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4 <head><title>A Tour Through RCU's Requirements [LWN.net]</title>
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6
7<h1>A Tour Through RCU's Requirements</h1>
8
9<p>Copyright IBM Corporation, 2015</p>
10<p>Author: Paul E.&nbsp;McKenney</p>
11<p><i>The initial version of this document appeared in the
12<a href="https://lwn.net/">LWN</a> articles
13<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/652156/">here</a>,
14<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/652677/">here</a>, and
15<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/653326/">here</a>.</i></p>
16
17<h2>Introduction</h2>
18
19<p>
20Read-copy update (RCU) is a synchronization mechanism that is often
21used as a replacement for reader-writer locking.
22RCU is unusual in that updaters do not block readers,
23which means that RCU's read-side primitives can be exceedingly fast
24and scalable.
25In addition, updaters can make useful forward progress concurrently
26with readers.
27However, all this concurrency between RCU readers and updaters does raise
28the question of exactly what RCU readers are doing, which in turn
29raises the question of exactly what RCU's requirements are.
30
31<p>
32This document therefore summarizes RCU's requirements, and can be thought
33of as an informal, high-level specification for RCU.
34It is important to understand that RCU's specification is primarily
35empirical in nature;
36in fact, I learned about many of these requirements the hard way.
37This situation might cause some consternation, however, not only
38has this learning process been a lot of fun, but it has also been
39a great privilege to work with so many people willing to apply
40technologies in interesting new ways.
41
42<p>
43All that aside, here are the categories of currently known RCU requirements:
44</p>
45
46<ol>
47<li> <a href="#Fundamental Requirements">
48 Fundamental Requirements</a>
49<li> <a href="#Fundamental Non-Requirements">Fundamental Non-Requirements</a>
50<li> <a href="#Parallelism Facts of Life">
51 Parallelism Facts of Life</a>
52<li> <a href="#Quality-of-Implementation Requirements">
53 Quality-of-Implementation Requirements</a>
54<li> <a href="#Linux Kernel Complications">
55 Linux Kernel Complications</a>
56<li> <a href="#Software-Engineering Requirements">
57 Software-Engineering Requirements</a>
58<li> <a href="#Other RCU Flavors">
59 Other RCU Flavors</a>
60<li> <a href="#Possible Future Changes">
61 Possible Future Changes</a>
62</ol>
63
64<p>
65This is followed by a <a href="#Summary">summary</a>,
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66however, the answers to each quick quiz immediately follows the quiz.
67Select the big white space with your mouse to see the answer.
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68
69<h2><a name="Fundamental Requirements">Fundamental Requirements</a></h2>
70
71<p>
72RCU's fundamental requirements are the closest thing RCU has to hard
73mathematical requirements.
74These are:
75
76<ol>
77<li> <a href="#Grace-Period Guarantee">
78 Grace-Period Guarantee</a>
79<li> <a href="#Publish-Subscribe Guarantee">
80 Publish-Subscribe Guarantee</a>
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81<li> <a href="#Memory-Barrier Guarantees">
82 Memory-Barrier Guarantees</a>
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83<li> <a href="#RCU Primitives Guaranteed to Execute Unconditionally">
84 RCU Primitives Guaranteed to Execute Unconditionally</a>
85<li> <a href="#Guaranteed Read-to-Write Upgrade">
86 Guaranteed Read-to-Write Upgrade</a>
87</ol>
88
89<h3><a name="Grace-Period Guarantee">Grace-Period Guarantee</a></h3>
90
91<p>
92RCU's grace-period guarantee is unusual in being premeditated:
93Jack Slingwine and I had this guarantee firmly in mind when we started
94work on RCU (then called &ldquo;rclock&rdquo;) in the early 1990s.
95That said, the past two decades of experience with RCU have produced
96a much more detailed understanding of this guarantee.
97
98<p>
99RCU's grace-period guarantee allows updaters to wait for the completion
100of all pre-existing RCU read-side critical sections.
101An RCU read-side critical section
102begins with the marker <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and ends with
103the marker <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>.
104These markers may be nested, and RCU treats a nested set as one
105big RCU read-side critical section.
106Production-quality implementations of <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
107<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> are extremely lightweight, and in
108fact have exactly zero overhead in Linux kernels built for production
109use with <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>.
110
111<p>
112This guarantee allows ordering to be enforced with extremely low
113overhead to readers, for example:
114
115<blockquote>
116<pre>
117 1 int x, y;
118 2
119 3 void thread0(void)
120 4 {
121 5 rcu_read_lock();
122 6 r1 = READ_ONCE(x);
123 7 r2 = READ_ONCE(y);
124 8 rcu_read_unlock();
125 9 }
12610
12711 void thread1(void)
12812 {
12913 WRITE_ONCE(x, 1);
13014 synchronize_rcu();
13115 WRITE_ONCE(y, 1);
13216 }
133</pre>
134</blockquote>
135
136<p>
137Because the <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;14 waits for
138all pre-existing readers, any instance of <tt>thread0()</tt> that
139loads a value of zero from <tt>x</tt> must complete before
140<tt>thread1()</tt> stores to <tt>y</tt>, so that instance must
141also load a value of zero from <tt>y</tt>.
142Similarly, any instance of <tt>thread0()</tt> that loads a value of
143one from <tt>y</tt> must have started after the
144<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> started, and must therefore also load
145a value of one from <tt>x</tt>.
146Therefore, the outcome:
147<blockquote>
148<pre>
149(r1 == 0 &amp;&amp; r2 == 1)
150</pre>
151</blockquote>
152cannot happen.
153
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154<table>
155<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
156<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
157<tr><td>
158 Wait a minute!
159 You said that updaters can make useful forward progress concurrently
160 with readers, but pre-existing readers will block
161 <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>!!!
162 Just who are you trying to fool???
163</td></tr>
164<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
165<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
166 First, if updaters do not wish to be blocked by readers, they can use
167 <tt>call_rcu()</tt> or <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>, which will
168 be discussed later.
169 Second, even when using <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>, the other
170 update-side code does run concurrently with readers, whether
171 pre-existing or not.
172</font></td></tr>
173<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
174</table>
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175
176<p>
177This scenario resembles one of the first uses of RCU in
178<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DYNIX">DYNIX/ptx</a>,
179which managed a distributed lock manager's transition into
180a state suitable for handling recovery from node failure,
181more or less as follows:
182
183<blockquote>
184<pre>
185 1 #define STATE_NORMAL 0
186 2 #define STATE_WANT_RECOVERY 1
187 3 #define STATE_RECOVERING 2
188 4 #define STATE_WANT_NORMAL 3
189 5
190 6 int state = STATE_NORMAL;
191 7
192 8 void do_something_dlm(void)
193 9 {
19410 int state_snap;
19511
19612 rcu_read_lock();
19713 state_snap = READ_ONCE(state);
19814 if (state_snap == STATE_NORMAL)
19915 do_something();
20016 else
20117 do_something_carefully();
20218 rcu_read_unlock();
20319 }
20420
20521 void start_recovery(void)
20622 {
20723 WRITE_ONCE(state, STATE_WANT_RECOVERY);
20824 synchronize_rcu();
20925 WRITE_ONCE(state, STATE_RECOVERING);
21026 recovery();
21127 WRITE_ONCE(state, STATE_WANT_NORMAL);
21228 synchronize_rcu();
21329 WRITE_ONCE(state, STATE_NORMAL);
21430 }
215</pre>
216</blockquote>
217
218<p>
219The RCU read-side critical section in <tt>do_something_dlm()</tt>
220works with the <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> in <tt>start_recovery()</tt>
221to guarantee that <tt>do_something()</tt> never runs concurrently
222with <tt>recovery()</tt>, but with little or no synchronization
223overhead in <tt>do_something_dlm()</tt>.
224
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225<table>
226<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
227<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
228<tr><td>
229 Why is the <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;28 needed?
230</td></tr>
231<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
232<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
233 Without that extra grace period, memory reordering could result in
234 <tt>do_something_dlm()</tt> executing <tt>do_something()</tt>
235 concurrently with the last bits of <tt>recovery()</tt>.
236</font></td></tr>
237<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
238</table>
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239
240<p>
241In order to avoid fatal problems such as deadlocks,
242an RCU read-side critical section must not contain calls to
243<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
244Similarly, an RCU read-side critical section must not
245contain anything that waits, directly or indirectly, on completion of
246an invocation of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
247
248<p>
249Although RCU's grace-period guarantee is useful in and of itself, with
250<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/573497/">quite a few use cases</a>,
251it would be good to be able to use RCU to coordinate read-side
252access to linked data structures.
253For this, the grace-period guarantee is not sufficient, as can
254be seen in function <tt>add_gp_buggy()</tt> below.
255We will look at the reader's code later, but in the meantime, just think of
256the reader as locklessly picking up the <tt>gp</tt> pointer,
257and, if the value loaded is non-<tt>NULL</tt>, locklessly accessing the
258<tt>-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>-&gt;b</tt> fields.
259
260<blockquote>
261<pre>
262 1 bool add_gp_buggy(int a, int b)
263 2 {
264 3 p = kmalloc(sizeof(*p), GFP_KERNEL);
265 4 if (!p)
266 5 return -ENOMEM;
267 6 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
268 7 if (rcu_access_pointer(gp)) {
269 8 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
270 9 return false;
27110 }
27211 p-&gt;a = a;
27312 p-&gt;b = a;
27413 gp = p; /* ORDERING BUG */
27514 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
27615 return true;
27716 }
278</pre>
279</blockquote>
280
281<p>
282The problem is that both the compiler and weakly ordered CPUs are within
283their rights to reorder this code as follows:
284
285<blockquote>
286<pre>
287 1 bool add_gp_buggy_optimized(int a, int b)
288 2 {
289 3 p = kmalloc(sizeof(*p), GFP_KERNEL);
290 4 if (!p)
291 5 return -ENOMEM;
292 6 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
293 7 if (rcu_access_pointer(gp)) {
294 8 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
295 9 return false;
29610 }
297<b>11 gp = p; /* ORDERING BUG */
29812 p-&gt;a = a;
29913 p-&gt;b = a;</b>
30014 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
30115 return true;
30216 }
303</pre>
304</blockquote>
305
306<p>
307If an RCU reader fetches <tt>gp</tt> just after
308<tt>add_gp_buggy_optimized</tt> executes line&nbsp;11,
309it will see garbage in the <tt>-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>-&gt;b</tt>
310fields.
311And this is but one of many ways in which compiler and hardware optimizations
312could cause trouble.
313Therefore, we clearly need some way to prevent the compiler and the CPU from
314reordering in this manner, which brings us to the publish-subscribe
315guarantee discussed in the next section.
316
317<h3><a name="Publish-Subscribe Guarantee">Publish/Subscribe Guarantee</a></h3>
318
319<p>
320RCU's publish-subscribe guarantee allows data to be inserted
321into a linked data structure without disrupting RCU readers.
322The updater uses <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> to insert the
323new data, and readers use <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> to
324access data, whether new or old.
325The following shows an example of insertion:
326
327<blockquote>
328<pre>
329 1 bool add_gp(int a, int b)
330 2 {
331 3 p = kmalloc(sizeof(*p), GFP_KERNEL);
332 4 if (!p)
333 5 return -ENOMEM;
334 6 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
335 7 if (rcu_access_pointer(gp)) {
336 8 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
337 9 return false;
33810 }
33911 p-&gt;a = a;
34012 p-&gt;b = a;
34113 rcu_assign_pointer(gp, p);
34214 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
34315 return true;
34416 }
345</pre>
346</blockquote>
347
348<p>
349The <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> on line&nbsp;13 is conceptually
350equivalent to a simple assignment statement, but also guarantees
351that its assignment will
352happen after the two assignments in lines&nbsp;11 and&nbsp;12,
353similar to the C11 <tt>memory_order_release</tt> store operation.
354It also prevents any number of &ldquo;interesting&rdquo; compiler
355optimizations, for example, the use of <tt>gp</tt> as a scratch
356location immediately preceding the assignment.
357
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358<table>
359<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
360<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
361<tr><td>
362 But <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> does nothing to prevent the
363 two assignments to <tt>p-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>p-&gt;b</tt>
364 from being reordered.
365 Can't that also cause problems?
366</td></tr>
367<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
368<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
369 No, it cannot.
370 The readers cannot see either of these two fields until
371 the assignment to <tt>gp</tt>, by which time both fields are
372 fully initialized.
373 So reordering the assignments
374 to <tt>p-&gt;a</tt> and <tt>p-&gt;b</tt> cannot possibly
375 cause any problems.
376</font></td></tr>
377<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
378</table>
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379
380<p>
381It is tempting to assume that the reader need not do anything special
382to control its accesses to the RCU-protected data,
383as shown in <tt>do_something_gp_buggy()</tt> below:
384
385<blockquote>
386<pre>
387 1 bool do_something_gp_buggy(void)
388 2 {
389 3 rcu_read_lock();
390 4 p = gp; /* OPTIMIZATIONS GALORE!!! */
391 5 if (p) {
392 6 do_something(p-&gt;a, p-&gt;b);
393 7 rcu_read_unlock();
394 8 return true;
395 9 }
39610 rcu_read_unlock();
39711 return false;
39812 }
399</pre>
400</blockquote>
401
402<p>
403However, this temptation must be resisted because there are a
404surprisingly large number of ways that the compiler
405(to say nothing of
406<a href="https://h71000.www7.hp.com/wizard/wiz_2637.html">DEC Alpha CPUs</a>)
407can trip this code up.
408For but one example, if the compiler were short of registers, it
409might choose to refetch from <tt>gp</tt> rather than keeping
410a separate copy in <tt>p</tt> as follows:
411
412<blockquote>
413<pre>
414 1 bool do_something_gp_buggy_optimized(void)
415 2 {
416 3 rcu_read_lock();
417 4 if (gp) { /* OPTIMIZATIONS GALORE!!! */
418<b> 5 do_something(gp-&gt;a, gp-&gt;b);</b>
419 6 rcu_read_unlock();
420 7 return true;
421 8 }
422 9 rcu_read_unlock();
42310 return false;
42411 }
425</pre>
426</blockquote>
427
428<p>
429If this function ran concurrently with a series of updates that
430replaced the current structure with a new one,
431the fetches of <tt>gp-&gt;a</tt>
432and <tt>gp-&gt;b</tt> might well come from two different structures,
433which could cause serious confusion.
434To prevent this (and much else besides), <tt>do_something_gp()</tt> uses
435<tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> to fetch from <tt>gp</tt>:
436
437<blockquote>
438<pre>
439 1 bool do_something_gp(void)
440 2 {
441 3 rcu_read_lock();
442 4 p = rcu_dereference(gp);
443 5 if (p) {
444 6 do_something(p-&gt;a, p-&gt;b);
445 7 rcu_read_unlock();
446 8 return true;
447 9 }
44810 rcu_read_unlock();
44911 return false;
45012 }
451</pre>
452</blockquote>
453
454<p>
455The <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> uses volatile casts and (for DEC Alpha)
456memory barriers in the Linux kernel.
