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-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/BigTreeClassicRCU.svg474
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/BigTreeClassicRCUBH.svg499
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/BigTreeClassicRCUBHdyntick.svg695
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/BigTreePreemptRCUBHdyntick.svg741
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/BigTreePreemptRCUBHdyntickCB.svg858
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/Data-Structures.html1333
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/HugeTreeClassicRCU.svg939
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/TreeLevel.svg828
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/TreeMapping.svg305
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/TreeMappingLevel.svg380
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/blkd_task.svg843
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/nxtlist.svg396
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/2013-08-is-it-dead.pngbin100825 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/RCUApplicability.svg237
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.html941
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.htmlx2741
-rwxr-xr-xDocumentation/RCU/Design/htmlqqz.sh108
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/trace.txt10
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RCU/whatisRCU.txt22
19 files changed, 8845 insertions, 3505 deletions
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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+ <html>
+ <head><title>A Tour Through TREE_RCU's Data Structures [LWN.net]</title>
+ <meta HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+
+ <p>January 27, 2016</p>
+ <p>This article was contributed by Paul E.&nbsp;McKenney</p>
+
+<h3>Introduction</h3>
+
+This document describes RCU's major data structures and their relationship
+to each other.
+
+<ol>
+<li> <a href="#Data-Structure Relationships">
+ Data-Structure Relationships</a>
+<li> <a href="#The rcu_state Structure">
+ The <tt>rcu_state</tt> Structure</a>
+<li> <a href="#The rcu_node Structure">
+ The <tt>rcu_node</tt> Structure</a>
+<li> <a href="#The rcu_data Structure">
+ The <tt>rcu_data</tt> Structure</a>
+<li> <a href="#The rcu_dynticks Structure">
+ The <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt> Structure</a>
+<li> <a href="#The rcu_head Structure">
+ The <tt>rcu_head</tt> Structure</a>
+<li> <a href="#RCU-Specific Fields in the task_struct Structure">
+ RCU-Specific Fields in the <tt>task_struct</tt> Structure</a>
+<li> <a href="#Accessor Functions">
+ Accessor Functions</a>
+</ol>
+
+At the end we have the
+<a href="#Answers to Quick Quizzes">answers to the quick quizzes</a>.
+
+<h3><a name="Data-Structure Relationships">Data-Structure Relationships</a></h3>
+
+<p>RCU is for all intents and purposes a large state machine, and its
+data structures maintain the state in such a way as to allow RCU readers
+to execute extremely quickly, while also processing the RCU grace periods
+requested by updaters in an efficient and extremely scalable fashion.
+The efficiency and scalability of RCU updaters is provided primarily
+by a combining tree, as shown below:
+
+</p><p><img src="BigTreeClassicRCU.svg" alt="BigTreeClassicRCU.svg" width="30%">
+
+</p><p>This diagram shows an enclosing <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure
+containing a tree of <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures.
+Each leaf node of the <tt>rcu_node</tt> tree has up to 16
+<tt>rcu_data</tt> structures associated with it, so that there
+are <tt>NR_CPUS</tt> number of <tt>rcu_data</tt> structures,
+one for each possible CPU.
+This structure is adjusted at boot time, if needed, to handle the
+common case where <tt>nr_cpu_ids</tt> is much less than
+<tt>NR_CPUs</tt>.
+For example, a number of Linux distributions set <tt>NR_CPUs=4096</tt>,
+which results in a three-level <tt>rcu_node</tt> tree.
+If the actual hardware has only 16 CPUs, RCU will adjust itself
+at boot time, resulting in an <tt>rcu_node</tt> tree with only a single node.
+
+</p><p>The purpose of this combining tree is to allow per-CPU events
+such as quiescent states, dyntick-idle transitions,
+and CPU hotplug operations to be processed efficiently
+and scalably.
+Quiescent states are recorded by the per-CPU <tt>rcu_data</tt> structures,
+and other events are recorded by the leaf-level <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+structures.
+All of these events are combined at each level of the tree until finally
+grace periods are completed at the tree's root <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+structure.
+A grace period can be completed at the root once every CPU
+(or, in the case of <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU</tt>, task)
+has passed through a quiescent state.
+Once a grace period has completed, record of that fact is propagated
+back down the tree.
+
+</p><p>As can be seen from the diagram, on a 64-bit system
+a two-level tree with 64 leaves can accommodate 1,024 CPUs, with a fanout
+of 64 at the root and a fanout of 16 at the leaves.
+
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Why isn't the fanout at the leaves also 64?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ Because there are more types of events that affect the leaf-level
+ <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures than further up the tree.
+ Therefore, if the leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures have fanout of
+ 64, the contention on these structures' <tt>-&gt;structures</tt>
+ becomes excessive.
+ Experimentation on a wide variety of systems has shown that a fanout
+ of 16 works well for the leaves of the <tt>rcu_node</tt> tree.
+ </font>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">Of course, further experience with
+ systems having hundreds or thousands of CPUs may demonstrate
+ that the fanout for the non-leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures
+ must also be reduced.
+ Such reduction can be easily carried out when and if it proves
+ necessary.
+ In the meantime, if you are using such a system and running into
+ contention problems on the non-leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures,
+ you may use the <tt>CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT</tt> kernel configuration
+ parameter to reduce the non-leaf fanout as needed.
+ </font>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">Kernels built for systems with
+ strong NUMA characteristics might also need to adjust
+ <tt>CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT</tt> so that the domains of the
+ <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures align with hardware boundaries.
+ However, there has thus far been no need for this.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>If your system has more than 1,024 CPUs (or more than 512 CPUs on
+a 32-bit system), then RCU will automatically add more levels to the
+tree.
+For example, if you are crazy enough to build a 64-bit system with 65,536
+CPUs, RCU would configure the <tt>rcu_node</tt> tree as follows:
+
+</p><p><img src="HugeTreeClassicRCU.svg" alt="HugeTreeClassicRCU.svg" width="50%">
+
+</p><p>RCU currently permits up to a four-level tree, which on a 64-bit system
+accommodates up to 4,194,304 CPUs, though only a mere 524,288 CPUs for
+32-bit systems.
+On the other hand, you can set <tt>CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT</tt> to be
+as small as 2 if you wish, which would permit only 16 CPUs, which
+is useful for testing.
+
+</p><p>This multi-level combining tree allows us to get most of the
+performance and scalability
+benefits of partitioning, even though RCU grace-period detection is
+inherently a global operation.
+The trick here is that only the last CPU to report a quiescent state
+into a given <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure need advance to the <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+structure at the next level up the tree.
+This means that at the leaf-level <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure, only
+one access out of sixteen will progress up the tree.
+For the internal <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures, the situation is even
+more extreme: Only one access out of sixty-four will progress up
+the tree.
+Because the vast majority of the CPUs do not progress up the tree,
+the lock contention remains roughly constant up the tree.
+No matter how many CPUs there are in the system, at most 64 quiescent-state
+reports per grace period will progress all the way to the root
+<tt>rcu_node</tt> structure, thus ensuring that the lock contention
+on that root <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure remains acceptably low.
+
+</p><p>In effect, the combining tree acts like a big shock absorber,
+keeping lock contention under control at all tree levels regardless
+of the level of loading on the system.
+
+</p><p>The Linux kernel actually supports multiple flavors of RCU
+running concurrently, so RCU builds separate data structures for each
+flavor.
+For example, for <tt>CONFIG_TREE_RCU=y</tt> kernels, RCU provides
+rcu_sched and rcu_bh, as shown below:
+
+</p><p><img src="BigTreeClassicRCUBH.svg" alt="BigTreeClassicRCUBH.svg" width="33%">
+
+</p><p>Energy efficiency is increasingly important, and for that
+reason the Linux kernel provides <tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_IDLE</tt>, which
+turns off the scheduling-clock interrupts on idle CPUs, which in
+turn allows those CPUs to attain deeper sleep states and to consume
+less energy.
+CPUs whose scheduling-clock interrupts have been turned off are
+said to be in <i>dyntick-idle mode</i>.
+RCU must handle dyntick-idle CPUs specially
+because RCU would otherwise wake up each CPU on every grace period,
+which would defeat the whole purpose of <tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_IDLE</tt>.
+RCU uses the <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt> structure to track
+which CPUs are in dyntick idle mode, as shown below:
+
+</p><p><img src="BigTreeClassicRCUBHdyntick.svg" alt="BigTreeClassicRCUBHdyntick.svg" width="33%">
+
+</p><p>However, if a CPU is in dyntick-idle mode, it is in that mode
+for all flavors of RCU.
+Therefore, a single <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt> structure is allocated per
+CPU, and all of a given CPU's <tt>rcu_data</tt> structures share
+that <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt>, as shown in the figure.
+
+</p><p>Kernels built with <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU</tt> support
+rcu_preempt in addition to rcu_sched and rcu_bh, as shown below:
+
+</p><p><img src="BigTreePreemptRCUBHdyntick.svg" alt="BigTreePreemptRCUBHdyntick.svg" width="35%">
+
+</p><p>RCU updaters wait for normal grace periods by registering
+RCU callbacks, either directly via <tt>call_rcu()</tt> and
+friends (namely <tt>call_rcu_bh()</tt> and <tt>call_rcu_sched()</tt>),
+there being a separate interface per flavor of RCU)
+or indirectly via <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> and friends.
+RCU callbacks are represented by <tt>rcu_head</tt> structures,
+which are queued on <tt>rcu_data</tt> structures while they are
+waiting for a grace period to elapse, as shown in the following figure:
+
+</p><p><img src="BigTreePreemptRCUBHdyntickCB.svg" alt="BigTreePreemptRCUBHdyntickCB.svg" width="40%">
+
+</p><p>This figure shows how <tt>TREE_RCU</tt>'s and
+<tt>PREEMPT_RCU</tt>'s major data structures are related.
+Lesser data structures will be introduced with the algorithms that
+make use of them.
+
+</p><p>Note that each of the data structures in the above figure has
+its own synchronization:
+
+<p><ol>
+<li> Each <tt>rcu_state</tt> structures has a lock and a mutex,
+ and some fields are protected by the corresponding root
+ <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure's lock.
+<li> Each <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure has a spinlock.
+<li> The fields in <tt>rcu_data</tt> are private to the corresponding
+ CPU, although a few can be read and written by other CPUs.
+<li> Similarly, the fields in <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt> are private
+ to the corresponding CPU, although a few can be read by
+ other CPUs.
+</ol>
+
+<p>It is important to note that different data structures can have
+very different ideas about the state of RCU at any given time.
+For but one example, awareness of the start or end of a given RCU
+grace period propagates slowly through the data structures.
+This slow propagation is absolutely necessary for RCU to have good
+read-side performance.
+If this balkanized implementation seems foreign to you, one useful
+trick is to consider each instance of these data structures to be
+a different person, each having the usual slightly different
+view of reality.
+
+</p><p>The general role of each of these data structures is as
+follows:
+
+</p><ol>
+<li> <tt>rcu_state</tt>:
+ This structure forms the interconnection between the
+ <tt>rcu_node</tt> and <tt>rcu_data</tt> structures,
+ tracks grace periods, serves as short-term repository
+ for callbacks orphaned by CPU-hotplug events,
+ maintains <tt>rcu_barrier()</tt> state,
+ tracks expedited grace-period state,
+ and maintains state used to force quiescent states when
+ grace periods extend too long,
+<li> <tt>rcu_node</tt>: This structure forms the combining
+ tree that propagates quiescent-state
+ information from the leaves to the root, and also propagates
+ grace-period information from the root to the leaves.
+ It provides local copies of the grace-period state in order
+ to allow this information to be accessed in a synchronized
+ manner without suffering the scalability limitations that
+ would otherwise be imposed by global locking.
+ In <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU</tt> kernels, it manages the lists
+ of tasks that have blocked while in their current
+ RCU read-side critical section.
+ In <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU</tt> with
+ <tt>CONFIG_RCU_BOOST</tt>, it manages the
+ per-<tt>rcu_node</tt> priority-boosting
+ kernel threads (kthreads) and state.
+ Finally, it records CPU-hotplug state in order to determine
+ which CPUs should be ignored during a given grace period.
+<li> <tt>rcu_data</tt>: This per-CPU structure is the
+ focus of quiescent-state detection and RCU callback queuing.
+ It also tracks its relationship to the corresponding leaf
+ <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure to allow more-efficient
+ propagation of quiescent states up the <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+ combining tree.
+ Like the <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure, it provides a local
+ copy of the grace-period information to allow for-free
+ synchronized
+ access to this information from the corresponding CPU.
+ Finally, this structure records past dyntick-idle state
+ for the corresponding CPU and also tracks statistics.
+<li> <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt>:
+ This per-CPU structure tracks the current dyntick-idle
+ state for the corresponding CPU.
+ Unlike the other three structures, the <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt>
+ structure is not replicated per RCU flavor.
+<li> <tt>rcu_head</tt>:
+ This structure represents RCU callbacks, and is the
+ only structure allocated and managed by RCU users.
+ The <tt>rcu_head</tt> structure is normally embedded
+ within the RCU-protected data structure.
+</ol>
+
+<p>If all you wanted from this article was a general notion of how
+RCU's data structures are related, you are done.
+Otherwise, each of the following sections give more details on
+the <tt>rcu_state</tt>, <tt>rcu_node</tt>, <tt>rcu_data</tt>,
+and <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt> data structures.
+
+<h3><a name="The rcu_state Structure">
+The <tt>rcu_state</tt> Structure</a></h3>
+
+<p>The <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure is the base structure that
+represents a flavor of RCU.
+This structure forms the interconnection between the
+<tt>rcu_node</tt> and <tt>rcu_data</tt> structures,
+tracks grace periods, contains the lock used to
+synchronize with CPU-hotplug events,
+and maintains state used to force quiescent states when
+grace periods extend too long,
+
+</p><p>A few of the <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure's fields are discussed,
+singly and in groups, in the following sections.
+The more specialized fields are covered in the discussion of their
+use.
+
+<h5>Relationship to rcu_node and rcu_data Structures</h5>
+
+This portion of the <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure is declared
+as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 struct rcu_node node[NUM_RCU_NODES];
+ 2 struct rcu_node *level[NUM_RCU_LVLS + 1];
+ 3 struct rcu_data __percpu *rda;
+</pre>
+
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Wait a minute!
+ You said that the <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures formed a tree,
+ but they are declared as a flat array!
+ What gives?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ The tree is laid out in the array.
+ The first node In the array is the head, the next set of nodes in the
+ array are children of the head node, and so on until the last set of
+ nodes in the array are the leaves.
+ </font>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">See the following diagrams to see how
+ this works.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The <tt>rcu_node</tt> tree is embedded into the
+<tt>-&gt;node[]</tt> array as shown in the following figure:
+
+</p><p><img src="TreeMapping.svg" alt="TreeMapping.svg" width="40%">
+
+</p><p>One interesting consequence of this mapping is that a
+breadth-first traversal of the tree is implemented as a simple
+linear scan of the array, which is in fact what the
+<tt>rcu_for_each_node_breadth_first()</tt> macro does.
+This macro is used at the beginning and ends of grace periods.
+
+</p><p>Each entry of the <tt>-&gt;level</tt> array references
+the first <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure on the corresponding level
+of the tree, for example, as shown below:
+
+</p><p><img src="TreeMappingLevel.svg" alt="TreeMappingLevel.svg" width="40%">
+
+</p><p>The zero<sup>th</sup> element of the array references the root
+<tt>rcu_node</tt> structure, the first element references the
+first child of the root <tt>rcu_node</tt>, and finally the second
+element references the first leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure.
+
+</p><p>For whatever it is worth, if you draw the tree to be tree-shaped
+rather than array-shaped, it is easy to draw a planar representation:
+
+</p><p><img src="TreeLevel.svg" alt="TreeLevel.svg" width="60%">
+
+</p><p>Finally, the <tt>-&gt;rda</tt> field references a per-CPU
+pointer to the corresponding CPU's <tt>rcu_data</tt> structure.
+
+</p><p>All of these fields are constant once initialization is complete,
+and therefore need no protection.
+
+<h5>Grace-Period Tracking</h5>
+
+<p>This portion of the <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure is declared
+as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 unsigned long gpnum;
+ 2 unsigned long completed;
+</pre>
+
+<p>RCU grace periods are numbered, and
+the <tt>-&gt;gpnum</tt> field contains the number of the grace
+period that started most recently.
+The <tt>-&gt;completed</tt> field contains the number of the
+grace period that completed most recently.
+If the two fields are equal, the RCU grace period that most recently
+started has already completed, and therefore the corresponding
+flavor of RCU is idle.
+If <tt>-&gt;gpnum</tt> is one greater than <tt>-&gt;completed</tt>,
+then <tt>-&gt;gpnum</tt> gives the number of the current RCU
+grace period, which has not yet completed.
+Any other combination of values indicates that something is broken.
+These two fields are protected by the root <tt>rcu_node</tt>'s
+<tt>-&gt;lock</tt> field.
+
+</p><p>There are <tt>-&gt;gpnum</tt> and <tt>-&gt;completed</tt> fields
+in the <tt>rcu_node</tt> and <tt>rcu_data</tt> structures
+as well.
+The fields in the <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure represent the
+most current values, and those of the other structures are compared
+in order to detect the start of a new grace period in a distributed
+fashion.
+The values flow from <tt>rcu_state</tt> to <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+(down the tree from the root to the leaves) to <tt>rcu_data</tt>.
+
+<h5>Miscellaneous</h5>
+
+<p>This portion of the <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure is declared
+as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 unsigned long gp_max;
+ 2 char abbr;
+ 3 char *name;
+</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;gp_max</tt> field tracks the duration of the longest
+grace period in jiffies.
+It is protected by the root <tt>rcu_node</tt>'s <tt>-&gt;lock</tt>.
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;name</tt> field points to the name of the RCU flavor
+(for example, &ldquo;rcu_sched&rdquo;), and is constant.
+The <tt>-&gt;abbr</tt> field contains a one-character abbreviation,
+for example, &ldquo;s&rdquo; for RCU-sched.
+
+<h3><a name="The rcu_node Structure">
+The <tt>rcu_node</tt> Structure</a></h3>
+
+<p>The <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures form the combining
+tree that propagates quiescent-state
+information from the leaves to the root and also that propagates
+grace-period information from the root down to the leaves.
+They provides local copies of the grace-period state in order
+to allow this information to be accessed in a synchronized
+manner without suffering the scalability limitations that
+would otherwise be imposed by global locking.
+In <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU</tt> kernels, they manage the lists
+of tasks that have blocked while in their current
+RCU read-side critical section.
+In <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU</tt> with
+<tt>CONFIG_RCU_BOOST</tt>, they manage the
+per-<tt>rcu_node</tt> priority-boosting
+kernel threads (kthreads) and state.
+Finally, they record CPU-hotplug state in order to determine
+which CPUs should be ignored during a given grace period.
+
+</p><p>The <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure's fields are discussed,
+singly and in groups, in the following sections.
+
+<h5>Connection to Combining Tree</h5>
+
+<p>This portion of the <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure is declared
+as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 struct rcu_node *parent;
+ 2 u8 level;
+ 3 u8 grpnum;
+ 4 unsigned long grpmask;
+ 5 int grplo;
+ 6 int grphi;
+</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;parent</tt> pointer references the <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+one level up in the tree, and is <tt>NULL</tt> for the root
+<tt>rcu_node</tt>.
+The RCU implementation makes heavy use of this field to push quiescent
+states up the tree.
+The <tt>-&gt;level</tt> field gives the level in the tree, with
+the root being at level zero, its children at level one, and so on.
+The <tt>-&gt;grpnum</tt> field gives this node's position within
+the children of its parent, so this number can range between 0 and 31
+on 32-bit systems and between 0 and 63 on 64-bit systems.
+The <tt>-&gt;level</tt> and <tt>-&gt;grpnum</tt> fields are
+used only during initialization and for tracing.
+The <tt>-&gt;grpmask</tt> field is the bitmask counterpart of
+<tt>-&gt;grpnum</tt>, and therefore always has exactly one bit set.
+This mask is used to clear the bit corresponding to this <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+structure in its parent's bitmasks, which are described later.
+Finally, the <tt>-&gt;grplo</tt> and <tt>-&gt;grphi</tt> fields
+contain the lowest and highest numbered CPU served by this
+<tt>rcu_node</tt> structure, respectively.
+
+</p><p>All of these fields are constant, and thus do not require any
+synchronization.
+
+<h5>Synchronization</h5>
+
+<p>This field of the <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure is declared
+as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 raw_spinlock_t lock;
+</pre>
+
+<p>This field is used to protect the remaining fields in this structure,
+unless otherwise stated.
+That said, all of the fields in this structure can be accessed without
+locking for tracing purposes.
+Yes, this can result in confusing traces, but better some tracing confusion
+than to be heisenbugged out of existence.
+
+<h5>Grace-Period Tracking</h5>
+
+<p>This portion of the <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure is declared
+as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 unsigned long gpnum;
+ 2 unsigned long completed;
+</pre>
+
+<p>These fields are the counterparts of the fields of the same name in
+the <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure.
+They each may lag up to one behind their <tt>rcu_state</tt>
+counterparts.
+If a given <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure's <tt>-&gt;gpnum</tt> and
+<tt>-&gt;complete</tt> fields are equal, then this <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+structure believes that RCU is idle.
+Otherwise, as with the <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure,
+the <tt>-&gt;gpnum</tt> field will be one greater than the
+<tt>-&gt;complete</tt> fields, with <tt>-&gt;gpnum</tt>
+indicating which grace period this <tt>rcu_node</tt> believes
+is still being waited for.
+
+</p><p>The <tt>&gt;gpnum</tt> field of each <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+structure is updated at the beginning
+of each grace period, and the <tt>-&gt;completed</tt> fields are
+updated at the end of each grace period.
+
+<h5>Quiescent-State Tracking</h5>
+
+<p>These fields manage the propagation of quiescent states up the
+combining tree.
+
+</p><p>This portion of the <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure has fields
+as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 unsigned long qsmask;
+ 2 unsigned long expmask;
+ 3 unsigned long qsmaskinit;
+ 4 unsigned long expmaskinit;
+</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;qsmask</tt> field tracks which of this
+<tt>rcu_node</tt> structure's children still need to report
+quiescent states for the current normal grace period.
+Such children will have a value of 1 in their corresponding bit.
+Note that the leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures should be
+thought of as having <tt>rcu_data</tt> structures as their
+children.
+Similarly, the <tt>-&gt;expmask</tt> field tracks which
+of this <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure's children still need to report
+quiescent states for the current expedited grace period.
+An expedited grace period has
+the same conceptual properties as a normal grace period, but the
+expedited implementation accepts extreme CPU overhead to obtain
+much lower grace-period latency, for example, consuming a few
+tens of microseconds worth of CPU time to reduce grace-period
+duration from milliseconds to tens of microseconds.
+The <tt>-&gt;qsmaskinit</tt> field tracks which of this
+<tt>rcu_node</tt> structure's children cover for at least
+one online CPU.
+This mask is used to initialize <tt>-&gt;qsmask</tt>,
+and <tt>-&gt;expmaskinit</tt> is used to initialize
+<tt>-&gt;expmask</tt> and the beginning of the
+normal and expedited grace periods, respectively.
+
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Why are these bitmasks protected by locking?
+ Come on, haven't you heard of atomic instructions???
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ Lockless grace-period computation! Such a tantalizing possibility!
+ </font>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">But consider the following sequence of events:
+ </font>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU&nbsp;0 has been in dyntick-idle
+ mode for quite some time.
+ When it wakes up, it notices that the current RCU
+ grace period needs it to report in, so it sets a
+ flag where the scheduling clock interrupt will find it.
+ </font><p>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">Meanwhile, CPU&nbsp;1 is running
+ <tt>force_quiescent_state()</tt>,
+ and notices that CPU&nbsp;0 has been in dyntick idle mode,
+ which qualifies as an extended quiescent state.
+ </font><p>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU&nbsp;0's scheduling clock
+ interrupt fires in the
+ middle of an RCU read-side critical section, and notices
+ that the RCU core needs something, so commences RCU softirq
+ processing.
+ </font>
+ <p>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU&nbsp;0's softirq handler
+ executes and is just about ready
+ to report its quiescent state up the <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+ tree.
+ </font><p>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">But CPU&nbsp;1 beats it to the punch,
+ completing the current
+ grace period and starting a new one.
+ </font><p>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU&nbsp;0 now reports its quiescent
+ state for the wrong
+ grace period.
+ That grace period might now end before the RCU read-side
+ critical section.
