linux/Documentation/this_cpu_ops.txt
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   1===================
   2this_cpu operations
   3===================
   4
   5:Author: Christoph Lameter, August 4th, 2014
   6:Author: Pranith Kumar, Aug 2nd, 2014
   7
   8this_cpu operations are a way of optimizing access to per cpu
   9variables associated with the *currently* executing processor. This is
  10done through the use of segment registers (or a dedicated register where
  11the cpu permanently stored the beginning of the per cpu area for a
  12specific processor).
  13
  14this_cpu operations add a per cpu variable offset to the processor
  15specific per cpu base and encode that operation in the instruction
  16operating on the per cpu variable.
  17
  18This means that there are no atomicity issues between the calculation of
  19the offset and the operation on the data. Therefore it is not
  20necessary to disable preemption or interrupts to ensure that the
  21processor is not changed between the calculation of the address and
  22the operation on the data.
  23
  24Read-modify-write operations are of particular interest. Frequently
  25processors have special lower latency instructions that can operate
  26without the typical synchronization overhead, but still provide some
  27sort of relaxed atomicity guarantees. The x86, for example, can execute
  28RMW (Read Modify Write) instructions like inc/dec/cmpxchg without the
  29lock prefix and the associated latency penalty.
  30
  31Access to the variable without the lock prefix is not synchronized but
  32synchronization is not necessary since we are dealing with per cpu
  33data specific to the currently executing processor. Only the current
  34processor should be accessing that variable and therefore there are no
  35concurrency issues with other processors in the system.
  36
  37Please note that accesses by remote processors to a per cpu area are
  38exceptional situations and may impact performance and/or correctness
  39(remote write operations) of local RMW operations via this_cpu_*.
  40
  41The main use of the this_cpu operations has been to optimize counter
  42operations.
  43
  44The following this_cpu() operations with implied preemption protection
  45are defined. These operations can be used without worrying about
  46preemption 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_cmpxchg_double(pcp1, pcp2, oval1, oval2, nval1, nval2)
  57        this_cpu_sub(pcp, val)
  58        this_cpu_inc(pcp)
  59        this_cpu_dec(pcp)
  60        this_cpu_sub_return(pcp, val)
  61        this_cpu_inc_return(pcp)
  62        this_cpu_dec_return(pcp)
  63
  64
  65Inner working of this_cpu operations
  66------------------------------------
  67
  68On x86 the fs: or the gs: segment registers contain the base of the
  69per cpu area. It is then possible to simply use the segment override
  70to relocate a per cpu relative address to the proper per cpu area for
  71the processor. So the relocation to the per cpu base is encoded in the
  72instruction via a segment register prefix.
  73
  74For example::
  75
  76        DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, x);
  77        int z;
  78
  79        z = this_cpu_read(x);
  80
  81results in a single instruction::
  82
  83        mov ax, gs:[x]
  84
  85instead of a sequence of calculation of the address and then a fetch
  86from that address which occurs with the per cpu operations. Before
  87this_cpu_ops such sequence also required preempt disable/enable to
  88prevent the kernel from moving the thread to a different processor
  89while the calculation is performed.
  90
  91Consider the following this_cpu operation::
  92
  93        this_cpu_inc(x)
  94
  95The above results in the following single instruction (no lock prefix!)::
  96
  97        inc gs:[x]
  98
  99instead of the following operations required if there is no segment
 100register::
 101
 102        int *y;
 103        int cpu;
 104
 105        cpu = get_cpu();
 106        y = per_cpu_ptr(&x, cpu);
 107        (*y)++;
 108        put_cpu();
 109
 110Note that these operations can only be used on per cpu data that is
 111reserved for a specific processor. Without disabling preemption in the
 112surrounding code this_cpu_inc() will only guarantee that one of the
 113per cpu counters is correctly incremented. However, there is no
 114guarantee that the OS will not move the process directly before or
 115after the this_cpu instruction is executed. In general this means that
 116the value of the individual counters for each processor are
 117meaningless. The sum of all the per cpu counters is the only value
 118that is of interest.