457Should a
458<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>
459ever appear, then <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> could be implemented
460as a <tt>memory_order_consume</tt> load.
461Regardless of the exact implementation, a pointer fetched by
462<tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> may not be used outside of the
463outermost RCU read-side critical section containing that
464<tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>, unless protection of
465the corresponding data element has been passed from RCU to some
466other synchronization mechanism, most commonly locking or
467<a href="https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/RCU/rcuref.txt">reference counting</a>.
468
469<p>
470In short, updaters use <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> and readers
471use <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>, and these two RCU API elements
472work together to ensure that readers have a consistent view of
473newly added data elements.
474
475<p>
476Of course, it is also necessary to remove elements from RCU-protected
477data structures, for example, using the following process:
478
479<ol>
480<li> Remove the data element from the enclosing structure.
481<li> Wait for all pre-existing RCU read-side critical sections
482 to complete (because only pre-existing readers can possibly have
483 a reference to the newly removed data element).
484<li> At this point, only the updater has a reference to the
485 newly removed data element, so it can safely reclaim
486 the data element, for example, by passing it to <tt>kfree()</tt>.
487</ol>
488
489This process is implemented by <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>:
490
491<blockquote>
492<pre>
493 1 bool remove_gp_synchronous(void)
494 2 {
495 3 struct foo *p;
496 4
497 5 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
498 6 p = rcu_access_pointer(gp);
499 7 if (!p) {
500 8 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
501 9 return false;
50210 }
50311 rcu_assign_pointer(gp, NULL);
50412 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
50513 synchronize_rcu();
50614 kfree(p);
50715 return true;
50816 }
509</pre>
510</blockquote>
511
512<p>
513This function is straightforward, with line&nbsp;13 waiting for a grace
514period before line&nbsp;14 frees the old data element.
515This waiting ensures that readers will reach line&nbsp;7 of
516<tt>do_something_gp()</tt> before the data element referenced by
517<tt>p</tt> is freed.
518The <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> on line&nbsp;6 is similar to
519<tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>, except that:
520
521<ol>
522<li> The value returned by <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>
523 cannot be dereferenced.
524 If you want to access the value pointed to as well as
525 the pointer itself, use <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>
526 instead of <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>.
527<li> The call to <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> need not be
528 protected.
529 In contrast, <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> must either be
530 within an RCU read-side critical section or in a code
531 segment where the pointer cannot change, for example, in
532 code protected by the corresponding update-side lock.
533</ol>
534
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535<table>
536<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
537<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
538<tr><td>
539 Without the <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> or the
540 <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>, what destructive optimizations
541 might the compiler make use of?
542</td></tr>
543<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
544<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
545 Let's start with what happens to <tt>do_something_gp()</tt>
546 if it fails to use <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
547 It could reuse a value formerly fetched from this same pointer.
548 It could also fetch the pointer from <tt>gp</tt> in a byte-at-a-time
549 manner, resulting in <i>load tearing</i>, in turn resulting a bytewise
e2c85cb1 550 mash-up of two distinct pointer values.
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551 It might even use value-speculation optimizations, where it makes
552 a wrong guess, but by the time it gets around to checking the
553 value, an update has changed the pointer to match the wrong guess.
554 Too bad about any dereferences that returned pre-initialization garbage
555 in the meantime!
556 </font>
557
558 <p><font color="ffffff">
559 For <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>, as long as all modifications
560 to <tt>gp</tt> are carried out while holding <tt>gp_lock</tt>,
561 the above optimizations are harmless.
562 However,
563 with <tt>CONFIG_SPARSE_RCU_POINTER=y</tt>,
564 <tt>sparse</tt> will complain if you
565 define <tt>gp</tt> with <tt>__rcu</tt> and then
566 access it without using
567 either <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> or <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
568</font></td></tr>
569<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
570</table>
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571
572<p>
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573In short, RCU's publish-subscribe guarantee is provided by the combination
574of <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> and <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
575This guarantee allows data elements to be safely added to RCU-protected
576linked data structures without disrupting RCU readers.
577This guarantee can be used in combination with the grace-period
578guarantee to also allow data elements to be removed from RCU-protected
579linked data structures, again without disrupting RCU readers.
580
581<p>
582This guarantee was only partially premeditated.
583DYNIX/ptx used an explicit memory barrier for publication, but had nothing
584resembling <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> for subscription, nor did it
585have anything resembling the <tt>smp_read_barrier_depends()</tt>
586that was later subsumed into <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>.
587The need for these operations made itself known quite suddenly at a
588late-1990s meeting with the DEC Alpha architects, back in the days when
589DEC was still a free-standing company.
590It took the Alpha architects a good hour to convince me that any sort
591of barrier would ever be needed, and it then took me a good <i>two</i> hours
592to convince them that their documentation did not make this point clear.
593More recent work with the C and C++ standards committees have provided
594much education on tricks and traps from the compiler.
595In short, compilers were much less tricky in the early 1990s, but in
5962015, don't even think about omitting <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>!
597
598<h3><a name="Memory-Barrier Guarantees">Memory-Barrier Guarantees</a></h3>
599
600<p>
601The previous section's simple linked-data-structure scenario clearly
602demonstrates the need for RCU's stringent memory-ordering guarantees on
603systems with more than one CPU:
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604
605<ol>
606<li> Each CPU that has an RCU read-side critical section that
607 begins before <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> starts is
608 guaranteed to execute a full memory barrier between the time
609 that the RCU read-side critical section ends and the time that
610 <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns.
611 Without this guarantee, a pre-existing RCU read-side critical section
612 might hold a reference to the newly removed <tt>struct foo</tt>
613 after the <tt>kfree()</tt> on line&nbsp;14 of
614 <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>.
615<li> Each CPU that has an RCU read-side critical section that ends
616 after <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns is guaranteed
617 to execute a full memory barrier between the time that
618 <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> begins and the time that the RCU
619 read-side critical section begins.
620 Without this guarantee, a later RCU read-side critical section
621 running after the <tt>kfree()</tt> on line&nbsp;14 of
622 <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt> might
623 later run <tt>do_something_gp()</tt> and find the
624 newly deleted <tt>struct foo</tt>.
625<li> If the task invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> remains
626 on a given CPU, then that CPU is guaranteed to execute a full
627 memory barrier sometime during the execution of
628 <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
629 This guarantee ensures that the <tt>kfree()</tt> on
630 line&nbsp;14 of <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt> really does
631 execute after the removal on line&nbsp;11.
632<li> If the task invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> migrates
633 among a group of CPUs during that invocation, then each of the
634 CPUs in that group is guaranteed to execute a full memory barrier
635 sometime during the execution of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
636 This guarantee also ensures that the <tt>kfree()</tt> on
637 line&nbsp;14 of <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt> really does
638 execute after the removal on
639 line&nbsp;11, but also in the case where the thread executing the
640 <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> migrates in the meantime.
641</ol>
642
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643<table>
644<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
645<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
646<tr><td>
647 Given that multiple CPUs can start RCU read-side critical sections
648 at any time without any ordering whatsoever, how can RCU possibly
649 tell whether or not a given RCU read-side critical section starts
650 before a given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>?
651</td></tr>
652<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
653<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
654 If RCU cannot tell whether or not a given
655 RCU read-side critical section starts before a
656 given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>,
657 then it must assume that the RCU read-side critical section
658 started first.
659 In other words, a given instance of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
660 can avoid waiting on a given RCU read-side critical section only
661 if it can prove that <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> started first.
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662
663 <p>
664 A related question is &ldquo;When <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
665 doesn't generate any code, why does it matter how it relates
666 to a grace period?&rdquo;
667 The answer is that it is not the relationship of
668 <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> itself that is important, but rather
669 the relationship of the code within the enclosed RCU read-side
670 critical section to the code preceding and following the
671 grace period.
672 If we take this viewpoint, then a given RCU read-side critical
673 section begins before a given grace period when some access
674 preceding the grace period observes the effect of some access
675 within the critical section, in which case none of the accesses
676 within the critical section may observe the effects of any
677 access following the grace period.
678
679 <p>
680 As of late 2016, mathematical models of RCU take this
681 viewpoint, for example, see slides&nbsp;62 and&nbsp;63
682 of the
683 <a href="http://www2.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/scalability/paper/LinuxMM.2016.10.04c.LCE.pdf">2016 LinuxCon EU</a>
684 presentation.
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685</font></td></tr>
686<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
687</table>
688
689<table>
690<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
691<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
692<tr><td>
693 The first and second guarantees require unbelievably strict ordering!
694 Are all these memory barriers <i> really</i> required?
695</td></tr>
696<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
697<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
698 Yes, they really are required.
699 To see why the first guarantee is required, consider the following
700 sequence of events:
701 </font>
702
703 <ol>
704 <li> <font color="ffffff">
705 CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
706 </font>
707 <li> <font color="ffffff">
708 CPU 1: <tt>q = rcu_dereference(gp);
709 /* Very likely to return p. */</tt>
710 </font>
711 <li> <font color="ffffff">
712 CPU 0: <tt>list_del_rcu(p);</tt>
713 </font>
714 <li> <font color="ffffff">
715 CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> starts.
716 </font>
717 <li> <font color="ffffff">
718 CPU 1: <tt>do_something_with(q-&gt;a);
719 /* No smp_mb(), so might happen after kfree(). */</tt>
720 </font>
721 <li> <font color="ffffff">
722 CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
723 </font>
724 <li> <font color="ffffff">
725 CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns.
726 </font>
727 <li> <font color="ffffff">
728 CPU 0: <tt>kfree(p);</tt>
729 </font>
730 </ol>
731
732 <p><font color="ffffff">
733 Therefore, there absolutely must be a full memory barrier between the
734 end of the RCU read-side critical section and the end of the
735 grace period.
736 </font>
737
738 <p><font color="ffffff">
739 The sequence of events demonstrating the necessity of the second rule
740 is roughly similar:
741 </font>
742
743 <ol>
744 <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 0: <tt>list_del_rcu(p);</tt>
745 </font>
746 <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> starts.
747 </font>
748 <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
749 </font>
750 <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 1: <tt>q = rcu_dereference(gp);
751 /* Might return p if no memory barrier. */</tt>
752 </font>
753 <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 0: <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> returns.
754 </font>
755 <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 0: <tt>kfree(p);</tt>
756 </font>
757 <li> <font color="ffffff">
758 CPU 1: <tt>do_something_with(q-&gt;a); /* Boom!!! */</tt>
759 </font>
760 <li> <font color="ffffff">CPU 1: <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
761 </font>
762 </ol>
763
764 <p><font color="ffffff">
765 And similarly, without a memory barrier between the beginning of the
766 grace period and the beginning of the RCU read-side critical section,
767 CPU&nbsp;1 might end up accessing the freelist.
768 </font>
769
770 <p><font color="ffffff">
771 The &ldquo;as if&rdquo; rule of course applies, so that any
772 implementation that acts as if the appropriate memory barriers
773 were in place is a correct implementation.
774 That said, it is much easier to fool yourself into believing
775 that you have adhered to the as-if rule than it is to actually
776 adhere to it!
777</font></td></tr>
778<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
779</table>
780
781<table>
782<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
783<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
784<tr><td>
785 You claim that <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
786 generate absolutely no code in some kernel builds.
787 This means that the compiler might arbitrarily rearrange consecutive
788 RCU read-side critical sections.
789 Given such rearrangement, if a given RCU read-side critical section
790 is done, how can you be sure that all prior RCU read-side critical
791 sections are done?
792 Won't the compiler rearrangements make that impossible to determine?
793</td></tr>
794<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
795<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
796 In cases where <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
797 generate absolutely no code, RCU infers quiescent states only at
798 special locations, for example, within the scheduler.
799 Because calls to <tt>schedule()</tt> had better prevent calling-code
800 accesses to shared variables from being rearranged across the call to
801 <tt>schedule()</tt>, if RCU detects the end of a given RCU read-side
802 critical section, it will necessarily detect the end of all prior
803 RCU read-side critical sections, no matter how aggressively the
804 compiler scrambles the code.
805 </font>
806
807 <p><font color="ffffff">
808 Again, this all assumes that the compiler cannot scramble code across
809 calls to the scheduler, out of interrupt handlers, into the idle loop,
810 into user-mode code, and so on.
811 But if your kernel build allows that sort of scrambling, you have broken
812 far more than just RCU!
813</font></td></tr>
814<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
815</table>
d8936c0b 816
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818Note that these memory-barrier requirements do not replace the fundamental
819RCU requirement that a grace period wait for all pre-existing readers.
820On the contrary, the memory barriers called out in this section must operate in
821such a way as to <i>enforce</i> this fundamental requirement.
822Of course, different implementations enforce this requirement in different
823ways, but enforce it they must.
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824
825<h3><a name="RCU Primitives Guaranteed to Execute Unconditionally">RCU Primitives Guaranteed to Execute Unconditionally</a></h3>
826
827<p>
828The common-case RCU primitives are unconditional.
829They are invoked, they do their job, and they return, with no possibility
830of error, and no need to retry.
831This is a key RCU design philosophy.
832
833<p>
834However, this philosophy is pragmatic rather than pigheaded.
835If someone comes up with a good justification for a particular conditional
836RCU primitive, it might well be implemented and added.
837After all, this guarantee was reverse-engineered, not premeditated.
838The unconditional nature of the RCU primitives was initially an
839accident of implementation, and later experience with synchronization
840primitives with conditional primitives caused me to elevate this
841accident to a guarantee.
842Therefore, the justification for adding a conditional primitive to
843RCU would need to be based on detailed and compelling use cases.
844
845<h3><a name="Guaranteed Read-to-Write Upgrade">Guaranteed Read-to-Write Upgrade</a></h3>
846
847<p>
848As far as RCU is concerned, it is always possible to carry out an
849update within an RCU read-side critical section.
850For example, that RCU read-side critical section might search for
851a given data element, and then might acquire the update-side
852spinlock in order to update that element, all while remaining
853in that RCU read-side critical section.
854Of course, it is necessary to exit the RCU read-side critical section
855before invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>, however, this
856inconvenience can be avoided through use of the
857<tt>call_rcu()</tt> and <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> API members
858described later in this document.
859
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860<table>
861<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
862<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
863<tr><td>
864 But how does the upgrade-to-write operation exclude other readers?
865</td></tr>
866<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
867<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
868 It doesn't, just like normal RCU updates, which also do not exclude
869 RCU readers.
870</font></td></tr>
871<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
872</table>
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873
874<p>
875This guarantee allows lookup code to be shared between read-side
876and update-side code, and was premeditated, appearing in the earliest
877DYNIX/ptx RCU documentation.
878
879<h2><a name="Fundamental Non-Requirements">Fundamental Non-Requirements</a></h2>
880
881<p>
882RCU provides extremely lightweight readers, and its read-side guarantees,
883though quite useful, are correspondingly lightweight.
