not used in an interrupt context 231 and the scheduler cannot preempt, then they are safe. If any interrupts 232 still occur while an operation is in progress and if the interrupt too 233 modifies the variable, then RMW actions can not be guaranteed to be 234 safe:: 235 236 __this_cpu_read(pcp) 237 __this_cpu_write(pcp, val) 238 __this_cpu_add(pcp, val) 239 __this_cpu_and(pcp, val) 240 __this_cpu_or(pcp, val) 241 __this_cpu_add_return(pcp, val) 242 __this_cpu_xchg(pcp, nval) 243 __this_cpu_cmpxchg(pcp, oval, nval) 244 __this_cpu_sub(pcp, val) 245 __this_cpu_inc(pcp) 246 __this_cpu_dec(pcp) 247 __this_cpu_sub_return(pcp, val) 248 __this_cpu_inc_return(pcp) 249 __this_cpu_dec_return(pcp) 250 251 252 Will increment x and will not fall-back to code that disables 253 interrupts on platforms that cannot accomplish atomicity through 254 address relocation and a Read-Modify-Write operation in the same 255 instruction. 256 257 258 &this_cpu_ptr(pp)->n vs this_cpu_ptr(&pp->n) 259 -------------------------------------------- 260 261 The first operation takes the offset and forms an address and then 262 adds the offset of the n field. This may result in two add 263 instructions emitted by the compiler. 264 265 The second one first adds the two offsets and then does the 266 relocation. IMHO the second form looks cleaner and has an easier time 267 with (). The second form also is consistent with the way 268 this_cpu_read() and friends are used. 269 270 271 Remote access to per cpu data 272 ------------------------------ 273 274 Per cpu data structures are designed to be used by one cpu exclusively. 275 If you use the variables as intended, this_cpu_ops() are guaranteed to 276 be "atomic" as no other CPU has access to these data structures. 277 278 There are special cases where you might need to access per cpu data 279 structures remotely. It is usually safe to do a remote read access 280 and that is frequently done to summarize counters. Remote write access 281 something which could be problematic because this_cpu ops do not 282 have lock semantics. A remote write may interfere with a this_cpu 283 RMW operation. 284 285 Remote write accesses to percpu data structures are highly discouraged 286 unless absolutely necessary. Please consider using an IPI to wake up 287 the remote CPU and perform the update to its per cpu area. 288 289 To access per-cpu data structure remotely, typically the per_cpu_ptr() 290 function is used:: 291 292 293 DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct data, datap); 294 295 struct data *p = per_cpu_ptr(&datap, cpu); 296 297 This makes it explicit that we are getting ready to access a percpu 298 area remotely. 299 300 You can also do the following to convert the datap offset to an address:: 301 302 struct data *p = this_cpu_ptr(&datap); 303 304 but, passing of pointers calculated via this_cpu_ptr to other cpus is 305 unusual and should be avoided. 306 307 Remote access are typically only for reading the status of another cpus 308 per cpu data. Write accesses can cause unique problems due to the 309 relaxed synchronization requirements for this_cpu operations. 310 311 One example that illustrates some concerns with write operations is 312 the following scenario that occurs because two per cpu variables 313 share a cache-line but the relaxed synchronization is applied to 314 only one process updating the cache-line. 315 316 Consider the following example:: 317 318 319 struct test { 320 atomic_t a; 321 int b; 322 }; 323 324 DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct test, onecacheline); 325 326 There is some concern about what would happen if the field 'a' is updated 327 remotely from one processor and the local processor would use this_cpu ops 328 to update field b. Care should be taken that such simultaneous accesses to 329 data within the same cache line are avoided. Also costly synchronization 330 may be necessary. IPIs are generally recommended in such scenarios instead 331 of a remote write to the per cpu area of another processor. 332 333 Even in cases where the remote writes are rare, please bear in 334 mind that a remote write will evict the cache line from the processor 335 that most likely will access it. If the processor wakes up and finds a 336 missing local cache line of a per cpu area, its performance and hence 337 the wake up times will be affected.
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