+ If that happens, disaster will ensue.
+ </font>
+ </ol>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">So the locking is absolutely required in
+ order to coordinate
+ clearing of the bits with the grace-period numbers in
+ <tt>-&gt;gpnum</tt> and <tt>-&gt;completed</tt>.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<h5>Blocked-Task Management</h5>
+
+<p><tt>PREEMPT_RCU</tt> allows tasks to be preempted in the
+midst of their RCU read-side critical sections, and these tasks
+must be tracked explicitly.
+The details of exactly why and how they are tracked will be covered
+in a separate article on RCU read-side processing.
+For now, it is enough to know that the <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+structure tracks them.
+
+<pre>
+ 1 struct list_head blkd_tasks;
+ 2 struct list_head *gp_tasks;
+ 3 struct list_head *exp_tasks;
+ 4 bool wait_blkd_tasks;
+</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;blkd_tasks</tt> field is a list header for
+the list of blocked and preempted tasks.
+As tasks undergo context switches within RCU read-side critical
+sections, their <tt>task_struct</tt> structures are enqueued
+(via the <tt>task_struct</tt>'s <tt>-&gt;rcu_node_entry</tt>
+field) onto the head of the <tt>-&gt;blkd_tasks</tt> list for the
+leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure corresponding to the CPU
+on which the outgoing context switch executed.
+As these tasks later exit their RCU read-side critical sections,
+they remove themselves from the list.
+This list is therefore in reverse time order, so that if one of the tasks
+is blocking the current grace period, all subsequent tasks must
+also be blocking that same grace period.
+Therefore, a single pointer into this list suffices to track
+all tasks blocking a given grace period.
+That pointer is stored in <tt>-&gt;gp_tasks</tt> for normal
+grace periods and in <tt>-&gt;exp_tasks</tt> for expedited
+grace periods.
+These last two fields are <tt>NULL</tt> if either there is
+no grace period in flight or if there are no blocked tasks
+preventing that grace period from completing.
+If either of these two pointers is referencing a task that
+removes itself from the <tt>-&gt;blkd_tasks</tt> list,
+then that task must advance the pointer to the next task on
+the list, or set the pointer to <tt>NULL</tt> if there
+are no subsequent tasks on the list.
+
+</p><p>For example, suppose that tasks&nbsp;T1, T2, and&nbsp;T3 are
+all hard-affinitied to the largest-numbered CPU in the system.
+Then if task&nbsp;T1 blocked in an RCU read-side
+critical section, then an expedited grace period started,
+then task&nbsp;T2 blocked in an RCU read-side critical section,
+then a normal grace period started, and finally task&nbsp;3 blocked
+in an RCU read-side critical section, then the state of the
+last leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure's blocked-task list
+would be as shown below:
+
+</p><p><img src="blkd_task.svg" alt="blkd_task.svg" width="60%">
+
+</p><p>Task&nbsp;T1 is blocking both grace periods, task&nbsp;T2 is
+blocking only the normal grace period, and task&nbsp;T3 is blocking
+neither grace period.
+Note that these tasks will not remove themselves from this list
+immediately upon resuming execution.
+They will instead remain on the list until they execute the outermost
+<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> that ends their RCU read-side critical
+section.
+
+<p>
+The <tt>-&gt;wait_blkd_tasks</tt> field indicates whether or not
+the current grace period is waiting on a blocked task.
+
+<h5>Sizing the <tt>rcu_node</tt> Array</h5>
+
+<p>The <tt>rcu_node</tt> array is sized via a series of
+C-preprocessor expressions as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 #ifdef CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT
+ 2 #define RCU_FANOUT CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT
+ 3 #else
+ 4 # ifdef CONFIG_64BIT
+ 5 # define RCU_FANOUT 64
+ 6 # else
+ 7 # define RCU_FANOUT 32
+ 8 # endif
+ 9 #endif
+10
+11 #ifdef CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT_LEAF
+12 #define RCU_FANOUT_LEAF CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT_LEAF
+13 #else
+14 # ifdef CONFIG_64BIT
+15 # define RCU_FANOUT_LEAF 64
+16 # else
+17 # define RCU_FANOUT_LEAF 32
+18 # endif
+19 #endif
+20
+21 #define RCU_FANOUT_1 (RCU_FANOUT_LEAF)
+22 #define RCU_FANOUT_2 (RCU_FANOUT_1 * RCU_FANOUT)
+23 #define RCU_FANOUT_3 (RCU_FANOUT_2 * RCU_FANOUT)
+24 #define RCU_FANOUT_4 (RCU_FANOUT_3 * RCU_FANOUT)
+25
+26 #if NR_CPUS &lt;= RCU_FANOUT_1
+27 # define RCU_NUM_LVLS 1
+28 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_0 1
+29 # define NUM_RCU_NODES NUM_RCU_LVL_0
+30 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_INIT { NUM_RCU_LVL_0 }
+31 # define RCU_NODE_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_0" }
+32 # define RCU_FQS_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_fqs_0" }
+33 # define RCU_EXP_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_exp_0" }
+34 #elif NR_CPUS &lt;= RCU_FANOUT_2
+35 # define RCU_NUM_LVLS 2
+36 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_0 1
+37 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_1 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_1)
+38 # define NUM_RCU_NODES (NUM_RCU_LVL_0 + NUM_RCU_LVL_1)
+39 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_INIT { NUM_RCU_LVL_0, NUM_RCU_LVL_1 }
+40 # define RCU_NODE_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_0", "rcu_node_1" }
+41 # define RCU_FQS_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_fqs_0", "rcu_node_fqs_1" }
+42 # define RCU_EXP_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_exp_0", "rcu_node_exp_1" }
+43 #elif NR_CPUS &lt;= RCU_FANOUT_3
+44 # define RCU_NUM_LVLS 3
+45 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_0 1
+46 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_1 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_2)
+47 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_2 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_1)
+48 # define NUM_RCU_NODES (NUM_RCU_LVL_0 + NUM_RCU_LVL_1 + NUM_RCU_LVL_2)
+49 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_INIT { NUM_RCU_LVL_0, NUM_RCU_LVL_1, NUM_RCU_LVL_2 }
+50 # define RCU_NODE_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_0", "rcu_node_1", "rcu_node_2" }
+51 # define RCU_FQS_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_fqs_0", "rcu_node_fqs_1", "rcu_node_fqs_2" }
+52 # define RCU_EXP_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_exp_0", "rcu_node_exp_1", "rcu_node_exp_2" }
+53 #elif NR_CPUS &lt;= RCU_FANOUT_4
+54 # define RCU_NUM_LVLS 4
+55 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_0 1
+56 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_1 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_3)
+57 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_2 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_2)
+58 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_3 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_1)
+59 # define NUM_RCU_NODES (NUM_RCU_LVL_0 + NUM_RCU_LVL_1 + NUM_RCU_LVL_2 + NUM_RCU_LVL_3)
+60 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_INIT { NUM_RCU_LVL_0, NUM_RCU_LVL_1, NUM_RCU_LVL_2, NUM_RCU_LVL_3 }
+61 # define RCU_NODE_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_0", "rcu_node_1", "rcu_node_2", "rcu_node_3" }
+62 # define RCU_FQS_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_fqs_0", "rcu_node_fqs_1", "rcu_node_fqs_2", "rcu_node_fqs_3" }
+63 # define RCU_EXP_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_exp_0", "rcu_node_exp_1", "rcu_node_exp_2", "rcu_node_exp_3" }
+64 #else
+65 # error "CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT insufficient for NR_CPUS"
+66 #endif
+</pre>
+
+<p>The maximum number of levels in the <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure
+is currently limited to four, as specified by lines&nbsp;21-24
+and the structure of the subsequent &ldquo;if&rdquo; statement.
+For 32-bit systems, this allows 16*32*32*32=524,288 CPUs, which
+should be sufficient for the next few years at least.
+For 64-bit systems, 16*64*64*64=4,194,304 CPUs is allowed, which
+should see us through the next decade or so.
+This four-level tree also allows kernels built with
+<tt>CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT=8</tt> to support up to 4096 CPUs,
+which might be useful in very large systems having eight CPUs per
+socket (but please note that no one has yet shown any measurable
+performance degradation due to misaligned socket and <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+boundaries).
+In addition, building kernels with a full four levels of <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+tree permits better testing of RCU's combining-tree code.
+
+</p><p>The <tt>RCU_FANOUT</tt> symbol controls how many children
+are permitted at each non-leaf level of the <tt>rcu_node</tt> tree.
+If the <tt>CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT</tt> Kconfig option is not specified,
+it is set based on the word size of the system, which is also
+the Kconfig default.
+
+</p><p>The <tt>RCU_FANOUT_LEAF</tt> symbol controls how many CPUs are
+handled by each leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure.
+Experience has shown that allowing a given leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+structure to handle 64 CPUs, as permitted by the number of bits in
+the <tt>-&gt;qsmask</tt> field on a 64-bit system, results in
+excessive contention for the leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures'
+<tt>-&gt;lock</tt> fields.
+The number of CPUs per leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure is therefore
+limited to 16 given the default value of <tt>CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT_LEAF</tt>.
+If <tt>CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT_LEAF</tt> is unspecified, the value
+selected is based on the word size of the system, just as for
+<tt>CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT</tt>.
+Lines&nbsp;11-19 perform this computation.
+
+</p><p>Lines&nbsp;21-24 compute the maximum number of CPUs supported by
+a single-level (which contains a single <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure),
+two-level, three-level, and four-level <tt>rcu_node</tt> tree,
+respectively, given the fanout specified by <tt>RCU_FANOUT</tt>
+and <tt>RCU_FANOUT_LEAF</tt>.
+These numbers of CPUs are retained in the
+<tt>RCU_FANOUT_1</tt>,
+<tt>RCU_FANOUT_2</tt>,
+<tt>RCU_FANOUT_3</tt>, and
+<tt>RCU_FANOUT_4</tt>
+C-preprocessor variables, respectively.
+
+</p><p>These variables are used to control the C-preprocessor <tt>#if</tt>
+statement spanning lines&nbsp;26-66 that computes the number of
+<tt>rcu_node</tt> structures required for each level of the tree,
+as well as the number of levels required.
+The number of levels is placed in the <tt>NUM_RCU_LVLS</tt>
+C-preprocessor variable by lines&nbsp;27, 35, 44, and&nbsp;54.
+The number of <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures for the topmost level
+of the tree is always exactly one, and this value is unconditionally
+placed into <tt>NUM_RCU_LVL_0</tt> by lines&nbsp;28, 36, 45, and&nbsp;55.
+The rest of the levels (if any) of the <tt>rcu_node</tt> tree
+are computed by dividing the maximum number of CPUs by the
+fanout supported by the number of levels from the current level down,
+rounding up. This computation is performed by lines&nbsp;37,
+46-47, and&nbsp;56-58.
+Lines&nbsp;31-33, 40-42, 50-52, and&nbsp;62-63 create initializers
+for lockdep lock-class names.
+Finally, lines&nbsp;64-66 produce an error if the maximum number of
+CPUs is too large for the specified fanout.
+
+<h3><a name="The rcu_data Structure">
+The <tt>rcu_data</tt> Structure</a></h3>
+
+<p>The <tt>rcu_data</tt> maintains the per-CPU state for the
+corresponding flavor of RCU.
+The fields in this structure may be accessed only from the corresponding
+CPU (and from tracing) unless otherwise stated.
+This structure is the
+focus of quiescent-state detection and RCU callback queuing.
+It also tracks its relationship to the corresponding leaf
+<tt>rcu_node</tt> structure to allow more-efficient
+propagation of quiescent states up the <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+combining tree.
+Like the <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure, it provides a local
+copy of the grace-period information to allow for-free
+synchronized
+access to this information from the corresponding CPU.
+Finally, this structure records past dyntick-idle state
+for the corresponding CPU and also tracks statistics.
+
+</p><p>The <tt>rcu_data</tt> structure's fields are discussed,
+singly and in groups, in the following sections.
+
+<h5>Connection to Other Data Structures</h5>
+
+<p>This portion of the <tt>rcu_data</tt> structure is declared
+as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 int cpu;
+ 2 struct rcu_state *rsp;
+ 3 struct rcu_node *mynode;
+ 4 struct rcu_dynticks *dynticks;
+ 5 unsigned long grpmask;
+ 6 bool beenonline;
+</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;cpu</tt> field contains the number of the
+corresponding CPU, the <tt>-&gt;rsp</tt> pointer references
+the corresponding <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure (and is most frequently
+used to locate the name of the corresponding flavor of RCU for tracing),
+and the <tt>-&gt;mynode</tt> field references the corresponding
+<tt>rcu_node</tt> structure.
+The <tt>-&gt;mynode</tt> is used to propagate quiescent states
+up the combining tree.
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;dynticks</tt> pointer references the
+<tt>rcu_dynticks</tt> structure corresponding to this
+CPU.
+Recall that a single per-CPU instance of the <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt>
+structure is shared among all flavors of RCU.
+These first four fields are constant and therefore require not
+synchronization.
+
+</p><p>The <tt>-&gt;grpmask</tt> field indicates the bit in
+the <tt>-&gt;mynode-&gt;qsmask</tt> corresponding to this
+<tt>rcu_data</tt> structure, and is also used when propagating
+quiescent states.
+The <tt>-&gt;beenonline</tt> flag is set whenever the corresponding
+CPU comes online, which means that the debugfs tracing need not dump
+out any <tt>rcu_data</tt> structure for which this flag is not set.
+
+<h5>Quiescent-State and Grace-Period Tracking</h5>
+
+<p>This portion of the <tt>rcu_data</tt> structure is declared
+as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 unsigned long completed;
+ 2 unsigned long gpnum;
+ 3 bool cpu_no_qs;
+ 4 bool core_needs_qs;
+ 5 bool gpwrap;
+ 6 unsigned long rcu_qs_ctr_snap;
+</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>completed</tt> and <tt>gpnum</tt>
+fields are the counterparts of the fields of the same name
+in the <tt>rcu_state</tt> and <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures.
+They may each lag up to one behind their <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+counterparts, but in <tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_IDLE</tt> and
+<tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_FULL</tt> kernels can lag
+arbitrarily far behind for CPUs in dyntick-idle mode (but these counters
+will catch up upon exit from dyntick-idle mode).
+If a given <tt>rcu_data</tt> structure's <tt>-&gt;gpnum</tt> and
+<tt>-&gt;complete</tt> fields are equal, then this <tt>rcu_data</tt>
+structure believes that RCU is idle.
+Otherwise, as with the <tt>rcu_state</tt> and <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+structure,
+the <tt>-&gt;gpnum</tt> field will be one greater than the
+<tt>-&gt;complete</tt> fields, with <tt>-&gt;gpnum</tt>
+indicating which grace period this <tt>rcu_data</tt> believes
+is still being waited for.
+
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ All this replication of the grace period numbers can only cause
+ massive confusion.
+ Why not just keep a global pair of counters and be done with it???
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ Because if there was only a single global pair of grace-period
+ numbers, there would need to be a single global lock to allow
+ safely accessing and updating them.
+ And if we are not going to have a single global lock, we need
+ to carefully manage the numbers on a per-node basis.
+ Recall from the answer to a previous Quick Quiz that the consequences
+ of applying a previously sampled quiescent state to the wrong
+ grace period are quite severe.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;cpu_no_qs</tt> flag indicates that the
+CPU has not yet passed through a quiescent state,
+while the <tt>-&gt;core_needs_qs</tt> flag indicates that the
+RCU core needs a quiescent state from the corresponding CPU.
+The <tt>-&gt;gpwrap</tt> field indicates that the corresponding
+CPU has remained idle for so long that the <tt>completed</tt>
+and <tt>gpnum</tt> counters are in danger of overflow, which
+will cause the CPU to disregard the values of its counters on
+its next exit from idle.
+Finally, the <tt>rcu_qs_ctr_snap</tt> field is used to detect
+cases where a given operation has resulted in a quiescent state
+for all flavors of RCU, for example, <tt>cond_resched_rcu_qs()</tt>.
+
+<h5>RCU Callback Handling</h5>
+
+<p>In the absence of CPU-hotplug events, RCU callbacks are invoked by
+the same CPU that registered them.
+This is strictly a cache-locality optimization: callbacks can and
+do get invoked on CPUs other than the one that registered them.
+After all, if the CPU that registered a given callback has gone
+offline before the callback can be invoked, there really is no other
+choice.
+
+</p><p>This portion of the <tt>rcu_data</tt> structure is declared
+as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 struct rcu_head *nxtlist;
+ 2 struct rcu_head **nxttail[RCU_NEXT_SIZE];
+ 3 unsigned long nxtcompleted[RCU_NEXT_SIZE];
+ 4 long qlen_lazy;
+ 5 long qlen;
+ 6 long qlen_last_fqs_check;
+ 7 unsigned long n_force_qs_snap;
+ 8 unsigned long n_cbs_invoked;
+ 9 unsigned long n_cbs_orphaned;
+10 unsigned long n_cbs_adopted;
+11 long blimit;
+</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;nxtlist</tt> pointer and the
+<tt>-&gt;nxttail[]</tt> array form a four-segment list with
+older callbacks near the head and newer ones near the tail.
+Each segment contains callbacks with the corresponding relationship
+to the current grace period.
+The pointer out of the end of each of the four segments is referenced
+by the element of the <tt>-&gt;nxttail[]</tt> array indexed by
+<tt>RCU_DONE_TAIL</tt> (for callbacks handled by a prior grace period),
+<tt>RCU_WAIT_TAIL</tt> (for callbacks waiting on the current grace period),
+<tt>RCU_NEXT_READY_TAIL</tt> (for callbacks that will wait on the next
+grace period), and
+<tt>RCU_NEXT_TAIL</tt> (for callbacks that are not yet associated
+with a specific grace period)
+respectively, as shown in the following figure.
+
+</p><p><img src="nxtlist.svg" alt="nxtlist.svg" width="40%">
+
+</p><p>In this figure, the <tt>-&gt;nxtlist</tt> pointer references the
+first
+RCU callback in the list.
+The <tt>-&gt;nxttail[RCU_DONE_TAIL]</tt> array element references
+the <tt>-&gt;nxtlist</tt> pointer itself, indicating that none
+of the callbacks is ready to invoke.
+The <tt>-&gt;nxttail[RCU_WAIT_TAIL]</tt> array element references callback
+CB&nbsp;2's <tt>-&gt;next</tt> pointer, which indicates that
+CB&nbsp;1 and CB&nbsp;2 are both waiting on the current grace period.
+The <tt>-&gt;nxttail[RCU_NEXT_READY_TAIL]</tt> array element
+references the same RCU callback that <tt>-&gt;nxttail[RCU_WAIT_TAIL]</tt>
+does, which indicates that there are no callbacks waiting on the next
+RCU grace period.
+The <tt>-&gt;nxttail[RCU_NEXT_TAIL]</tt> array element references
+CB&nbsp;4's <tt>-&gt;next</tt> pointer, indicating that all the
+remaining RCU callbacks have not yet been assigned to an RCU grace
+period.
+Note that the <tt>-&gt;nxttail[RCU_NEXT_TAIL]</tt> array element
+always references the last RCU callback's <tt>-&gt;next</tt> pointer
+unless the callback list is empty, in which case it references
+the <tt>-&gt;nxtlist</tt> pointer.
+
+</p><p>CPUs advance their callbacks from the
+<tt>RCU_NEXT_TAIL</tt> to the <tt>RCU_NEXT_READY_TAIL</tt> to the
+<tt>RCU_WAIT_TAIL</tt> to the <tt>RCU_DONE_TAIL</tt> list segments
+as grace periods advance.
+The CPU advances the callbacks in its <tt>rcu_data</tt> structure
+whenever it notices that another RCU grace period has completed.
+The CPU detects the completion of an RCU grace period by noticing
+that the value of its <tt>rcu_data</tt> structure's
+<tt>-&gt;completed</tt> field differs from that of its leaf
+<tt>rcu_node</tt> structure.
+Recall that each <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure's
+<tt>-&gt;completed</tt> field is updated at the end of each
+grace period.
+
+</p><p>The <tt>-&gt;nxtcompleted[]</tt> array records grace-period
+numbers corresponding to the list segments.
+This allows CPUs that go idle for extended periods to determine
+which of their callbacks are ready to be invoked after reawakening.
+
+</p><p>The <tt>-&gt;qlen</tt> counter contains the number of
+callbacks in <tt>-&gt;nxtlist</tt>, and the
+<tt>-&gt;qlen_lazy</tt> contains the number of those callbacks that
+are known to only free memory, and whose invocation can therefore
+be safely deferred.
+The <tt>-&gt;qlen_last_fqs_check</tt> and
+<tt>-&gt;n_force_qs_snap</tt> coordinate the forcing of quiescent
+states from <tt>call_rcu()</tt> and friends when callback
+lists grow excessively long.
+
+</p><p>The <tt>-&gt;n_cbs_invoked</tt>,
+<tt>-&gt;n_cbs_orphaned</tt>, and <tt>-&gt;n_cbs_adopted</tt>
+fields count the number of callbacks invoked,
+sent to other CPUs when this CPU goes offline,
+and received from other CPUs when those other CPUs go offline.
+Finally, the <tt>-&gt;blimit</tt> counter is the maximum number of
+RCU callbacks that may be invoked at a given time.
+
+<h5>Dyntick-Idle Handling</h5>
+
+<p>This portion of the <tt>rcu_data</tt> structure is declared
+as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 int dynticks_snap;
+ 2 unsigned long dynticks_fqs;
+</pre>
+
+The <tt>-&gt;dynticks_snap</tt> field is used to take a snapshot
+of the corresponding CPU's dyntick-idle state when forcing
+quiescent states, and is therefore accessed from other CPUs.
+Finally, the <tt>-&gt;dynticks_fqs</tt> field is used to
+count the number of times this CPU is determined to be in
+dyntick-idle state, and is used for tracing and debugging purposes.
+
+<h3><a name="The rcu_dynticks Structure">
+The <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt> Structure</a></h3>
+
+<p>The <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt> maintains the per-CPU dyntick-idle state
+for the corresponding CPU.
+Unlike the other structures, <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt> is not
+replicated over the different flavors of RCU.
+The fields in this structure may be accessed only from the corresponding
+CPU (and from tracing) unless otherwise stated.
+Its fields are as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 int dynticks_nesting;
+ 2 int dynticks_nmi_nesting;
+ 3 atomic_t dynticks;
+</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;dynticks_nesting</tt> field counts the
+nesting depth of normal interrupts.
+In addition, this counter is incremented when exiting dyntick-idle
+mode and decremented when entering it.
+This counter can therefore be thought of as counting the number
+of reasons why this CPU cannot be permitted to enter dyntick-idle
+mode, aside from non-maskable interrupts (NMIs).
+NMIs are counted by the <tt>-&gt;dynticks_nmi_nesting</tt>
+field, except that NMIs that interrupt non-dyntick-idle execution
+are not counted.
+
+</p><p>Finally, the <tt>-&gt;dynticks</tt> field counts the corresponding
+CPU's transitions to and from dyntick-idle mode, so that this counter
+has an even value when the CPU is in dyntick-idle mode and an odd
+value otherwise.
+
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Why not just count all NMIs?
+ Wouldn't that be simpler and less error prone?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ It seems simpler only until you think hard about how to go about
+ updating the <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt> structure's
+ <tt>-&gt;dynticks</tt> field.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Additional fields are present for some special-purpose
+builds, and are discussed separately.
+
+<h3><a name="The rcu_head Structure">
+The <tt>rcu_head</tt> Structure</a></h3>
+
+<p>Each <tt>rcu_head</tt> structure represents an RCU callback.
+These structures are normally embedded within RCU-protected data
+structures whose algorithms use asynchronous grace periods.
+In contrast, when using algorithms that block waiting for RCU grace periods,
+RCU users need not provide <tt>rcu_head</tt> structures.
+
+</p><p>The <tt>rcu_head</tt> structure has fields as follows:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 struct rcu_head *next;
+ 2 void (*func)(struct rcu_head *head);
+</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;next</tt> field is used
+to link the <tt>rcu_head</tt> structures together in the
+lists within the <tt>rcu_data</tt> structures.
+The <tt>-&gt;func</tt> field is a pointer to the function
+to be called when the callback is ready to be invoked, and
+this function is passed a pointer to the <tt>rcu_head</tt>
+structure.
+However, <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> uses the <tt>-&gt;func</tt>
+field to record the offset of the <tt>rcu_head</tt>
+structure within the enclosing RCU-protected data structure.
+
+</p><p>Both of these fields are used internally by RCU.
+From the viewpoint of RCU users, this structure is an
+opaque &ldquo;cookie&rdquo;.