884It is therefore all too easy to assume that RCU is guaranteeing more
885than it really is.
886Of course, the list of things that RCU does not guarantee is infinitely
887long, however, the following sections list a few non-guarantees that
888have caused confusion.
889Except where otherwise noted, these non-guarantees were premeditated.
890
891<ol>
892<li> <a href="#Readers Impose Minimal Ordering">
893 Readers Impose Minimal Ordering</a>
894<li> <a href="#Readers Do Not Exclude Updaters">
895 Readers Do Not Exclude Updaters</a>
896<li> <a href="#Updaters Only Wait For Old Readers">
897 Updaters Only Wait For Old Readers</a>
898<li> <a href="#Grace Periods Don't Partition Read-Side Critical Sections">
899 Grace Periods Don't Partition Read-Side Critical Sections</a>
900<li> <a href="#Read-Side Critical Sections Don't Partition Grace Periods">
901 Read-Side Critical Sections Don't Partition Grace Periods</a>
902<li> <a href="#Disabling Preemption Does Not Block Grace Periods">
903 Disabling Preemption Does Not Block Grace Periods</a>
904</ol>
905
906<h3><a name="Readers Impose Minimal Ordering">Readers Impose Minimal Ordering</a></h3>
907
908<p>
909Reader-side markers such as <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
910<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> provide absolutely no ordering guarantees
911except through their interaction with the grace-period APIs such as
912<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
913To see this, consider the following pair of threads:
914
915<blockquote>
916<pre>
917 1 void thread0(void)
918 2 {
919 3 rcu_read_lock();
920 4 WRITE_ONCE(x, 1);
921 5 rcu_read_unlock();
922 6 rcu_read_lock();
923 7 WRITE_ONCE(y, 1);
924 8 rcu_read_unlock();
925 9 }
92610
92711 void thread1(void)
92812 {
92913 rcu_read_lock();
93014 r1 = READ_ONCE(y);
93115 rcu_read_unlock();
93216 rcu_read_lock();
93317 r2 = READ_ONCE(x);
93418 rcu_read_unlock();
93519 }
936</pre>
937</blockquote>
938
939<p>
940After <tt>thread0()</tt> and <tt>thread1()</tt> execute
941concurrently, it is quite possible to have
942
943<blockquote>
944<pre>
945(r1 == 1 &amp;&amp; r2 == 0)
946</pre>
947</blockquote>
948
949(that is, <tt>y</tt> appears to have been assigned before <tt>x</tt>),
950which would not be possible if <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
951<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> had much in the way of ordering
952properties.
953But they do not, so the CPU is within its rights
954to do significant reordering.
955This is by design: Any significant ordering constraints would slow down
956these fast-path APIs.
957
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958<table>
959<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
960<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
961<tr><td>
962 Can't the compiler also reorder this code?
963</td></tr>
964<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
965<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
966 No, the volatile casts in <tt>READ_ONCE()</tt> and
967 <tt>WRITE_ONCE()</tt> prevent the compiler from reordering in
968 this particular case.
969</font></td></tr>
970<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
971</table>
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972
973<h3><a name="Readers Do Not Exclude Updaters">Readers Do Not Exclude Updaters</a></h3>
974
975<p>
976Neither <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> nor <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
977exclude updates.
978All they do is to prevent grace periods from ending.
979The following example illustrates this:
980
981<blockquote>
982<pre>
983 1 void thread0(void)
984 2 {
985 3 rcu_read_lock();
986 4 r1 = READ_ONCE(y);
987 5 if (r1) {
988 6 do_something_with_nonzero_x();
989 7 r2 = READ_ONCE(x);
990 8 WARN_ON(!r2); /* BUG!!! */
991 9 }
99210 rcu_read_unlock();
99311 }
99412
99513 void thread1(void)
99614 {
99715 spin_lock(&amp;my_lock);
99816 WRITE_ONCE(x, 1);
99917 WRITE_ONCE(y, 1);
100018 spin_unlock(&amp;my_lock);
100119 }
1002</pre>
1003</blockquote>
1004
1005<p>
1006If the <tt>thread0()</tt> function's <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
1007excluded the <tt>thread1()</tt> function's update,
1008the <tt>WARN_ON()</tt> could never fire.
1009But the fact is that <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> does not exclude
1010much of anything aside from subsequent grace periods, of which
1011<tt>thread1()</tt> has none, so the
1012<tt>WARN_ON()</tt> can and does fire.
1013
1014<h3><a name="Updaters Only Wait For Old Readers">Updaters Only Wait For Old Readers</a></h3>
1015
1016<p>
1017It might be tempting to assume that after <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
1018completes, there are no readers executing.
1019This temptation must be avoided because
1020new readers can start immediately after <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
1021starts, and <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> is under no
1022obligation to wait for these new readers.
1023
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1024<table>
1025<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
1026<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
1027<tr><td>
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1028 Suppose that synchronize_rcu() did wait until <i>all</i>
1029 readers had completed instead of waiting only on
1030 pre-existing readers.
1031 For how long would the updater be able to rely on there
1032 being no readers?
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1033</td></tr>
1034<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
1035<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
5413e24c 1036 For no time at all.
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1037 Even if <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> were to wait until
1038 all readers had completed, a new reader might start immediately after
1039 <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> completed.
1040 Therefore, the code following
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1041 <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> can <i>never</i> rely on there being
1042 no readers.
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1043</font></td></tr>
1044<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
1045</table>
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1046
1047<h3><a name="Grace Periods Don't Partition Read-Side Critical Sections">
1048Grace Periods Don't Partition Read-Side Critical Sections</a></h3>
1049
1050<p>
1051It is tempting to assume that if any part of one RCU read-side critical
1052section precedes a given grace period, and if any part of another RCU
1053read-side critical section follows that same grace period, then all of
1054the first RCU read-side critical section must precede all of the second.
1055However, this just isn't the case: A single grace period does not
1056partition the set of RCU read-side critical sections.
1057An example of this situation can be illustrated as follows, where
1058<tt>x</tt>, <tt>y</tt>, and <tt>z</tt> are initially all zero:
1059
1060<blockquote>
1061<pre>
1062 1 void thread0(void)
1063 2 {
1064 3 rcu_read_lock();
1065 4 WRITE_ONCE(a, 1);
1066 5 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
1067 6 rcu_read_unlock();
1068 7 }
1069 8
1070 9 void thread1(void)
107110 {
107211 r1 = READ_ONCE(a);
107312 synchronize_rcu();
107413 WRITE_ONCE(c, 1);
107514 }
107615
107716 void thread2(void)
107817 {
107918 rcu_read_lock();
108019 r2 = READ_ONCE(b);
108120 r3 = READ_ONCE(c);
108221 rcu_read_unlock();
108322 }
1084</pre>
1085</blockquote>
1086
1087<p>
1088It turns out that the outcome:
1089
1090<blockquote>
1091<pre>
1092(r1 == 1 &amp;&amp; r2 == 0 &amp;&amp; r3 == 1)
1093</pre>
1094</blockquote>
1095
1096is entirely possible.
1097The following figure show how this can happen, with each circled
1098<tt>QS</tt> indicating the point at which RCU recorded a
1099<i>quiescent state</i> for each thread, that is, a state in which
1100RCU knows that the thread cannot be in the midst of an RCU read-side
1101critical section that started before the current grace period:
1102
1103<p><img src="GPpartitionReaders1.svg" alt="GPpartitionReaders1.svg" width="60%"></p>
1104
1105<p>
1106If it is necessary to partition RCU read-side critical sections in this
1107manner, it is necessary to use two grace periods, where the first
1108grace period is known to end before the second grace period starts:
1109
1110<blockquote>
1111<pre>
1112 1 void thread0(void)
1113 2 {
1114 3 rcu_read_lock();
1115 4 WRITE_ONCE(a, 1);
1116 5 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
1117 6 rcu_read_unlock();
1118 7 }
1119 8
1120 9 void thread1(void)
112110 {
112211 r1 = READ_ONCE(a);
112312 synchronize_rcu();
112413 WRITE_ONCE(c, 1);
112514 }
112615
112716 void thread2(void)
112817 {
112918 r2 = READ_ONCE(c);
113019 synchronize_rcu();
113120 WRITE_ONCE(d, 1);
113221 }
113322
113423 void thread3(void)
113524 {
113625 rcu_read_lock();
113726 r3 = READ_ONCE(b);
113827 r4 = READ_ONCE(d);
113928 rcu_read_unlock();
114029 }
1141</pre>
1142</blockquote>
1143
1144<p>
1145Here, if <tt>(r1 == 1)</tt>, then
1146<tt>thread0()</tt>'s write to <tt>b</tt> must happen
1147before the end of <tt>thread1()</tt>'s grace period.
1148If in addition <tt>(r4 == 1)</tt>, then
1149<tt>thread3()</tt>'s read from <tt>b</tt> must happen
1150after the beginning of <tt>thread2()</tt>'s grace period.
1151If it is also the case that <tt>(r2 == 1)</tt>, then the
1152end of <tt>thread1()</tt>'s grace period must precede the
1153beginning of <tt>thread2()</tt>'s grace period.
1154This mean that the two RCU read-side critical sections cannot overlap,
1155guaranteeing that <tt>(r3 == 1)</tt>.
1156As a result, the outcome:
1157
1158<blockquote>
1159<pre>
1160(r1 == 1 &amp;&amp; r2 == 1 &amp;&amp; r3 == 0 &amp;&amp; r4 == 1)
1161</pre>
1162</blockquote>
1163
1164cannot happen.
1165
1166<p>
1167This non-requirement was also non-premeditated, but became apparent
1168when studying RCU's interaction with memory ordering.
1169
1170<h3><a name="Read-Side Critical Sections Don't Partition Grace Periods">
1171Read-Side Critical Sections Don't Partition Grace Periods</a></h3>
1172
1173<p>
1174It is also tempting to assume that if an RCU read-side critical section
1175happens between a pair of grace periods, then those grace periods cannot
1176overlap.
1177However, this temptation leads nowhere good, as can be illustrated by
1178the following, with all variables initially zero:
1179
1180<blockquote>
1181<pre>
1182 1 void thread0(void)
1183 2 {
1184 3 rcu_read_lock();
1185 4 WRITE_ONCE(a, 1);
1186 5 WRITE_ONCE(b, 1);
1187 6 rcu_read_unlock();
1188 7 }
1189 8
1190 9 void thread1(void)
119110 {
119211 r1 = READ_ONCE(a);
119312 synchronize_rcu();
119413 WRITE_ONCE(c, 1);
119514 }
119615
119716 void thread2(void)
119817 {
119918 rcu_read_lock();
120019 WRITE_ONCE(d, 1);
120120 r2 = READ_ONCE(c);
120221 rcu_read_unlock();
120322 }
120423
120524 void thread3(void)
120625 {
120726 r3 = READ_ONCE(d);
120827 synchronize_rcu();
120928 WRITE_ONCE(e, 1);
121029 }
121130
121231 void thread4(void)
121332 {
121433 rcu_read_lock();
121534 r4 = READ_ONCE(b);
121635 r5 = READ_ONCE(e);
121736 rcu_read_unlock();
121837 }
1219</pre>
1220</blockquote>
1221
1222<p>
1223In this case, the outcome:
1224
1225<blockquote>
1226<pre>
1227(r1 == 1 &amp;&amp; r2 == 1 &amp;&amp; r3 == 1 &amp;&amp; r4 == 0 &amp&amp; r5 == 1)
1228</pre>
1229</blockquote>
1230
1231is entirely possible, as illustrated below:
1232
1233<p><img src="ReadersPartitionGP1.svg" alt="ReadersPartitionGP1.svg" width="100%"></p>
1234
1235<p>
1236Again, an RCU read-side critical section can overlap almost all of a
1237given grace period, just so long as it does not overlap the entire
1238grace period.
1239As a result, an RCU read-side critical section cannot partition a pair
1240of RCU grace periods.
1241
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1242<table>
1243<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
1244<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
1245<tr><td>
1246 How long a sequence of grace periods, each separated by an RCU
1247 read-side critical section, would be required to partition the RCU
1248 read-side critical sections at the beginning and end of the chain?
1249</td></tr>
1250<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
1251<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
1252 In theory, an infinite number.
1253 In practice, an unknown number that is sensitive to both implementation
1254 details and timing considerations.
1255 Therefore, even in practice, RCU users must abide by the
1256 theoretical rather than the practical answer.
1257</font></td></tr>
1258<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
1259</table>
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1260
1261<h3><a name="Disabling Preemption Does Not Block Grace Periods">
1262Disabling Preemption Does Not Block Grace Periods</a></h3>
1263
1264<p>
1265There was a time when disabling preemption on any given CPU would block
1266subsequent grace periods.
1267However, this was an accident of implementation and is not a requirement.
1268And in the current Linux-kernel implementation, disabling preemption
1269on a given CPU in fact does not block grace periods, as Oleg Nesterov
1270<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/20150614193825.GA19582@redhat.com">demonstrated</a>.
1271
1272<p>
1273If you need a preempt-disable region to block grace periods, you need to add
1274<tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>, for example
1275as follows:
1276
1277<blockquote>
1278<pre>
1279 1 preempt_disable();
1280 2 rcu_read_lock();
1281 3 do_something();
1282 4 rcu_read_unlock();
1283 5 preempt_enable();
1284 6
1285 7 /* Spinlocks implicitly disable preemption. */
1286 8 spin_lock(&amp;mylock);
1287 9 rcu_read_lock();
128810 do_something();
128911 rcu_read_unlock();
129012 spin_unlock(&amp;mylock);
1291</pre>
1292</blockquote>
1293
1294<p>
1295In theory, you could enter the RCU read-side critical section first,
1296but it is more efficient to keep the entire RCU read-side critical
1297section contained in the preempt-disable region as shown above.
1298Of course, RCU read-side critical sections that extend outside of
1299preempt-disable regions will work correctly, but such critical sections
1300can be preempted, which forces <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> to do
1301more work.
1302And no, this is <i>not</i> an invitation to enclose all of your RCU
1303read-side critical sections within preempt-disable regions, because
1304doing so would degrade real-time response.
1305
1306<p>
1307This non-requirement appeared with preemptible RCU.
1308If you need a grace period that waits on non-preemptible code regions, use
1309<a href="#Sched Flavor">RCU-sched</a>.
1310
1311<h2><a name="Parallelism Facts of Life">Parallelism Facts of Life</a></h2>
1312
1313<p>
1314These parallelism facts of life are by no means specific to RCU, but
1315the RCU implementation must abide by them.
1316They therefore bear repeating:
1317
1318<ol>
1319<li> Any CPU or task may be delayed at any time,
1320 and any attempts to avoid these delays by disabling
1321 preemption, interrupts, or whatever are completely futile.
