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From: Andrea Parri <parri.andrea@gmail.com>
To: "Paul E. McKenney" <paulmck@kernel.org>
Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-arch@vger.kernel.org,
	kernel-team@meta.com, mingo@kernel.org,
	stern@rowland.harvard.edu, will@kernel.org, peterz@infradead.org,
	boqun.feng@gmail.com, npiggin@gmail.com, dhowells@redhat.com,
	j.alglave@ucl.ac.uk, luc.maranget@inria.fr, akiyks@gmail.com,
	Jonas Oberhauser <jonas.oberhauser@huaweicloud.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH memory-model 2/8] tools/memory-model: Unify UNLOCK+LOCK pairings to po-unlock-lock-po
Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2023 01:59:00 +0100	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <ZBpS1H2rufhVoCid@andrea> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20230321010246.50960-2-paulmck@kernel.org>

On Mon, Mar 20, 2023 at 06:02:40PM -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> From: Jonas Oberhauser <jonas.oberhauser@huaweicloud.com>
> 
> LKMM uses two relations for talking about UNLOCK+LOCK pairings:
> 
> 	1) po-unlock-lock-po, which handles UNLOCK+LOCK pairings
> 	   on the same CPU or immediate lock handovers on the same
> 	   lock variable
> 
> 	2) po;[UL];(co|po);[LKW];po, which handles UNLOCK+LOCK pairs
> 	   literally as described in rcupdate.h#L1002, i.e., even
> 	   after a sequence of handovers on the same lock variable.
> 
> The latter relation is used only once, to provide the guarantee
> defined in rcupdate.h#L1002 by smp_mb__after_unlock_lock(), which
> makes any UNLOCK+LOCK pair followed by the fence behave like a full
> barrier.
> 
> This patch drops this use in favor of using po-unlock-lock-po
> everywhere, which unifies the way the model talks about UNLOCK+LOCK
> pairings.  At first glance this seems to weaken the guarantee given
> by LKMM: When considering a long sequence of lock handovers
> such as below, where P0 hands the lock to P1, which hands it to P2,
> which finally executes such an after_unlock_lock fence, the mb
> relation currently links any stores in the critical section of P0
> to instructions P2 executes after its fence, but not so after the
> patch.
> 
> P0(int *x, int *y, spinlock_t *mylock)
> {
>         spin_lock(mylock);
>         WRITE_ONCE(*x, 2);
>         spin_unlock(mylock);
>         WRITE_ONCE(*y, 1);
> }
> 
> P1(int *y, int *z, spinlock_t *mylock)
> {
>         int r0 = READ_ONCE(*y); // reads 1
>         spin_lock(mylock);
>         spin_unlock(mylock);
>         WRITE_ONCE(*z,1);
> }
> 
> P2(int *z, int *d, spinlock_t *mylock)
> {
>         int r1 = READ_ONCE(*z); // reads 1
>         spin_lock(mylock);
>         spin_unlock(mylock);
>         smp_mb__after_unlock_lock();
>         WRITE_ONCE(*d,1);
> }
> 
> P3(int *x, int *d)
> {
>         WRITE_ONCE(*d,2);
>         smp_mb();
>         WRITE_ONCE(*x,1);
> }
> 
> exists (1:r0=1 /\ 2:r1=1 /\ x=2 /\ d=2)
> 
> Nevertheless, the ordering guarantee given in rcupdate.h is actually
> not weakened.  This is because the unlock operations along the
> sequence of handovers are A-cumulative fences.  They ensure that any
> stores that propagate to the CPU performing the first unlock
> operation in the sequence must also propagate to every CPU that
> performs a subsequent lock operation in the sequence.  Therefore any
> such stores will also be ordered correctly by the fence even if only
> the final handover is considered a full barrier.
> 
> Indeed this patch does not affect the behaviors allowed by LKMM at
> all.  The mb relation is used to define ordering through:
> 1) mb/.../ppo/hb, where the ordering is subsumed by hb+ where the
>    lock-release, rfe, and unlock-acquire orderings each provide hb
> 2) mb/strong-fence/cumul-fence/prop, where the rfe and A-cumulative
>    lock-release orderings simply add more fine-grained cumul-fence
>    edges to substitute a single strong-fence edge provided by a long
>    lock handover sequence
> 3) mb/strong-fence/pb and various similar uses in the definition of
>    data races, where as discussed above any long handover sequence
>    can be turned into a sequence of cumul-fence edges that provide
>    the same ordering.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Jonas Oberhauser <jonas.oberhauser@huaweicloud.com>
> Reviewed-by: Alan Stern <stern@rowland.harvard.edu>
> Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@kernel.org>