+
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Given that the callback function <tt>-&gt;func</tt>
+ is passed a pointer to the <tt>rcu_head</tt> structure,
+ how is that function supposed to find the beginning of the
+ enclosing RCU-protected data structure?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ In actual practice, there is a separate callback function per
+ type of RCU-protected data structure.
+ The callback function can therefore use the <tt>container_of()</tt>
+ macro in the Linux kernel (or other pointer-manipulation facilities
+ in other software environments) to find the beginning of the
+ enclosing structure.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><a name="RCU-Specific Fields in the task_struct Structure">
+RCU-Specific Fields in the <tt>task_struct</tt> Structure</a></h3>
+
+<p>The <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU</tt> implementation uses some
+additional fields in the <tt>task_struct</tt> structure:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 #ifdef CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU
+ 2 int rcu_read_lock_nesting;
+ 3 union rcu_special rcu_read_unlock_special;
+ 4 struct list_head rcu_node_entry;
+ 5 struct rcu_node *rcu_blocked_node;
+ 6 #endif /* #ifdef CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU */
+ 7 #ifdef CONFIG_TASKS_RCU
+ 8 unsigned long rcu_tasks_nvcsw;
+ 9 bool rcu_tasks_holdout;
+10 struct list_head rcu_tasks_holdout_list;
+11 int rcu_tasks_idle_cpu;
+12 #endif /* #ifdef CONFIG_TASKS_RCU */
+</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;rcu_read_lock_nesting</tt> field records the
+nesting level for RCU read-side critical sections, and
+the <tt>-&gt;rcu_read_unlock_special</tt> field is a bitmask
+that records special conditions that require <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
+to do additional work.
+The <tt>-&gt;rcu_node_entry</tt> field is used to form lists of
+tasks that have blocked within preemptible-RCU read-side critical
+sections and the <tt>-&gt;rcu_blocked_node</tt> field references
+the <tt>rcu_node</tt> structure whose list this task is a member of,
+or <tt>NULL</tt> if it is not blocked within a preemptible-RCU
+read-side critical section.
+
+<p>The <tt>-&gt;rcu_tasks_nvcsw</tt> field tracks the number of
+voluntary context switches that this task had undergone at the
+beginning of the current tasks-RCU grace period,
+<tt>-&gt;rcu_tasks_holdout</tt> is set if the current tasks-RCU
+grace period is waiting on this task, <tt>-&gt;rcu_tasks_holdout_list</tt>
+is a list element enqueuing this task on the holdout list,
+and <tt>-&gt;rcu_tasks_idle_cpu</tt> tracks which CPU this
+idle task is running, but only if the task is currently running,
+that is, if the CPU is currently idle.
+
+<h3><a name="Accessor Functions">
+Accessor Functions</a></h3>
+
+<p>The following listing shows the
+<tt>rcu_get_root()</tt>, <tt>rcu_for_each_node_breadth_first</tt>,
+<tt>rcu_for_each_nonleaf_node_breadth_first()</tt>, and
+<tt>rcu_for_each_leaf_node()</tt> function and macros:
+
+<pre>
+ 1 static struct rcu_node *rcu_get_root(struct rcu_state *rsp)
+ 2 {
+ 3 return &amp;rsp-&gt;node[0];
+ 4 }
+ 5
+ 6 #define rcu_for_each_node_breadth_first(rsp, rnp) \
+ 7 for ((rnp) = &amp;(rsp)-&gt;node[0]; \
+ 8 (rnp) &lt; &amp;(rsp)-&gt;node[NUM_RCU_NODES]; (rnp)++)
+ 9
+ 10 #define rcu_for_each_nonleaf_node_breadth_first(rsp, rnp) \
+ 11 for ((rnp) = &amp;(rsp)-&gt;node[0]; \
+ 12 (rnp) &lt; (rsp)-&gt;level[NUM_RCU_LVLS - 1]; (rnp)++)
+ 13
+ 14 #define rcu_for_each_leaf_node(rsp, rnp) \
+ 15 for ((rnp) = (rsp)-&gt;level[NUM_RCU_LVLS - 1]; \
+ 16 (rnp) &lt; &amp;(rsp)-&gt;node[NUM_RCU_NODES]; (rnp)++)
+</pre>
+
+<p>The <tt>rcu_get_root()</tt> simply returns a pointer to the
+first element of the specified <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure's
+<tt>-&gt;node[]</tt> array, which is the root <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+structure.
+
+</p><p>As noted earlier, the <tt>rcu_for_each_node_breadth_first()</tt>
+macro takes advantage of the layout of the <tt>rcu_node</tt>
+structures in the <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure's
+<tt>-&gt;node[]</tt> array, performing a breadth-first traversal by
+simply traversing the array in order.
+The <tt>rcu_for_each_nonleaf_node_breadth_first()</tt> macro operates
+similarly, but traverses only the first part of the array, thus excluding
+the leaf <tt>rcu_node</tt> structures.
+Finally, the <tt>rcu_for_each_leaf_node()</tt> macro traverses only
+the last part of the array, thus traversing only the leaf
+<tt>rcu_node</tt> structures.
+
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ What do <tt>rcu_for_each_nonleaf_node_breadth_first()</tt> and
+ <tt>rcu_for_each_leaf_node()</tt> do if the <tt>rcu_node</tt> tree
+ contains only a single node?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ In the single-node case,
+ <tt>rcu_for_each_nonleaf_node_breadth_first()</tt> is a no-op
+ and <tt>rcu_for_each_leaf_node()</tt> traverses the single node.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3><a name="Summary">
+Summary</a></h3>
+
+So each flavor of RCU is represented by an <tt>rcu_state</tt> structure,
+which contains a combining tree of <tt>rcu_node</tt> and
+<tt>rcu_data</tt> structures.
+Finally, in <tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_IDLE</tt> kernels, each CPU's dyntick-idle
+state is tracked by an <tt>rcu_dynticks</tt> structure.
+
+If you made it this far, you are well prepared to read the code
+walkthroughs in the other articles in this series.
+
+<h3><a name="Acknowledgments">
+Acknowledgments</a></h3>
+
+I owe thanks to Cyrill Gorcunov, Mathieu Desnoyers, Dhaval Giani, Paul
+Turner, Abhishek Srivastava, Matt Kowalczyk, and Serge Hallyn
+for helping me get this document into a more human-readable state.
+
+<h3><a name="Legal Statement">
+Legal Statement</a></h3>
+
+<p>This work represents the view of the author and does not necessarily
+represent the view of IBM.
+
+</p><p>Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds.
+
+</p><p>Other company, product, and service names may be trademarks or
+service marks of others.
+
+</body></html>
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diff --git a/Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/2013-08-is-it-dead.png b/Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/2013-08-is-it-dead.png
deleted file mode 100644
index 7496a55e4e7b..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/2013-08-is-it-dead.png
+++ /dev/null
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deleted file mode 100644
index ebcbeee391ed..000000000000
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- x="4050"
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- id="rect12" />
- <!-- Text -->
- <text
- xml:space="preserve"
- x="7200"
- y="900"
- font-style="normal"
- font-weight="normal"
- font-size="324"
- id="text14"
- sodipodi:linespacing="125%"
- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;fill:#000000;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"><tspan
- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"
- id="tspan3017">Read-Mostly, Stale &amp;</tspan></text>
- <!-- Text -->
- <text
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- font-weight="normal"
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- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;fill:#000000;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"><tspan
- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"
- id="tspan3019">Inconsistent Data OK</tspan></text>
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- <text
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- sodipodi:linespacing="125%"
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- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"
- id="tspan3021">(RCU Works Great!!!)</tspan></text>
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- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"
- id="tspan3023">(RCU Works Well)</tspan></text>
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- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"
- id="tspan3025">Read-Mostly, Need Consistent Data</tspan></text>
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- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"
- id="tspan3027">Read-Write, Need Consistent Data</tspan></text>
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- sodipodi:linespacing="125%">Update-Mostly, Need Consistent Data</text>
- <!-- Text -->
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- y="5625"
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- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;fill:#000000;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"><tspan
- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"
- id="tspan3029">(RCU Might Be OK...)</tspan></text>
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- <text
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- x="7200"
- y="7875"
- font-style="normal"
- font-weight="normal"
- font-size="324"
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- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;fill:#000000;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"
- sodipodi:linespacing="125%">(1) Provide Existence Guarantees For Update-Friendly Mechanisms</text>
- <!-- Text -->
- <text
- xml:space="preserve"
- x="7200"
- y="8325"
- font-style="normal"
- font-weight="normal"
- font-size="324"
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- sodipodi:linespacing="125%">(2) Provide Wait-Free Read-Side Primitives for Real-Time Use)</text>
- <!-- Text -->
- <text
- xml:space="preserve"
- x="7200"
- y="7425"
- font-style="normal"
- font-weight="normal"
- font-size="324"
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- style="font-size:427.63009644px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:normal;text-align:center;line-height:125%;writing-mode:lr-tb;text-anchor:middle;fill:#000000;font-family:Nimbus Sans L;-inkscape-font-specification:Nimbus Sans L"
- sodipodi:linespacing="125%">(RCU is Very Unlikely to be the Right Tool For The Job, But it Can:</text>
- </g>
-</svg>
diff --git a/Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.html b/Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.html
index a725f9900ec8..e7e24b3e86e2 100644
--- a/Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.html
+++ b/Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.html
@@ -1,5 +1,3 @@
-<!-- DO NOT HAND EDIT. -->
-<!-- Instead, edit Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.htmlx and run 'sh htmlqqz.sh Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements' -->
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
<html>
@@ -65,8 +63,8 @@ All that aside, here are the categories of currently known RCU requirements:
<p>
This is followed by a <a href="#Summary">summary</a>,
-which is in turn followed by the inevitable
-<a href="#Answers to Quick Quizzes">answers to the quick quizzes</a>.
+however, the answers to each quick quiz immediately follows the quiz.
+Select the big white space with your mouse to see the answer.
<h2><a name="Fundamental Requirements">Fundamental Requirements</a></h2>
@@ -153,13 +151,27 @@ Therefore, the outcome:
</blockquote>
cannot happen.
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 1"><b>Quick Quiz 1</b>:</a>
-Wait a minute!
-You said that updaters can make useful forward progress concurrently
-with readers, but pre-existing readers will block
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>!!!
-Just who are you trying to fool???
-<br><a href="#qq1answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Wait a minute!
+ You said that updaters can make useful forward progress concurrently
+ with readers, but pre-existing readers will block
+ <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>!!!
+ Just who are you trying to fool???
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ First, if updaters do not wish to be blocked by readers, they can use
+ <tt>call_rcu()</tt> or <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>, which will
+ be discussed later.
+ Second, even when using <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>, the other
+ update-side code does run concurrently with readers, whether
+ pre-existing or not.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<p>
This scenario resembles one of the first uses of RCU in
@@ -210,9 +222,20 @@ to guarantee that <tt>do_something()</tt> never runs concurrently
with <tt>recovery()</tt>, but with little or no synchronization
overhead in <tt>do_something_dlm()</tt>.
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 2"><b>Quick Quiz 2</b>:</a>
-Why is the <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;28 needed?
-<br><a href="#qq2answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Why is the <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;28 needed?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ Without that extra grace period, memory reordering could result in
+ <tt>do_something_dlm()</tt> executing <tt>do_something()</tt>
+ concurrently with the last bits of <tt>recovery()</tt>.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<p>
In order to avoid fatal problems such as deadlocks,
@@ -332,12 +355,27 @@ It also prevents any number of &ldquo;interesting&rdquo; compiler
optimizations, for example, the use of <tt>gp</tt> as a scratch
location immediately preceding the assignment.
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 3"><b>Quick Quiz 3</b>:</a>
-But <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> does nothing to prevent the
-two assignments to <tt>p-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>p-&gt;b</tt>
-from being reordered.
-Can't that also cause problems?
-<br><a href="#qq3answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ But <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> does nothing to prevent the
+ two assignments to <tt>p-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>p-&gt;b</tt>
+ from being reordered.
+ Can't that also cause problems?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ No, it cannot.
+ The readers cannot see either of these two fields until
+ the assignment to <tt>gp</tt>, by which time both fields are
+ fully initialized.
+ So reordering the assignments
+ to <tt>p-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>p-&gt;b</tt> cannot possibly
+ cause any problems.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<p>
It is tempting to assume that the reader need not do anything special
@@ -494,11 +532,42 @@ The <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> on line&nbsp;6 is similar to
code protected by the corresponding update-side lock.
</ol>
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 4"><b>Quick Quiz 4</b>:</a>
-Without the <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> or the
-<tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>, what destructive optimizations
-might the compiler make use of?
-<br><a href="#qq4answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Without the <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> or the
+ <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>, what destructive optimizations
+ might the compiler make use of?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ Let's start with what happens to <tt>do_something_gp()</tt>
+ if it fails to use <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
+ It could reuse a value formerly fetched from this same pointer.
+ It could also fetch the pointer from <tt>gp</tt> in a byte-at-a-time
+ manner, resulting in <i>load tearing</i>, in turn resulting a bytewise
+ mash-up of two distince pointer values.
+ It might even use value-speculation optimizations, where it makes
+ a wrong guess, but by the time it gets around to checking the
+ value, an update has changed the pointer to match the wrong guess.
+ Too bad about any dereferences that returned pre-initialization garbage
+ in the meantime!
+ </font>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">
+ For <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>, as long as all modifications
+ to <tt>gp</tt> are carried out while holding <tt>gp_lock</tt>,
+ the above optimizations are harmless.
+ However,
+ with <tt>CONFIG_SPARSE_RCU_POINTER=y</tt>,
+ <tt>sparse</tt> will complain if you
+ define <tt>gp</tt> with <tt>__rcu</tt> and then
+ access it without using
+ either <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> or <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<p>
In short, RCU's publish-subscribe guarantee is provided by the combination
@@ -571,17 +640,156 @@ systems with more than one CPU:
<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> migrates in the meantime.
</ol>
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 5"><b>Quick Quiz 5</b>:</a>
-Given that multiple CPUs can start RCU read-side critical sections
-at any time without any ordering whatsoever, how can RCU possibly tell whether
-or not a given RCU read-side critical section starts before a
-given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>?
-<br><a href="#qq5answer">Answer</a>
-
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 6"><b>Quick Quiz 6</b>:</a>
-The first and second guarantees require unbelievably strict ordering!
-Are all these memory barriers <i> really</i> required?
-<br><a href="#qq6answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Given that multiple CPUs can start RCU read-side critical sections
+ at any time without any ordering whatsoever, how can RCU possibly
+ tell whether or not a given RCU read-side critical section starts
+ before a given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ If RCU cannot tell whether or not a given
+ RCU read-side critical section starts before a
+ given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>,
+ then it must assume that the RCU read-side critical section
+ started first.
+ In other words, a given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
+ can avoid waiting on a given RCU read-side critical section only
+ if it can prove that <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> started first.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ The first and second guarantees require unbelievably strict ordering!
+ Are all these memory barriers <i> really</i> required?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ Yes, they really are required.
+ To see why the first guarantee is required, consider the following
+ sequence of events:
+ </font>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">
+ CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">
+ CPU 1: <tt>q = rcu_dereference(gp);
+ /* Very likely to return p. */</tt>
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">
+ CPU 0: <tt>list_del_rcu(p);</tt>
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">
+ CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> starts.
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">
+ CPU 1: <tt>do_something_with(q-&gt;a);
+ /* No smp_mb(), so might happen after kfree(). */</tt>
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">
+ CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">
+ CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns.
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">
+ CPU 0: <tt>kfree(p);</tt>
+ </font>
+ </ol>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">
+ Therefore, there absolutely must be a full memory barrier between the
+ end of the RCU read-side critical section and the end of the
+ grace period.
+ </font>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">
+ The sequence of events demonstrating the necessity of the second rule
+ is roughly similar:
+ </font>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 0: <tt>list_del_rcu(p);</tt>
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> starts.
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 1: <tt>q = rcu_dereference(gp);
+ /* Might return p if no memory barrier. */</tt>
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns.
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 0: <tt>kfree(p);</tt>
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">
+ CPU 1: <tt>do_something_with(q-&gt;a); /* Boom!!! */</tt>
+ </font>
+ <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
+ </font>
+ </ol>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">
+ And similarly, without a memory barrier between the beginning of the
+ grace period and the beginning of the RCU read-side critical section,
+ CPU&nbsp;1 might end up accessing the freelist.
+ </font>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">
+ The &ldquo;as if&rdquo; rule of course applies, so that any
+ implementation that acts as if the appropriate memory barriers
+ were in place is a correct implementation.
+ That said, it is much easier to fool yourself into believing
+ that you have adhered to the as-if rule than it is to actually
+ adhere to it!
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ You claim that <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
+ generate absolutely no code in some kernel builds.
+ This means that the compiler might arbitrarily rearrange consecutive
+ RCU read-side critical sections.
+ Given such rearrangement, if a given RCU read-side critical section
+ is done, how can you be sure that all prior RCU read-side critical
+ sections are done?
+ Won't the compiler rearrangements make that impossible to determine?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ In cases where <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
+ generate absolutely no code, RCU infers quiescent states only at
+ special locations, for example, within the scheduler.
+ Because calls to <tt>schedule()</tt> had better prevent calling-code
+ accesses to shared variables from being rearranged across the call to
+ <tt>schedule()</tt>, if RCU detects the end of a given RCU read-side
+ critical section, it will necessarily detect the end of all prior
+ RCU read-side critical sections, no matter how aggressively the
+ compiler scrambles the code.
+ </font>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">
+ Again, this all assumes that the compiler cannot scramble code across
+ calls to the scheduler, out of interrupt handlers, into the idle loop,
+ into user-mode code, and so on.
+ But if your kernel build allows that sort of scrambling, you have broken
+ far more than just RCU!
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<p>
Note that these memory-barrier requirements do not replace the fundamental
@@ -626,9 +834,19 @@ inconvenience can be avoided through use of the
<tt>call_rcu()</tt> and <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> API members
described later in this document.
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 7"><b>Quick Quiz 7</b>:</a>
-But how does the upgrade-to-write operation exclude other readers?
-<br><a href="#qq7answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ But how does the upgrade-to-write operation exclude other readers?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ It doesn't, just like normal RCU updates, which also do not exclude
+ RCU readers.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<p>
This guarantee allows lookup code to be shared between read-side
@@ -714,9 +932,20 @@ to do significant reordering.
This is by design: Any significant ordering constraints would slow down
these fast-path APIs.
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 8"><b>Quick Quiz 8</b>:</a>
-Can't the compiler also reorder this code?
-<br><a href="#qq8answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Can't the compiler also reorder this code?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ No, the volatile casts in <tt>READ_ONCE()</tt> and
+ <tt>WRITE_ONCE()</tt> prevent the compiler from reordering in
+ this particular case.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<h3><a name="Readers Do Not Exclude Updaters">Readers Do Not Exclude Updaters</a></h3>
@@ -769,10 +998,28 @@ new readers can start immediately after <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
starts, and <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> is under no
obligation to wait for these new readers.
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 9"><b>Quick Quiz 9</b>:</a>
-Suppose that synchronize_rcu() did wait until all readers had completed.
-Would the updater be able to rely on this?
-<br><a href="#qq9answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Suppose that synchronize_rcu() did wait until <i>all</i>
+ readers had completed instead of waiting only on
+ pre-existing readers.
+ For how long would the updater be able to rely on there
+ being no readers?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ For no time at all.
+ Even if <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> were to wait until
+ all readers had completed, a new reader might start immediately after
+ <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> completed.
+ Therefore, the code following
+ <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> can <i>never</i> rely on there being
+ no readers.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<h3><a name="Grace Periods Don't Partition Read-Side Critical Sections">
Grace Periods Don't Partition Read-Side Critical Sections</a></h3>
@@ -969,11 +1216,24 @@ grace period.
As a result, an RCU read-side critical section cannot partition a pair
of RCU grace periods.
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 10"><b>Quick Quiz 10</b>:</a>
-How long a sequence of grace periods, each separated by an RCU read-side
-critical section, would be required to partition the RCU read-side
-critical sections at the beginning and end of the chain?
-<br><a href="#qq10answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ How long a sequence of grace periods, each separated by an RCU
+ read-side critical section, would be required to partition the RCU
+ read-side critical sections at the beginning and end of the chain?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ In theory, an infinite number.
+ In practice, an unknown number that is sensitive to both implementation
+ details and timing considerations.
+ Therefore, even in practice, RCU users must abide by the
+ theoretical rather than the practical answer.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<h3><a name="Disabling Preemption Does Not Block Grace Periods">
Disabling Preemption Does Not Block Grace Periods</a></h3>
@@ -1109,12 +1369,27 @@ These classes is covered in the following sections.
<h3><a name="Specialization">Specialization</a></h3>
<p>
-RCU is and always has been intended primarily for read-mostly situations, as
-illustrated by the following figure.
-This means that RCU's read-side primitives are optimized, often at the
+RCU is and always has been intended primarily for read-mostly situations,
+which means that RCU's read-side primitives are optimized, often at the
expense of its update-side primitives.
+Experience thus far is captured by the following list of situations:
-<p><img src="RCUApplicability.svg" alt="RCUApplicability.svg" width="70%"></p>
+<ol>
+<li> Read-mostly data, where stale and inconsistent data is not
+ a problem: RCU works great!
+<li> Read-mostly data, where data must be consistent:
+ RCU works well.
+<li> Read-write data, where data must be consistent:
+ RCU <i>might</i> work OK.
+ Or not.
+<li> Write-mostly data, where data must be consistent:
+ RCU is very unlikely to be the right tool for the job,
+ with the following exceptions, where RCU can provide:
+ <ol type=a>
+ <li> Existence guarantees for update-friendly mechanisms.
+ <li> Wait-free read-side primitives for real-time use.
+ </ol>
+</ol>
<p>
This focus on read-mostly situations means that RCU must interoperate
@@ -1127,9 +1402,43 @@ synchronization primitives be legal within RCU read-side critical sections,
including spinlocks, sequence locks, atomic operations, reference
counters, and memory barriers.
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 11"><b>Quick Quiz 11</b>:</a>
-What about sleeping locks?
-<br><a href="#qq11answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ What about sleeping locks?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ These are forbidden within Linux-kernel RCU read-side critical
+ sections because it is not legal to place a quiescent state
+ (in this case, voluntary context switch) within an RCU read-side
+ critical section.
+ However, sleeping locks may be used within userspace RCU read-side
+ critical sections, and also within Linux-kernel sleepable RCU
+ <a href="#Sleepable RCU"><font color="ffffff">(SRCU)</font></a>
+ read-side critical sections.
+ In addition, the -rt patchset turns spinlocks into a
+ sleeping locks so that the corresponding critical sections
+ can be preempted, which also means that these sleeplockified
+ spinlocks (but not other sleeping locks!) may be acquire within
+ -rt-Linux-kernel RCU read-side critical sections.
+ </font>
+
+ <p><font color="ffffff">
+ Note that it <i>is</i> legal for a normal RCU read-side
+ critical section to conditionally acquire a sleeping locks
+ (as in <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt>), but only as long as it does
+ not loop indefinitely attempting to conditionally acquire that
+ sleeping locks.
+ The key point is that things like <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt>
+ either return with the mutex held, or return an error indication if
+ the mutex was not immediately available.
+ Either way, <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt> returns immediately without
+ sleeping.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<p>
It often comes as a surprise that many algorithms do not require a
@@ -1160,10 +1469,7 @@ some period of time, so the exact wait period is a judgment call.
One of our pair of veternarians might wait 30 seconds before pronouncing
the cat dead, while the other might insist on waiting a full minute.
The two veternarians would then disagree on the state of the cat during
-the final 30 seconds of the minute following the last heartbeat, as
-fancifully illustrated below:
-
-<p><img src="2013-08-is-it-dead.png" alt="2013-08-is-it-dead.png" width="431"></p>
+the final 30 seconds of the minute following the last heartbeat.
<p>
Interestingly enough, this same situation applies to hardware.
@@ -1343,7 +1649,8 @@ situations where neither <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> nor
<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> would be legal,
including within preempt-disable code, <tt>local_bh_disable()</tt> code,
interrupt-disable code, and interrupt handlers.
-However, even <tt>call_rcu()</tt> is illegal within NMI handlers.
+However, even <tt>call_rcu()</tt> is illegal within NMI handlers
+and from idle and offline CPUs.
The callback function (<tt>remove_gp_cb()</tt> in this case) will be
executed within softirq (software interrupt) environment within the
Linux kernel,
@@ -1354,12 +1661,27 @@ write an RCU callback function that takes too long.