1322 This is most obvious in preemptible user-level
1323 environments and in virtualized environments (where
1324 a given guest OS's VCPUs can be preempted at any time by
1325 the underlying hypervisor), but can also happen in bare-metal
1326 environments due to ECC errors, NMIs, and other hardware
1327 events.
1328 Although a delay of more than about 20 seconds can result
1329 in splats, the RCU implementation is obligated to use
1330 algorithms that can tolerate extremely long delays, but where
1331 &ldquo;extremely long&rdquo; is not long enough to allow
1332 wrap-around when incrementing a 64-bit counter.
1333<li> Both the compiler and the CPU can reorder memory accesses.
1334 Where it matters, RCU must use compiler directives and
1335 memory-barrier instructions to preserve ordering.
1336<li> Conflicting writes to memory locations in any given cache line
1337 will result in expensive cache misses.
1338 Greater numbers of concurrent writes and more-frequent
1339 concurrent writes will result in more dramatic slowdowns.
1340 RCU is therefore obligated to use algorithms that have
1341 sufficient locality to avoid significant performance and
1342 scalability problems.
1343<li> As a rough rule of thumb, only one CPU's worth of processing
1344 may be carried out under the protection of any given exclusive
1345 lock.
1346 RCU must therefore use scalable locking designs.
1347<li> Counters are finite, especially on 32-bit systems.
1348 RCU's use of counters must therefore tolerate counter wrap,
1349 or be designed such that counter wrap would take way more
1350 time than a single system is likely to run.
1351 An uptime of ten years is quite possible, a runtime
1352 of a century much less so.
1353 As an example of the latter, RCU's dyntick-idle nesting counter
1354 allows 54 bits for interrupt nesting level (this counter
1355 is 64 bits even on a 32-bit system).
1356 Overflowing this counter requires 2<sup>54</sup>
1357 half-interrupts on a given CPU without that CPU ever going idle.
1358 If a half-interrupt happened every microsecond, it would take
1359 570 years of runtime to overflow this counter, which is currently
1360 believed to be an acceptably long time.
1361<li> Linux systems can have thousands of CPUs running a single
1362 Linux kernel in a single shared-memory environment.
1363 RCU must therefore pay close attention to high-end scalability.
1364</ol>
1365
1366<p>
1367This last parallelism fact of life means that RCU must pay special
1368attention to the preceding facts of life.
1369The idea that Linux might scale to systems with thousands of CPUs would
1370have been met with some skepticism in the 1990s, but these requirements
1371would have otherwise have been unsurprising, even in the early 1990s.
1372
1373<h2><a name="Quality-of-Implementation Requirements">Quality-of-Implementation Requirements</a></h2>
1374
1375<p>
1376These sections list quality-of-implementation requirements.
1377Although an RCU implementation that ignores these requirements could
1378still be used, it would likely be subject to limitations that would
1379make it inappropriate for industrial-strength production use.
1380Classes of quality-of-implementation requirements are as follows:
1381
1382<ol>
1383<li> <a href="#Specialization">Specialization</a>
1384<li> <a href="#Performance and Scalability">Performance and Scalability</a>
1385<li> <a href="#Composability">Composability</a>
1386<li> <a href="#Corner Cases">Corner Cases</a>
1387</ol>
1388
1389<p>
1390These classes is covered in the following sections.
1391
1392<h3><a name="Specialization">Specialization</a></h3>
1393
1394<p>
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1395RCU is and always has been intended primarily for read-mostly situations,
1396which means that RCU's read-side primitives are optimized, often at the
649e4368 1397expense of its update-side primitives.
11a65df5 1398Experience thus far is captured by the following list of situations:
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1400<ol>
1401<li> Read-mostly data, where stale and inconsistent data is not
1402 a problem: RCU works great!
1403<li> Read-mostly data, where data must be consistent:
1404 RCU works well.
1405<li> Read-write data, where data must be consistent:
1406 RCU <i>might</i> work OK.
1407 Or not.
1408<li> Write-mostly data, where data must be consistent:
1409 RCU is very unlikely to be the right tool for the job,
1410 with the following exceptions, where RCU can provide:
1411 <ol type=a>
1412 <li> Existence guarantees for update-friendly mechanisms.
1413 <li> Wait-free read-side primitives for real-time use.
1414 </ol>
1415</ol>
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1416
1417<p>
1418This focus on read-mostly situations means that RCU must interoperate
1419with other synchronization primitives.
1420For example, the <tt>add_gp()</tt> and <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>
1421examples discussed earlier use RCU to protect readers and locking to
1422coordinate updaters.
1423However, the need extends much farther, requiring that a variety of
1424synchronization primitives be legal within RCU read-side critical sections,
1425including spinlocks, sequence locks, atomic operations, reference
1426counters, and memory barriers.
1427
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1428<table>
1429<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
1430<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
1431<tr><td>
1432 What about sleeping locks?
1433</td></tr>
1434<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
1435<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
1436 These are forbidden within Linux-kernel RCU read-side critical
1437 sections because it is not legal to place a quiescent state
1438 (in this case, voluntary context switch) within an RCU read-side
1439 critical section.
1440 However, sleeping locks may be used within userspace RCU read-side
1441 critical sections, and also within Linux-kernel sleepable RCU
1442 <a href="#Sleepable RCU"><font color="ffffff">(SRCU)</font></a>
1443 read-side critical sections.
1444 In addition, the -rt patchset turns spinlocks into a
1445 sleeping locks so that the corresponding critical sections
1446 can be preempted, which also means that these sleeplockified
1447 spinlocks (but not other sleeping locks!) may be acquire within
1448 -rt-Linux-kernel RCU read-side critical sections.
1449 </font>
1450
1451 <p><font color="ffffff">
1452 Note that it <i>is</i> legal for a normal RCU read-side
1453 critical section to conditionally acquire a sleeping locks
1454 (as in <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt>), but only as long as it does
1455 not loop indefinitely attempting to conditionally acquire that
1456 sleeping locks.
1457 The key point is that things like <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt>
1458 either return with the mutex held, or return an error indication if
1459 the mutex was not immediately available.
1460 Either way, <tt>mutex_trylock()</tt> returns immediately without
1461 sleeping.
1462</font></td></tr>
1463<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
1464</table>
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1465
1466<p>
1467It often comes as a surprise that many algorithms do not require a
1468consistent view of data, but many can function in that mode,
1469with network routing being the poster child.
1470Internet routing algorithms take significant time to propagate
1471updates, so that by the time an update arrives at a given system,
1472that system has been sending network traffic the wrong way for
1473a considerable length of time.
1474Having a few threads continue to send traffic the wrong way for a
1475few more milliseconds is clearly not a problem: In the worst case,
1476TCP retransmissions will eventually get the data where it needs to go.
1477In general, when tracking the state of the universe outside of the
1478computer, some level of inconsistency must be tolerated due to
1479speed-of-light delays if nothing else.
1480
1481<p>
1482Furthermore, uncertainty about external state is inherent in many cases.
1483For example, a pair of veternarians might use heartbeat to determine
1484whether or not a given cat was alive.
1485But how long should they wait after the last heartbeat to decide that
1486the cat is in fact dead?
1487Waiting less than 400 milliseconds makes no sense because this would
1488mean that a relaxed cat would be considered to cycle between death
1489and life more than 100 times per minute.
1490Moreover, just as with human beings, a cat's heart might stop for
1491some period of time, so the exact wait period is a judgment call.
1492One of our pair of veternarians might wait 30 seconds before pronouncing
1493the cat dead, while the other might insist on waiting a full minute.
1494The two veternarians would then disagree on the state of the cat during
11a65df5 1495the final 30 seconds of the minute following the last heartbeat.
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1496
1497<p>
1498Interestingly enough, this same situation applies to hardware.
1499When push comes to shove, how do we tell whether or not some
1500external server has failed?
1501We send messages to it periodically, and declare it failed if we
1502don't receive a response within a given period of time.
1503Policy decisions can usually tolerate short
1504periods of inconsistency.
1505The policy was decided some time ago, and is only now being put into
1506effect, so a few milliseconds of delay is normally inconsequential.
1507
1508<p>
1509However, there are algorithms that absolutely must see consistent data.
1510For example, the translation between a user-level SystemV semaphore
1511ID to the corresponding in-kernel data structure is protected by RCU,
1512but it is absolutely forbidden to update a semaphore that has just been
1513removed.
1514In the Linux kernel, this need for consistency is accommodated by acquiring
1515spinlocks located in the in-kernel data structure from within
1516the RCU read-side critical section, and this is indicated by the
1517green box in the figure above.
1518Many other techniques may be used, and are in fact used within the
1519Linux kernel.
1520
1521<p>
1522In short, RCU is not required to maintain consistency, and other
1523mechanisms may be used in concert with RCU when consistency is required.
1524RCU's specialization allows it to do its job extremely well, and its
1525ability to interoperate with other synchronization mechanisms allows
1526the right mix of synchronization tools to be used for a given job.
1527
1528<h3><a name="Performance and Scalability">Performance and Scalability</a></h3>
1529
1530<p>
1531Energy efficiency is a critical component of performance today,
1532and Linux-kernel RCU implementations must therefore avoid unnecessarily
1533awakening idle CPUs.
1534I cannot claim that this requirement was premeditated.
1535In fact, I learned of it during a telephone conversation in which I
1536was given &ldquo;frank and open&rdquo; feedback on the importance
1537of energy efficiency in battery-powered systems and on specific
1538energy-efficiency shortcomings of the Linux-kernel RCU implementation.
1539In my experience, the battery-powered embedded community will consider
1540any unnecessary wakeups to be extremely unfriendly acts.
1541So much so that mere Linux-kernel-mailing-list posts are
1542insufficient to vent their ire.
1543
1544<p>
1545Memory consumption is not particularly important for in most
1546situations, and has become decreasingly
1547so as memory sizes have expanded and memory
1548costs have plummeted.
1549However, as I learned from Matt Mackall's
1550<a href="http://elinux.org/Linux_Tiny-FAQ">bloatwatch</a>
1551efforts, memory footprint is critically important on single-CPU systems with
1552non-preemptible (<tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>) kernels, and thus
1553<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/20090113221724.GA15307@linux.vnet.ibm.com">tiny RCU</a>
1554was born.
1555Josh Triplett has since taken over the small-memory banner with his
1556<a href="https://tiny.wiki.kernel.org/">Linux kernel tinification</a>
1557project, which resulted in
1558<a href="#Sleepable RCU">SRCU</a>
1559becoming optional for those kernels not needing it.
1560
1561<p>
1562The remaining performance requirements are, for the most part,
1563unsurprising.
1564For example, in keeping with RCU's read-side specialization,
1565<tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> should have negligible overhead (for
1566example, suppression of a few minor compiler optimizations).
1567Similarly, in non-preemptible environments, <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
1568<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> should have exactly zero overhead.
1569
1570<p>
1571In preemptible environments, in the case where the RCU read-side
1572critical section was not preempted (as will be the case for the
1573highest-priority real-time process), <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
1574<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> should have minimal overhead.
1575In particular, they should not contain atomic read-modify-write
1576operations, memory-barrier instructions, preemption disabling,
1577interrupt disabling, or backwards branches.
1578However, in the case where the RCU read-side critical section was preempted,
1579<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> may acquire spinlocks and disable interrupts.
1580This is why it is better to nest an RCU read-side critical section
1581within a preempt-disable region than vice versa, at least in cases
1582where that critical section is short enough to avoid unduly degrading
1583real-time latencies.
1584
1585<p>
1586The <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> grace-period-wait primitive is
1587optimized for throughput.
1588It may therefore incur several milliseconds of latency in addition to
1589the duration of the longest RCU read-side critical section.
1590On the other hand, multiple concurrent invocations of
1591<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> are required to use batching optimizations
1592so that they can be satisfied by a single underlying grace-period-wait
1593operation.
1594For example, in the Linux kernel, it is not unusual for a single
1595grace-period-wait operation to serve more than
1596<a href="https://www.usenix.org/conference/2004-usenix-annual-technical-conference/making-rcu-safe-deep-sub-millisecond-response">1,000 separate invocations</a>
1597of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>, thus amortizing the per-invocation
1598overhead down to nearly zero.
1599However, the grace-period optimization is also required to avoid
1600measurable degradation of real-time scheduling and interrupt latencies.
1601
1602<p>
1603In some cases, the multi-millisecond <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
1604latencies are unacceptable.
1605In these cases, <tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> may be used
1606instead, reducing the grace-period latency down to a few tens of
1607microseconds on small systems, at least in cases where the RCU read-side
1608critical sections are short.
1609There are currently no special latency requirements for
1610<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> on large systems, but,
1611consistent with the empirical nature of the RCU specification,
1612that is subject to change.
1613However, there most definitely are scalability requirements:
1614A storm of <tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> invocations on 4096
1615CPUs should at least make reasonable forward progress.
1616In return for its shorter latencies, <tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt>
1617is permitted to impose modest degradation of real-time latency
1618on non-idle online CPUs.
1619That said, it will likely be necessary to take further steps to reduce this
1620degradation, hopefully to roughly that of a scheduling-clock interrupt.
1621
1622<p>
1623There are a number of situations where even
1624<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt>'s reduced grace-period
1625latency is unacceptable.
1626In these situations, the asynchronous <tt>call_rcu()</tt> can be
1627used in place of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> as follows:
1628
1629<blockquote>
1630<pre>
1631 1 struct foo {
1632 2 int a;
1633 3 int b;
1634 4 struct rcu_head rh;
1635 5 };
1636 6
1637 7 static void remove_gp_cb(struct rcu_head *rhp)
1638 8 {
1639 9 struct foo *p = container_of(rhp, struct foo, rh);
164010
164111 kfree(p);
164212 }
164313
164414 bool remove_gp_asynchronous(void)
164515 {
164616 struct foo *p;
164717
164818 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
164919 p = rcu_dereference(gp);
165020 if (!p) {
165121 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
165222 return false;
165323 }
165424 rcu_assign_pointer(gp, NULL);
165525 call_rcu(&amp;p-&gt;rh, remove_gp_cb);
165626 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
165727 return true;
165828 }
1659</pre>
1660</blockquote>
1661
1662<p>
1663A definition of <tt>struct foo</tt> is finally needed, and appears
1664on lines&nbsp;1-5.
1665The function <tt>remove_gp_cb()</tt> is passed to <tt>call_rcu()</tt>
1666on line&nbsp;25, and will be invoked after the end of a subsequent
1667grace period.
1668This gets the same effect as <tt>remove_gp_synchronous()</tt>,
1669but without forcing the updater to wait for a grace period to elapse.
1670The <tt>call_rcu()</tt> function may be used in a number of
1671situations where neither <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> nor
1672<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> would be legal,
1673including within preempt-disable code, <tt>local_bh_disable()</tt> code,
1674interrupt-disable code, and interrupt handlers.
514f1eb5 1675However, even <tt>call_rcu()</tt> is illegal within NMI handlers
0c7d10e4 1676and from idle and offline CPUs.