Looks like after-unlock-lock has just won the single fattest inline comment
in linux-kernel.cat.  :-)

Acked-by: Andrea Parri <parri.andrea@gmail.com>

  Andrea


> ---
>  tools/memory-model/linux-kernel.cat | 15 +++++++++++++--
>  1 file changed, 13 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/tools/memory-model/linux-kernel.cat b/tools/memory-model/linux-kernel.cat
> index 07f884f9b2bf..6e531457bb73 100644
> --- a/tools/memory-model/linux-kernel.cat
> +++ b/tools/memory-model/linux-kernel.cat
> @@ -37,8 +37,19 @@ let mb = ([M] ; fencerel(Mb) ; [M]) |
>  	([M] ; fencerel(Before-atomic) ; [RMW] ; po? ; [M]) |
>  	([M] ; po? ; [RMW] ; fencerel(After-atomic) ; [M]) |
>  	([M] ; po? ; [LKW] ; fencerel(After-spinlock) ; [M]) |
> -	([M] ; po ; [UL] ; (co | po) ; [LKW] ;
> -		fencerel(After-unlock-lock) ; [M])
> +(*
> + * Note: The po-unlock-lock-po relation only passes the lock to the direct
> + * successor, perhaps giving the impression that the ordering of the
> + * smp_mb__after_unlock_lock() fence only affects a single lock handover.
> + * However, in a longer sequence of lock handovers, the implicit
> + * A-cumulative release fences of lock-release ensure that any stores that
> + * propagate to one of the involved CPUs before it hands over the lock to
> + * the next CPU will also propagate to the final CPU handing over the lock
> + * to the CPU that executes the fence.  Therefore, all those stores are
> + * also affected by the fence.
> + *)
> +	([M] ; po-unlock-lock-po ;
> +		[After-unlock-lock] ; po ; [M])
>  let gp = po ; [Sync-rcu | Sync-srcu] ; po?
>  let strong-fence = mb | gp
>  
> -- 
> 2.40.0.rc2
> 

  reply	other threads:[~2023-03-22  0:59 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 19+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2023-03-21  1:02 [PATCH memory-model 0/8] LKMM updates for v6.4 Paul E. McKenney
2023-03-21  1:02 ` [PATCH memory-model 1/8] tools/memory-model: Update some warning labels Paul E. McKenney
2023-03-22  0:51   ` Andrea Parri
2023-03-21  1:02 ` [PATCH memory-model 2/8] tools/memory-model: Unify UNLOCK+LOCK pairings to po-unlock-lock-po Paul E. McKenney
2023-03-22  0:59   ` Andrea Parri [this message]
2023-03-22 18:06     ` Paul E. McKenney
2023-03-21  1:02 ` [PATCH memory-model 3/8] tools/memory-model: Add smp_mb__after_srcu_read_unlock() Paul E. McKenney
2023-03-21  1:02 ` [PATCH memory-model 4/8] tools/memory-model: Restrict to-r to read-read address dependency Paul E. McKenney
2023-03-22  0:53   ` Andrea Parri
2023-03-21  1:02 ` [PATCH memory-model 5/8] tools/memory-model: Provide exact SRCU semantics Paul E. McKenney
2023-03-22  1:07   ` Andrea Parri
2023-03-22  1:13     ` Alan Stern
2023-03-21  1:02 ` [PATCH memory-model 6/8] tools/memory-model: Make ppo a subrelation of po Paul E. McKenney
2023-03-21  1:02 ` [PATCH memory-model 7/8] tools/memory-model: Add documentation about SRCU read-side critical sections Paul E. McKenney
2023-03-22  1:40   ` Andrea Parri
2023-03-22  2:17     ` Joel Fernandes
2023-03-22 14:30     ` Alan Stern
2023-03-22 18:02     ` Paul E. McKenney
2023-03-21  1:02 ` [PATCH memory-model 8/8] Documentation: litmus-tests: Correct spelling Paul E. McKenney

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