Long-running operations should be relegated to separate threads or
(in the Linux kernel) workqueues.
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 12"><b>Quick Quiz 12</b>:</a>
-Why does line&nbsp;19 use <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>?
-After all, <tt>call_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;25 stores into the
-structure, which would interact badly with concurrent insertions.
-Doesn't this mean that <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> is required?
-<br><a href="#qq12answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Why does line&nbsp;19 use <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>?
+ After all, <tt>call_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;25 stores into the
+ structure, which would interact badly with concurrent insertions.
+ Doesn't this mean that <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> is required?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ Presumably the <tt>-&gt;gp_lock</tt> acquired on line&nbsp;18 excludes
+ any changes, including any insertions that <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>
+ would protect against.
+ Therefore, any insertions will be delayed until after
+ <tt>-&gt;gp_lock</tt>
+ is released on line&nbsp;25, which in turn means that
+ <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> suffices.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<p>
However, all that <tt>remove_gp_cb()</tt> is doing is
@@ -1406,14 +1728,31 @@ This was due to the fact that RCU was not heavily used within DYNIX/ptx,
so the very few places that needed something like
<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> simply open-coded it.
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 13"><b>Quick Quiz 13</b>:</a>
-Earlier it was claimed that <tt>call_rcu()</tt> and
-<tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> allowed updaters to avoid being blocked
-by readers.
-But how can that be correct, given that the invocation of the callback
-and the freeing of the memory (respectively) must still wait for
-a grace period to elapse?
-<br><a href="#qq13answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ Earlier it was claimed that <tt>call_rcu()</tt> and
+ <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> allowed updaters to avoid being blocked
+ by readers.
+ But how can that be correct, given that the invocation of the callback
+ and the freeing of the memory (respectively) must still wait for
+ a grace period to elapse?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ We could define things this way, but keep in mind that this sort of
+ definition would say that updates in garbage-collected languages
+ cannot complete until the next time the garbage collector runs,
+ which does not seem at all reasonable.
+ The key point is that in most cases, an updater using either
+ <tt>call_rcu()</tt> or <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> can proceed to the
+ next update as soon as it has invoked <tt>call_rcu()</tt> or
+ <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>, without having to wait for a subsequent
+ grace period.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<p>
But what if the updater must wait for the completion of code to be
@@ -1838,11 +2177,26 @@ kthreads to be spawned.
Therefore, invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> during scheduler
initialization can result in deadlock.
-<p><a name="Quick Quiz 14"><b>Quick Quiz 14</b>:</a>
-So what happens with <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> during
-scheduler initialization for <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>
-kernels?
-<br><a href="#qq14answer">Answer</a>
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ So what happens with <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> during
+ scheduler initialization for <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>
+ kernels?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ In <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt> kernel, <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
+ maps directly to <tt>synchronize_sched()</tt>.
+ Therefore, <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> works normally throughout
+ boot in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt> kernels.
+ However, your code must also work in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> kernels,
+ so it is still necessary to avoid invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
+ during scheduler initialization.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
<p>
I learned of these boot-time requirements as a result of a series of
@@ -2171,6 +2525,14 @@ This real-time requirement motivated the grace-period kthread, which
also simplified handling of a number of race conditions.
<p>
+RCU must avoid degrading real-time response for CPU-bound threads, whether
+executing in usermode (which is one use case for
+<tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_FULL=y</tt>) or in the kernel.
+That said, CPU-bound loops in the kernel must execute
+<tt>cond_resched_rcu_qs()</tt> at least once per few tens of milliseconds
+in order to avoid receiving an IPI from RCU.
+
+<p>
Finally, RCU's status as a synchronization primitive means that
any RCU failure can result in arbitrary memory corruption that can be
extremely difficult to debug.
@@ -2223,6 +2585,8 @@ described in a separate section.
<li> <a href="#Sched Flavor">Sched Flavor</a>
<li> <a href="#Sleepable RCU">Sleepable RCU</a>
<li> <a href="#Tasks RCU">Tasks RCU</a>
+<li> <a href="#Waiting for Multiple Grace Periods">
+ Waiting for Multiple Grace Periods</a>
</ol>
<h3><a name="Bottom-Half Flavor">Bottom-Half Flavor</a></h3>
@@ -2472,6 +2836,94 @@ The tasks-RCU API is quite compact, consisting only of
<tt>synchronize_rcu_tasks()</tt>, and
<tt>rcu_barrier_tasks()</tt>.
+<h3><a name="Waiting for Multiple Grace Periods">
+Waiting for Multiple Grace Periods</a></h3>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps you have an RCU protected data structure that is accessed from
+RCU read-side critical sections, from softirq handlers, and from
+hardware interrupt handlers.
+That is three flavors of RCU, the normal flavor, the bottom-half flavor,
+and the sched flavor.
+How to wait for a compound grace period?
+
+<p>
+The best approach is usually to &ldquo;just say no!&rdquo; and
+insert <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
+around each RCU read-side critical section, regardless of what
+environment it happens to be in.
+But suppose that some of the RCU read-side critical sections are
+on extremely hot code paths, and that use of <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>
+is not a viable option, so that <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
+<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> are not free.
+What then?
+
+<p>
+You <i>could</i> wait on all three grace periods in succession, as follows:
+
+<blockquote>
+<pre>
+ 1 synchronize_rcu();
+ 2 synchronize_rcu_bh();
+ 3 synchronize_sched();
+</pre>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>
+This works, but triples the update-side latency penalty.
+In cases where this is not acceptable, <tt>synchronize_rcu_mult()</tt>
+may be used to wait on all three flavors of grace period concurrently:
+
+<blockquote>
+<pre>
+ 1 synchronize_rcu_mult(call_rcu, call_rcu_bh, call_rcu_sched);
+</pre>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>
+But what if it is necessary to also wait on SRCU?
+This can be done as follows:
+
+<blockquote>
+<pre>
+ 1 static void call_my_srcu(struct rcu_head *head,
+ 2 void (*func)(struct rcu_head *head))
+ 3 {
+ 4 call_srcu(&amp;my_srcu, head, func);
+ 5 }
+ 6
+ 7 synchronize_rcu_mult(call_rcu, call_rcu_bh, call_rcu_sched, call_my_srcu);
+</pre>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>
+If you needed to wait on multiple different flavors of SRCU
+(but why???), you would need to create a wrapper function resembling
+<tt>call_my_srcu()</tt> for each SRCU flavor.
+
+<table>
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
+<tr><td>
+ But what if I need to wait for multiple RCU flavors, but I also need
+ the grace periods to be expedited?
+</td></tr>
+<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
+<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
+ If you are using expedited grace periods, there should be less penalty
+ for waiting on them in succession.
+ But if that is nevertheless a problem, you can use workqueues
+ or multiple kthreads to wait on the various expedited grace
+ periods concurrently.
+</font></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>
+Again, it is usually better to adjust the RCU read-side critical sections
+to use a single flavor of RCU, but when this is not feasible, you can use
+<tt>synchronize_rcu_mult()</tt>.
+
<h2><a name="Possible Future Changes">Possible Future Changes</a></h2>
<p>
@@ -2569,329 +3021,4 @@ and is provided
under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
United States license.
-<h3><a name="Answers to Quick Quizzes">
-Answers to Quick Quizzes</a></h3>
-
-<a name="qq1answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 1</b>:
-Wait a minute!
-You said that updaters can make useful forward progress concurrently
-with readers, but pre-existing readers will block
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>!!!
-Just who are you trying to fool???
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-First, if updaters do not wish to be blocked by readers, they can use
-<tt>call_rcu()</tt> or <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>, which will
-be discussed later.
-Second, even when using <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>, the other
-update-side code does run concurrently with readers, whether pre-existing
-or not.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%201"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 1</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq2answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 2</b>:
-Why is the <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;28 needed?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-Without that extra grace period, memory reordering could result in
-<tt>do_something_dlm()</tt> executing <tt>do_something()</tt>
-concurrently with the last bits of <tt>recovery()</tt>.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%202"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 2</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq3answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 3</b>:
-But <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> does nothing to prevent the
-two assignments to <tt>p-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>p-&gt;b</tt>
-from being reordered.
-Can't that also cause problems?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-No, it cannot.
-The readers cannot see either of these two fields until
-the assignment to <tt>gp</tt>, by which time both fields are
-fully initialized.
-So reordering the assignments
-to <tt>p-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>p-&gt;b</tt> cannot possibly
-cause any problems.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%203"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 3</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq4answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 4</b>:
-Without the <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> or the
-<tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>, what destructive optimizations
-might the compiler make use of?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-Let's start with what happens to <tt>do_something_gp()</tt>
-if it fails to use <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
-It could reuse a value formerly fetched from this same pointer.
-It could also fetch the pointer from <tt>gp</tt> in a byte-at-a-time
-manner, resulting in <i>load tearing</i>, in turn resulting a bytewise
-mash-up of two distince pointer values.
-It might even use value-speculation optimizations, where it makes a wrong
-guess, but by the time it gets around to checking the value, an update
-has changed the pointer to match the wrong guess.
-Too bad about any dereferences that returned pre-initialization garbage
-in the meantime!
-
-<p>
-For <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>, as long as all modifications
-to <tt>gp</tt> are carried out while holding <tt>gp_lock</tt>,
-the above optimizations are harmless.
-However,
-with <tt>CONFIG_SPARSE_RCU_POINTER=y</tt>,
-<tt>sparse</tt> will complain if you
-define <tt>gp</tt> with <tt>__rcu</tt> and then
-access it without using
-either <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> or <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%204"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 4</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq5answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 5</b>:
-Given that multiple CPUs can start RCU read-side critical sections
-at any time without any ordering whatsoever, how can RCU possibly tell whether
-or not a given RCU read-side critical section starts before a
-given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-If RCU cannot tell whether or not a given
-RCU read-side critical section starts before a
-given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>,
-then it must assume that the RCU read-side critical section
-started first.
-In other words, a given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
-can avoid waiting on a given RCU read-side critical section only
-if it can prove that <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> started first.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%205"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 5</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq6answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 6</b>:
-The first and second guarantees require unbelievably strict ordering!
-Are all these memory barriers <i> really</i> required?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-Yes, they really are required.
-To see why the first guarantee is required, consider the following
-sequence of events:
-
-<ol>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>q = rcu_dereference(gp);
- /* Very likely to return p. */</tt>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>list_del_rcu(p);</tt>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> starts.
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>do_something_with(q-&gt;a);
- /* No smp_mb(), so might happen after kfree(). */</tt>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns.
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>kfree(p);</tt>
-</ol>
-
-<p>
-Therefore, there absolutely must be a full memory barrier between the
-end of the RCU read-side critical section and the end of the
-grace period.
-
-<p>
-The sequence of events demonstrating the necessity of the second rule
-is roughly similar:
-
-<ol>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>list_del_rcu(p);</tt>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> starts.
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>q = rcu_dereference(gp);
- /* Might return p if no memory barrier. */</tt>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns.
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>kfree(p);</tt>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>do_something_with(q-&gt;a); /* Boom!!! */</tt>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
-</ol>
-
-<p>
-And similarly, without a memory barrier between the beginning of the
-grace period and the beginning of the RCU read-side critical section,
-CPU&nbsp;1 might end up accessing the freelist.
-
-<p>
-The &ldquo;as if&rdquo; rule of course applies, so that any implementation
-that acts as if the appropriate memory barriers were in place is a
-correct implementation.
-That said, it is much easier to fool yourself into believing that you have
-adhered to the as-if rule than it is to actually adhere to it!
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%206"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 6</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq7answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 7</b>:
-But how does the upgrade-to-write operation exclude other readers?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-It doesn't, just like normal RCU updates, which also do not exclude
-RCU readers.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%207"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 7</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq8answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 8</b>:
-Can't the compiler also reorder this code?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-No, the volatile casts in <tt>READ_ONCE()</tt> and
-<tt>WRITE_ONCE()</tt> prevent the compiler from reordering in
-this particular case.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%208"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 8</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq9answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 9</b>:
-Suppose that synchronize_rcu() did wait until all readers had completed.
-Would the updater be able to rely on this?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-No.
-Even if <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> were to wait until
-all readers had completed, a new reader might start immediately after
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> completed.
-Therefore, the code following
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> cannot rely on there being no readers
-in any case.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%209"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 9</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq10answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 10</b>:
-How long a sequence of grace periods, each separated by an RCU read-side
-critical section, would be required to partition the RCU read-side
-critical sections at the beginning and end of the chain?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-In theory, an infinite number.
-In practice, an unknown number that is sensitive to both implementation
-details and timing considerations.
-Therefore, even in practice, RCU users must abide by the theoretical rather
-than the practical answer.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%2010"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 10</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq11answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 11</b>:
-What about sleeping locks?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-These are forbidden within Linux-kernel RCU read-side critical sections
-because it is not legal to place a quiescent state (in this case,
-voluntary context switch) within an RCU read-side critical section.
-However, sleeping locks may be used within userspace RCU read-side critical
-sections, and also within Linux-kernel sleepable RCU
-<a href="#Sleepable RCU">(SRCU)</a>
-read-side critical sections.
-In addition, the -rt patchset turns spinlocks into a sleeping locks so
-that the corresponding critical sections can be preempted, which
-also means that these sleeplockified spinlocks (but not other sleeping locks!)
-may be acquire within -rt-Linux-kernel RCU read-side critical sections.
-
-<p>
-Note that it <i>is</i> legal for a normal RCU read-side critical section
-to conditionally acquire a sleeping locks (as in <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt>),
-but only as long as it does not loop indefinitely attempting to
-conditionally acquire that sleeping locks.
-The key point is that things like <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt>
-either return with the mutex held, or return an error indication if
-the mutex was not immediately available.
-Either way, <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt> returns immediately without sleeping.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%2011"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 11</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq12answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 12</b>:
-Why does line&nbsp;19 use <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>?
-After all, <tt>call_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;25 stores into the
-structure, which would interact badly with concurrent insertions.
-Doesn't this mean that <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> is required?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-Presumably the <tt>-&gt;gp_lock</tt> acquired on line&nbsp;18 excludes
-any changes, including any insertions that <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>
-would protect against.
-Therefore, any insertions will be delayed until after <tt>-&gt;gp_lock</tt>
-is released on line&nbsp;25, which in turn means that
-<tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> suffices.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%2012"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 12</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq13answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 13</b>:
-Earlier it was claimed that <tt>call_rcu()</tt> and
-<tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> allowed updaters to avoid being blocked
-by readers.
-But how can that be correct, given that the invocation of the callback
-and the freeing of the memory (respectively) must still wait for
-a grace period to elapse?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-We could define things this way, but keep in mind that this sort of
-definition would say that updates in garbage-collected languages
-cannot complete until the next time the garbage collector runs,
-which does not seem at all reasonable.
-The key point is that in most cases, an updater using either
-<tt>call_rcu()</tt> or <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> can proceed to the
-next update as soon as it has invoked <tt>call_rcu()</tt> or
-<tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>, without having to wait for a subsequent
-grace period.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%2013"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 13</b>.</a>
-
-<a name="qq14answer"></a>
-<p><b>Quick Quiz 14</b>:
-So what happens with <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> during
-scheduler initialization for <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>
-kernels?
-
-
-</p><p><b>Answer</b>:
-In <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt> kernel, <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
-maps directly to <tt>synchronize_sched()</tt>.
-Therefore, <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> works normally throughout
-boot in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt> kernels.
-However, your code must also work in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> kernels,
-so it is still necessary to avoid invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
-during scheduler initialization.
-
-
-</p><p><a href="#Quick%20Quiz%2014"><b>Back to Quick Quiz 14</b>.</a>
-
-
</body></html>
diff --git a/Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.htmlx b/Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.htmlx
deleted file mode 100644
index 3a97ba490c42..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.htmlx
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2741 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
- <html>
- <head><title>A Tour Through RCU's Requirements [LWN.net]</title>
- <meta HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=utf-8">
-
-<h1>A Tour Through RCU's Requirements</h1>
-
-<p>Copyright IBM Corporation, 2015</p>
-<p>Author: Paul E.&nbsp;McKenney</p>
-<p><i>The initial version of this document appeared in the
-<a href="https://lwn.net/">LWN</a> articles
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/652156/">here</a>,
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/652677/">here</a>, and
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/653326/">here</a>.</i></p>
-
-<h2>Introduction</h2>
-
-<p>
-Read-copy update (RCU) is a synchronization mechanism that is often
-used as a replacement for reader-writer locking.
-RCU is unusual in that updaters do not block readers,
-which means that RCU's read-side primitives can be exceedingly fast
-and scalable.
-In addition, updaters can make useful forward progress concurrently
-with readers.
-However, all this concurrency between RCU readers and updaters does raise
-the question of exactly what RCU readers are doing, which in turn
-raises the question of exactly what RCU's requirements are.
-
-<p>
-This document therefore summarizes RCU's requirements, and can be thought
-of as an informal, high-level specification for RCU.
-It is important to understand that RCU's specification is primarily
-empirical in nature;
-in fact, I learned about many of these requirements the hard way.
-This situation might cause some consternation, however, not only
-has this learning process been a lot of fun, but it has also been
-a great privilege to work with so many people willing to apply
-technologies in interesting new ways.
-
-<p>
-All that aside, here are the categories of currently known RCU requirements:
-</p>
-
-<ol>
-<li> <a href="#Fundamental Requirements">
- Fundamental Requirements</a>
-<li> <a href="#Fundamental Non-Requirements">Fundamental Non-Requirements</a>
-<li> <a href="#Parallelism Facts of Life">
- Parallelism Facts of Life</a>
-<li> <a href="#Quality-of-Implementation Requirements">
- Quality-of-Implementation Requirements</a>
-<li> <a href="#Linux Kernel Complications">
- Linux Kernel Complications</a>
-<li> <a href="#Software-Engineering Requirements">
- Software-Engineering Requirements</a>
-<li> <a href="#Other RCU Flavors">
- Other RCU Flavors</a>
-<li> <a href="#Possible Future Changes">
- Possible Future Changes</a>
-</ol>
-
-<p>
-This is followed by a <a href="#Summary">summary</a>,
-which is in turn followed by the inevitable
-<a href="#Answers to Quick Quizzes">answers to the quick quizzes</a>.
-
-<h2><a name="Fundamental Requirements">Fundamental Requirements</a></h2>
-
-<p>
-RCU's fundamental requirements are the closest thing RCU has to hard
-mathematical requirements.
-These are:
-
-<ol>
-<li> <a href="#Grace-Period Guarantee">
- Grace-Period Guarantee</a>
-<li> <a href="#Publish-Subscribe Guarantee">
- Publish-Subscribe Guarantee</a>
-<li> <a href="#Memory-Barrier Guarantees">
- Memory-Barrier Guarantees</a>
-<li> <a href="#RCU Primitives Guaranteed to Execute Unconditionally">
- RCU Primitives Guaranteed to Execute Unconditionally</a>
-<li> <a href="#Guaranteed Read-to-Write Upgrade">
- Guaranteed Read-to-Write Upgrade</a>
-</ol>
-
-<h3><a name="Grace-Period Guarantee">Grace-Period Guarantee</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-RCU's grace-period guarantee is unusual in being premeditated:
-Jack Slingwine and I had this guarantee firmly in mind when we started
-work on RCU (then called &ldquo;rclock&rdquo;) in the early 1990s.
-That said, the past two decades of experience with RCU have produced
-a much more detailed understanding of this guarantee.
-
-<p>
-RCU's grace-period guarantee allows updaters to wait for the completion
-of all pre-existing RCU read-side critical sections.
-An RCU read-side critical section
-begins with the marker <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and ends with
-the marker <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>.
-These markers may be nested, and RCU treats a nested set as one
-big RCU read-side critical section.
-Production-quality implementations of <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> are extremely lightweight, and in
-fact have exactly zero overhead in Linux kernels built for production
-use with <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>.
-
-<p>
-This guarantee allows ordering to be enforced with extremely low
-overhead to readers, for example:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 int x, y;
- 2
- 3 void thread0(void)
- 4 {
- 5 rcu_read_lock();
- 6 r1 = READ_ONCE(x);
- 7 r2 = READ_ONCE(y);
- 8 rcu_read_unlock();
- 9 }
-10
-11 void thread1(void)
-12 {
-13 WRITE_ONCE(x, 1);
-14 synchronize_rcu();
-15 WRITE_ONCE(y, 1);
-16 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-Because the <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;14 waits for
-all pre-existing readers, any instance of <tt>thread0()</tt> that
-loads a value of zero from <tt>x</tt> must complete before
-<tt>thread1()</tt> stores to <tt>y</tt>, so that instance must
-also load a value of zero from <tt>y</tt>.
-Similarly, any instance of <tt>thread0()</tt> that loads a value of
-one from <tt>y</tt> must have started after the
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> started, and must therefore also load
-a value of one from <tt>x</tt>.
-Therefore, the outcome:
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
-(r1 == 0 &amp;&amp; r2 == 1)
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-cannot happen.
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-Wait a minute!
-You said that updaters can make useful forward progress concurrently
-with readers, but pre-existing readers will block
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>!!!
-Just who are you trying to fool???
-<p>@@QQA@@
-First, if updaters do not wish to be blocked by readers, they can use
-<tt>call_rcu()</tt> or <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>, which will
-be discussed later.
-Second, even when using <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>, the other
-update-side code does run concurrently with readers, whether pre-existing
-or not.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<p>
-This scenario resembles one of the first uses of RCU in
-<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DYNIX">DYNIX/ptx</a>,
-which managed a distributed lock manager's transition into
-a state suitable for handling recovery from node failure,
-more or less as follows:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 #define STATE_NORMAL 0
- 2 #define STATE_WANT_RECOVERY 1
- 3 #define STATE_RECOVERING 2
- 4 #define STATE_WANT_NORMAL 3
- 5
- 6 int state = STATE_NORMAL;
- 7
- 8 void do_something_dlm(void)
- 9 {
-10 int state_snap;
-11
-12 rcu_read_lock();
-13 state_snap = READ_ONCE(state);
-14 if (state_snap == STATE_NORMAL)
-15 do_something();
-16 else
-17 do_something_carefully();
-18 rcu_read_unlock();
-19 }
-20
-21 void start_recovery(void)
-22 {
-23 WRITE_ONCE(state, STATE_WANT_RECOVERY);
-24 synchronize_rcu();
-25 WRITE_ONCE(state, STATE_RECOVERING);
-26 recovery();
-27 WRITE_ONCE(state, STATE_WANT_NORMAL);
-28 synchronize_rcu();
-29 WRITE_ONCE(state, STATE_NORMAL);
-30 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-The RCU read-side critical section in <tt>do_something_dlm()</tt>
-works with the <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> in <tt>start_recovery()</tt>
-to guarantee that <tt>do_something()</tt> never runs concurrently
-with <tt>recovery()</tt>, but with little or no synchronization
-overhead in <tt>do_something_dlm()</tt>.
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-Why is the <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;28 needed?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-Without that extra grace period, memory reordering could result in
-<tt>do_something_dlm()</tt> executing <tt>do_something()</tt>
-concurrently with the last bits of <tt>recovery()</tt>.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<p>
-In order to avoid fatal problems such as deadlocks,
-an RCU read-side critical section must not contain calls to
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
-Similarly, an RCU read-side critical section must not
-contain anything that waits, directly or indirectly, on completion of
-an invocation of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
-
-<p>
-Although RCU's grace-period guarantee is useful in and of itself, with
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/573497/">quite a few use cases</a>,
-it would be good to be able to use RCU to coordinate read-side
-access to linked data structures.
-For this, the grace-period guarantee is not sufficient, as can
-be seen in function <tt>add_gp_buggy()</tt> below.
-We will look at the reader's code later, but in the meantime, just think of
-the reader as locklessly picking up the <tt>gp</tt> pointer,
-and, if the value loaded is non-<tt>NULL</tt>, locklessly accessing the
-<tt>-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>-&gt;b</tt> fields.
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 bool add_gp_buggy(int a, int b)
- 2 {
- 3 p = kmalloc(sizeof(*p), GFP_KERNEL);
- 4 if (!p)
- 5 return -ENOMEM;
- 6 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
- 7 if (rcu_access_pointer(gp)) {
- 8 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
- 9 return false;
-10 }
-11 p-&gt;a = a;
-12 p-&gt;b = a;
-13 gp = p; /* ORDERING BUG */
-14 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
-15 return true;
-16 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-The problem is that both the compiler and weakly ordered CPUs are within
-their rights to reorder this code as follows:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 bool add_gp_buggy_optimized(int a, int b)
- 2 {
- 3 p = kmalloc(sizeof(*p), GFP_KERNEL);
- 4 if (!p)
- 5 return -ENOMEM;
- 6 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
- 7 if (rcu_access_pointer(gp)) {
- 8 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
- 9 return false;
-10 }
-<b>11 gp = p; /* ORDERING BUG */
-12 p-&gt;a = a;
-13 p-&gt;b = a;</b>
-14 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
-15 return true;
-16 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-If an RCU reader fetches <tt>gp</tt> just after
-<tt>add_gp_buggy_optimized</tt> executes line&nbsp;11,
-it will see garbage in the <tt>-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>-&gt;b</tt>
-fields.