 119
 120Per cpu variables are used for performance reasons. Bouncing cache
 121lines can be avoided if multiple processors concurrently go through
 122the same code paths.  Since each processor has its own per cpu
 123variables no concurrent cache line updates take place. The price that
 124has to be paid for this optimization is the need to add up the per cpu
 125counters when the value of a counter is needed.
 126
 127
 128Special operations
 129------------------
 130
 131::
 132
 133        y = this_cpu_ptr(&x)
 134
 135Takes the offset of a per cpu variable (&x !) and returns the address
 136of the per cpu variable that belongs to the currently executing
 137processor.  this_cpu_ptr avoids multiple steps that the common
 138get_cpu/put_cpu sequence requires. No processor number is
 139available. Instead, the offset of the local per cpu area is simply
 140added to the per cpu offset.
 141
 142Note that this operation is usually used in a code segment when
 143preemption has been disabled. The pointer is then used to
 144access local per cpu data in a critical section. When preemption
 145is re-enabled this pointer is usually no longer useful since it may
 146no longer point to per cpu data of the current processor.
 147
 148
 149Per cpu variables and offsets
 150-----------------------------
 151
 152Per cpu variables have *offsets* to the beginning of the per cpu
 153area. They do not have addresses although they look like that in the
 154code. Offsets cannot be directly dereferenced. The offset must be
 155added to a base pointer of a per cpu area of a processor in order to
 156form a valid address.
 157
 158Therefore the use of x or &x outside of the context of per cpu
 159operations is invalid and will generally be treated like a NULL
 160pointer dereference.
 161
 162::
 163
 164        DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, x);
 165
 166In the context of per cpu operations the above implies that x is a per
 167cpu variable. Most this_cpu operations take a cpu variable.
 168
 169::
 170
 171        int __percpu *p = &x;
 172
 173&x and hence p is the *offset* of a per cpu variable. this_cpu_ptr()
 174takes the offset of a per cpu variable which makes this look a bit
 175strange.
 176
 177
 178Operations on a field of a per cpu structure
 179--------------------------------------------
 180
 181Let's say we have a percpu structure::
 182
 183        struct s {
 184                int n,m;
 185        };
 186
 187        DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct s, p);
 188
 189
 190Operations on these fields are straightforward::
 191
 192        this_cpu_inc(p.m)
 193
 194        z = this_cpu_cmpxchg(p.m, 0, 1);
 195
 196
 197If we have an offset to struct s::
 198
 199        struct s __percpu *ps = &p;
 200
 201        this_cpu_dec(ps->m);
 202
 203        z = this_cpu_inc_return(ps->n);
 204
 205
 206The calculation of the pointer may require the use of this_cpu_ptr()
 207if we do not make use of this_cpu ops later to manipulate fields::
 208
 209        struct s *pp;
 210
 211        pp = this_cpu_ptr(&p);
 212
 213        pp->m--;
 214
 215        z = pp->n++;
 216
 217
 218Variants of this_cpu ops
 219------------------------
 220
 221this_cpu ops are interrupt safe. Some architectures do not support
 222these per cpu local operations. In that case the operation must be
 223replaced by code that disables interrupts, then does the operations
 224that are guaranteed to be atomic and then re-enable interrupts. Doing
 225so is expensive. If there are other reasons why the scheduler cannot
 226change the processor we are executing on then there is no reason to
 227disable interrupts. For that purpose the following __this_cpu operations
 228are provided.