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1677The callback function (<tt>remove_gp_cb()</tt> in this case) will be
1678executed within softirq (software interrupt) environment within the
1679Linux kernel,
1680either within a real softirq handler or under the protection
1681of <tt>local_bh_disable()</tt>.
1682In both the Linux kernel and in userspace, it is bad practice to
1683write an RCU callback function that takes too long.
1684Long-running operations should be relegated to separate threads or
1685(in the Linux kernel) workqueues.
1686
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1687<table>
1688<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
1689<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
1690<tr><td>
1691 Why does line&nbsp;19 use <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>?
1692 After all, <tt>call_rcu()</tt> on line&nbsp;25 stores into the
1693 structure, which would interact badly with concurrent insertions.
1694 Doesn't this mean that <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> is required?
1695</td></tr>
1696<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
1697<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
1698 Presumably the <tt>-&gt;gp_lock</tt> acquired on line&nbsp;18 excludes
1699 any changes, including any insertions that <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>
1700 would protect against.
1701 Therefore, any insertions will be delayed until after
1702 <tt>-&gt;gp_lock</tt>
1703 is released on line&nbsp;25, which in turn means that
1704 <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt> suffices.
1705</font></td></tr>
1706<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
1707</table>
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1708
1709<p>
1710However, all that <tt>remove_gp_cb()</tt> is doing is
1711invoking <tt>kfree()</tt> on the data element.
1712This is a common idiom, and is supported by <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>,
1713which allows &ldquo;fire and forget&rdquo; operation as shown below:
1714
1715<blockquote>
1716<pre>
1717 1 struct foo {
1718 2 int a;
1719 3 int b;
1720 4 struct rcu_head rh;
1721 5 };
1722 6
1723 7 bool remove_gp_faf(void)
1724 8 {
1725 9 struct foo *p;
172610
172711 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
172812 p = rcu_dereference(gp);
172913 if (!p) {
173014 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
173115 return false;
173216 }
173317 rcu_assign_pointer(gp, NULL);
173418 kfree_rcu(p, rh);
173519 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
173620 return true;
173721 }
1738</pre>
1739</blockquote>
1740
1741<p>
1742Note that <tt>remove_gp_faf()</tt> simply invokes
1743<tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> and proceeds, without any need to pay any
1744further attention to the subsequent grace period and <tt>kfree()</tt>.
1745It is permissible to invoke <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> from the same
1746environments as for <tt>call_rcu()</tt>.
1747Interestingly enough, DYNIX/ptx had the equivalents of
1748<tt>call_rcu()</tt> and <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>, but not
1749<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
1750This was due to the fact that RCU was not heavily used within DYNIX/ptx,
1751so the very few places that needed something like
1752<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> simply open-coded it.
1753
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1754<table>
1755<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
1756<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
1757<tr><td>
1758 Earlier it was claimed that <tt>call_rcu()</tt> and
1759 <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> allowed updaters to avoid being blocked
1760 by readers.
1761 But how can that be correct, given that the invocation of the callback
1762 and the freeing of the memory (respectively) must still wait for
1763 a grace period to elapse?
1764</td></tr>
1765<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
1766<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
1767 We could define things this way, but keep in mind that this sort of
1768 definition would say that updates in garbage-collected languages
1769 cannot complete until the next time the garbage collector runs,
1770 which does not seem at all reasonable.
1771 The key point is that in most cases, an updater using either
1772 <tt>call_rcu()</tt> or <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> can proceed to the
1773 next update as soon as it has invoked <tt>call_rcu()</tt> or
1774 <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>, without having to wait for a subsequent
1775 grace period.
1776</font></td></tr>
1777<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
1778</table>
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1779
1780<p>
1781But what if the updater must wait for the completion of code to be
1782executed after the end of the grace period, but has other tasks
1783that can be carried out in the meantime?
1784The polling-style <tt>get_state_synchronize_rcu()</tt> and
1785<tt>cond_synchronize_rcu()</tt> functions may be used for this
1786purpose, as shown below:
1787
1788<blockquote>
1789<pre>
1790 1 bool remove_gp_poll(void)
1791 2 {
1792 3 struct foo *p;
1793 4 unsigned long s;
1794 5
1795 6 spin_lock(&amp;gp_lock);
1796 7 p = rcu_access_pointer(gp);
1797 8 if (!p) {
1798 9 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
179910 return false;
180011 }
180112 rcu_assign_pointer(gp, NULL);
180213 spin_unlock(&amp;gp_lock);
180314 s = get_state_synchronize_rcu();
180415 do_something_while_waiting();
180516 cond_synchronize_rcu(s);
180617 kfree(p);
180718 return true;
180819 }
1809</pre>
1810</blockquote>
1811
1812<p>
1813On line&nbsp;14, <tt>get_state_synchronize_rcu()</tt> obtains a
1814&ldquo;cookie&rdquo; from RCU,
1815then line&nbsp;15 carries out other tasks,
1816and finally, line&nbsp;16 returns immediately if a grace period has
1817elapsed in the meantime, but otherwise waits as required.
1818The need for <tt>get_state_synchronize_rcu</tt> and
1819<tt>cond_synchronize_rcu()</tt> has appeared quite recently,
1820so it is too early to tell whether they will stand the test of time.
1821
1822<p>
1823RCU thus provides a range of tools to allow updaters to strike the
1824required tradeoff between latency, flexibility and CPU overhead.
1825
1826<h3><a name="Composability">Composability</a></h3>
1827
1828<p>
1829Composability has received much attention in recent years, perhaps in part
1830due to the collision of multicore hardware with object-oriented techniques
1831designed in single-threaded environments for single-threaded use.
1832And in theory, RCU read-side critical sections may be composed, and in
1833fact may be nested arbitrarily deeply.
1834In practice, as with all real-world implementations of composable
1835constructs, there are limitations.
1836
1837<p>
1838Implementations of RCU for which <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
1839and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> generate no code, such as
1840Linux-kernel RCU when <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>, can be
1841nested arbitrarily deeply.
1842After all, there is no overhead.
1843Except that if all these instances of <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
1844and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> are visible to the compiler,
1845compilation will eventually fail due to exhausting memory,
1846mass storage, or user patience, whichever comes first.
1847If the nesting is not visible to the compiler, as is the case with
1848mutually recursive functions each in its own translation unit,
1849stack overflow will result.
1850If the nesting takes the form of loops, either the control variable
1851will overflow or (in the Linux kernel) you will get an RCU CPU stall warning.
1852Nevertheless, this class of RCU implementations is one
1853of the most composable constructs in existence.
1854
1855<p>
1856RCU implementations that explicitly track nesting depth
1857are limited by the nesting-depth counter.
1858For example, the Linux kernel's preemptible RCU limits nesting to
1859<tt>INT_MAX</tt>.
1860This should suffice for almost all practical purposes.
1861That said, a consecutive pair of RCU read-side critical sections
1862between which there is an operation that waits for a grace period
1863cannot be enclosed in another RCU read-side critical section.
1864This is because it is not legal to wait for a grace period within
1865an RCU read-side critical section: To do so would result either
1866in deadlock or
1867in RCU implicitly splitting the enclosing RCU read-side critical
1868section, neither of which is conducive to a long-lived and prosperous
1869kernel.
1870
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1871<p>
1872It is worth noting that RCU is not alone in limiting composability.
1873For example, many transactional-memory implementations prohibit
1874composing a pair of transactions separated by an irrevocable
1875operation (for example, a network receive operation).
1876For another example, lock-based critical sections can be composed
1877surprisingly freely, but only if deadlock is avoided.
1878
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1879<p>
1880In short, although RCU read-side critical sections are highly composable,
1881care is required in some situations, just as is the case for any other
1882composable synchronization mechanism.
1883
1884<h3><a name="Corner Cases">Corner Cases</a></h3>
1885
1886<p>
1887A given RCU workload might have an endless and intense stream of
1888RCU read-side critical sections, perhaps even so intense that there
1889was never a point in time during which there was not at least one
1890RCU read-side critical section in flight.
1891RCU cannot allow this situation to block grace periods: As long as
1892all the RCU read-side critical sections are finite, grace periods
1893must also be finite.
1894
1895<p>
1896That said, preemptible RCU implementations could potentially result
1897in RCU read-side critical sections being preempted for long durations,
1898which has the effect of creating a long-duration RCU read-side
1899critical section.
1900This situation can arise only in heavily loaded systems, but systems using
1901real-time priorities are of course more vulnerable.
1902Therefore, RCU priority boosting is provided to help deal with this
1903case.
1904That said, the exact requirements on RCU priority boosting will likely
1905evolve as more experience accumulates.
1906
1907<p>
1908Other workloads might have very high update rates.
1909Although one can argue that such workloads should instead use
1910something other than RCU, the fact remains that RCU must
1911handle such workloads gracefully.
1912This requirement is another factor driving batching of grace periods,
1913but it is also the driving force behind the checks for large numbers
1914of queued RCU callbacks in the <tt>call_rcu()</tt> code path.
1915Finally, high update rates should not delay RCU read-side critical
1916sections, although some read-side delays can occur when using
1917<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt>, courtesy of this function's use
1918of <tt>try_stop_cpus()</tt>.
1919(In the future, <tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> will be
1920converted to use lighter-weight inter-processor interrupts (IPIs),
1921but this will still disturb readers, though to a much smaller degree.)
1922
1923<p>
1924Although all three of these corner cases were understood in the early
19251990s, a simple user-level test consisting of <tt>close(open(path))</tt>
1926in a tight loop
1927in the early 2000s suddenly provided a much deeper appreciation of the
1928high-update-rate corner case.
1929This test also motivated addition of some RCU code to react to high update
1930rates, for example, if a given CPU finds itself with more than 10,000
1931RCU callbacks queued, it will cause RCU to take evasive action by
1932more aggressively starting grace periods and more aggressively forcing
1933completion of grace-period processing.
1934This evasive action causes the grace period to complete more quickly,
1935but at the cost of restricting RCU's batching optimizations, thus
1936increasing the CPU overhead incurred by that grace period.
1937
1938<h2><a name="Software-Engineering Requirements">
1939Software-Engineering Requirements</a></h2>
1940
1941<p>
1942Between Murphy's Law and &ldquo;To err is human&rdquo;, it is necessary to
1943guard against mishaps and misuse:
1944
1945<ol>
1946<li> It is all too easy to forget to use <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>
1947 everywhere that it is needed, so kernels built with
1948 <tt>CONFIG_PROVE_RCU=y</tt> will spat if
1949 <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> is used outside of an
1950 RCU read-side critical section.
1951 Update-side code can use <tt>rcu_dereference_protected()</tt>,
1952 which takes a
1953 <a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/371986/">lockdep expression</a>
1954 to indicate what is providing the protection.
1955 If the indicated protection is not provided, a lockdep splat
1956 is emitted.
1957
1958 <p>
1959 Code shared between readers and updaters can use
1960 <tt>rcu_dereference_check()</tt>, which also takes a
1961 lockdep expression, and emits a lockdep splat if neither
1962 <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> nor the indicated protection
1963 is in place.
1964 In addition, <tt>rcu_dereference_raw()</tt> is used in those
1965 (hopefully rare) cases where the required protection cannot
1966 be easily described.
1967 Finally, <tt>rcu_read_lock_held()</tt> is provided to
1968 allow a function to verify that it has been invoked within
1969 an RCU read-side critical section.
1970 I was made aware of this set of requirements shortly after Thomas
1971 Gleixner audited a number of RCU uses.
1972<li> A given function might wish to check for RCU-related preconditions
1973 upon entry, before using any other RCU API.
1974 The <tt>rcu_lockdep_assert()</tt> does this job,
1975 asserting the expression in kernels having lockdep enabled
1976 and doing nothing otherwise.
1977<li> It is also easy to forget to use <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt>
1978 and <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>, perhaps (incorrectly)
1979 substituting a simple assignment.
1980 To catch this sort of error, a given RCU-protected pointer may be
1981 tagged with <tt>__rcu</tt>, after which running sparse
1982 with <tt>CONFIG_SPARSE_RCU_POINTER=y</tt> will complain
1983 about simple-assignment accesses to that pointer.
1984 Arnd Bergmann made me aware of this requirement, and also
1985 supplied the needed
1986 <a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/376011/">patch series</a>.
1987<li> Kernels built with <tt>CONFIG_DEBUG_OBJECTS_RCU_HEAD=y</tt>
1988 will splat if a data element is passed to <tt>call_rcu()</tt>
1989 twice in a row, without a grace period in between.
1990 (This error is similar to a double free.)
1991 The corresponding <tt>rcu_head</tt> structures that are
1992 dynamically allocated are automatically tracked, but
1993 <tt>rcu_head</tt> structures allocated on the stack
1994 must be initialized with <tt>init_rcu_head_on_stack()</tt>
1995 and cleaned up with <tt>destroy_rcu_head_on_stack()</tt>.
1996 Similarly, statically allocated non-stack <tt>rcu_head</tt>
1997 structures must be initialized with <tt>init_rcu_head()</tt>
1998 and cleaned up with <tt>destroy_rcu_head()</tt>.
1999 Mathieu Desnoyers made me aware of this requirement, and also
2000 supplied the needed
2001 <a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/20100319013024.GA28456@Krystal">patch</a>.
2002<li> An infinite loop in an RCU read-side critical section will
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2003 eventually trigger an RCU CPU stall warning splat, with
2004 the duration of &ldquo;eventually&rdquo; being controlled by the
2005 <tt>RCU_CPU_STALL_TIMEOUT</tt> <tt>Kconfig</tt> option, or,
2006 alternatively, by the
2007 <tt>rcupdate.rcu_cpu_stall_timeout</tt> boot/sysfs
2008 parameter.
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2009 However, RCU is not obligated to produce this splat
2010 unless there is a grace period waiting on that particular
2011 RCU read-side critical section.
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2012 <p>
2013 Some extreme workloads might intentionally delay
2014 RCU grace periods, and systems running those workloads can
2015 be booted with <tt>rcupdate.rcu_cpu_stall_suppress</tt>
2016 to suppress the splats.
2017 This kernel parameter may also be set via <tt>sysfs</tt>.
2018 Furthermore, RCU CPU stall warnings are counter-productive
2019 during sysrq dumps and during panics.
2020 RCU therefore supplies the <tt>rcu_sysrq_start()</tt> and
2021 <tt>rcu_sysrq_end()</tt> API members to be called before
2022 and after long sysrq dumps.
2023 RCU also supplies the <tt>rcu_panic()</tt> notifier that is
2024 automatically invoked at the beginning of a panic to suppress
2025 further RCU CPU stall warnings.
2026
2027 <p>
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2028 This requirement made itself known in the early 1990s, pretty
2029 much the first time that it was necessary to debug a CPU stall.
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2030 That said, the initial implementation in DYNIX/ptx was quite
2031 generic in comparison with that of Linux.
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2032<li> Although it would be very good to detect pointers leaking out
2033 of RCU read-side critical sections, there is currently no
2034 good way of doing this.