-And this is but one of many ways in which compiler and hardware optimizations
-could cause trouble.
-Therefore, we clearly need some way to prevent the compiler and the CPU from
-reordering in this manner, which brings us to the publish-subscribe
-guarantee discussed in the next section.
-
-<h3><a name="Publish-Subscribe Guarantee">Publish/Subscribe Guarantee</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-RCU's publish-subscribe guarantee allows data to be inserted
-into a linked data structure without disrupting RCU readers.
-The updater uses <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> to insert the
-new data, and readers use <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> to
-access data, whether new or old.
-The following shows an example of insertion:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 bool add_gp(int a, int b)
- 2 {
- 3 p = kmalloc(sizeof(*p), GFP_KERNEL);
- 4 if (!p)
- 5 return -ENOMEM;
- 6 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
- 7 if (rcu_access_pointer(gp)) {
- 8 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
- 9 return false;
-10 }
-11 p-&gt;a = a;
-12 p-&gt;b = a;
-13 rcu_assign_pointer(gp, p);
-14 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
-15 return true;
-16 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-The <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> on line&nbsp;13 is conceptually
-equivalent to a simple assignment statement, but also guarantees
-that its assignment will
-happen after the two assignments in lines&nbsp;11 and&nbsp;12,
-similar to the C11 <tt>memory_order_release</tt> store operation.
-It also prevents any number of &ldquo;interesting&rdquo; compiler
-optimizations, for example, the use of <tt>gp</tt> as a scratch
-location immediately preceding the assignment.
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-But <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> does nothing to prevent the
-two assignments to <tt>p-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>p-&gt;b</tt>
-from being reordered.
-Can't that also cause problems?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-No, it cannot.
-The readers cannot see either of these two fields until
-the assignment to <tt>gp</tt>, by which time both fields are
-fully initialized.
-So reordering the assignments
-to <tt>p-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>p-&gt;b</tt> cannot possibly
-cause any problems.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<p>
-It is tempting to assume that the reader need not do anything special
-to control its accesses to the RCU-protected data,
-as shown in <tt>do_something_gp_buggy()</tt> below:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 bool do_something_gp_buggy(void)
- 2 {
- 3 rcu_read_lock();
- 4 p = gp; /* OPTIMIZATIONS GALORE!!! */
- 5 if (p) {
- 6 do_something(p-&gt;a, p-&gt;b);
- 7 rcu_read_unlock();
- 8 return true;
- 9 }
-10 rcu_read_unlock();
-11 return false;
-12 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-However, this temptation must be resisted because there are a
-surprisingly large number of ways that the compiler
-(to say nothing of
-<a href="https://h71000.www7.hp.com/wizard/wiz_2637.html">DEC Alpha CPUs</a>)
-can trip this code up.
-For but one example, if the compiler were short of registers, it
-might choose to refetch from <tt>gp</tt> rather than keeping
-a separate copy in <tt>p</tt> as follows:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 bool do_something_gp_buggy_optimized(void)
- 2 {
- 3 rcu_read_lock();
- 4 if (gp) { /* OPTIMIZATIONS GALORE!!! */
-<b> 5 do_something(gp-&gt;a, gp-&gt;b);</b>
- 6 rcu_read_unlock();
- 7 return true;
- 8 }
- 9 rcu_read_unlock();
-10 return false;
-11 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-If this function ran concurrently with a series of updates that
-replaced the current structure with a new one,
-the fetches of <tt>gp-&gt;a</tt>
-and <tt>gp-&gt;b</tt> might well come from two different structures,
-which could cause serious confusion.
-To prevent this (and much else besides), <tt>do_something_gp()</tt> uses
-<tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> to fetch from <tt>gp</tt>:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 bool do_something_gp(void)
- 2 {
- 3 rcu_read_lock();
- 4 p = rcu_dereference(gp);
- 5 if (p) {
- 6 do_something(p-&gt;a, p-&gt;b);
- 7 rcu_read_unlock();
- 8 return true;
- 9 }
-10 rcu_read_unlock();
-11 return false;
-12 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-The <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> uses volatile casts and (for DEC Alpha)
-memory barriers in the Linux kernel.
-Should a
-<a href="http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/RCU/consume.2015.07.13a.pdf">high-quality implementation of C11 <tt>memory_order_consume</tt> [PDF]</a>
-ever appear, then <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> could be implemented
-as a <tt>memory_order_consume</tt> load.
-Regardless of the exact implementation, a pointer fetched by
-<tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> may not be used outside of the
-outermost RCU read-side critical section containing that
-<tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>, unless protection of
-the corresponding data element has been passed from RCU to some
-other synchronization mechanism, most commonly locking or
-<a href="https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/RCU/rcuref.txt">reference counting</a>.
-
-<p>
-In short, updaters use <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> and readers
-use <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>, and these two RCU API elements
-work together to ensure that readers have a consistent view of
-newly added data elements.
-
-<p>
-Of course, it is also necessary to remove elements from RCU-protected
-data structures, for example, using the following process:
-
-<ol>
-<li> Remove the data element from the enclosing structure.
-<li> Wait for all pre-existing RCU read-side critical sections
- to complete (because only pre-existing readers can possibly have
- a reference to the newly removed data element).
-<li> At this point, only the updater has a reference to the
- newly removed data element, so it can safely reclaim
- the data element, for example, by passing it to <tt>kfree()</tt>.
-</ol>
-
-This process is implemented by <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 bool remove_gp_synchronous(void)
- 2 {
- 3 struct foo *p;
- 4
- 5 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
- 6 p = rcu_access_pointer(gp);
- 7 if (!p) {
- 8 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
- 9 return false;
-10 }
-11 rcu_assign_pointer(gp, NULL);
-12 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
-13 synchronize_rcu();
-14 kfree(p);
-15 return true;
-16 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-This function is straightforward, with line&nbsp;13 waiting for a grace
-period before line&nbsp;14 frees the old data element.
-This waiting ensures that readers will reach line&nbsp;7 of
-<tt>do_something_gp()</tt> before the data element referenced by
-<tt>p</tt> is freed.
-The <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> on line&nbsp;6 is similar to
-<tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>, except that:
-
-<ol>
-<li> The value returned by <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>
- cannot be dereferenced.
- If you want to access the value pointed to as well as
- the pointer itself, use <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>
- instead of <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>.
-<li> The call to <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> need not be
- protected.
- In contrast, <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> must either be
- within an RCU read-side critical section or in a code
- segment where the pointer cannot change, for example, in
- code protected by the corresponding update-side lock.
-</ol>
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-Without the <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> or the
-<tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>, what destructive optimizations
-might the compiler make use of?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-Let's start with what happens to <tt>do_something_gp()</tt>
-if it fails to use <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
-It could reuse a value formerly fetched from this same pointer.
-It could also fetch the pointer from <tt>gp</tt> in a byte-at-a-time
-manner, resulting in <i>load tearing</i>, in turn resulting a bytewise
-mash-up of two distince pointer values.
-It might even use value-speculation optimizations, where it makes a wrong
-guess, but by the time it gets around to checking the value, an update
-has changed the pointer to match the wrong guess.
-Too bad about any dereferences that returned pre-initialization garbage
-in the meantime!
-
-<p>
-For <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>, as long as all modifications
-to <tt>gp</tt> are carried out while holding <tt>gp_lock</tt>,
-the above optimizations are harmless.
-However,
-with <tt>CONFIG_SPARSE_RCU_POINTER=y</tt>,
-<tt>sparse</tt> will complain if you
-define <tt>gp</tt> with <tt>__rcu</tt> and then
-access it without using
-either <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> or <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<p>
-In short, RCU's publish-subscribe guarantee is provided by the combination
-of <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> and <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
-This guarantee allows data elements to be safely added to RCU-protected
-linked data structures without disrupting RCU readers.
-This guarantee can be used in combination with the grace-period
-guarantee to also allow data elements to be removed from RCU-protected
-linked data structures, again without disrupting RCU readers.
-
-<p>
-This guarantee was only partially premeditated.
-DYNIX/ptx used an explicit memory barrier for publication, but had nothing
-resembling <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> for subscription, nor did it
-have anything resembling the <tt>smp_read_barrier_depends()</tt>
-that was later subsumed into <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
-The need for these operations made itself known quite suddenly at a
-late-1990s meeting with the DEC Alpha architects, back in the days when
-DEC was still a free-standing company.
-It took the Alpha architects a good hour to convince me that any sort
-of barrier would ever be needed, and it then took me a good <i>two</i> hours
-to convince them that their documentation did not make this point clear.
-More recent work with the C and C++ standards committees have provided
-much education on tricks and traps from the compiler.
-In short, compilers were much less tricky in the early 1990s, but in
-2015, don't even think about omitting <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>!
-
-<h3><a name="Memory-Barrier Guarantees">Memory-Barrier Guarantees</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-The previous section's simple linked-data-structure scenario clearly
-demonstrates the need for RCU's stringent memory-ordering guarantees on
-systems with more than one CPU:
-
-<ol>
-<li> Each CPU that has an RCU read-side critical section that
- begins before <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> starts is
- guaranteed to execute a full memory barrier between the time
- that the RCU read-side critical section ends and the time that
- <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns.
- Without this guarantee, a pre-existing RCU read-side critical section
- might hold a reference to the newly removed <tt>struct foo</tt>
- after the <tt>kfree()</tt> on line&nbsp;14 of
- <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>.
-<li> Each CPU that has an RCU read-side critical section that ends
- after <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns is guaranteed
- to execute a full memory barrier between the time that
- <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> begins and the time that the RCU
- read-side critical section begins.
- Without this guarantee, a later RCU read-side critical section
- running after the <tt>kfree()</tt> on line&nbsp;14 of
- <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt> might
- later run <tt>do_something_gp()</tt> and find the
- newly deleted <tt>struct foo</tt>.
-<li> If the task invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> remains
- on a given CPU, then that CPU is guaranteed to execute a full
- memory barrier sometime during the execution of
- <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
- This guarantee ensures that the <tt>kfree()</tt> on
- line&nbsp;14 of <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt> really does
- execute after the removal on line&nbsp;11.
-<li> If the task invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> migrates
- among a group of CPUs during that invocation, then each of the
- CPUs in that group is guaranteed to execute a full memory barrier
- sometime during the execution of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
- This guarantee also ensures that the <tt>kfree()</tt> on
- line&nbsp;14 of <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt> really does
- execute after the removal on
- line&nbsp;11, but also in the case where the thread executing the
- <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> migrates in the meantime.
-</ol>
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-Given that multiple CPUs can start RCU read-side critical sections
-at any time without any ordering whatsoever, how can RCU possibly tell whether
-or not a given RCU read-side critical section starts before a
-given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-If RCU cannot tell whether or not a given
-RCU read-side critical section starts before a
-given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>,
-then it must assume that the RCU read-side critical section
-started first.
-In other words, a given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
-can avoid waiting on a given RCU read-side critical section only
-if it can prove that <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> started first.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-The first and second guarantees require unbelievably strict ordering!
-Are all these memory barriers <i> really</i> required?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-Yes, they really are required.
-To see why the first guarantee is required, consider the following
-sequence of events:
-
-<ol>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>q = rcu_dereference(gp);
- /* Very likely to return p. */</tt>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>list_del_rcu(p);</tt>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> starts.
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>do_something_with(q-&gt;a);
- /* No smp_mb(), so might happen after kfree(). */</tt>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns.
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>kfree(p);</tt>
-</ol>
-
-<p>
-Therefore, there absolutely must be a full memory barrier between the
-end of the RCU read-side critical section and the end of the
-grace period.
-
-<p>
-The sequence of events demonstrating the necessity of the second rule
-is roughly similar:
-
-<ol>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>list_del_rcu(p);</tt>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> starts.
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>q = rcu_dereference(gp);
- /* Might return p if no memory barrier. */</tt>
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns.
-<li> CPU 0: <tt>kfree(p);</tt>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>do_something_with(q-&gt;a); /* Boom!!! */</tt>
-<li> CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
-</ol>
-
-<p>
-And similarly, without a memory barrier between the beginning of the
-grace period and the beginning of the RCU read-side critical section,
-CPU&nbsp;1 might end up accessing the freelist.
-
-<p>
-The &ldquo;as if&rdquo; rule of course applies, so that any implementation
-that acts as if the appropriate memory barriers were in place is a
-correct implementation.
-That said, it is much easier to fool yourself into believing that you have
-adhered to the as-if rule than it is to actually adhere to it!
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<p>
-Note that these memory-barrier requirements do not replace the fundamental
-RCU requirement that a grace period wait for all pre-existing readers.
-On the contrary, the memory barriers called out in this section must operate in
-such a way as to <i>enforce</i> this fundamental requirement.
-Of course, different implementations enforce this requirement in different
-ways, but enforce it they must.
-
-<h3><a name="RCU Primitives Guaranteed to Execute Unconditionally">RCU Primitives Guaranteed to Execute Unconditionally</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-The common-case RCU primitives are unconditional.
-They are invoked, they do their job, and they return, with no possibility
-of error, and no need to retry.
-This is a key RCU design philosophy.
-
-<p>
-However, this philosophy is pragmatic rather than pigheaded.
-If someone comes up with a good justification for a particular conditional
-RCU primitive, it might well be implemented and added.
-After all, this guarantee was reverse-engineered, not premeditated.
-The unconditional nature of the RCU primitives was initially an
-accident of implementation, and later experience with synchronization
-primitives with conditional primitives caused me to elevate this
-accident to a guarantee.
-Therefore, the justification for adding a conditional primitive to
-RCU would need to be based on detailed and compelling use cases.
-
-<h3><a name="Guaranteed Read-to-Write Upgrade">Guaranteed Read-to-Write Upgrade</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-As far as RCU is concerned, it is always possible to carry out an
-update within an RCU read-side critical section.
-For example, that RCU read-side critical section might search for
-a given data element, and then might acquire the update-side
-spinlock in order to update that element, all while remaining
-in that RCU read-side critical section.
-Of course, it is necessary to exit the RCU read-side critical section
-before invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>, however, this
-inconvenience can be avoided through use of the
-<tt>call_rcu()</tt> and <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> API members
-described later in this document.
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-But how does the upgrade-to-write operation exclude other readers?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-It doesn't, just like normal RCU updates, which also do not exclude
-RCU readers.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<p>
-This guarantee allows lookup code to be shared between read-side
-and update-side code, and was premeditated, appearing in the earliest
-DYNIX/ptx RCU documentation.
-
-<h2><a name="Fundamental Non-Requirements">Fundamental Non-Requirements</a></h2>
-
-<p>
-RCU provides extremely lightweight readers, and its read-side guarantees,
-though quite useful, are correspondingly lightweight.
-It is therefore all too easy to assume that RCU is guaranteeing more
-than it really is.
-Of course, the list of things that RCU does not guarantee is infinitely
-long, however, the following sections list a few non-guarantees that
-have caused confusion.
-Except where otherwise noted, these non-guarantees were premeditated.
-
-<ol>
-<li> <a href="#Readers Impose Minimal Ordering">
- Readers Impose Minimal Ordering</a>
-<li> <a href="#Readers Do Not Exclude Updaters">
- Readers Do Not Exclude Updaters</a>
-<li> <a href="#Updaters Only Wait For Old Readers">
- Updaters Only Wait For Old Readers</a>
-<li> <a href="#Grace Periods Don't Partition Read-Side Critical Sections">
- Grace Periods Don't Partition Read-Side Critical Sections</a>
-<li> <a href="#Read-Side Critical Sections Don't Partition Grace Periods">
- Read-Side Critical Sections Don't Partition Grace Periods</a>
-<li> <a href="#Disabling Preemption Does Not Block Grace Periods">
- Disabling Preemption Does Not Block Grace Periods</a>
-</ol>
-
-<h3><a name="Readers Impose Minimal Ordering">Readers Impose Minimal Ordering</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-Reader-side markers such as <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> provide absolutely no ordering guarantees
-except through their interaction with the grace-period APIs such as
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
-To see this, consider the following pair of threads:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 void thread0(void)
- 2 {
- 3 rcu_read_lock();
- 4 WRITE_ONCE(x, 1);
- 5 rcu_read_unlock();
- 6 rcu_read_lock();
- 7 WRITE_ONCE(y, 1);
- 8 rcu_read_unlock();
- 9 }
-10
-11 void thread1(void)
-12 {
-13 rcu_read_lock();
-14 r1 = READ_ONCE(y);
-15 rcu_read_unlock();
-16 rcu_read_lock();
-17 r2 = READ_ONCE(x);
-18 rcu_read_unlock();
-19 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-After <tt>thread0()</tt> and <tt>thread1()</tt> execute
-concurrently, it is quite possible to have
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
-(r1 == 1 &amp;&amp; r2 == 0)
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-(that is, <tt>y</tt> appears to have been assigned before <tt>x</tt>),
-which would not be possible if <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> had much in the way of ordering
-properties.
-But they do not, so the CPU is within its rights
-to do significant reordering.
-This is by design: Any significant ordering constraints would slow down
-these fast-path APIs.
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-Can't the compiler also reorder this code?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-No, the volatile casts in <tt>READ_ONCE()</tt> and
-<tt>WRITE_ONCE()</tt> prevent the compiler from reordering in
-this particular case.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<h3><a name="Readers Do Not Exclude Updaters">Readers Do Not Exclude Updaters</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-Neither <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> nor <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
-exclude updates.
-All they do is to prevent grace periods from ending.
-The following example illustrates this:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 void thread0(void)
- 2 {
- 3 rcu_read_lock();
- 4 r1 = READ_ONCE(y);
- 5 if (r1) {
- 6 do_something_with_nonzero_x();
- 7 r2 = READ_ONCE(x);
- 8 WARN_ON(!r2); /* BUG!!! */
- 9 }
-10 rcu_read_unlock();
-11 }
-12
-13 void thread1(void)
-14 {
-15 spin_lock(&amp;my_lock);
-16 WRITE_ONCE(x, 1);
-17 WRITE_ONCE(y, 1);
-18 spin_unlock(&amp;my_lock);
-19 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-If the <tt>thread0()</tt> function's <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
-excluded the <tt>thread1()</tt> function's update,
-the <tt>WARN_ON()</tt> could never fire.
-But the fact is that <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> does not exclude
-much of anything aside from subsequent grace periods, of which
-<tt>thread1()</tt> has none, so the
-<tt>WARN_ON()</tt> can and does fire.
-
-<h3><a name="Updaters Only Wait For Old Readers">Updaters Only Wait For Old Readers</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-It might be tempting to assume that after <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
-completes, there are no readers executing.
-This temptation must be avoided because
-new readers can start immediately after <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
-starts, and <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> is under no
-obligation to wait for these new readers.
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-Suppose that synchronize_rcu() did wait until all readers had completed.
-Would the updater be able to rely on this?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-No.
-Even if <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> were to wait until
-all readers had completed, a new reader might start immediately after
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> completed.
-Therefore, the code following
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> cannot rely on there being no readers
-in any case.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<h3><a name="Grace Periods Don't Partition Read-Side Critical Sections">
-Grace Periods Don't Partition Read-Side Critical Sections</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-It is tempting to assume that if any part of one RCU read-side critical
-section precedes a given grace period, and if any part of another RCU
-read-side critical section follows that same grace period, then all of
-the first RCU read-side critical section must precede all of the second.
-However, this just isn't the case: A single grace period does not
-partition the set of RCU read-side critical sections.
-An example of this situation can be illustrated as follows, where
-<tt>x</tt>, <tt>y</tt>, and <tt>z</tt> are initially all zero:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 void thread0(void)
- 2 {
- 3 rcu_read_lock();
- 4 WRITE_ONCE(a, 1);
- 5 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
- 6 rcu_read_unlock();
- 7 }
- 8
- 9 void thread1(void)
-10 {
-11 r1 = READ_ONCE(a);
-12 synchronize_rcu();
-13 WRITE_ONCE(c, 1);
-14 }
-15
-16 void thread2(void)
-17 {
-18 rcu_read_lock();
-19 r2 = READ_ONCE(b);
-20 r3 = READ_ONCE(c);
-21 rcu_read_unlock();
-22 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-It turns out that the outcome:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
-(r1 == 1 &amp;&amp; r2 == 0 &amp;&amp; r3 == 1)
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-is entirely possible.
-The following figure show how this can happen, with each circled
-<tt>QS</tt> indicating the point at which RCU recorded a
-<i>quiescent state</i> for each thread, that is, a state in which
-RCU knows that the thread cannot be in the midst of an RCU read-side
-critical section that started before the current grace period:
-
-<p><img src="GPpartitionReaders1.svg" alt="GPpartitionReaders1.svg" width="60%"></p>
-
-<p>
-If it is necessary to partition RCU read-side critical sections in this
-manner, it is necessary to use two grace periods, where the first
-grace period is known to end before the second grace period starts:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 void thread0(void)
- 2 {
- 3 rcu_read_lock();
- 4 WRITE_ONCE(a, 1);
- 5 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
- 6 rcu_read_unlock();
- 7 }
- 8
- 9 void thread1(void)
-10 {
-11 r1 = READ_ONCE(a);
-12 synchronize_rcu();
-13 WRITE_ONCE(c, 1);
-14 }
-15
-16 void thread2(void)
-17 {
-18 r2 = READ_ONCE(c);
-19 synchronize_rcu();
-20 WRITE_ONCE(d, 1);
-21 }
-22
-23 void thread3(void)
-24 {
-25 rcu_read_lock();
-26 r3 = READ_ONCE(b);
-27 r4 = READ_ONCE(d);
-28 rcu_read_unlock();
-29 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-Here, if <tt>(r1 == 1)</tt>, then
-<tt>thread0()</tt>'s write to <tt>b</tt> must happen
-before the end of <tt>thread1()</tt>'s grace period.
-If in addition <tt>(r4 == 1)</tt>, then
-<tt>thread3()</tt>'s read from <tt>b</tt> must happen
-after the beginning of <tt>thread2()</tt>'s grace period.
-If it is also the case that <tt>(r2 == 1)</tt>, then the
-end of <tt>thread1()</tt>'s grace period must precede the
-beginning of <tt>thread2()</tt>'s grace period.
-This mean that the two RCU read-side critical sections cannot overlap,
-guaranteeing that <tt>(r3 == 1)</tt>.
-As a result, the outcome:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
-(r1 == 1 &amp;&amp; r2 == 1 &amp;&amp; r3 == 0 &amp;&amp; r4 == 1)
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-cannot happen.
-
-<p>
-This non-requirement was also non-premeditated, but became apparent
-when studying RCU's interaction with memory ordering.
-
-<h3><a name="Read-Side Critical Sections Don't Partition Grace Periods">
-Read-Side Critical Sections Don't Partition Grace Periods</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-It is also tempting to assume that if an RCU read-side critical section
-happens between a pair of grace periods, then those grace periods cannot
-overlap.
-However, this temptation leads nowhere good, as can be illustrated by
-the following, with all variables initially zero:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 void thread0(void)
- 2 {
- 3 rcu_read_lock();
- 4 WRITE_ONCE(a, 1);
- 5 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
- 6 rcu_read_unlock();
- 7 }
- 8
- 9 void thread1(void)
-10 {
-11 r1 = READ_ONCE(a);
-12 synchronize_rcu();
-13 WRITE_ONCE(c, 1);
-14 }
-15
-16 void thread2(void)
-17 {
-18 rcu_read_lock();
-19 WRITE_ONCE(d, 1);
-20 r2 = READ_ONCE(c);
-21 rcu_read_unlock();
-22 }
-23
-24 void thread3(void)
-25 {
-26 r3 = READ_ONCE(d);
-27 synchronize_rcu();
-28 WRITE_ONCE(e, 1);
-29 }
-30
-31 void thread4(void)
-32 {
-33 rcu_read_lock();
-34 r4 = READ_ONCE(b);
-35 r5 = READ_ONCE(e);
-36 rcu_read_unlock();
-37 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-In this case, the outcome:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
-(r1 == 1 &amp;&amp; r2 == 1 &amp;&amp; r3 == 1 &amp;&amp; r4 == 0 &amp&amp; r5 == 1)
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-is entirely possible, as illustrated below:
-
-<p><img src="ReadersPartitionGP1.svg" alt="ReadersPartitionGP1.svg" width="100%"></p>
-
-<p>
-Again, an RCU read-side critical section can overlap almost all of a
-given grace period, just so long as it does not overlap the entire
-grace period.
