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      1 /*
      2  * Copyright (C) 2007 The Android Open Source Project
      3  *
      4  * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
      5  * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
      6  * You may obtain a copy of the License at
      7  *
      8  *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
      9  *
     10  * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
     11  * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
     12  * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
     13  * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
     14  * limitations under the License.
     15  */
     16 
     17 #ifndef ANDROID_CUTILS_ATOMIC_H
     18 #define ANDROID_CUTILS_ATOMIC_H
     19 
     20 #include <stdint.h>
     21 #include <sys/types.h>
     22 #include <stdatomic.h>
     23 
     24 #ifndef ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
     25 #define ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE static inline
     26 #endif
     27 
     28 /*
     29  * A handful of basic atomic operations.
     30  * THESE ARE HERE FOR LEGACY REASONS ONLY.  AVOID.
     31  *
     32  * PREFERRED ALTERNATIVES:
     33  * - Use C++/C/pthread locks/mutexes whenever there is not a
     34  *   convincing reason to do otherwise.  Note that very clever and
     35  *   complicated, but correct, lock-free code is often slower than
     36  *   using locks, especially where nontrivial data structures
     37  *   are involved.
     38  * - C11 stdatomic.h.
     39  * - Where supported, C++11 std::atomic<T> .
     40  *
     41  * PLEASE STOP READING HERE UNLESS YOU ARE TRYING TO UNDERSTAND
     42  * OR UPDATE OLD CODE.
     43  *
     44  * The "acquire" and "release" terms can be defined intuitively in terms
     45  * of the placement of memory barriers in a simple lock implementation:
     46  *   - wait until compare-and-swap(lock-is-free --> lock-is-held) succeeds
     47  *   - barrier
     48  *   - [do work]
     49  *   - barrier
     50  *   - store(lock-is-free)
     51  * In very crude terms, the initial (acquire) barrier prevents any of the
     52  * "work" from happening before the lock is held, and the later (release)
     53  * barrier ensures that all of the work happens before the lock is released.
     54  * (Think of cached writes, cache read-ahead, and instruction reordering
     55  * around the CAS and store instructions.)
     56  *
     57  * The barriers must apply to both the compiler and the CPU.  Note it is
     58  * legal for instructions that occur before an "acquire" barrier to be
     59  * moved down below it, and for instructions that occur after a "release"
     60  * barrier to be moved up above it.
     61  *
     62  * The ARM-driven implementation we use here is short on subtlety,
     63  * and actually requests a full barrier from the compiler and the CPU.
     64  * The only difference between acquire and release is in whether they
     65  * are issued before or after the atomic operation with which they
     66  * are associated.  To ease the transition to C/C++ atomic intrinsics,
     67  * you should not rely on this, and instead assume that only the minimal
     68  * acquire/release protection is provided.
     69  *
     70  * NOTE: all int32_t* values are expected to be aligned on 32-bit boundaries.
     71  * If they are not, atomicity is not guaranteed.
     72  */
     73 
     74 /*
     75  * Basic arithmetic and bitwise operations.  These all provide a
     76  * barrier with "release" ordering, and return the previous value.
     77  *
     78  * These have the same characteristics (e.g. what happens on overflow)
     79  * as the equivalent non-atomic C operations.
     80  */
     81 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
     82 int32_t android_atomic_inc(volatile int32_t* addr)
     83 {
     84     volatile atomic_int_least32_t* a = (volatile atomic_int_least32_t*)addr;
     85         /* Int32_t, if it exists, is the same as int_least32_t. */
     86     return atomic_fetch_add_explicit(a, 1, memory_order_release);
     87 }
     88 
     89 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
     90 int32_t android_atomic_dec(volatile int32_t* addr)
     91 {
     92     volatile atomic_int_least32_t* a = (volatile atomic_int_least32_t*)addr;
     93     return atomic_fetch_sub_explicit(a, 1, memory_order_release);
     94 }
     95 
     96 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
     97 int32_t android_atomic_add(int32_t value, volatile int32_t* addr)
     98 {
     99     volatile atomic_int_least32_t* a = (volatile atomic_int_least32_t*)addr;
    100     return atomic_fetch_add_explicit(a, value, memory_order_release);
    101 }
    102 
    103 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
    104 int32_t android_atomic_and(int32_t value, volatile int32_t* addr)
    105 {
    106     volatile atomic_int_least32_t* a = (volatile atomic_int_least32_t*)addr;
    107     return atomic_fetch_and_explicit(a, value, memory_order_release);
    108 }
    109 
    110 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
    111 int32_t android_atomic_or(int32_t value, volatile int32_t* addr)
    112 {
    113     volatile atomic_int_least32_t* a = (volatile atomic_int_least32_t*)addr;
    114     return atomic_fetch_or_explicit(a, value, memory_order_release);
    115 }
    116 
    117 /*
    118  * Perform an atomic load with "acquire" or "release" ordering.