2035 One complication is the need to distinguish between pointers
2036 leaking and pointers that have been handed off from RCU to
2037 some other synchronization mechanism, for example, reference
2038 counting.
2039<li> In kernels built with <tt>CONFIG_RCU_TRACE=y</tt>, RCU-related
2040 information is provided via both debugfs and event tracing.
2041<li> Open-coded use of <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt> and
2042 <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt> to create typical linked
2043 data structures can be surprisingly error-prone.
2044 Therefore, RCU-protected
2045 <a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/609973/#RCU List APIs">linked lists</a>
2046 and, more recently, RCU-protected
2047 <a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/612100/">hash tables</a>
2048 are available.
2049 Many other special-purpose RCU-protected data structures are
2050 available in the Linux kernel and the userspace RCU library.
2051<li> Some linked structures are created at compile time, but still
2052 require <tt>__rcu</tt> checking.
2053 The <tt>RCU_POINTER_INITIALIZER()</tt> macro serves this
2054 purpose.
2055<li> It is not necessary to use <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt>
2056 when creating linked structures that are to be published via
2057 a single external pointer.
2058 The <tt>RCU_INIT_POINTER()</tt> macro is provided for
2059 this task and also for assigning <tt>NULL</tt> pointers
2060 at runtime.
2061</ol>
2062
2063<p>
2064This not a hard-and-fast list: RCU's diagnostic capabilities will
2065continue to be guided by the number and type of usage bugs found
2066in real-world RCU usage.
2067
2068<h2><a name="Linux Kernel Complications">Linux Kernel Complications</a></h2>
2069
2070<p>
2071The Linux kernel provides an interesting environment for all kinds of
2072software, including RCU.
2073Some of the relevant points of interest are as follows:
2074
2075<ol>
2076<li> <a href="#Configuration">Configuration</a>.
2077<li> <a href="#Firmware Interface">Firmware Interface</a>.
2078<li> <a href="#Early Boot">Early Boot</a>.
2079<li> <a href="#Interrupts and NMIs">
2080 Interrupts and non-maskable interrupts (NMIs)</a>.
2081<li> <a href="#Loadable Modules">Loadable Modules</a>.
2082<li> <a href="#Hotplug CPU">Hotplug CPU</a>.
2083<li> <a href="#Scheduler and RCU">Scheduler and RCU</a>.
2084<li> <a href="#Tracing and RCU">Tracing and RCU</a>.
2085<li> <a href="#Energy Efficiency">Energy Efficiency</a>.
701e8031 2086<li> <a href="#Memory Efficiency">Memory Efficiency</a>.
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2087<li> <a href="#Performance, Scalability, Response Time, and Reliability">
2088 Performance, Scalability, Response Time, and Reliability</a>.
2089</ol>
2090
2091<p>
2092This list is probably incomplete, but it does give a feel for the
2093most notable Linux-kernel complications.
2094Each of the following sections covers one of the above topics.
2095
2096<h3><a name="Configuration">Configuration</a></h3>
2097
2098<p>
2099RCU's goal is automatic configuration, so that almost nobody
2100needs to worry about RCU's <tt>Kconfig</tt> options.
2101And for almost all users, RCU does in fact work well
2102&ldquo;out of the box.&rdquo;
2103
2104<p>
2105However, there are specialized use cases that are handled by
2106kernel boot parameters and <tt>Kconfig</tt> options.
2107Unfortunately, the <tt>Kconfig</tt> system will explicitly ask users
2108about new <tt>Kconfig</tt> options, which requires almost all of them
2109be hidden behind a <tt>CONFIG_RCU_EXPERT</tt> <tt>Kconfig</tt> option.
2110
2111<p>
2112This all should be quite obvious, but the fact remains that
2113Linus Torvalds recently had to
2114<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/CA+55aFy4wcCwaL4okTs8wXhGZ5h-ibecy_Meg9C4MNQrUnwMcg@mail.gmail.com">remind</a>
2115me of this requirement.
2116
2117<h3><a name="Firmware Interface">Firmware Interface</a></h3>
2118
2119<p>
2120In many cases, kernel obtains information about the system from the
2121firmware, and sometimes things are lost in translation.
2122Or the translation is accurate, but the original message is bogus.
2123
2124<p>
2125For example, some systems' firmware overreports the number of CPUs,
2126sometimes by a large factor.
2127If RCU naively believed the firmware, as it used to do,
2128it would create too many per-CPU kthreads.
2129Although the resulting system will still run correctly, the extra
2130kthreads needlessly consume memory and can cause confusion
2131when they show up in <tt>ps</tt> listings.
2132
2133<p>
2134RCU must therefore wait for a given CPU to actually come online before
2135it can allow itself to believe that the CPU actually exists.
2136The resulting &ldquo;ghost CPUs&rdquo; (which are never going to
2137come online) cause a number of
2138<a href="https://paulmck.livejournal.com/37494.html">interesting complications</a>.
2139
2140<h3><a name="Early Boot">Early Boot</a></h3>
2141
2142<p>
2143The Linux kernel's boot sequence is an interesting process,
2144and RCU is used early, even before <tt>rcu_init()</tt>
2145is invoked.
2146In fact, a number of RCU's primitives can be used as soon as the
2147initial task's <tt>task_struct</tt> is available and the
2148boot CPU's per-CPU variables are set up.
2149The read-side primitives (<tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt>,
2150<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>, <tt>rcu_dereference()</tt>,
2151and <tt>rcu_access_pointer()</tt>) will operate normally very early on,
2152as will <tt>rcu_assign_pointer()</tt>.
2153
2154<p>
2155Although <tt>call_rcu()</tt> may be invoked at any
2156time during boot, callbacks are not guaranteed to be invoked until after
2157the scheduler is fully up and running.
2158This delay in callback invocation is due to the fact that RCU does not
2159invoke callbacks until it is fully initialized, and this full initialization
2160cannot occur until after the scheduler has initialized itself to the
2161point where RCU can spawn and run its kthreads.
2162In theory, it would be possible to invoke callbacks earlier,
2163however, this is not a panacea because there would be severe restrictions
2164on what operations those callbacks could invoke.
2165
2166<p>
2167Perhaps surprisingly, <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>,
2168<a href="#Bottom-Half Flavor"><tt>synchronize_rcu_bh()</tt></a>
2169(<a href="#Bottom-Half Flavor">discussed below</a>),
2170and
2171<a href="#Sched Flavor"><tt>synchronize_sched()</tt></a>
2172will all operate normally
2173during very early boot, the reason being that there is only one CPU
2174and preemption is disabled.
2175This means that the call <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> (or friends)
2176itself is a quiescent
2177state and thus a grace period, so the early-boot implementation can
2178be a no-op.
2179
2180<p>
2181Both <tt>synchronize_rcu_bh()</tt> and <tt>synchronize_sched()</tt>
2182continue to operate normally through the remainder of boot, courtesy
2183of the fact that preemption is disabled across their RCU read-side
2184critical sections and also courtesy of the fact that there is still
2185only one CPU.
2186However, once the scheduler starts initializing, preemption is enabled.
2187There is still only a single CPU, but the fact that preemption is enabled
2188means that the no-op implementation of <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> no
2189longer works in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> kernels.
2190Therefore, as soon as the scheduler starts initializing, the early-boot
2191fastpath is disabled.
2192This means that <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> switches to its runtime
2193mode of operation where it posts callbacks, which in turn means that
2194any call to <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> will block until the corresponding
2195callback is invoked.
2196Unfortunately, the callback cannot be invoked until RCU's runtime
2197grace-period machinery is up and running, which cannot happen until
2198the scheduler has initialized itself sufficiently to allow RCU's
2199kthreads to be spawned.
2200Therefore, invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> during scheduler
2201initialization can result in deadlock.
2202
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2203<table>
2204<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
2205<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
2206<tr><td>
2207 So what happens with <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> during
2208 scheduler initialization for <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>
2209 kernels?
2210</td></tr>
2211<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
2212<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
2213 In <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt> kernel, <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
2214 maps directly to <tt>synchronize_sched()</tt>.
2215 Therefore, <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> works normally throughout
2216 boot in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt> kernels.
2217 However, your code must also work in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> kernels,
2218 so it is still necessary to avoid invoking <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>
2219 during scheduler initialization.
2220</font></td></tr>
2221<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
2222</table>
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2223
2224<p>
2225I learned of these boot-time requirements as a result of a series of
2226system hangs.
2227
2228<h3><a name="Interrupts and NMIs">Interrupts and NMIs</a></h3>
2229
2230<p>
2231The Linux kernel has interrupts, and RCU read-side critical sections are
2232legal within interrupt handlers and within interrupt-disabled regions
2233of code, as are invocations of <tt>call_rcu()</tt>.
2234
2235<p>
2236Some Linux-kernel architectures can enter an interrupt handler from
2237non-idle process context, and then just never leave it, instead stealthily
2238transitioning back to process context.
2239This trick is sometimes used to invoke system calls from inside the kernel.
2240These &ldquo;half-interrupts&rdquo; mean that RCU has to be very careful
2241about how it counts interrupt nesting levels.
2242I learned of this requirement the hard way during a rewrite
2243of RCU's dyntick-idle code.
2244
2245<p>
2246The Linux kernel has non-maskable interrupts (NMIs), and
2247RCU read-side critical sections are legal within NMI handlers.
2248Thankfully, RCU update-side primitives, including
2249<tt>call_rcu()</tt>, are prohibited within NMI handlers.
2250
2251<p>
2252The name notwithstanding, some Linux-kernel architectures
2253can have nested NMIs, which RCU must handle correctly.
2254Andy Lutomirski
2255<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/CALCETrXLq1y7e_dKFPgou-FKHB6Pu-r8+t-6Ds+8=va7anBWDA@mail.gmail.com">surprised me</a>
2256with this requirement;
2257he also kindly surprised me with
2258<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/CALCETrXSY9JpW3uE6H8WYk81sg56qasA2aqmjMPsq5dOtzso=g@mail.gmail.com">an algorithm</a>
2259that meets this requirement.
2260
2261<h3><a name="Loadable Modules">Loadable Modules</a></h3>
2262
2263<p>
2264The Linux kernel has loadable modules, and these modules can
2265also be unloaded.
2266After a given module has been unloaded, any attempt to call
2267one of its functions results in a segmentation fault.
2268The module-unload functions must therefore cancel any
2269delayed calls to loadable-module functions, for example,
2270any outstanding <tt>mod_timer()</tt> must be dealt with
2271via <tt>del_timer_sync()</tt> or similar.
2272
2273<p>
2274Unfortunately, there is no way to cancel an RCU callback;
2275once you invoke <tt>call_rcu()</tt>, the callback function is
2276going to eventually be invoked, unless the system goes down first.
2277Because it is normally considered socially irresponsible to crash the system
2278in response to a module unload request, we need some other way
2279to deal with in-flight RCU callbacks.
2280
2281<p>
2282RCU therefore provides
2283<tt><a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/217484/">rcu_barrier()</a></tt>,
2284which waits until all in-flight RCU callbacks have been invoked.
2285If a module uses <tt>call_rcu()</tt>, its exit function should therefore
2286prevent any future invocation of <tt>call_rcu()</tt>, then invoke
2287<tt>rcu_barrier()</tt>.
2288In theory, the underlying module-unload code could invoke
2289<tt>rcu_barrier()</tt> unconditionally, but in practice this would
2290incur unacceptable latencies.
2291
2292<p>
2293Nikita Danilov noted this requirement for an analogous filesystem-unmount
2294situation, and Dipankar Sarma incorporated <tt>rcu_barrier()</tt> into RCU.
2295The need for <tt>rcu_barrier()</tt> for module unloading became
2296apparent later.
2297
2298<h3><a name="Hotplug CPU">Hotplug CPU</a></h3>
2299
2300<p>
2301The Linux kernel supports CPU hotplug, which means that CPUs
2302can come and go.
2303It is of course illegal to use any RCU API member from an offline CPU.
2304This requirement was present from day one in DYNIX/ptx, but
2305on the other hand, the Linux kernel's CPU-hotplug implementation
2306is &ldquo;interesting.&rdquo;
2307
2308<p>
2309The Linux-kernel CPU-hotplug implementation has notifiers that
2310are used to allow the various kernel subsystems (including RCU)
2311to respond appropriately to a given CPU-hotplug operation.
2312Most RCU operations may be invoked from CPU-hotplug notifiers,
2313including even normal synchronous grace-period operations
2314such as <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>.
2315However, expedited grace-period operations such as
2316<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt> are not supported,
2317due to the fact that current implementations block CPU-hotplug
2318operations, which could result in deadlock.
2319
2320<p>
2321In addition, all-callback-wait operations such as
2322<tt>rcu_barrier()</tt> are also not supported, due to the
2323fact that there are phases of CPU-hotplug operations where
2324the outgoing CPU's callbacks will not be invoked until after
2325the CPU-hotplug operation ends, which could also result in deadlock.
2326
2327<h3><a name="Scheduler and RCU">Scheduler and RCU</a></h3>
2328
2329<p>
2330RCU depends on the scheduler, and the scheduler uses RCU to
2331protect some of its data structures.
2332This means the scheduler is forbidden from acquiring
2333the runqueue locks and the priority-inheritance locks
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2334in the middle of an outermost RCU read-side critical section unless either
2335(1)&nbsp;it releases them before exiting that same
2336RCU read-side critical section, or
c64c4b0f 2337(2)&nbsp;interrupts are disabled across
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2338that entire RCU read-side critical section.
2339This same prohibition also applies (recursively!) to any lock that is acquired
649e4368 2340while holding any lock to which this prohibition applies.
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2341Adhering to this rule prevents preemptible RCU from invoking
2342<tt>rcu_read_unlock_special()</tt> while either runqueue or
2343priority-inheritance locks are held, thus avoiding deadlock.
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2345<p>
2346Prior to v4.4, it was only necessary to disable preemption across
2347RCU read-side critical sections that acquired scheduler locks.
2348In v4.4, expedited grace periods started using IPIs, and these
2349IPIs could force a <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> to take the slowpath.
2350Therefore, this expedited-grace-period change required disabling of
2351interrupts, not just preemption.
2352
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2353<p>
2354For RCU's part, the preemptible-RCU <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
2355implementation must be written carefully to avoid similar deadlocks.
2356In particular, <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> must tolerate an
2357interrupt where the interrupt handler invokes both
2358<tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>.
2359This possibility requires <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> to use
2360negative nesting levels to avoid destructive recursion via
2361interrupt handler's use of RCU.
2362
2363<p>
2364This pair of mutual scheduler-RCU requirements came as a
2365<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/453002/">complete surprise</a>.
2366
2367<p>
2368As noted above, RCU makes use of kthreads, and it is necessary to
2369avoid excessive CPU-time accumulation by these kthreads.