-As a result, an RCU read-side critical section cannot partition a pair
-of RCU grace periods.
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-How long a sequence of grace periods, each separated by an RCU read-side
-critical section, would be required to partition the RCU read-side
-critical sections at the beginning and end of the chain?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-In theory, an infinite number.
-In practice, an unknown number that is sensitive to both implementation
-details and timing considerations.
-Therefore, even in practice, RCU users must abide by the theoretical rather
-than the practical answer.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<h3><a name="Disabling Preemption Does Not Block Grace Periods">
-Disabling Preemption Does Not Block Grace Periods</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-There was a time when disabling preemption on any given CPU would block
-subsequent grace periods.
-However, this was an accident of implementation and is not a requirement.
-And in the current Linux-kernel implementation, disabling preemption
-on a given CPU in fact does not block grace periods, as Oleg Nesterov
-<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/20150614193825.GA19582@redhat.com">demonstrated</a>.
-
-<p>
-If you need a preempt-disable region to block grace periods, you need to add
-<tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>, for example
-as follows:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 preempt_disable();
- 2 rcu_read_lock();
- 3 do_something();
- 4 rcu_read_unlock();
- 5 preempt_enable();
- 6
- 7 /* Spinlocks implicitly disable preemption. */
- 8 spin_lock(&amp;mylock);
- 9 rcu_read_lock();
-10 do_something();
-11 rcu_read_unlock();
-12 spin_unlock(&amp;mylock);
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-In theory, you could enter the RCU read-side critical section first,
-but it is more efficient to keep the entire RCU read-side critical
-section contained in the preempt-disable region as shown above.
-Of course, RCU read-side critical sections that extend outside of
-preempt-disable regions will work correctly, but such critical sections
-can be preempted, which forces <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> to do
-more work.
-And no, this is <i>not</i> an invitation to enclose all of your RCU
-read-side critical sections within preempt-disable regions, because
-doing so would degrade real-time response.
-
-<p>
-This non-requirement appeared with preemptible RCU.
-If you need a grace period that waits on non-preemptible code regions, use
-<a href="#Sched Flavor">RCU-sched</a>.
-
-<h2><a name="Parallelism Facts of Life">Parallelism Facts of Life</a></h2>
-
-<p>
-These parallelism facts of life are by no means specific to RCU, but
-the RCU implementation must abide by them.
-They therefore bear repeating:
-
-<ol>
-<li> Any CPU or task may be delayed at any time,
- and any attempts to avoid these delays by disabling
- preemption, interrupts, or whatever are completely futile.
- This is most obvious in preemptible user-level
- environments and in virtualized environments (where
- a given guest OS's VCPUs can be preempted at any time by
- the underlying hypervisor), but can also happen in bare-metal
- environments due to ECC errors, NMIs, and other hardware
- events.
- Although a delay of more than about 20 seconds can result
- in splats, the RCU implementation is obligated to use
- algorithms that can tolerate extremely long delays, but where
- &ldquo;extremely long&rdquo; is not long enough to allow
- wrap-around when incrementing a 64-bit counter.
-<li> Both the compiler and the CPU can reorder memory accesses.
- Where it matters, RCU must use compiler directives and
- memory-barrier instructions to preserve ordering.
-<li> Conflicting writes to memory locations in any given cache line
- will result in expensive cache misses.
- Greater numbers of concurrent writes and more-frequent
- concurrent writes will result in more dramatic slowdowns.
- RCU is therefore obligated to use algorithms that have
- sufficient locality to avoid significant performance and
- scalability problems.
-<li> As a rough rule of thumb, only one CPU's worth of processing
- may be carried out under the protection of any given exclusive
- lock.
- RCU must therefore use scalable locking designs.
-<li> Counters are finite, especially on 32-bit systems.
- RCU's use of counters must therefore tolerate counter wrap,
- or be designed such that counter wrap would take way more
- time than a single system is likely to run.
- An uptime of ten years is quite possible, a runtime
- of a century much less so.
- As an example of the latter, RCU's dyntick-idle nesting counter
- allows 54 bits for interrupt nesting level (this counter
- is 64 bits even on a 32-bit system).
- Overflowing this counter requires 2<sup>54</sup>
- half-interrupts on a given CPU without that CPU ever going idle.
- If a half-interrupt happened every microsecond, it would take
- 570 years of runtime to overflow this counter, which is currently
- believed to be an acceptably long time.
-<li> Linux systems can have thousands of CPUs running a single
- Linux kernel in a single shared-memory environment.
- RCU must therefore pay close attention to high-end scalability.
-</ol>
-
-<p>
-This last parallelism fact of life means that RCU must pay special
-attention to the preceding facts of life.
-The idea that Linux might scale to systems with thousands of CPUs would
-have been met with some skepticism in the 1990s, but these requirements
-would have otherwise have been unsurprising, even in the early 1990s.
-
-<h2><a name="Quality-of-Implementation Requirements">Quality-of-Implementation Requirements</a></h2>
-
-<p>
-These sections list quality-of-implementation requirements.
-Although an RCU implementation that ignores these requirements could
-still be used, it would likely be subject to limitations that would
-make it inappropriate for industrial-strength production use.
-Classes of quality-of-implementation requirements are as follows:
-
-<ol>
-<li> <a href="#Specialization">Specialization</a>
-<li> <a href="#Performance and Scalability">Performance and Scalability</a>
-<li> <a href="#Composability">Composability</a>
-<li> <a href="#Corner Cases">Corner Cases</a>
-</ol>
-
-<p>
-These classes is covered in the following sections.
-
-<h3><a name="Specialization">Specialization</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-RCU is and always has been intended primarily for read-mostly situations, as
-illustrated by the following figure.
-This means that RCU's read-side primitives are optimized, often at the
-expense of its update-side primitives.
-
-<p><img src="RCUApplicability.svg" alt="RCUApplicability.svg" width="70%"></p>
-
-<p>
-This focus on read-mostly situations means that RCU must interoperate
-with other synchronization primitives.
-For example, the <tt>add_gp()</tt> and <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>
-examples discussed earlier use RCU to protect readers and locking to
-coordinate updaters.
-However, the need extends much farther, requiring that a variety of
-synchronization primitives be legal within RCU read-side critical sections,
-including spinlocks, sequence locks, atomic operations, reference
-counters, and memory barriers.
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-What about sleeping locks?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-These are forbidden within Linux-kernel RCU read-side critical sections
-because it is not legal to place a quiescent state (in this case,
-voluntary context switch) within an RCU read-side critical section.
-However, sleeping locks may be used within userspace RCU read-side critical
-sections, and also within Linux-kernel sleepable RCU
-<a href="#Sleepable RCU">(SRCU)</a>
-read-side critical sections.
-In addition, the -rt patchset turns spinlocks into a sleeping locks so
-that the corresponding critical sections can be preempted, which
-also means that these sleeplockified spinlocks (but not other sleeping locks!)
-may be acquire within -rt-Linux-kernel RCU read-side critical sections.
-
-<p>
-Note that it <i>is</i> legal for a normal RCU read-side critical section
-to conditionally acquire a sleeping locks (as in <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt>),
-but only as long as it does not loop indefinitely attempting to
-conditionally acquire that sleeping locks.
-The key point is that things like <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt>
-either return with the mutex held, or return an error indication if
-the mutex was not immediately available.
-Either way, <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt> returns immediately without sleeping.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<p>
-It often comes as a surprise that many algorithms do not require a
-consistent view of data, but many can function in that mode,
-with network routing being the poster child.
-Internet routing algorithms take significant time to propagate
-updates, so that by the time an update arrives at a given system,
-that system has been sending network traffic the wrong way for
-a considerable length of time.
-Having a few threads continue to send traffic the wrong way for a
-few more milliseconds is clearly not a problem: In the worst case,
-TCP retransmissions will eventually get the data where it needs to go.
-In general, when tracking the state of the universe outside of the
-computer, some level of inconsistency must be tolerated due to
-speed-of-light delays if nothing else.
-
-<p>
-Furthermore, uncertainty about external state is inherent in many cases.
-For example, a pair of veternarians might use heartbeat to determine
-whether or not a given cat was alive.
-But how long should they wait after the last heartbeat to decide that
-the cat is in fact dead?
-Waiting less than 400 milliseconds makes no sense because this would
-mean that a relaxed cat would be considered to cycle between death
-and life more than 100 times per minute.
-Moreover, just as with human beings, a cat's heart might stop for
-some period of time, so the exact wait period is a judgment call.
-One of our pair of veternarians might wait 30 seconds before pronouncing
-the cat dead, while the other might insist on waiting a full minute.
-The two veternarians would then disagree on the state of the cat during
-the final 30 seconds of the minute following the last heartbeat, as
-fancifully illustrated below:
-
-<p><img src="2013-08-is-it-dead.png" alt="2013-08-is-it-dead.png" width="431"></p>
-
-<p>
-Interestingly enough, this same situation applies to hardware.
-When push comes to shove, how do we tell whether or not some
-external server has failed?
-We send messages to it periodically, and declare it failed if we
-don't receive a response within a given period of time.
-Policy decisions can usually tolerate short
-periods of inconsistency.
-The policy was decided some time ago, and is only now being put into
-effect, so a few milliseconds of delay is normally inconsequential.
-
-<p>
-However, there are algorithms that absolutely must see consistent data.
-For example, the translation between a user-level SystemV semaphore
-ID to the corresponding in-kernel data structure is protected by RCU,
-but it is absolutely forbidden to update a semaphore that has just been
-removed.
-In the Linux kernel, this need for consistency is accommodated by acquiring
-spinlocks located in the in-kernel data structure from within
-the RCU read-side critical section, and this is indicated by the
-green box in the figure above.
-Many other techniques may be used, and are in fact used within the
-Linux kernel.
-
-<p>
-In short, RCU is not required to maintain consistency, and other
-mechanisms may be used in concert with RCU when consistency is required.
-RCU's specialization allows it to do its job extremely well, and its
-ability to interoperate with other synchronization mechanisms allows
-the right mix of synchronization tools to be used for a given job.
-
-<h3><a name="Performance and Scalability">Performance and Scalability</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-Energy efficiency is a critical component of performance today,
-and Linux-kernel RCU implementations must therefore avoid unnecessarily
-awakening idle CPUs.
-I cannot claim that this requirement was premeditated.
-In fact, I learned of it during a telephone conversation in which I
-was given &ldquo;frank and open&rdquo; feedback on the importance
-of energy efficiency in battery-powered systems and on specific
-energy-efficiency shortcomings of the Linux-kernel RCU implementation.
-In my experience, the battery-powered embedded community will consider
-any unnecessary wakeups to be extremely unfriendly acts.
-So much so that mere Linux-kernel-mailing-list posts are
-insufficient to vent their ire.
-
-<p>
-Memory consumption is not particularly important for in most
-situations, and has become decreasingly
-so as memory sizes have expanded and memory
-costs have plummeted.
-However, as I learned from Matt Mackall's
-<a href="http://elinux.org/Linux_Tiny-FAQ">bloatwatch</a>
-efforts, memory footprint is critically important on single-CPU systems with
-non-preemptible (<tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>) kernels, and thus
-<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/20090113221724.GA15307@linux.vnet.ibm.com">tiny RCU</a>
-was born.
-Josh Triplett has since taken over the small-memory banner with his
-<a href="https://tiny.wiki.kernel.org/">Linux kernel tinification</a>
-project, which resulted in
-<a href="#Sleepable RCU">SRCU</a>
-becoming optional for those kernels not needing it.
-
-<p>
-The remaining performance requirements are, for the most part,
-unsurprising.
-For example, in keeping with RCU's read-side specialization,
-<tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> should have negligible overhead (for
-example, suppression of a few minor compiler optimizations).
-Similarly, in non-preemptible environments, <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> should have exactly zero overhead.
-
-<p>
-In preemptible environments, in the case where the RCU read-side
-critical section was not preempted (as will be the case for the
-highest-priority real-time process), <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> should have minimal overhead.
-In particular, they should not contain atomic read-modify-write
-operations, memory-barrier instructions, preemption disabling,
-interrupt disabling, or backwards branches.
-However, in the case where the RCU read-side critical section was preempted,
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> may acquire spinlocks and disable interrupts.
-This is why it is better to nest an RCU read-side critical section
-within a preempt-disable region than vice versa, at least in cases
-where that critical section is short enough to avoid unduly degrading
-real-time latencies.
-
-<p>
-The <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> grace-period-wait primitive is
-optimized for throughput.
-It may therefore incur several milliseconds of latency in addition to
-the duration of the longest RCU read-side critical section.
-On the other hand, multiple concurrent invocations of
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> are required to use batching optimizations
-so that they can be satisfied by a single underlying grace-period-wait
-operation.
-For example, in the Linux kernel, it is not unusual for a single
-grace-period-wait operation to serve more than
-<a href="https://www.usenix.org/conference/2004-usenix-annual-technical-conference/making-rcu-safe-deep-sub-millisecond-response">1,000 separate invocations</a>
-of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>, thus amortizing the per-invocation
-overhead down to nearly zero.
-However, the grace-period optimization is also required to avoid
-measurable degradation of real-time scheduling and interrupt latencies.
-
-<p>
-In some cases, the multi-millisecond <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
-latencies are unacceptable.
-In these cases, <tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> may be used
-instead, reducing the grace-period latency down to a few tens of
-microseconds on small systems, at least in cases where the RCU read-side
-critical sections are short.
-There are currently no special latency requirements for
-<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> on large systems, but,
-consistent with the empirical nature of the RCU specification,
-that is subject to change.
-However, there most definitely are scalability requirements:
-A storm of <tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> invocations on 4096
-CPUs should at least make reasonable forward progress.
-In return for its shorter latencies, <tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt>
-is permitted to impose modest degradation of real-time latency
-on non-idle online CPUs.
-That said, it will likely be necessary to take further steps to reduce this
-degradation, hopefully to roughly that of a scheduling-clock interrupt.
-
-<p>
-There are a number of situations where even
-<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt>'s reduced grace-period
-latency is unacceptable.
-In these situations, the asynchronous <tt>call_rcu()</tt> can be
-used in place of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> as follows:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 struct foo {
- 2 int a;
- 3 int b;
- 4 struct rcu_head rh;
- 5 };
- 6
- 7 static void remove_gp_cb(struct rcu_head *rhp)
- 8 {
- 9 struct foo *p = container_of(rhp, struct foo, rh);
-10
-11 kfree(p);
-12 }
-13
-14 bool remove_gp_asynchronous(void)
-15 {
-16 struct foo *p;
-17
-18 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
-19 p = rcu_dereference(gp);
-20 if (!p) {
-21 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
-22 return false;
-23 }
-24 rcu_assign_pointer(gp, NULL);
-25 call_rcu(&amp;p-&gt;rh, remove_gp_cb);
-26 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
-27 return true;
-28 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-A definition of <tt>struct foo</tt> is finally needed, and appears
-on lines&nbsp;1-5.
-The function <tt>remove_gp_cb()</tt> is passed to <tt>call_rcu()</tt>
-on line&nbsp;25, and will be invoked after the end of a subsequent
-grace period.
-This gets the same effect as <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>,
-but without forcing the updater to wait for a grace period to elapse.
-The <tt>call_rcu()</tt> function may be used in a number of
-situations where neither <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> nor
-<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> would be legal,
-including within preempt-disable code, <tt>local_bh_disable()</tt> code,
-interrupt-disable code, and interrupt handlers.
-However, even <tt>call_rcu()</tt> is illegal within NMI handlers.
-The callback function (<tt>remove_gp_cb()</tt> in this case) will be
-executed within softirq (software interrupt) environment within the
-Linux kernel,
-either within a real softirq handler or under the protection
-of <tt>local_bh_disable()</tt>.
-In both the Linux kernel and in userspace, it is bad practice to
-write an RCU callback function that takes too long.
-Long-running operations should be relegated to separate threads or
-(in the Linux kernel) workqueues.
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-Why does line&nbsp;19 use <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>?
-After all, <tt>call_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;25 stores into the
-structure, which would interact badly with concurrent insertions.
-Doesn't this mean that <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> is required?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-Presumably the <tt>-&gt;gp_lock</tt> acquired on line&nbsp;18 excludes
-any changes, including any insertions that <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>
-would protect against.
-Therefore, any insertions will be delayed until after <tt>-&gt;gp_lock</tt>
-is released on line&nbsp;25, which in turn means that
-<tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> suffices.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<p>
-However, all that <tt>remove_gp_cb()</tt> is doing is
-invoking <tt>kfree()</tt> on the data element.
-This is a common idiom, and is supported by <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>,
-which allows &ldquo;fire and forget&rdquo; operation as shown below:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 struct foo {
- 2 int a;
- 3 int b;
- 4 struct rcu_head rh;
- 5 };
- 6
- 7 bool remove_gp_faf(void)
- 8 {
- 9 struct foo *p;
-10
-11 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
-12 p = rcu_dereference(gp);
-13 if (!p) {
-14 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
-15 return false;
-16 }
-17 rcu_assign_pointer(gp, NULL);
-18 kfree_rcu(p, rh);
-19 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
-20 return true;
-21 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-Note that <tt>remove_gp_faf()</tt> simply invokes
-<tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> and proceeds, without any need to pay any
-further attention to the subsequent grace period and <tt>kfree()</tt>.
-It is permissible to invoke <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> from the same
-environments as for <tt>call_rcu()</tt>.
-Interestingly enough, DYNIX/ptx had the equivalents of
-<tt>call_rcu()</tt> and <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>, but not
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
-This was due to the fact that RCU was not heavily used within DYNIX/ptx,
-so the very few places that needed something like
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> simply open-coded it.
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-Earlier it was claimed that <tt>call_rcu()</tt> and
-<tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> allowed updaters to avoid being blocked
-by readers.
-But how can that be correct, given that the invocation of the callback
-and the freeing of the memory (respectively) must still wait for
-a grace period to elapse?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-We could define things this way, but keep in mind that this sort of
-definition would say that updates in garbage-collected languages
-cannot complete until the next time the garbage collector runs,
-which does not seem at all reasonable.
-The key point is that in most cases, an updater using either
-<tt>call_rcu()</tt> or <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> can proceed to the
-next update as soon as it has invoked <tt>call_rcu()</tt> or
-<tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>, without having to wait for a subsequent
-grace period.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<p>
-But what if the updater must wait for the completion of code to be
-executed after the end of the grace period, but has other tasks
-that can be carried out in the meantime?
-The polling-style <tt>get_state_synchronize_rcu()</tt> and
-<tt>cond_synchronize_rcu()</tt> functions may be used for this
-purpose, as shown below:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 bool remove_gp_poll(void)
- 2 {
- 3 struct foo *p;
- 4 unsigned long s;
- 5
- 6 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
- 7 p = rcu_access_pointer(gp);
- 8 if (!p) {
- 9 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
-10 return false;
-11 }
-12 rcu_assign_pointer(gp, NULL);
-13 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
-14 s = get_state_synchronize_rcu();
-15 do_something_while_waiting();
-16 cond_synchronize_rcu(s);
-17 kfree(p);
-18 return true;
-19 }
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-On line&nbsp;14, <tt>get_state_synchronize_rcu()</tt> obtains a
-&ldquo;cookie&rdquo; from RCU,
-then line&nbsp;15 carries out other tasks,
-and finally, line&nbsp;16 returns immediately if a grace period has
-elapsed in the meantime, but otherwise waits as required.
-The need for <tt>get_state_synchronize_rcu</tt> and
-<tt>cond_synchronize_rcu()</tt> has appeared quite recently,
-so it is too early to tell whether they will stand the test of time.
-
-<p>
-RCU thus provides a range of tools to allow updaters to strike the
-required tradeoff between latency, flexibility and CPU overhead.
-
-<h3><a name="Composability">Composability</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-Composability has received much attention in recent years, perhaps in part
-due to the collision of multicore hardware with object-oriented techniques
-designed in single-threaded environments for single-threaded use.
-And in theory, RCU read-side critical sections may be composed, and in
-fact may be nested arbitrarily deeply.
-In practice, as with all real-world implementations of composable
-constructs, there are limitations.
-
-<p>
-Implementations of RCU for which <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
-and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> generate no code, such as
-Linux-kernel RCU when <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>, can be
-nested arbitrarily deeply.
-After all, there is no overhead.
-Except that if all these instances of <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
-and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> are visible to the compiler,
-compilation will eventually fail due to exhausting memory,
-mass storage, or user patience, whichever comes first.
-If the nesting is not visible to the compiler, as is the case with
-mutually recursive functions each in its own translation unit,
-stack overflow will result.
-If the nesting takes the form of loops, either the control variable
-will overflow or (in the Linux kernel) you will get an RCU CPU stall warning.
-Nevertheless, this class of RCU implementations is one
-of the most composable constructs in existence.
-
-<p>
-RCU implementations that explicitly track nesting depth
-are limited by the nesting-depth counter.
-For example, the Linux kernel's preemptible RCU limits nesting to
-<tt>INT_MAX</tt>.
-This should suffice for almost all practical purposes.
-That said, a consecutive pair of RCU read-side critical sections
-between which there is an operation that waits for a grace period
-cannot be enclosed in another RCU read-side critical section.
-This is because it is not legal to wait for a grace period within
-an RCU read-side critical section: To do so would result either
-in deadlock or
-in RCU implicitly splitting the enclosing RCU read-side critical
-section, neither of which is conducive to a long-lived and prosperous
-kernel.
-
-<p>
-It is worth noting that RCU is not alone in limiting composability.
-For example, many transactional-memory implementations prohibit
-composing a pair of transactions separated by an irrevocable
-operation (for example, a network receive operation).
-For another example, lock-based critical sections can be composed
-surprisingly freely, but only if deadlock is avoided.
-
-<p>
-In short, although RCU read-side critical sections are highly composable,
-care is required in some situations, just as is the case for any other
-composable synchronization mechanism.
-
-<h3><a name="Corner Cases">Corner Cases</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-A given RCU workload might have an endless and intense stream of
-RCU read-side critical sections, perhaps even so intense that there
-was never a point in time during which there was not at least one
-RCU read-side critical section in flight.
-RCU cannot allow this situation to block grace periods: As long as
-all the RCU read-side critical sections are finite, grace periods
-must also be finite.
-
-<p>
-That said, preemptible RCU implementations could potentially result
-in RCU read-side critical sections being preempted for long durations,
-which has the effect of creating a long-duration RCU read-side
-critical section.
-This situation can arise only in heavily loaded systems, but systems using
-real-time priorities are of course more vulnerable.
-Therefore, RCU priority boosting is provided to help deal with this
-case.
-That said, the exact requirements on RCU priority boosting will likely
-evolve as more experience accumulates.
-
-<p>
-Other workloads might have very high update rates.
-Although one can argue that such workloads should instead use
-something other than RCU, the fact remains that RCU must
-handle such workloads gracefully.
-This requirement is another factor driving batching of grace periods,
-but it is also the driving force behind the checks for large numbers
-of queued RCU callbacks in the <tt>call_rcu()</tt> code path.
-Finally, high update rates should not delay RCU read-side critical
-sections, although some read-side delays can occur when using
-<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt>, courtesy of this function's use
-of <tt>try_stop_cpus()</tt>.
-(In the future, <tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> will be
-converted to use lighter-weight inter-processor interrupts (IPIs),
-but this will still disturb readers, though to a much smaller degree.)
-
-<p>
-Although all three of these corner cases were understood in the early
-1990s, a simple user-level test consisting of <tt>close(open(path))</tt>
-in a tight loop
-in the early 2000s suddenly provided a much deeper appreciation of the
-high-update-rate corner case.
-This test also motivated addition of some RCU code to react to high update
-rates, for example, if a given CPU finds itself with more than 10,000
-RCU callbacks queued, it will cause RCU to take evasive action by
-more aggressively starting grace periods and more aggressively forcing
-completion of grace-period processing.
-This evasive action causes the grace period to complete more quickly,
-but at the cost of restricting RCU's batching optimizations, thus
-increasing the CPU overhead incurred by that grace period.
-
-<h2><a name="Software-Engineering Requirements">
-Software-Engineering Requirements</a></h2>
-
-<p>
-Between Murphy's Law and &ldquo;To err is human&rdquo;, it is necessary to
-guard against mishaps and misuse:
-
-<ol>
-<li> It is all too easy to forget to use <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
- everywhere that it is needed, so kernels built with
- <tt>CONFIG_PROVE_RCU=y</tt> will spat if
- <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> is used outside of an
- RCU read-side critical section.
