linux/Documentation/process/volatile-considered-harmful.rst
<<
>>
Prefs
   1
   2.. _volatile_considered_harmful:
   3
   4Why the "volatile" type class should not be used
   5------------------------------------------------
   6
   7C programmers have often taken volatile to mean that the variable could be
   8changed outside of the current thread of execution; as a result, they are
   9sometimes tempted to use it in kernel code when shared data structures are
  10being used.  In other words, they have been known to treat volatile types
  11as a sort of easy atomic variable, which they are not.  The use of volatile in
  12kernel code is almost never correct; this document describes why.
  13
  14The key point to understand with regard to volatile is that its purpose is
  15to suppress optimization, which is almost never what one really wants to
  16do.  In the kernel, one must protect shared data structures against
  17unwanted concurrent access, which is very much a different task.  The
  18process of protecting against unwanted concurrency will also avoid almost
  19all optimization-related problems in a more efficient way.
  20
  21Like volatile, the kernel primitives which make concurrent access to data
  22safe (spinlocks, mutexes, memory barriers, etc.) are designed to prevent
  23unwanted optimization.  If they are being used properly, there will be no
  24need to use volatile as well.  If volatile is still necessary, there is
  25almost certainly a bug in the code somewhere.  In properly-written kernel
  26code, volatile can only serve to slow things down.
  27
  28Consider a typical block of kernel code::
  29
  30    spin_lock(&the_lock);
  31    do_something_on(&shared_data);
  32    do_something_else_with(&shared_data);
  33    spin_unlock(&the_lock);
  34
  35If all the code follows the locking rules, the value of shared_data cannot
  36change unexpectedly while the_lock is held.  Any other code which might
  37want to play with that data will be waiting on the lock.  The spinlock
  38primitives act as memory barriers - they are explicitly written to do so -
  39meaning that data accesses will not be optimized across them.  So the
  40compiler might think it knows what will be in shared_data, but the
  41spin_lock() call, since it acts as a memory barrier, will force it to
  42forget anything it knows.  There will be no optimization problems with
  43accesses to that data.
  44
  45If shared_data were declared volatile, the locking would still be
  46necessary.  But the compiler would also be prevented from optimizing access
  47to shared_data _within_ the critical section, when we know that nobody else
  48can be working with it.  While the lock is held, shared_data is not
  49volatile.  When dealing with shared data, proper locking makes volatile
  50unnecessary - and potentially harmful.
  51
  52The volatile storage class was originally meant for memory-mapped I/O
  53registers.  Within the kernel, register accesses, too, should be protected
  54by locks, but one also does not want the compiler "optimizing" register
  55accesses within a critical section.  But, within the kernel, I/O memory
  56accesses are always done through accessor functions; accessing I/O memory
  57directly through pointers is frowned upon and does not work on all
  58architectures.  Those accessors are written to prevent unwanted
  59optimization, so, once again, volatile is unnecessary.
  60
  61Another situation where one might be tempted to use volatile is
  62when the processor is busy-waiting on the value of a variable.  The right
  63way to perform a busy wait is::
  64
  65    while (my_variable != what_i_want)
  66        cpu_relax();
  67
  68The cpu_relax() call can lower CPU power consumption or yield to a
  69hyperthreaded twin processor; it also happens to serve as a compiler
  70barrier, so, once again, volatile is unnecessary.  Of course, busy-
  71waiting is generally an anti-social act to begin with.
  72
  73There are still a few rare situations where volatile makes sense in the
  74kernel:
  75
  76  - The above-mentioned accessor functions might use volatile on
  77    architectures where direct I/O memory access does work.  Essentially,
  78    each accessor call becomes a little critical section on its own and
  79    ensures that the access happens as expected by the programmer.
  80
  81  - Inline assembly code which changes memory, but which has no other
  82    visible side effects, risks being deleted by GCC.  Adding the volatile
  83    keyword to asm statements will prevent this removal.
  84
  85  - The jiffies variable is special in that it can have a different value
  86    every time it is referenced, but it can be read without any special
  87    locking.  So jiffies can be volatile, but the addition of other
  88    variables of this type is strongly frowned upon.  Jiffies is considered
  89    to be a "stupid legacy" issue (Linus's words) in this regard; fixing it
  90    would be more trouble than it is worth.
  91
  92  - Pointers to data structures in coherent memory which might be modified
  93    by I/O devices can, sometimes, legitimately be volatile.  A ring buffer
  94    used by a network adapter, where that adapter changes pointers to
  95    indicate which descriptors have been processed, is an example of this
  96    type of situation.
  97
  98For most code, none of the above justifications for volatile apply.  As a
  99result, the use of volatile is likely to be seen as a bug and will bring
 100additional scrutiny to the code.  Developers who are tempted to use
 101volatile should take a step back and think about what they are truly trying
 102to accomplish.
 103
 104Patches to remove volatile variables are generally welcome - as long as
 105they come with a justification which shows that the concurrency issues have
 106been properly thought through.
 107
 108
 109References
 110==========
 111
 112[1] http://lwn.net/Articles/233481/
 113
 114[2] http://lwn.net/Articles/233482/
 115
 116Credits
 117=======
 118
 119Original impetus and research by Randy Dunlap
 120
 121Written by Jonathan Corbet
 122
 123Improvements via comments from Satyam Sharma, Johannes Stezenbach, Jesper
 124Juhl, Heikki Orsila, H. Peter Anvin, Philipp Hahn, and Stefan
 125Richter.
 126