206 строки
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
206 строки
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
this_cpu operations
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-------------------
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this_cpu operations are a way of optimizing access to per cpu
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variables associated with the *currently* executing processor through
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the use of segment registers (or a dedicated register where the cpu
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permanently stored the beginning of the per cpu area for a specific
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processor).
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The this_cpu operations add a per cpu variable offset to the processor
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specific percpu base and encode that operation in the instruction
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operating on the per cpu variable.
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This means there are no atomicity issues between the calculation of
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the offset and the operation on the data. Therefore it is not
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necessary to disable preempt or interrupts to ensure that the
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processor is not changed between the calculation of the address and
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the operation on the data.
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Read-modify-write operations are of particular interest. Frequently
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processors have special lower latency instructions that can operate
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without the typical synchronization overhead but still provide some
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sort of relaxed atomicity guarantee. The x86 for example can execute
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RMV (Read Modify Write) instructions like inc/dec/cmpxchg without the
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lock prefix and the associated latency penalty.
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Access to the variable without the lock prefix is not synchronized but
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synchronization is not necessary since we are dealing with per cpu
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data specific to the currently executing processor. Only the current
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processor should be accessing that variable and therefore there are no
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concurrency issues with other processors in the system.
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On x86 the fs: or the gs: segment registers contain the base of the
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per cpu area. It is then possible to simply use the segment override
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to relocate a per cpu relative address to the proper per cpu area for
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the processor. So the relocation to the per cpu base is encoded in the
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instruction via a segment register prefix.
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For example:
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DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, x);
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int z;
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z = this_cpu_read(x);
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results in a single instruction
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mov ax, gs:[x]
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instead of a sequence of calculation of the address and then a fetch
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from that address which occurs with the percpu operations. Before
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this_cpu_ops such sequence also required preempt disable/enable to
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prevent the kernel from moving the thread to a different processor
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while the calculation is performed.
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The main use of the this_cpu operations has been to optimize counter
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operations.
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this_cpu_inc(x)
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results in the following single instruction (no lock prefix!)
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inc gs:[x]
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instead of the following operations required if there is no segment
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register.
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int *y;
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int cpu;
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cpu = get_cpu();
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y = per_cpu_ptr(&x, cpu);
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(*y)++;
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put_cpu();
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Note that these operations can only be used on percpu data that is
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reserved for a specific processor. Without disabling preemption in the
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surrounding code this_cpu_inc() will only guarantee that one of the
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percpu counters is correctly incremented. However, there is no
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guarantee that the OS will not move the process directly before or
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after the this_cpu instruction is executed. In general this means that
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the value of the individual counters for each processor are
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meaningless. The sum of all the per cpu counters is the only value
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that is of interest.
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Per cpu variables are used for performance reasons. Bouncing cache
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lines can be avoided if multiple processors concurrently go through
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the same code paths. Since each processor has its own per cpu
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variables no concurrent cacheline updates take place. The price that
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has to be paid for this optimization is the need to add up the per cpu
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counters when the value of the counter is needed.
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Special operations:
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-------------------
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y = this_cpu_ptr(&x)
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Takes the offset of a per cpu variable (&x !) and returns the address
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of the per cpu variable that belongs to the currently executing
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processor. this_cpu_ptr avoids multiple steps that the common
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get_cpu/put_cpu sequence requires. No processor number is
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available. Instead the offset of the local per cpu area is simply
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added to the percpu offset.
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Per cpu variables and offsets
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-----------------------------
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Per cpu variables have *offsets* to the beginning of the percpu
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area. They do not have addresses although they look like that in the
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code. Offsets cannot be directly dereferenced. The offset must be
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added to a base pointer of a percpu area of a processor in order to
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form a valid address.
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Therefore the use of x or &x outside of the context of per cpu
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operations is invalid and will generally be treated like a NULL
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pointer dereference.
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In the context of per cpu operations
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x is a per cpu variable. Most this_cpu operations take a cpu
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variable.
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&x is the *offset* a per cpu variable. this_cpu_ptr() takes
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the offset of a per cpu variable which makes this look a bit
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strange.
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Operations on a field of a per cpu structure
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--------------------------------------------
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Let's say we have a percpu structure
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struct s {
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int n,m;
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};
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DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct s, p);
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Operations on these fields are straightforward
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this_cpu_inc(p.m)
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z = this_cpu_cmpxchg(p.m, 0, 1);
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If we have an offset to struct s:
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struct s __percpu *ps = &p;
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z = this_cpu_dec(ps->m);
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z = this_cpu_inc_return(ps->n);
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The calculation of the pointer may require the use of this_cpu_ptr()
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if we do not make use of this_cpu ops later to manipulate fields:
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struct s *pp;
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pp = this_cpu_ptr(&p);
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pp->m--;
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z = pp->n++;
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Variants of this_cpu ops
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-------------------------
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this_cpu ops are interrupt safe. Some architecture do not support
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these per cpu local operations. In that case the operation must be
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replaced by code that disables interrupts, then does the operations
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that are guaranteed to be atomic and then reenable interrupts. Doing
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so is expensive. If there are other reasons why the scheduler cannot
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change the processor we are executing on then there is no reason to
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disable interrupts. For that purpose the __this_cpu operations are
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provided. For example.
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__this_cpu_inc(x);
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Will increment x and will not fallback to code that disables
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interrupts on platforms that cannot accomplish atomicity through
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address relocation and a Read-Modify-Write operation in the same
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instruction.
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&this_cpu_ptr(pp)->n vs this_cpu_ptr(&pp->n)
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--------------------------------------------
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The first operation takes the offset and forms an address and then
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adds the offset of the n field.
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The second one first adds the two offsets and then does the
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relocation. IMHO the second form looks cleaner and has an easier time
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with (). The second form also is consistent with the way
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this_cpu_read() and friends are used.
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Christoph Lameter, April 3rd, 2013
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