- Update-side code can use <tt>rcu_dereference_protected()</tt>,
- which takes a
- <a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/371986/">lockdep expression</a>
- to indicate what is providing the protection.
- If the indicated protection is not provided, a lockdep splat
- is emitted.
-
- <p>
- Code shared between readers and updaters can use
- <tt>rcu_dereference_check()</tt>, which also takes a
- lockdep expression, and emits a lockdep splat if neither
- <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> nor the indicated protection
- is in place.
- In addition, <tt>rcu_dereference_raw()</tt> is used in those
- (hopefully rare) cases where the required protection cannot
- be easily described.
- Finally, <tt>rcu_read_lock_held()</tt> is provided to
- allow a function to verify that it has been invoked within
- an RCU read-side critical section.
- I was made aware of this set of requirements shortly after Thomas
- Gleixner audited a number of RCU uses.
-<li> A given function might wish to check for RCU-related preconditions
- upon entry, before using any other RCU API.
- The <tt>rcu_lockdep_assert()</tt> does this job,
- asserting the expression in kernels having lockdep enabled
- and doing nothing otherwise.
-<li> It is also easy to forget to use <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt>
- and <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>, perhaps (incorrectly)
- substituting a simple assignment.
- To catch this sort of error, a given RCU-protected pointer may be
- tagged with <tt>__rcu</tt>, after which running sparse
- with <tt>CONFIG_SPARSE_RCU_POINTER=y</tt> will complain
- about simple-assignment accesses to that pointer.
- Arnd Bergmann made me aware of this requirement, and also
- supplied the needed
- <a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/376011/">patch series</a>.
-<li> Kernels built with <tt>CONFIG_DEBUG_OBJECTS_RCU_HEAD=y</tt>
- will splat if a data element is passed to <tt>call_rcu()</tt>
- twice in a row, without a grace period in between.
- (This error is similar to a double free.)
- The corresponding <tt>rcu_head</tt> structures that are
- dynamically allocated are automatically tracked, but
- <tt>rcu_head</tt> structures allocated on the stack
- must be initialized with <tt>init_rcu_head_on_stack()</tt>
- and cleaned up with <tt>destroy_rcu_head_on_stack()</tt>.
- Similarly, statically allocated non-stack <tt>rcu_head</tt>
- structures must be initialized with <tt>init_rcu_head()</tt>
- and cleaned up with <tt>destroy_rcu_head()</tt>.
- Mathieu Desnoyers made me aware of this requirement, and also
- supplied the needed
- <a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/20100319013024.GA28456@Krystal">patch</a>.
-<li> An infinite loop in an RCU read-side critical section will
- eventually trigger an RCU CPU stall warning splat, with
- the duration of &ldquo;eventually&rdquo; being controlled by the
- <tt>RCU_CPU_STALL_TIMEOUT</tt> <tt>Kconfig</tt> option, or,
- alternatively, by the
- <tt>rcupdate.rcu_cpu_stall_timeout</tt> boot/sysfs
- parameter.
- However, RCU is not obligated to produce this splat
- unless there is a grace period waiting on that particular
- RCU read-side critical section.
- <p>
- Some extreme workloads might intentionally delay
- RCU grace periods, and systems running those workloads can
- be booted with <tt>rcupdate.rcu_cpu_stall_suppress</tt>
- to suppress the splats.
- This kernel parameter may also be set via <tt>sysfs</tt>.
- Furthermore, RCU CPU stall warnings are counter-productive
- during sysrq dumps and during panics.
- RCU therefore supplies the <tt>rcu_sysrq_start()</tt> and
- <tt>rcu_sysrq_end()</tt> API members to be called before
- and after long sysrq dumps.
- RCU also supplies the <tt>rcu_panic()</tt> notifier that is
- automatically invoked at the beginning of a panic to suppress
- further RCU CPU stall warnings.
-
- <p>
- This requirement made itself known in the early 1990s, pretty
- much the first time that it was necessary to debug a CPU stall.
- That said, the initial implementation in DYNIX/ptx was quite
- generic in comparison with that of Linux.
-<li> Although it would be very good to detect pointers leaking out
- of RCU read-side critical sections, there is currently no
- good way of doing this.
- One complication is the need to distinguish between pointers
- leaking and pointers that have been handed off from RCU to
- some other synchronization mechanism, for example, reference
- counting.
-<li> In kernels built with <tt>CONFIG_RCU_TRACE=y</tt>, RCU-related
- information is provided via both debugfs and event tracing.
-<li> Open-coded use of <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> and
- <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> to create typical linked
- data structures can be surprisingly error-prone.
- Therefore, RCU-protected
- <a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/609973/#RCU List APIs">linked lists</a>
- and, more recently, RCU-protected
- <a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/612100/">hash tables</a>
- are available.
- Many other special-purpose RCU-protected data structures are
- available in the Linux kernel and the userspace RCU library.
-<li> Some linked structures are created at compile time, but still
- require <tt>__rcu</tt> checking.
- The <tt>RCU_POINTER_INITIALIZER()</tt> macro serves this
- purpose.
-<li> It is not necessary to use <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt>
- when creating linked structures that are to be published via
- a single external pointer.
- The <tt>RCU_INIT_POINTER()</tt> macro is provided for
- this task and also for assigning <tt>NULL</tt> pointers
- at runtime.
-</ol>
-
-<p>
-This not a hard-and-fast list: RCU's diagnostic capabilities will
-continue to be guided by the number and type of usage bugs found
-in real-world RCU usage.
-
-<h2><a name="Linux Kernel Complications">Linux Kernel Complications</a></h2>
-
-<p>
-The Linux kernel provides an interesting environment for all kinds of
-software, including RCU.
-Some of the relevant points of interest are as follows:
-
-<ol>
-<li> <a href="#Configuration">Configuration</a>.
-<li> <a href="#Firmware Interface">Firmware Interface</a>.
-<li> <a href="#Early Boot">Early Boot</a>.
-<li> <a href="#Interrupts and NMIs">
- Interrupts and non-maskable interrupts (NMIs)</a>.
-<li> <a href="#Loadable Modules">Loadable Modules</a>.
-<li> <a href="#Hotplug CPU">Hotplug CPU</a>.
-<li> <a href="#Scheduler and RCU">Scheduler and RCU</a>.
-<li> <a href="#Tracing and RCU">Tracing and RCU</a>.
-<li> <a href="#Energy Efficiency">Energy Efficiency</a>.
-<li> <a href="#Memory Efficiency">Memory Efficiency</a>.
-<li> <a href="#Performance, Scalability, Response Time, and Reliability">
- Performance, Scalability, Response Time, and Reliability</a>.
-</ol>
-
-<p>
-This list is probably incomplete, but it does give a feel for the
-most notable Linux-kernel complications.
-Each of the following sections covers one of the above topics.
-
-<h3><a name="Configuration">Configuration</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-RCU's goal is automatic configuration, so that almost nobody
-needs to worry about RCU's <tt>Kconfig</tt> options.
-And for almost all users, RCU does in fact work well
-&ldquo;out of the box.&rdquo;
-
-<p>
-However, there are specialized use cases that are handled by
-kernel boot parameters and <tt>Kconfig</tt> options.
-Unfortunately, the <tt>Kconfig</tt> system will explicitly ask users
-about new <tt>Kconfig</tt> options, which requires almost all of them
-be hidden behind a <tt>CONFIG_RCU_EXPERT</tt> <tt>Kconfig</tt> option.
-
-<p>
-This all should be quite obvious, but the fact remains that
-Linus Torvalds recently had to
-<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/CA+55aFy4wcCwaL4okTs8wXhGZ5h-ibecy_Meg9C4MNQrUnwMcg@mail.gmail.com">remind</a>
-me of this requirement.
-
-<h3><a name="Firmware Interface">Firmware Interface</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-In many cases, kernel obtains information about the system from the
-firmware, and sometimes things are lost in translation.
-Or the translation is accurate, but the original message is bogus.
-
-<p>
-For example, some systems' firmware overreports the number of CPUs,
-sometimes by a large factor.
-If RCU naively believed the firmware, as it used to do,
-it would create too many per-CPU kthreads.
-Although the resulting system will still run correctly, the extra
-kthreads needlessly consume memory and can cause confusion
-when they show up in <tt>ps</tt> listings.
-
-<p>
-RCU must therefore wait for a given CPU to actually come online before
-it can allow itself to believe that the CPU actually exists.
-The resulting &ldquo;ghost CPUs&rdquo; (which are never going to
-come online) cause a number of
-<a href="https://paulmck.livejournal.com/37494.html">interesting complications</a>.
-
-<h3><a name="Early Boot">Early Boot</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-The Linux kernel's boot sequence is an interesting process,
-and RCU is used early, even before <tt>rcu_init()</tt>
-is invoked.
-In fact, a number of RCU's primitives can be used as soon as the
-initial task's <tt>task_struct</tt> is available and the
-boot CPU's per-CPU variables are set up.
-The read-side primitives (<tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>,
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>, <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>,
-and <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>) will operate normally very early on,
-as will <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt>.
-
-<p>
-Although <tt>call_rcu()</tt> may be invoked at any
-time during boot, callbacks are not guaranteed to be invoked until after
-the scheduler is fully up and running.
-This delay in callback invocation is due to the fact that RCU does not
-invoke callbacks until it is fully initialized, and this full initialization
-cannot occur until after the scheduler has initialized itself to the
-point where RCU can spawn and run its kthreads.
-In theory, it would be possible to invoke callbacks earlier,
-however, this is not a panacea because there would be severe restrictions
-on what operations those callbacks could invoke.
-
-<p>
-Perhaps surprisingly, <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>,
-<a href="#Bottom-Half Flavor"><tt>synchronize_rcu_bh()</tt></a>
-(<a href="#Bottom-Half Flavor">discussed below</a>),
-and
-<a href="#Sched Flavor"><tt>synchronize_sched()</tt></a>
-will all operate normally
-during very early boot, the reason being that there is only one CPU
-and preemption is disabled.
-This means that the call <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> (or friends)
-itself is a quiescent
-state and thus a grace period, so the early-boot implementation can
-be a no-op.
-
-<p>
-Both <tt>synchronize_rcu_bh()</tt> and <tt>synchronize_sched()</tt>
-continue to operate normally through the remainder of boot, courtesy
-of the fact that preemption is disabled across their RCU read-side
-critical sections and also courtesy of the fact that there is still
-only one CPU.
-However, once the scheduler starts initializing, preemption is enabled.
-There is still only a single CPU, but the fact that preemption is enabled
-means that the no-op implementation of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> no
-longer works in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> kernels.
-Therefore, as soon as the scheduler starts initializing, the early-boot
-fastpath is disabled.
-This means that <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> switches to its runtime
-mode of operation where it posts callbacks, which in turn means that
-any call to <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> will block until the corresponding
-callback is invoked.
-Unfortunately, the callback cannot be invoked until RCU's runtime
-grace-period machinery is up and running, which cannot happen until
-the scheduler has initialized itself sufficiently to allow RCU's
-kthreads to be spawned.
-Therefore, invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> during scheduler
-initialization can result in deadlock.
-
-<p>@@QQ@@
-So what happens with <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> during
-scheduler initialization for <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>
-kernels?
-<p>@@QQA@@
-In <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt> kernel, <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
-maps directly to <tt>synchronize_sched()</tt>.
-Therefore, <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> works normally throughout
-boot in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt> kernels.
-However, your code must also work in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> kernels,
-so it is still necessary to avoid invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
-during scheduler initialization.
-<p>@@QQE@@
-
-<p>
-I learned of these boot-time requirements as a result of a series of
-system hangs.
-
-<h3><a name="Interrupts and NMIs">Interrupts and NMIs</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-The Linux kernel has interrupts, and RCU read-side critical sections are
-legal within interrupt handlers and within interrupt-disabled regions
-of code, as are invocations of <tt>call_rcu()</tt>.
-
-<p>
-Some Linux-kernel architectures can enter an interrupt handler from
-non-idle process context, and then just never leave it, instead stealthily
-transitioning back to process context.
-This trick is sometimes used to invoke system calls from inside the kernel.
-These &ldquo;half-interrupts&rdquo; mean that RCU has to be very careful
-about how it counts interrupt nesting levels.
-I learned of this requirement the hard way during a rewrite
-of RCU's dyntick-idle code.
-
-<p>
-The Linux kernel has non-maskable interrupts (NMIs), and
-RCU read-side critical sections are legal within NMI handlers.
-Thankfully, RCU update-side primitives, including
-<tt>call_rcu()</tt>, are prohibited within NMI handlers.
-
-<p>
-The name notwithstanding, some Linux-kernel architectures
-can have nested NMIs, which RCU must handle correctly.
-Andy Lutomirski
-<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/CALCETrXLq1y7e_dKFPgou-FKHB6Pu-r8+t-6Ds+8=va7anBWDA@mail.gmail.com">surprised me</a>
-with this requirement;
-he also kindly surprised me with
-<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/CALCETrXSY9JpW3uE6H8WYk81sg56qasA2aqmjMPsq5dOtzso=g@mail.gmail.com">an algorithm</a>
-that meets this requirement.
-
-<h3><a name="Loadable Modules">Loadable Modules</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-The Linux kernel has loadable modules, and these modules can
-also be unloaded.
-After a given module has been unloaded, any attempt to call
-one of its functions results in a segmentation fault.
-The module-unload functions must therefore cancel any
-delayed calls to loadable-module functions, for example,
-any outstanding <tt>mod_timer()</tt> must be dealt with
-via <tt>del_timer_sync()</tt> or similar.
-
-<p>
-Unfortunately, there is no way to cancel an RCU callback;
-once you invoke <tt>call_rcu()</tt>, the callback function is
-going to eventually be invoked, unless the system goes down first.
-Because it is normally considered socially irresponsible to crash the system
-in response to a module unload request, we need some other way
-to deal with in-flight RCU callbacks.
-
-<p>
-RCU therefore provides
-<tt><a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/217484/">rcu_barrier()</a></tt>,
-which waits until all in-flight RCU callbacks have been invoked.
-If a module uses <tt>call_rcu()</tt>, its exit function should therefore
-prevent any future invocation of <tt>call_rcu()</tt>, then invoke
-<tt>rcu_barrier()</tt>.
-In theory, the underlying module-unload code could invoke
-<tt>rcu_barrier()</tt> unconditionally, but in practice this would
-incur unacceptable latencies.
-
-<p>
-Nikita Danilov noted this requirement for an analogous filesystem-unmount
-situation, and Dipankar Sarma incorporated <tt>rcu_barrier()</tt> into RCU.
-The need for <tt>rcu_barrier()</tt> for module unloading became
-apparent later.
-
-<h3><a name="Hotplug CPU">Hotplug CPU</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-The Linux kernel supports CPU hotplug, which means that CPUs
-can come and go.
-It is of course illegal to use any RCU API member from an offline CPU.
-This requirement was present from day one in DYNIX/ptx, but
-on the other hand, the Linux kernel's CPU-hotplug implementation
-is &ldquo;interesting.&rdquo;
-
-<p>
-The Linux-kernel CPU-hotplug implementation has notifiers that
-are used to allow the various kernel subsystems (including RCU)
-to respond appropriately to a given CPU-hotplug operation.
-Most RCU operations may be invoked from CPU-hotplug notifiers,
-including even normal synchronous grace-period operations
-such as <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
-However, expedited grace-period operations such as
-<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> are not supported,
-due to the fact that current implementations block CPU-hotplug
-operations, which could result in deadlock.
-
-<p>
-In addition, all-callback-wait operations such as
-<tt>rcu_barrier()</tt> are also not supported, due to the
-fact that there are phases of CPU-hotplug operations where
-the outgoing CPU's callbacks will not be invoked until after
-the CPU-hotplug operation ends, which could also result in deadlock.
-
-<h3><a name="Scheduler and RCU">Scheduler and RCU</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-RCU depends on the scheduler, and the scheduler uses RCU to
-protect some of its data structures.
-This means the scheduler is forbidden from acquiring
-the runqueue locks and the priority-inheritance locks
-in the middle of an outermost RCU read-side critical section unless either
-(1)&nbsp;it releases them before exiting that same
-RCU read-side critical section, or
-(2)&nbsp;interrupts are disabled across
-that entire RCU read-side critical section.
-This same prohibition also applies (recursively!) to any lock that is acquired
-while holding any lock to which this prohibition applies.
-Adhering to this rule prevents preemptible RCU from invoking
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock_special()</tt> while either runqueue or
-priority-inheritance locks are held, thus avoiding deadlock.
-
-<p>
-Prior to v4.4, it was only necessary to disable preemption across
-RCU read-side critical sections that acquired scheduler locks.
-In v4.4, expedited grace periods started using IPIs, and these
-IPIs could force a <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> to take the slowpath.
-Therefore, this expedited-grace-period change required disabling of
-interrupts, not just preemption.
-
-<p>
-For RCU's part, the preemptible-RCU <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
-implementation must be written carefully to avoid similar deadlocks.
-In particular, <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> must tolerate an
-interrupt where the interrupt handler invokes both
-<tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>.
-This possibility requires <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> to use
-negative nesting levels to avoid destructive recursion via
-interrupt handler's use of RCU.
-
-<p>
-This pair of mutual scheduler-RCU requirements came as a
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/453002/">complete surprise</a>.
-
-<p>
-As noted above, RCU makes use of kthreads, and it is necessary to
-avoid excessive CPU-time accumulation by these kthreads.
-This requirement was no surprise, but RCU's violation of it
-when running context-switch-heavy workloads when built with
-<tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_FULL=y</tt>
-<a href="http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/scalability/paper/BareMetal.2015.01.15b.pdf">did come as a surprise [PDF]</a>.
-RCU has made good progress towards meeting this requirement, even
-for context-switch-have <tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_FULL=y</tt> workloads,
-but there is room for further improvement.
-
-<h3><a name="Tracing and RCU">Tracing and RCU</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-It is possible to use tracing on RCU code, but tracing itself
-uses RCU.
-For this reason, <tt>rcu_dereference_raw_notrace()</tt>
-is provided for use by tracing, which avoids the destructive
-recursion that could otherwise ensue.
-This API is also used by virtualization in some architectures,
-where RCU readers execute in environments in which tracing
-cannot be used.
-The tracing folks both located the requirement and provided the
-needed fix, so this surprise requirement was relatively painless.
-
-<h3><a name="Energy Efficiency">Energy Efficiency</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-Interrupting idle CPUs is considered socially unacceptable,
-especially by people with battery-powered embedded systems.
-RCU therefore conserves energy by detecting which CPUs are
-idle, including tracking CPUs that have been interrupted from idle.
-This is a large part of the energy-efficiency requirement,
-so I learned of this via an irate phone call.
-
-<p>
-Because RCU avoids interrupting idle CPUs, it is illegal to
-execute an RCU read-side critical section on an idle CPU.
-(Kernels built with <tt>CONFIG_PROVE_RCU=y</tt> will splat
-if you try it.)
-The <tt>RCU_NONIDLE()</tt> macro and <tt>_rcuidle</tt>
-event tracing is provided to work around this restriction.
-In addition, <tt>rcu_is_watching()</tt> may be used to
-test whether or not it is currently legal to run RCU read-side
-critical sections on this CPU.
-I learned of the need for diagnostics on the one hand
-and <tt>RCU_NONIDLE()</tt> on the other while inspecting
-idle-loop code.
-Steven Rostedt supplied <tt>_rcuidle</tt> event tracing,
-which is used quite heavily in the idle loop.
-
-<p>
-It is similarly socially unacceptable to interrupt an
-<tt>nohz_full</tt> CPU running in userspace.
-RCU must therefore track <tt>nohz_full</tt> userspace
-execution.
-And in
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/558284/"><tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_FULL_SYSIDLE=y</tt></a>
-kernels, RCU must separately track idle CPUs on the one hand and
-CPUs that are either idle or executing in userspace on the other.
-In both cases, RCU must be able to sample state at two points in
-time, and be able to determine whether or not some other CPU spent
-any time idle and/or executing in userspace.
-
-<p>
-These energy-efficiency requirements have proven quite difficult to
-understand and to meet, for example, there have been more than five
-clean-sheet rewrites of RCU's energy-efficiency code, the last of
-which was finally able to demonstrate
-<a href="http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/realtime/paper/AMPenergy.2013.04.19a.pdf">real energy savings running on real hardware [PDF]</a>.
-As noted earlier,
-I learned of many of these requirements via angry phone calls:
-Flaming me on the Linux-kernel mailing list was apparently not
-sufficient to fully vent their ire at RCU's energy-efficiency bugs!
-
-<h3><a name="Memory Efficiency">Memory Efficiency</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-Although small-memory non-realtime systems can simply use Tiny RCU,
-code size is only one aspect of memory efficiency.
-Another aspect is the size of the <tt>rcu_head</tt> structure
-used by <tt>call_rcu()</tt> and <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>.
-Although this structure contains nothing more than a pair of pointers,
-it does appear in many RCU-protected data structures, including
-some that are size critical.
-The <tt>page</tt> structure is a case in point, as evidenced by
-the many occurrences of the <tt>union</tt> keyword within that structure.
-
-<p>
-This need for memory efficiency is one reason that RCU uses hand-crafted
-singly linked lists to track the <tt>rcu_head</tt> structures that
-are waiting for a grace period to elapse.
-It is also the reason why <tt>rcu_head</tt> structures do not contain
-debug information, such as fields tracking the file and line of the
-<tt>call_rcu()</tt> or <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> that posted them.
-Although this information might appear in debug-only kernel builds at some
-point, in the meantime, the <tt>-&gt;func</tt> field will often provide
-the needed debug information.
-
-<p>
-However, in some cases, the need for memory efficiency leads to even
-more extreme measures.
-Returning to the <tt>page</tt> structure, the <tt>rcu_head</tt> field
-shares storage with a great many other structures that are used at
-various points in the corresponding page's lifetime.
-In order to correctly resolve certain
-<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/1439976106-137226-1-git-send-email-kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com">race conditions</a>,
-the Linux kernel's memory-management subsystem needs a particular bit
-to remain zero during all phases of grace-period processing,
-and that bit happens to map to the bottom bit of the
-<tt>rcu_head</tt> structure's <tt>-&gt;next</tt> field.
-RCU makes this guarantee as long as <tt>call_rcu()</tt>
-is used to post the callback, as opposed to <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>
-or some future &ldquo;lazy&rdquo;
-variant of <tt>call_rcu()</tt> that might one day be created for
-energy-efficiency purposes.
-
-<h3><a name="Performance, Scalability, Response Time, and Reliability">
-Performance, Scalability, Response Time, and Reliability</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-Expanding on the
-<a href="#Performance and Scalability">earlier discussion</a>,
-RCU is used heavily by hot code paths in performance-critical
-portions of the Linux kernel's networking, security, virtualization,
-and scheduling code paths.
-RCU must therefore use efficient implementations, especially in its
-read-side primitives.
-To that end, it would be good if preemptible RCU's implementation
-of <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> could be inlined, however, doing
-this requires resolving <tt>#include</tt> issues with the
-<tt>task_struct</tt> structure.
-
-<p>
-The Linux kernel supports hardware configurations with up to
-4096 CPUs, which means that RCU must be extremely scalable.
-Algorithms that involve frequent acquisitions of global locks or
-frequent atomic operations on global variables simply cannot be
-tolerated within the RCU implementation.
-RCU therefore makes heavy use of a combining tree based on the
-<tt>rcu_node</tt> structure.
-RCU is required to tolerate all CPUs continuously invoking any
-combination of RCU's runtime primitives with minimal per-operation
-overhead.
-In fact, in many cases, increasing load must <i>decrease</i> the
-per-operation overhead, witness the batching optimizations for
-<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>, <tt>call_rcu()</tt>,
-<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt>, and <tt>rcu_barrier()</tt>.
-As a general rule, RCU must cheerfully accept whatever the
-rest of the Linux kernel decides to throw at it.
-
-<p>
-The Linux kernel is used for real-time workloads, especially
-in conjunction with the
-<a href="https://rt.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Main_Page">-rt patchset</a>.
-The real-time-latency response requirements are such that the
-traditional approach of disabling preemption across RCU
-read-side critical sections is inappropriate.
-Kernels built with <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> therefore
-use an RCU implementation that allows RCU read-side critical
-sections to be preempted.
-This requirement made its presence known after users made it
-clear that an earlier
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/107930/">real-time patch</a>
-did not meet their needs, in conjunction with some
-<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/20050318002026.GA2693@us.ibm.com">RCU issues</a>
-encountered by a very early version of the -rt patchset.