2370This requirement was no surprise, but RCU's violation of it
2371when running context-switch-heavy workloads when built with
2372<tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_FULL=y</tt>
2373<a href="http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/scalability/paper/BareMetal.2015.01.15b.pdf">did come as a surprise [PDF]</a>.
2374RCU has made good progress towards meeting this requirement, even
2375for context-switch-have <tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_FULL=y</tt> workloads,
2376but there is room for further improvement.
2377
2378<h3><a name="Tracing and RCU">Tracing and RCU</a></h3>
2379
2380<p>
2381It is possible to use tracing on RCU code, but tracing itself
2382uses RCU.
2383For this reason, <tt>rcu_dereference_raw_notrace()</tt>
2384is provided for use by tracing, which avoids the destructive
2385recursion that could otherwise ensue.
2386This API is also used by virtualization in some architectures,
2387where RCU readers execute in environments in which tracing
2388cannot be used.
2389The tracing folks both located the requirement and provided the
2390needed fix, so this surprise requirement was relatively painless.
2391
2392<h3><a name="Energy Efficiency">Energy Efficiency</a></h3>
2393
2394<p>
2395Interrupting idle CPUs is considered socially unacceptable,
2396especially by people with battery-powered embedded systems.
2397RCU therefore conserves energy by detecting which CPUs are
2398idle, including tracking CPUs that have been interrupted from idle.
2399This is a large part of the energy-efficiency requirement,
2400so I learned of this via an irate phone call.
2401
2402<p>
2403Because RCU avoids interrupting idle CPUs, it is illegal to
2404execute an RCU read-side critical section on an idle CPU.
2405(Kernels built with <tt>CONFIG_PROVE_RCU=y</tt> will splat
2406if you try it.)
2407The <tt>RCU_NONIDLE()</tt> macro and <tt>_rcuidle</tt>
2408event tracing is provided to work around this restriction.
2409In addition, <tt>rcu_is_watching()</tt> may be used to
2410test whether or not it is currently legal to run RCU read-side
2411critical sections on this CPU.
2412I learned of the need for diagnostics on the one hand
2413and <tt>RCU_NONIDLE()</tt> on the other while inspecting
2414idle-loop code.
2415Steven Rostedt supplied <tt>_rcuidle</tt> event tracing,
2416which is used quite heavily in the idle loop.
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2417However, there are some restrictions on the code placed within
2418<tt>RCU_NONIDLE()</tt>:
2419
2420<ol>
2421<li> Blocking is prohibited.
2422 In practice, this is not a serious restriction given that idle
2423 tasks are prohibited from blocking to begin with.
2424<li> Although nesting <tt>RCU_NONIDLE()</tt> is permited, they cannot
2425 nest indefinitely deeply.
2426 However, given that they can be nested on the order of a million
2427 deep, even on 32-bit systems, this should not be a serious
2428 restriction.
2429 This nesting limit would probably be reached long after the
2430 compiler OOMed or the stack overflowed.
2431<li> Any code path that enters <tt>RCU_NONIDLE()</tt> must sequence
2432 out of that same <tt>RCU_NONIDLE()</tt>.
2433 For example, the following is grossly illegal:
2434
2435 <blockquote>
2436 <pre>
2437 1 RCU_NONIDLE({
2438 2 do_something();
2439 3 goto bad_idea; /* BUG!!! */
2440 4 do_something_else();});
2441 5 bad_idea:
2442 </pre>
2443 </blockquote>
2444
2445 <p>
2446 It is just as illegal to transfer control into the middle of
2447 <tt>RCU_NONIDLE()</tt>'s argument.
2448 Yes, in theory, you could transfer in as long as you also
2449 transferred out, but in practice you could also expect to get sharply
2450 worded review comments.
2451</ol>
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2452
2453<p>
2454It is similarly socially unacceptable to interrupt an
2455<tt>nohz_full</tt> CPU running in userspace.
2456RCU must therefore track <tt>nohz_full</tt> userspace
2457execution.
2458And in
2459<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/558284/"><tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_FULL_SYSIDLE=y</tt></a>
2460kernels, RCU must separately track idle CPUs on the one hand and
2461CPUs that are either idle or executing in userspace on the other.
2462In both cases, RCU must be able to sample state at two points in
2463time, and be able to determine whether or not some other CPU spent
2464any time idle and/or executing in userspace.
2465
2466<p>
2467These energy-efficiency requirements have proven quite difficult to
2468understand and to meet, for example, there have been more than five
2469clean-sheet rewrites of RCU's energy-efficiency code, the last of
2470which was finally able to demonstrate
2471<a href="http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/realtime/paper/AMPenergy.2013.04.19a.pdf">real energy savings running on real hardware [PDF]</a>.
2472As noted earlier,
2473I learned of many of these requirements via angry phone calls:
2474Flaming me on the Linux-kernel mailing list was apparently not
2475sufficient to fully vent their ire at RCU's energy-efficiency bugs!
2476
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2477<h3><a name="Memory Efficiency">Memory Efficiency</a></h3>
2478
2479<p>
2480Although small-memory non-realtime systems can simply use Tiny RCU,
2481code size is only one aspect of memory efficiency.
2482Another aspect is the size of the <tt>rcu_head</tt> structure
2483used by <tt>call_rcu()</tt> and <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>.
2484Although this structure contains nothing more than a pair of pointers,
2485it does appear in many RCU-protected data structures, including
2486some that are size critical.
2487The <tt>page</tt> structure is a case in point, as evidenced by
2488the many occurrences of the <tt>union</tt> keyword within that structure.
2489
2490<p>
2491This need for memory efficiency is one reason that RCU uses hand-crafted
2492singly linked lists to track the <tt>rcu_head</tt> structures that
2493are waiting for a grace period to elapse.
2494It is also the reason why <tt>rcu_head</tt> structures do not contain
2495debug information, such as fields tracking the file and line of the
2496<tt>call_rcu()</tt> or <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt> that posted them.
2497Although this information might appear in debug-only kernel builds at some
2498point, in the meantime, the <tt>-&gt;func</tt> field will often provide
2499the needed debug information.
2500
2501<p>
2502However, in some cases, the need for memory efficiency leads to even
2503more extreme measures.
2504Returning to the <tt>page</tt> structure, the <tt>rcu_head</tt> field
2505shares storage with a great many other structures that are used at
2506various points in the corresponding page's lifetime.
2507In order to correctly resolve certain
2508<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/1439976106-137226-1-git-send-email-kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com">race conditions</a>,
2509the Linux kernel's memory-management subsystem needs a particular bit
2510to remain zero during all phases of grace-period processing,
2511and that bit happens to map to the bottom bit of the
2512<tt>rcu_head</tt> structure's <tt>-&gt;next</tt> field.
2513RCU makes this guarantee as long as <tt>call_rcu()</tt>
2514is used to post the callback, as opposed to <tt>kfree_rcu()</tt>
2515or some future &ldquo;lazy&rdquo;
2516variant of <tt>call_rcu()</tt> that might one day be created for
2517energy-efficiency purposes.
2518
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2519<p>
2520That said, there are limits.
2521RCU requires that the <tt>rcu_head</tt> structure be aligned to a
2522two-byte boundary, and passing a misaligned <tt>rcu_head</tt>
2523structure to one of the <tt>call_rcu()</tt> family of functions
2524will result in a splat.
2525It is therefore necessary to exercise caution when packing
2526structures containing fields of type <tt>rcu_head</tt>.
2527Why not a four-byte or even eight-byte alignment requirement?
2528Because the m68k architecture provides only two-byte alignment,
2529and thus acts as alignment's least common denominator.
2530
2531<p>
2532The reason for reserving the bottom bit of pointers to
2533<tt>rcu_head</tt> structures is to leave the door open to
2534&ldquo;lazy&rdquo; callbacks whose invocations can safely be deferred.
2535Deferring invocation could potentially have energy-efficiency
2536benefits, but only if the rate of non-lazy callbacks decreases
2537significantly for some important workload.
2538In the meantime, reserving the bottom bit keeps this option open
2539in case it one day becomes useful.
2540
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2541<h3><a name="Performance, Scalability, Response Time, and Reliability">
2542Performance, Scalability, Response Time, and Reliability</a></h3>
2543
2544<p>
2545Expanding on the
2546<a href="#Performance and Scalability">earlier discussion</a>,
2547RCU is used heavily by hot code paths in performance-critical
2548portions of the Linux kernel's networking, security, virtualization,
2549and scheduling code paths.
2550RCU must therefore use efficient implementations, especially in its
2551read-side primitives.
2552To that end, it would be good if preemptible RCU's implementation
2553of <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> could be inlined, however, doing
2554this requires resolving <tt>#include</tt> issues with the
2555<tt>task_struct</tt> structure.
2556
2557<p>
2558The Linux kernel supports hardware configurations with up to
25594096 CPUs, which means that RCU must be extremely scalable.
2560Algorithms that involve frequent acquisitions of global locks or
2561frequent atomic operations on global variables simply cannot be
2562tolerated within the RCU implementation.
2563RCU therefore makes heavy use of a combining tree based on the
2564<tt>rcu_node</tt> structure.
2565RCU is required to tolerate all CPUs continuously invoking any
2566combination of RCU's runtime primitives with minimal per-operation
2567overhead.
2568In fact, in many cases, increasing load must <i>decrease</i> the
2569per-operation overhead, witness the batching optimizations for
2570<tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt>, <tt>call_rcu()</tt>,
2571<tt>synchronize_rcu_expedited()</tt>, and <tt>rcu_barrier()</tt>.
2572As a general rule, RCU must cheerfully accept whatever the
2573rest of the Linux kernel decides to throw at it.
2574
2575<p>
2576The Linux kernel is used for real-time workloads, especially
2577in conjunction with the
2578<a href="https://rt.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Main_Page">-rt patchset</a>.
2579The real-time-latency response requirements are such that the
2580traditional approach of disabling preemption across RCU
2581read-side critical sections is inappropriate.
2582Kernels built with <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> therefore
2583use an RCU implementation that allows RCU read-side critical
2584sections to be preempted.
2585This requirement made its presence known after users made it
2586clear that an earlier
2587<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/107930/">real-time patch</a>
2588did not meet their needs, in conjunction with some
2589<a href="https://lkml.kernel.org/g/20050318002026.GA2693@us.ibm.com">RCU issues</a>
2590encountered by a very early version of the -rt patchset.
2591
2592<p>
2593In addition, RCU must make do with a sub-100-microsecond real-time latency
2594budget.
2595In fact, on smaller systems with the -rt patchset, the Linux kernel
2596provides sub-20-microsecond real-time latencies for the whole kernel,
2597including RCU.
2598RCU's scalability and latency must therefore be sufficient for
2599these sorts of configurations.
2600To my surprise, the sub-100-microsecond real-time latency budget
2601<a href="http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/realtime/paper/bigrt.2013.01.31a.LCA.pdf">
2602applies to even the largest systems [PDF]</a>,
2603up to and including systems with 4096 CPUs.
2604This real-time requirement motivated the grace-period kthread, which
2605also simplified handling of a number of race conditions.
2606
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2607<p>
2608RCU must avoid degrading real-time response for CPU-bound threads, whether
2609executing in usermode (which is one use case for
2610<tt>CONFIG_NO_HZ_FULL=y</tt>) or in the kernel.
2611That said, CPU-bound loops in the kernel must execute
2612<tt>cond_resched_rcu_qs()</tt> at least once per few tens of milliseconds
2613in order to avoid receiving an IPI from RCU.
2614
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2615<p>
2616Finally, RCU's status as a synchronization primitive means that
2617any RCU failure can result in arbitrary memory corruption that can be
2618extremely difficult to debug.
2619This means that RCU must be extremely reliable, which in
2620practice also means that RCU must have an aggressive stress-test
2621suite.
2622This stress-test suite is called <tt>rcutorture</tt>.
2623
2624<p>
2625Although the need for <tt>rcutorture</tt> was no surprise,
2626the current immense popularity of the Linux kernel is posing
2627interesting&mdash;and perhaps unprecedented&mdash;validation
2628challenges.
2629To see this, keep in mind that there are well over one billion
2630instances of the Linux kernel running today, given Android
2631smartphones, Linux-powered televisions, and servers.
2632This number can be expected to increase sharply with the advent of
2633the celebrated Internet of Things.
2634
2635<p>
2636Suppose that RCU contains a race condition that manifests on average
2637once per million years of runtime.
2638This bug will be occurring about three times per <i>day</i> across
2639the installed base.
2640RCU could simply hide behind hardware error rates, given that no one
2641should really expect their smartphone to last for a million years.
2642However, anyone taking too much comfort from this thought should
2643consider the fact that in most jurisdictions, a successful multi-year
2644test of a given mechanism, which might include a Linux kernel,
2645suffices for a number of types of safety-critical certifications.
2646In fact, rumor has it that the Linux kernel is already being used
2647in production for safety-critical applications.
2648I don't know about you, but I would feel quite bad if a bug in RCU
2649killed someone.
2650Which might explain my recent focus on validation and verification.
2651
2652<h2><a name="Other RCU Flavors">Other RCU Flavors</a></h2>
2653
2654<p>
2655One of the more surprising things about RCU is that there are now
2656no fewer than five <i>flavors</i>, or API families.
2657In addition, the primary flavor that has been the sole focus up to
2658this point has two different implementations, non-preemptible and
2659preemptible.
2660The other four flavors are listed below, with requirements for each
2661described in a separate section.
2662
2663<ol>
2664<li> <a href="#Bottom-Half Flavor">Bottom-Half Flavor</a>
2665<li> <a href="#Sched Flavor">Sched Flavor</a>
2666<li> <a href="#Sleepable RCU">Sleepable RCU</a>
2667<li> <a href="#Tasks RCU">Tasks RCU</a>
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2668<li> <a href="#Waiting for Multiple Grace Periods">
2669 Waiting for Multiple Grace Periods</a>
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2670</ol>
2671
2672<h3><a name="Bottom-Half Flavor">Bottom-Half Flavor</a></h3>
2673
2674<p>
2675The softirq-disable (AKA &ldquo;bottom-half&rdquo;,
2676hence the &ldquo;_bh&rdquo; abbreviations)
2677flavor of RCU, or <i>RCU-bh</i>, was developed by
2678Dipankar Sarma to provide a flavor of RCU that could withstand the
2679network-based denial-of-service attacks researched by Robert
2680Olsson.
2681These attacks placed so much networking load on the system
2682that some of the CPUs never exited softirq execution,
2683which in turn prevented those CPUs from ever executing a context switch,
2684which, in the RCU implementation of that time, prevented grace periods
2685from ever ending.
2686The result was an out-of-memory condition and a system hang.
2687
2688<p>
2689The solution was the creation of RCU-bh, which does
2690<tt>local_bh_disable()</tt>
2691across its read-side critical sections, and which uses the transition
2692from one type of softirq processing to another as a quiescent state
2693in addition to context switch, idle, user mode, and offline.