    119  *
    120  * Note that the notion of a "release" ordering for a load does not
    121  * really fit into the C11 or C++11 memory model.  The extra ordering
    122  * is normally observable only by code using memory_order_relaxed
    123  * atomics, or data races.  In the rare cases in which such ordering
    124  * is called for, use memory_order_relaxed atomics and a leading
    125  * atomic_thread_fence (typically with memory_order_acquire,
    126  * not memory_order_release!) instead.  If you do not understand
    127  * this comment, you are in the vast majority, and should not be
    128  * using release loads or replacing them with anything other than
    129  * locks or default sequentially consistent atomics.
    130  */
    131 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
    132 int32_t android_atomic_acquire_load(volatile const int32_t* addr)
    133 {
    134     volatile atomic_int_least32_t* a = (volatile atomic_int_least32_t*)addr;
    135     return atomic_load_explicit(a, memory_order_acquire);
    136 }
    137 
    138 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
    139 int32_t android_atomic_release_load(volatile const int32_t* addr)
    140 {
    141     volatile atomic_int_least32_t* a = (volatile atomic_int_least32_t*)addr;
    142     atomic_thread_fence(memory_order_seq_cst);
    143     /* Any reasonable clients of this interface would probably prefer   */
    144     /* something weaker.  But some remaining clients seem to be         */
    145     /* abusing this API in strange ways, e.g. by using it as a fence.   */
    146     /* Thus we are conservative until we can get rid of remaining       */
    147     /* clients (and this function).                                     */
    148     return atomic_load_explicit(a, memory_order_relaxed);
    149 }
    150 
    151 /*
    152  * Perform an atomic store with "acquire" or "release" ordering.
    153  *
    154  * Note that the notion of an "acquire" ordering for a store does not
    155  * really fit into the C11 or C++11 memory model.  The extra ordering
    156  * is normally observable only by code using memory_order_relaxed
    157  * atomics, or data races.  In the rare cases in which such ordering
    158  * is called for, use memory_order_relaxed atomics and a trailing
    159  * atomic_thread_fence (typically with memory_order_release,
    160  * not memory_order_acquire!) instead.
    161  */
    162 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
    163 void android_atomic_acquire_store(int32_t value, volatile int32_t* addr)
    164 {
    165     volatile atomic_int_least32_t* a = (volatile atomic_int_least32_t*)addr;
    166     atomic_store_explicit(a, value, memory_order_relaxed);
    167     atomic_thread_fence(memory_order_seq_cst);
    168     /* Again overly conservative to accomodate weird clients.   */
    169 }
    170 
    171 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
    172 void android_atomic_release_store(int32_t value, volatile int32_t* addr)
    173 {
    174     volatile atomic_int_least32_t* a = (volatile atomic_int_least32_t*)addr;
    175     atomic_store_explicit(a, value, memory_order_release);
    176 }
    177 
    178 /*
    179  * Compare-and-set operation with "acquire" or "release" ordering.
    180  *
    181  * This returns zero if the new value was successfully stored, which will
    182  * only happen when *addr == oldvalue.
    183  *
    184  * (The return value is inverted from implementations on other platforms,
    185  * but matches the ARM ldrex/strex result.)
    186  *
    187  * Implementations that use the release CAS in a loop may be less efficient
    188  * than possible, because we re-issue the memory barrier on each iteration.
    189  */
    190 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
    191 int android_atomic_acquire_cas(int32_t oldvalue, int32_t newvalue,
    192                            volatile int32_t* addr)
    193 {
    194     volatile atomic_int_least32_t* a = (volatile atomic_int_least32_t*)addr;
    195     return (int)(!atomic_compare_exchange_strong_explicit(
    196                                           a, &oldvalue, newvalue,
    197                                           memory_order_acquire,
    198                                           memory_order_acquire));
    199 }
    200 
    201 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
    202 int android_atomic_release_cas(int32_t oldvalue, int32_t newvalue,
    203                                volatile int32_t* addr)
    204 {
    205     volatile atomic_int_least32_t* a = (volatile atomic_int_least32_t*)addr;
    206     return (int)(!atomic_compare_exchange_strong_explicit(
    207                                           a, &oldvalue, newvalue,
    208                                           memory_order_release,
    209                                           memory_order_relaxed));
    210 }
    211 
    212 /*
    213  * Fence primitives.
    214  */
    215 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
    216 void android_compiler_barrier(void)
    217 {
    218     __asm__ __volatile__ ("" : : : "memory");
    219     /* Could probably also be:                          */
    220     /* atomic_signal_fence(memory_order_seq_cst);       */
    221 }
    222 
    223 ANDROID_ATOMIC_INLINE
    224 void android_memory_barrier(void)
    225 {
    226     atomic_thread_fence(memory_order_seq_cst);
    227 }
    228 
    229 /*
    230  * Aliases for code using an older version of this header.  These are now
    231  * deprecated and should not be used.  The definitions will be removed
    232  * in a future release.
    233  */
    234 #define android_atomic_write android_atomic_release_store
    235 #define android_atomic_cmpxchg android_atomic_release_cas
    236 
    237 #endif // ANDROID_CUTILS_ATOMIC_H
    238