-
-<p>
-In addition, RCU must make do with a sub-100-microsecond real-time latency
-budget.
-In fact, on smaller systems with the -rt patchset, the Linux kernel
-provides sub-20-microsecond real-time latencies for the whole kernel,
-including RCU.
-RCU's scalability and latency must therefore be sufficient for
-these sorts of configurations.
-To my surprise, the sub-100-microsecond real-time latency budget
-<a href="http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/realtime/paper/bigrt.2013.01.31a.LCA.pdf">
-applies to even the largest systems [PDF]</a>,
-up to and including systems with 4096 CPUs.
-This real-time requirement motivated the grace-period kthread, which
-also simplified handling of a number of race conditions.
-
-<p>
-Finally, RCU's status as a synchronization primitive means that
-any RCU failure can result in arbitrary memory corruption that can be
-extremely difficult to debug.
-This means that RCU must be extremely reliable, which in
-practice also means that RCU must have an aggressive stress-test
-suite.
-This stress-test suite is called <tt>rcutorture</tt>.
-
-<p>
-Although the need for <tt>rcutorture</tt> was no surprise,
-the current immense popularity of the Linux kernel is posing
-interesting&mdash;and perhaps unprecedented&mdash;validation
-challenges.
-To see this, keep in mind that there are well over one billion
-instances of the Linux kernel running today, given Android
-smartphones, Linux-powered televisions, and servers.
-This number can be expected to increase sharply with the advent of
-the celebrated Internet of Things.
-
-<p>
-Suppose that RCU contains a race condition that manifests on average
-once per million years of runtime.
-This bug will be occurring about three times per <i>day</i> across
-the installed base.
-RCU could simply hide behind hardware error rates, given that no one
-should really expect their smartphone to last for a million years.
-However, anyone taking too much comfort from this thought should
-consider the fact that in most jurisdictions, a successful multi-year
-test of a given mechanism, which might include a Linux kernel,
-suffices for a number of types of safety-critical certifications.
-In fact, rumor has it that the Linux kernel is already being used
-in production for safety-critical applications.
-I don't know about you, but I would feel quite bad if a bug in RCU
-killed someone.
-Which might explain my recent focus on validation and verification.
-
-<h2><a name="Other RCU Flavors">Other RCU Flavors</a></h2>
-
-<p>
-One of the more surprising things about RCU is that there are now
-no fewer than five <i>flavors</i>, or API families.
-In addition, the primary flavor that has been the sole focus up to
-this point has two different implementations, non-preemptible and
-preemptible.
-The other four flavors are listed below, with requirements for each
-described in a separate section.
-
-<ol>
-<li> <a href="#Bottom-Half Flavor">Bottom-Half Flavor</a>
-<li> <a href="#Sched Flavor">Sched Flavor</a>
-<li> <a href="#Sleepable RCU">Sleepable RCU</a>
-<li> <a href="#Tasks RCU">Tasks RCU</a>
-</ol>
-
-<h3><a name="Bottom-Half Flavor">Bottom-Half Flavor</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-The softirq-disable (AKA &ldquo;bottom-half&rdquo;,
-hence the &ldquo;_bh&rdquo; abbreviations)
-flavor of RCU, or <i>RCU-bh</i>, was developed by
-Dipankar Sarma to provide a flavor of RCU that could withstand the
-network-based denial-of-service attacks researched by Robert
-Olsson.
-These attacks placed so much networking load on the system
-that some of the CPUs never exited softirq execution,
-which in turn prevented those CPUs from ever executing a context switch,
-which, in the RCU implementation of that time, prevented grace periods
-from ever ending.
-The result was an out-of-memory condition and a system hang.
-
-<p>
-The solution was the creation of RCU-bh, which does
-<tt>local_bh_disable()</tt>
-across its read-side critical sections, and which uses the transition
-from one type of softirq processing to another as a quiescent state
-in addition to context switch, idle, user mode, and offline.
-This means that RCU-bh grace periods can complete even when some of
-the CPUs execute in softirq indefinitely, thus allowing algorithms
-based on RCU-bh to withstand network-based denial-of-service attacks.
-
-<p>
-Because
-<tt>rcu_read_lock_bh()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>
-disable and re-enable softirq handlers, any attempt to start a softirq
-handlers during the
-RCU-bh read-side critical section will be deferred.
-In this case, <tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>
-will invoke softirq processing, which can take considerable time.
-One can of course argue that this softirq overhead should be associated
-with the code following the RCU-bh read-side critical section rather
-than <tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>, but the fact
-is that most profiling tools cannot be expected to make this sort
-of fine distinction.
-For example, suppose that a three-millisecond-long RCU-bh read-side
-critical section executes during a time of heavy networking load.
-There will very likely be an attempt to invoke at least one softirq
-handler during that three milliseconds, but any such invocation will
-be delayed until the time of the <tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>.
-This can of course make it appear at first glance as if
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt> was executing very slowly.
-
-<p>
-The
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/609973/#RCU Per-Flavor API Table">RCU-bh API</a>
-includes
-<tt>rcu_read_lock_bh()</tt>,
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>,
-<tt>rcu_dereference_bh()</tt>,
-<tt>rcu_dereference_bh_check()</tt>,
-<tt>synchronize_rcu_bh()</tt>,
-<tt>synchronize_rcu_bh_expedited()</tt>,
-<tt>call_rcu_bh()</tt>,
-<tt>rcu_barrier_bh()</tt>, and
-<tt>rcu_read_lock_bh_held()</tt>.
-
-<h3><a name="Sched Flavor">Sched Flavor</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-Before preemptible RCU, waiting for an RCU grace period had the
-side effect of also waiting for all pre-existing interrupt
-and NMI handlers.
-However, there are legitimate preemptible-RCU implementations that
-do not have this property, given that any point in the code outside
-of an RCU read-side critical section can be a quiescent state.
-Therefore, <i>RCU-sched</i> was created, which follows &ldquo;classic&rdquo;
-RCU in that an RCU-sched grace period waits for for pre-existing
-interrupt and NMI handlers.
-In kernels built with <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>, the RCU and RCU-sched
-APIs have identical implementations, while kernels built with
-<tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> provide a separate implementation for each.
-
-<p>
-Note well that in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> kernels,
-<tt>rcu_read_lock_sched()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched()</tt>
-disable and re-enable preemption, respectively.
-This means that if there was a preemption attempt during the
-RCU-sched read-side critical section, <tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched()</tt>
-will enter the scheduler, with all the latency and overhead entailed.
-Just as with <tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>, this can make it look
-as if <tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched()</tt> was executing very slowly.
-However, the highest-priority task won't be preempted, so that task
-will enjoy low-overhead <tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched()</tt> invocations.
-
-<p>
-The
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/609973/#RCU Per-Flavor API Table">RCU-sched API</a>
-includes
-<tt>rcu_read_lock_sched()</tt>,
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched()</tt>,
-<tt>rcu_read_lock_sched_notrace()</tt>,
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched_notrace()</tt>,
-<tt>rcu_dereference_sched()</tt>,
-<tt>rcu_dereference_sched_check()</tt>,
-<tt>synchronize_sched()</tt>,
-<tt>synchronize_rcu_sched_expedited()</tt>,
-<tt>call_rcu_sched()</tt>,
-<tt>rcu_barrier_sched()</tt>, and
-<tt>rcu_read_lock_sched_held()</tt>.
-However, anything that disables preemption also marks an RCU-sched
-read-side critical section, including
-<tt>preempt_disable()</tt> and <tt>preempt_enable()</tt>,
-<tt>local_irq_save()</tt> and <tt>local_irq_restore()</tt>,
-and so on.
-
-<h3><a name="Sleepable RCU">Sleepable RCU</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-For well over a decade, someone saying &ldquo;I need to block within
-an RCU read-side critical section&rdquo; was a reliable indication
-that this someone did not understand RCU.
-After all, if you are always blocking in an RCU read-side critical
-section, you can probably afford to use a higher-overhead synchronization
-mechanism.
-However, that changed with the advent of the Linux kernel's notifiers,
-whose RCU read-side critical
-sections almost never sleep, but sometimes need to.
-This resulted in the introduction of
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/202847/">sleepable RCU</a>,
-or <i>SRCU</i>.
-
-<p>
-SRCU allows different domains to be defined, with each such domain
-defined by an instance of an <tt>srcu_struct</tt> structure.
-A pointer to this structure must be passed in to each SRCU function,
-for example, <tt>synchronize_srcu(&amp;ss)</tt>, where
-<tt>ss</tt> is the <tt>srcu_struct</tt> structure.
-The key benefit of these domains is that a slow SRCU reader in one
-domain does not delay an SRCU grace period in some other domain.
-That said, one consequence of these domains is that read-side code
-must pass a &ldquo;cookie&rdquo; from <tt>srcu_read_lock()</tt>
-to <tt>srcu_read_unlock()</tt>, for example, as follows:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 int idx;
- 2
- 3 idx = srcu_read_lock(&amp;ss);
- 4 do_something();
- 5 srcu_read_unlock(&amp;ss, idx);
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-As noted above, it is legal to block within SRCU read-side critical sections,
-however, with great power comes great responsibility.
-If you block forever in one of a given domain's SRCU read-side critical
-sections, then that domain's grace periods will also be blocked forever.
-Of course, one good way to block forever is to deadlock, which can
-happen if any operation in a given domain's SRCU read-side critical
-section can block waiting, either directly or indirectly, for that domain's
-grace period to elapse.
-For example, this results in a self-deadlock:
-
-<blockquote>
-<pre>
- 1 int idx;
- 2
- 3 idx = srcu_read_lock(&amp;ss);
- 4 do_something();
- 5 synchronize_srcu(&amp;ss);
- 6 srcu_read_unlock(&amp;ss, idx);
-</pre>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-However, if line&nbsp;5 acquired a mutex that was held across
-a <tt>synchronize_srcu()</tt> for domain <tt>ss</tt>,
-deadlock would still be possible.
-Furthermore, if line&nbsp;5 acquired a mutex that was held across
-a <tt>synchronize_srcu()</tt> for some other domain <tt>ss1</tt>,
-and if an <tt>ss1</tt>-domain SRCU read-side critical section
-acquired another mutex that was held across as <tt>ss</tt>-domain
-<tt>synchronize_srcu()</tt>,
-deadlock would again be possible.
-Such a deadlock cycle could extend across an arbitrarily large number
-of different SRCU domains.
-Again, with great power comes great responsibility.
-
-<p>
-Unlike the other RCU flavors, SRCU read-side critical sections can
-run on idle and even offline CPUs.
-This ability requires that <tt>srcu_read_lock()</tt> and
-<tt>srcu_read_unlock()</tt> contain memory barriers, which means
-that SRCU readers will run a bit slower than would RCU readers.
-It also motivates the <tt>smp_mb__after_srcu_read_unlock()</tt>
-API, which, in combination with <tt>srcu_read_unlock()</tt>,
-guarantees a full memory barrier.
-
-<p>
-The
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/609973/#RCU Per-Flavor API Table">SRCU API</a>
-includes
-<tt>srcu_read_lock()</tt>,
-<tt>srcu_read_unlock()</tt>,
-<tt>srcu_dereference()</tt>,
-<tt>srcu_dereference_check()</tt>,
-<tt>synchronize_srcu()</tt>,
-<tt>synchronize_srcu_expedited()</tt>,
-<tt>call_srcu()</tt>,
-<tt>srcu_barrier()</tt>, and
-<tt>srcu_read_lock_held()</tt>.
-It also includes
-<tt>DEFINE_SRCU()</tt>,
-<tt>DEFINE_STATIC_SRCU()</tt>, and
-<tt>init_srcu_struct()</tt>
-APIs for defining and initializing <tt>srcu_struct</tt> structures.
-
-<h3><a name="Tasks RCU">Tasks RCU</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-Some forms of tracing use &ldquo;tramopolines&rdquo; to handle the
-binary rewriting required to install different types of probes.
-It would be good to be able to free old trampolines, which sounds
-like a job for some form of RCU.
-However, because it is necessary to be able to install a trace
-anywhere in the code, it is not possible to use read-side markers
-such as <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>.
-In addition, it does not work to have these markers in the trampoline
-itself, because there would need to be instructions following
-<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>.
-Although <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> would guarantee that execution
-reached the <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>, it would not be able to
-guarantee that execution had completely left the trampoline.
-
-<p>
-The solution, in the form of
-<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/607117/"><i>Tasks RCU</i></a>,
-is to have implicit
-read-side critical sections that are delimited by voluntary context
-switches, that is, calls to <tt>schedule()</tt>,
-<tt>cond_resched_rcu_qs()</tt>, and
-<tt>synchronize_rcu_tasks()</tt>.
-In addition, transitions to and from userspace execution also delimit
-tasks-RCU read-side critical sections.
-
-<p>
-The tasks-RCU API is quite compact, consisting only of
-<tt>call_rcu_tasks()</tt>,
-<tt>synchronize_rcu_tasks()</tt>, and
-<tt>rcu_barrier_tasks()</tt>.
-
-<h2><a name="Possible Future Changes">Possible Future Changes</a></h2>
-
-<p>
-One of the tricks that RCU uses to attain update-side scalability is
-to increase grace-period latency with increasing numbers of CPUs.
-If this becomes a serious problem, it will be necessary to rework the
-grace-period state machine so as to avoid the need for the additional
-latency.
-
-<p>
-Expedited grace periods scan the CPUs, so their latency and overhead
-increases with increasing numbers of CPUs.
-If this becomes a serious problem on large systems, it will be necessary
-to do some redesign to avoid this scalability problem.
-
-<p>
-RCU disables CPU hotplug in a few places, perhaps most notably in the
-expedited grace-period and <tt>rcu_barrier()</tt> operations.
-If there is a strong reason to use expedited grace periods in CPU-hotplug
-notifiers, it will be necessary to avoid disabling CPU hotplug.
-This would introduce some complexity, so there had better be a <i>very</i>
-good reason.
-
-<p>
-The tradeoff between grace-period latency on the one hand and interruptions
-of other CPUs on the other hand may need to be re-examined.
-The desire is of course for zero grace-period latency as well as zero
-interprocessor interrupts undertaken during an expedited grace period
-operation.
-While this ideal is unlikely to be achievable, it is quite possible that
-further improvements can be made.
-
-<p>
-The multiprocessor implementations of RCU use a combining tree that
-groups CPUs so as to reduce lock contention and increase cache locality.
-However, this combining tree does not spread its memory across NUMA
-nodes nor does it align the CPU groups with hardware features such
-as sockets or cores.
-Such spreading and alignment is currently believed to be unnecessary
-because the hotpath read-side primitives do not access the combining
-tree, nor does <tt>call_rcu()</tt> in the common case.
-If you believe that your architecture needs such spreading and alignment,
-then your architecture should also benefit from the
-<tt>rcutree.rcu_fanout_leaf</tt> boot parameter, which can be set
-to the number of CPUs in a socket, NUMA node, or whatever.
-If the number of CPUs is too large, use a fraction of the number of
-CPUs.
-If the number of CPUs is a large prime number, well, that certainly
-is an &ldquo;interesting&rdquo; architectural choice!
-More flexible arrangements might be considered, but only if
-<tt>rcutree.rcu_fanout_leaf</tt> has proven inadequate, and only
-if the inadequacy has been demonstrated by a carefully run and
-realistic system-level workload.
-
-<p>
-Please note that arrangements that require RCU to remap CPU numbers will
-require extremely good demonstration of need and full exploration of
-alternatives.
-
-<p>
-There is an embarrassingly large number of flavors of RCU, and this
-number has been increasing over time.
-Perhaps it will be possible to combine some at some future date.
-
-<p>
-RCU's various kthreads are reasonably recent additions.
-It is quite likely that adjustments will be required to more gracefully
-handle extreme loads.
-It might also be necessary to be able to relate CPU utilization by
-RCU's kthreads and softirq handlers to the code that instigated this
-CPU utilization.
-For example, RCU callback overhead might be charged back to the
-originating <tt>call_rcu()</tt> instance, though probably not
-in production kernels.
-
-<h2><a name="Summary">Summary</a></h2>
-
-<p>
-This document has presented more than two decade's worth of RCU
-requirements.
-Given that the requirements keep changing, this will not be the last
-word on this subject, but at least it serves to get an important
-subset of the requirements set forth.
-
-<h2><a name="Acknowledgments">Acknowledgments</a></h2>
-
-I am grateful to Steven Rostedt, Lai Jiangshan, Ingo Molnar,
-Oleg Nesterov, Borislav Petkov, Peter Zijlstra, Boqun Feng, and
-Andy Lutomirski for their help in rendering
-this article human readable, and to Michelle Rankin for her support
-of this effort.
-Other contributions are acknowledged in the Linux kernel's git archive.
-The cartoon is copyright (c) 2013 by Melissa Broussard,
-and is provided
-under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
-United States license.
-
-<p>@@QQAL@@
-
-</body></html>
diff --git a/Documentation/RCU/Design/htmlqqz.sh b/Documentation/RCU/Design/htmlqqz.sh
deleted file mode 100755
index d354f069559b..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/RCU/Design/htmlqqz.sh
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,108 +0,0 @@
-#!/bin/sh
-#
-# Usage: sh htmlqqz.sh file
-#
-# Extracts and converts quick quizzes in a proto-HTML document file.htmlx.
-# Commands, all of which must be on a line by themselves:
-#
-# "<p>@@QQ@@": Start of a quick quiz.
-# "<p>@@QQA@@": Start of a quick-quiz answer.
-# "<p>@@QQE@@": End of a quick-quiz answer, and thus of the quick quiz.
-# "<p>@@QQAL@@": Place to put quick-quiz answer list.
-#
-# Places the result in file.html.
-#
-# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
-# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
-# (at your option) any later version.
-#
-# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
-# GNU General Public License for more details.
-#
-# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
-# along with this program; if not, you can access it online at
-# http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html.
-#
-# Copyright (c) 2013 Paul E. McKenney, IBM Corporation.
-
-fn=$1
-if test ! -r $fn.htmlx
-then
- echo "Error: $fn.htmlx unreadable."
- exit 1
-fi
-
-echo "<!-- DO NOT HAND EDIT. -->" > $fn.html
-echo "<!-- Instead, edit $fn.htmlx and run 'sh htmlqqz.sh $fn' -->" >> $fn.html
-awk < $fn.htmlx >> $fn.html '
-
-state == "" && $1 != "<p>@@QQ@@" && $1 != "<p>@@QQAL@@" {
- print $0;
- if ($0 ~ /^<p>@@QQ/)
- print "Bad Quick Quiz command: " NR " (expected <p>@@QQ@@ or <p>@@QQAL@@)." > "/dev/stderr"
- next;
-}
-
-state == "" && $1 == "<p>@@QQ@@" {
- qqn++;
- qqlineno = NR;
- haveqq = 1;
- state = "qq";
- print "<p><a name=\"Quick Quiz " qqn "\"><b>Quick Quiz " qqn "</b>:</a>"
- next;
-}
-
-state == "qq" && $1 != "<p>@@QQA@@" {
- qq[qqn] = qq[qqn] $0 "\n";
- print $0
- if ($0 ~ /^<p>@@QQ/)
- print "Bad Quick Quiz command: " NR ". (expected <p>@@QQA@@)" > "/dev/stderr"
- next;
-}
-
-state == "qq" && $1 == "<p>@@QQA@@" {
- state = "qqa";
- print "<br><a href=\"#qq" qqn "answer\">Answer</a>"
- next;
-}
-
-state == "qqa" && $1 != "<p>@@QQE@@" {
- qqa[qqn] = qqa[qqn] $0 "\n";
- if ($0 ~ /^<p>@@QQ/)
- print "Bad Quick Quiz command: " NR " (expected <p>@@QQE@@)." > "/dev/stderr"
- next;
-}
-
-state == "qqa" && $1 == "<p>@@QQE@@" {
- state = "";
- next;
-}
-
-state == "" && $1 == "<p>@@QQAL@@" {
- haveqq = "";
- print "<h3><a name=\"Answers to Quick Quizzes\">"
- print "Answers to Quick Quizzes</a></h3>"
- print "";
- for (i = 1; i <= qqn; i++) {
- print "<a name=\"qq" i "answer\"></a>"
- print "<p><b>Quick Quiz " i "</b>:"
- print qq[i];
- print "";
- print "</p><p><b>Answer</b>:"
- print qqa[i];
- print "";
- print "</p><p><a href=\"#Quick%20Quiz%20" i "\"><b>Back to Quick Quiz " i "</b>.</a>"
- print "";
- }
- next;
-}
-
-END {
- if (state != "")
- print "Unterminated Quick Quiz: " qqlineno "." > "/dev/stderr"
- else if (haveqq)
- print "Missing \"<p>@@QQAL@@\", no Quick Quiz." > "/dev/stderr"
-}'
diff --git a/Documentation/RCU/trace.txt b/Documentation/RCU/trace.txt
index ec6998b1b6d0..00a3a38b375a 100644
--- a/Documentation/RCU/trace.txt
+++ b/Documentation/RCU/trace.txt
@@ -237,17 +237,17 @@ o "ktl" is the low-order 16 bits (in hexadecimal) of the count of
The output of "cat rcu/rcu_preempt/rcuexp" looks as follows:
-s=21872 wd0=0 wd1=0 wd2=0 wd3=5 n=0 enq=0 sc=21872
+s=21872 wd1=0 wd2=0 wd3=5 n=0 enq=0 sc=21872
These fields are as follows:
o "s" is the sequence number, with an odd number indicating that
an expedited grace period is in progress.
-o "wd0", "wd1", "wd2", and "wd3" are the number of times that an
- attempt to start an expedited grace period found that someone
- else had completed an expedited grace period that satisfies the
- attempted request. "Our work is done."
+o "wd1", "wd2", and "wd3" are the number of times that an attempt
+ to start an expedited grace period found that someone else had
+ completed an expedited grace period that satisfies the attempted
+ request. "Our work is done."
o "n" is number of times that a concurrent CPU-hotplug operation
forced a fallback to a normal grace period.
diff --git a/Documentation/RCU/whatisRCU.txt b/Documentation/RCU/whatisRCU.txt
index dc49c6712b17..111770ffa10e 100644
--- a/Documentation/RCU/whatisRCU.txt
+++ b/Documentation/RCU/whatisRCU.txt
@@ -681,22 +681,30 @@ Although RCU can be used in many different ways, a very common use of
RCU is analogous to reader-writer locking. The following unified
diff shows how closely related RCU and reader-writer locking can be.
+ @@ -5,5 +5,5 @@ struct el {
+ int data;
+ /* Other data fields */
+ };
+ -rwlock_t listmutex;
+ +spinlock_t listmutex;
+ struct el head;
+
@@ -13,15 +14,15 @@
struct list_head *lp;
struct el *p;
- - read_lock();
+ - read_lock(&listmutex);
- list_for_each_entry(p, head, lp) {
+ rcu_read_lock();
+ list_for_each_entry_rcu(p, head, lp) {
if (p->key == key) {
*result = p->data;
- - read_unlock();
+ - read_unlock(&listmutex);
+ rcu_read_unlock();
return 1;
}
}
- - read_unlock();
+ - read_unlock(&listmutex);
+ rcu_read_unlock();
return 0;
}
@@ -732,7 +740,7 @@ Or, for those who prefer a side-by-side listing:
5 int data; 5 int data;
6 /* Other data fields */ 6 /* Other data fields */
7 }; 7 };
- 8 spinlock_t listmutex; 8 spinlock_t listmutex;
+ 8 rwlock_t listmutex; 8 spinlock_t listmutex;
9 struct el head; 9 struct el head;
1 int search(long key, int *result) 1 int search(long key, int *result)
@@ -740,15 +748,15 @@ Or, for those who prefer a side-by-side listing:
3 struct list_head *lp; 3 struct list_head *lp;
4 struct el *p; 4 struct el *p;
5 5
- 6 read_lock(); 6 rcu_read_lock();
+ 6 read_lock(&listmutex); 6 rcu_read_lock();
7 list_for_each_entry(p, head, lp) { 7 list_for_each_entry_rcu(p, head, lp) {
8 if (p->key == key) { 8 if (p->key == key) {
9 *result = p->data; 9 *result = p->data;
-10 read_unlock(); 10 rcu_read_unlock();
+10 read_unlock(&listmutex); 10 rcu_read_unlock();
11 return 1; 11 return 1;
12 } 12 }
13 } 13 }
-14 read_unlock(); 14 rcu_read_unlock();
+14 read_unlock(&listmutex); 14 rcu_read_unlock();
15 return 0; 15 return 0;
16 } 16 }