 229
 230These operations have no guarantee against concurrent interrupts or
 231preemption. If a per cpu variable is not used in an interrupt context
 232and the scheduler cannot preempt, then they are safe. If any interrupts
 233still occur while an operation is in progress and if the interrupt too
 234modifies the variable, then RMW actions can not be guaranteed to be
 235safe::
 236
 237        __this_cpu_read(pcp)
 238        __this_cpu_write(pcp, val)
 239        __this_cpu_add(pcp, val)
 240        __this_cpu_and(pcp, val)
 241        __this_cpu_or(pcp, val)
 242        __this_cpu_add_return(pcp, val)
 243        __this_cpu_xchg(pcp, nval)
 244        __this_cpu_cmpxchg(pcp, oval, nval)
 245        __this_cpu_cmpxchg_double(pcp1, pcp2, oval1, oval2, nval1, nval2)
 246        __this_cpu_sub(pcp, val)
 247        __this_cpu_inc(pcp)
 248        __this_cpu_dec(pcp)
 249        __this_cpu_sub_return(pcp, val)
 250        __this_cpu_inc_return(pcp)
 251        __this_cpu_dec_return(pcp)
 252
 253
 254Will increment x and will not fall-back to code that disables
 255interrupts on platforms that cannot accomplish atomicity through
 256address relocation and a Read-Modify-Write operation in the same
 257instruction.
 258
 259
 260&this_cpu_ptr(pp)->n vs this_cpu_ptr(&pp->n)
 261--------------------------------------------
 262
 263The first operation takes the offset and forms an address and then
 264adds the offset of the n field. This may result in two add
 265instructions emitted by the compiler.
 266
 267The second one first adds the two offsets and then does the
 268relocation.  IMHO the second form looks cleaner and has an easier time
 269with (). The second form also is consistent with the way
 270this_cpu_read() and friends are used.
 271
 272
 273Remote access to per cpu data
 274------------------------------
 275
 276Per cpu data structures are designed to be used by one cpu exclusively.
 277If you use the variables as intended, this_cpu_ops() are guaranteed to
 278be "atomic" as no other CPU has access to these data structures.
 279
 280There are special cases where you might need to access per cpu data
 281structures remotely. It is usually safe to do a remote read access
 282and that is frequently done to summarize counters. Remote write access
 283something which could be problematic because this_cpu ops do not
 284have lock semantics. A remote write may interfere with a this_cpu
 285RMW operation.
 286
 287Remote write accesses to percpu data structures are highly discouraged
 288unless absolutely necessary. Please consider using an IPI to wake up
 289the remote CPU and perform the update to its per cpu area.
 290
 291To access per-cpu data structure remotely, typically the per_cpu_ptr()
 292function is used::
 293
 294
 295        DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct data, datap);
 296
 297        struct data *p = per_cpu_ptr(&datap, cpu);
 298
 299This makes it explicit that we are getting ready to access a percpu
 300area remotely.
 301
 302You can also do the following to convert the datap offset to an address::
 303
 304        struct data *p = this_cpu_ptr(&datap);
 305
 306but, passing of pointers calculated via this_cpu_ptr to other cpus is
 307unusual and should be avoided.
 308
 309Remote access are typically only for reading the status of another cpus
 310per cpu data. Write accesses can cause unique problems due to the
 311relaxed synchronization requirements for this_cpu operations.
 312
 313One example that illustrates some concerns with write operations is
 314the following scenario that occurs because two per cpu variables
 315share a cache-line but the relaxed synchronization is applied to
 316only one process updating the cache-line.
 317
 318Consider the following example::
 319
 320
 321        struct test {
 322                atomic_t a;
 323                int b;
 324        };
 325
 326        DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct test, onecacheline);
 327
 328There is some concern about what would happen if the field 'a' is updated
 329remotely from one processor and the local processor would use this_cpu ops
 330to update field b. Care should be taken that such simultaneous accesses to
 331data within the same cache line are avoided. Also costly synchronization
 332may be necessary. IPIs are generally recommended in such scenarios instead
 333of a remote write to the per cpu area of another processor.
 334
 335Even in cases where the remote writes are rare, please bear in
 336mind that a remote write will evict the cache line from the processor
 337that most likely will access it. If the processor wakes up and finds a
 338missing local cache line of a per cpu area, its performance and hence
 339the wake up times will be affected.
 340