2694This means that RCU-bh grace periods can complete even when some of
2695the CPUs execute in softirq indefinitely, thus allowing algorithms
2696based on RCU-bh to withstand network-based denial-of-service attacks.
2697
2698<p>
2699Because
2700<tt>rcu_read_lock_bh()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>
2701disable and re-enable softirq handlers, any attempt to start a softirq
2702handlers during the
2703RCU-bh read-side critical section will be deferred.
2704In this case, <tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>
2705will invoke softirq processing, which can take considerable time.
2706One can of course argue that this softirq overhead should be associated
2707with the code following the RCU-bh read-side critical section rather
2708than <tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>, but the fact
2709is that most profiling tools cannot be expected to make this sort
2710of fine distinction.
2711For example, suppose that a three-millisecond-long RCU-bh read-side
2712critical section executes during a time of heavy networking load.
2713There will very likely be an attempt to invoke at least one softirq
2714handler during that three milliseconds, but any such invocation will
2715be delayed until the time of the <tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>.
2716This can of course make it appear at first glance as if
2717<tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt> was executing very slowly.
2718
2719<p>
2720The
2721<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/609973/#RCU Per-Flavor API Table">RCU-bh API</a>
2722includes
2723<tt>rcu_read_lock_bh()</tt>,
2724<tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>,
2725<tt>rcu_dereference_bh()</tt>,
2726<tt>rcu_dereference_bh_check()</tt>,
2727<tt>synchronize_rcu_bh()</tt>,
2728<tt>synchronize_rcu_bh_expedited()</tt>,
2729<tt>call_rcu_bh()</tt>,
2730<tt>rcu_barrier_bh()</tt>, and
2731<tt>rcu_read_lock_bh_held()</tt>.
2732
2733<h3><a name="Sched Flavor">Sched Flavor</a></h3>
2734
2735<p>
2736Before preemptible RCU, waiting for an RCU grace period had the
2737side effect of also waiting for all pre-existing interrupt
2738and NMI handlers.
2739However, there are legitimate preemptible-RCU implementations that
2740do not have this property, given that any point in the code outside
2741of an RCU read-side critical section can be a quiescent state.
2742Therefore, <i>RCU-sched</i> was created, which follows &ldquo;classic&rdquo;
2743RCU in that an RCU-sched grace period waits for for pre-existing
2744interrupt and NMI handlers.
2745In kernels built with <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>, the RCU and RCU-sched
2746APIs have identical implementations, while kernels built with
2747<tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> provide a separate implementation for each.
2748
2749<p>
2750Note well that in <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=y</tt> kernels,
2751<tt>rcu_read_lock_sched()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched()</tt>
2752disable and re-enable preemption, respectively.
2753This means that if there was a preemption attempt during the
2754RCU-sched read-side critical section, <tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched()</tt>
2755will enter the scheduler, with all the latency and overhead entailed.
2756Just as with <tt>rcu_read_unlock_bh()</tt>, this can make it look
2757as if <tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched()</tt> was executing very slowly.
2758However, the highest-priority task won't be preempted, so that task
2759will enjoy low-overhead <tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched()</tt> invocations.
2760
2761<p>
2762The
2763<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/609973/#RCU Per-Flavor API Table">RCU-sched API</a>
2764includes
2765<tt>rcu_read_lock_sched()</tt>,
2766<tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched()</tt>,
2767<tt>rcu_read_lock_sched_notrace()</tt>,
2768<tt>rcu_read_unlock_sched_notrace()</tt>,
2769<tt>rcu_dereference_sched()</tt>,
2770<tt>rcu_dereference_sched_check()</tt>,
2771<tt>synchronize_sched()</tt>,
2772<tt>synchronize_rcu_sched_expedited()</tt>,
2773<tt>call_rcu_sched()</tt>,
2774<tt>rcu_barrier_sched()</tt>, and
2775<tt>rcu_read_lock_sched_held()</tt>.
2776However, anything that disables preemption also marks an RCU-sched
2777read-side critical section, including
2778<tt>preempt_disable()</tt> and <tt>preempt_enable()</tt>,
2779<tt>local_irq_save()</tt> and <tt>local_irq_restore()</tt>,
2780and so on.
2781
2782<h3><a name="Sleepable RCU">Sleepable RCU</a></h3>
2783
2784<p>
2785For well over a decade, someone saying &ldquo;I need to block within
2786an RCU read-side critical section&rdquo; was a reliable indication
2787that this someone did not understand RCU.
2788After all, if you are always blocking in an RCU read-side critical
2789section, you can probably afford to use a higher-overhead synchronization
2790mechanism.
2791However, that changed with the advent of the Linux kernel's notifiers,
2792whose RCU read-side critical
2793sections almost never sleep, but sometimes need to.
2794This resulted in the introduction of
2795<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/202847/">sleepable RCU</a>,
2796or <i>SRCU</i>.
2797
2798<p>
2799SRCU allows different domains to be defined, with each such domain
2800defined by an instance of an <tt>srcu_struct</tt> structure.
2801A pointer to this structure must be passed in to each SRCU function,
2802for example, <tt>synchronize_srcu(&amp;ss)</tt>, where
2803<tt>ss</tt> is the <tt>srcu_struct</tt> structure.
2804The key benefit of these domains is that a slow SRCU reader in one
2805domain does not delay an SRCU grace period in some other domain.
2806That said, one consequence of these domains is that read-side code
2807must pass a &ldquo;cookie&rdquo; from <tt>srcu_read_lock()</tt>
2808to <tt>srcu_read_unlock()</tt>, for example, as follows:
2809
2810<blockquote>
2811<pre>
2812 1 int idx;
2813 2
2814 3 idx = srcu_read_lock(&amp;ss);
2815 4 do_something();
2816 5 srcu_read_unlock(&amp;ss, idx);
2817</pre>
2818</blockquote>
2819
2820<p>
2821As noted above, it is legal to block within SRCU read-side critical sections,
2822however, with great power comes great responsibility.
2823If you block forever in one of a given domain's SRCU read-side critical
2824sections, then that domain's grace periods will also be blocked forever.
2825Of course, one good way to block forever is to deadlock, which can
2826happen if any operation in a given domain's SRCU read-side critical
2827section can block waiting, either directly or indirectly, for that domain's
2828grace period to elapse.
2829For example, this results in a self-deadlock:
2830
2831<blockquote>
2832<pre>
2833 1 int idx;
2834 2
2835 3 idx = srcu_read_lock(&amp;ss);
2836 4 do_something();
2837 5 synchronize_srcu(&amp;ss);
2838 6 srcu_read_unlock(&amp;ss, idx);
2839</pre>
2840</blockquote>
2841
2842<p>
2843However, if line&nbsp;5 acquired a mutex that was held across
2844a <tt>synchronize_srcu()</tt> for domain <tt>ss</tt>,
2845deadlock would still be possible.
2846Furthermore, if line&nbsp;5 acquired a mutex that was held across
2847a <tt>synchronize_srcu()</tt> for some other domain <tt>ss1</tt>,
2848and if an <tt>ss1</tt>-domain SRCU read-side critical section
2849acquired another mutex that was held across as <tt>ss</tt>-domain
2850<tt>synchronize_srcu()</tt>,
2851deadlock would again be possible.
2852Such a deadlock cycle could extend across an arbitrarily large number
2853of different SRCU domains.
2854Again, with great power comes great responsibility.
2855
2856<p>
2857Unlike the other RCU flavors, SRCU read-side critical sections can
2858run on idle and even offline CPUs.
2859This ability requires that <tt>srcu_read_lock()</tt> and
2860<tt>srcu_read_unlock()</tt> contain memory barriers, which means
2861that SRCU readers will run a bit slower than would RCU readers.
2862It also motivates the <tt>smp_mb__after_srcu_read_unlock()</tt>
2863API, which, in combination with <tt>srcu_read_unlock()</tt>,
2864guarantees a full memory barrier.
2865
2866<p>
2867The
2868<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/609973/#RCU Per-Flavor API Table">SRCU API</a>
2869includes
2870<tt>srcu_read_lock()</tt>,
2871<tt>srcu_read_unlock()</tt>,
2872<tt>srcu_dereference()</tt>,
2873<tt>srcu_dereference_check()</tt>,
2874<tt>synchronize_srcu()</tt>,
2875<tt>synchronize_srcu_expedited()</tt>,
2876<tt>call_srcu()</tt>,
2877<tt>srcu_barrier()</tt>, and
2878<tt>srcu_read_lock_held()</tt>.
2879It also includes
2880<tt>DEFINE_SRCU()</tt>,
2881<tt>DEFINE_STATIC_SRCU()</tt>, and
2882<tt>init_srcu_struct()</tt>
2883APIs for defining and initializing <tt>srcu_struct</tt> structures.
2884
2885<h3><a name="Tasks RCU">Tasks RCU</a></h3>
2886
2887<p>
2888Some forms of tracing use &ldquo;tramopolines&rdquo; to handle the
2889binary rewriting required to install different types of probes.
2890It would be good to be able to free old trampolines, which sounds
2891like a job for some form of RCU.
2892However, because it is necessary to be able to install a trace
2893anywhere in the code, it is not possible to use read-side markers
2894such as <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>.
2895In addition, it does not work to have these markers in the trampoline
2896itself, because there would need to be instructions following
2897<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>.
2898Although <tt>synchronize_rcu()</tt> would guarantee that execution
2899reached the <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>, it would not be able to
2900guarantee that execution had completely left the trampoline.
2901
2902<p>
2903The solution, in the form of
2904<a href="https://lwn.net/Articles/607117/"><i>Tasks RCU</i></a>,
2905is to have implicit
2906read-side critical sections that are delimited by voluntary context
2907switches, that is, calls to <tt>schedule()</tt>,
2908<tt>cond_resched_rcu_qs()</tt>, and
2909<tt>synchronize_rcu_tasks()</tt>.
2910In addition, transitions to and from userspace execution also delimit
2911tasks-RCU read-side critical sections.
2912
2913<p>
2914The tasks-RCU API is quite compact, consisting only of
2915<tt>call_rcu_tasks()</tt>,
2916<tt>synchronize_rcu_tasks()</tt>, and
2917<tt>rcu_barrier_tasks()</tt>.
2918
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2919<h3><a name="Waiting for Multiple Grace Periods">
2920Waiting for Multiple Grace Periods</a></h3>
2921
2922<p>
2923Perhaps you have an RCU protected data structure that is accessed from
2924RCU read-side critical sections, from softirq handlers, and from
2925hardware interrupt handlers.
2926That is three flavors of RCU, the normal flavor, the bottom-half flavor,
2927and the sched flavor.
2928How to wait for a compound grace period?
2929
2930<p>
2931The best approach is usually to &ldquo;just say no!&rdquo; and
2932insert <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and <tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt>
2933around each RCU read-side critical section, regardless of what
2934environment it happens to be in.
2935But suppose that some of the RCU read-side critical sections are
2936on extremely hot code paths, and that use of <tt>CONFIG_PREEMPT=n</tt>
2937is not a viable option, so that <tt>rcu_read_lock()</tt> and
2938<tt>rcu_read_unlock()</tt> are not free.
2939What then?
2940
2941<p>
2942You <i>could</i> wait on all three grace periods in succession, as follows:
2943
2944<blockquote>
2945<pre>
2946 1 synchronize_rcu();
2947 2 synchronize_rcu_bh();
2948 3 synchronize_sched();
2949</pre>
2950</blockquote>
2951
2952<p>
2953This works, but triples the update-side latency penalty.
2954In cases where this is not acceptable, <tt>synchronize_rcu_mult()</tt>
2955may be used to wait on all three flavors of grace period concurrently:
2956
2957<blockquote>
2958<pre>
2959 1 synchronize_rcu_mult(call_rcu, call_rcu_bh, call_rcu_sched);
2960</pre>
2961</blockquote>
2962
2963<p>
2964But what if it is necessary to also wait on SRCU?
2965This can be done as follows:
2966
2967<blockquote>
2968<pre>
2969 1 static void call_my_srcu(struct rcu_head *head,
2970 2 void (*func)(struct rcu_head *head))
2971 3 {
2972 4 call_srcu(&amp;my_srcu, head, func);
2973 5 }
2974 6
2975 7 synchronize_rcu_mult(call_rcu, call_rcu_bh, call_rcu_sched, call_my_srcu);
2976</pre>
2977</blockquote>
2978
2979<p>
2980If you needed to wait on multiple different flavors of SRCU
2981(but why???), you would need to create a wrapper function resembling
2982<tt>call_my_srcu()</tt> for each SRCU flavor.
2983
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2984<table>
2985<tr><th>&nbsp;</th></tr>
2986<tr><th align="left">Quick Quiz:</th></tr>
2987<tr><td>
2988 But what if I need to wait for multiple RCU flavors, but I also need
2989 the grace periods to be expedited?
2990</td></tr>
2991<tr><th align="left">Answer:</th></tr>
2992<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><font color="ffffff">
2993 If you are using expedited grace periods, there should be less penalty
2994 for waiting on them in succession.
2995 But if that is nevertheless a problem, you can use workqueues
2996 or multiple kthreads to wait on the various expedited grace
2997 periods concurrently.
2998</font></td></tr>
2999<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
3000</table>
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3001
3002<p>
3003Again, it is usually better to adjust the RCU read-side critical sections
3004to use a single flavor of RCU, but when this is not feasible, you can use
3005<tt>synchronize_rcu_mult()</tt>.
3006
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3007<h2><a name="Possible Future Changes">Possible Future Changes</a></h2>
3008
3009<p>
3010One of the tricks that RCU uses to attain update-side scalability is
3011to increase grace-period latency with increasing numbers of CPUs.
3012If this becomes a serious problem, it will be necessary to rework the
3013grace-period state machine so as to avoid the need for the additional
3014latency.
3015
3016<p>
3017Expedited grace periods scan the CPUs, so their latency and overhead
3018increases with increasing numbers of CPUs.
3019If this becomes a serious problem on large systems, it will be necessary
3020to do some redesign to avoid this scalability problem.
3021
3022<p>
3023RCU disables CPU hotplug in a few places, perhaps most notably in the
3024expedited grace-period and <tt>rcu_barrier()</tt> operations.
3025If there is a strong reason to use expedited grace periods in CPU-hotplug
3026notifiers, it will be necessary to avoid disabling CPU hotplug.
3027This would introduce some complexity, so there had better be a <i>very</i>
3028good reason.
3029
3030<p>
3031The tradeoff between grace-period latency on the one hand and interruptions
3032of other CPUs on the other hand may need to be re-examined.
3033The desire is of course for zero grace-period latency as well as zero
3034interprocessor interrupts undertaken during an expedited grace period
3035operation.
3036While this ideal is unlikely to be achievable, it is quite possible that
3037further improvements can be made.
3038
3039<p>
3040The multiprocessor implementations of RCU use a combining tree that
3041groups CPUs so as to reduce lock contention and increase cache locality.
3042However, this combining tree does not spread its memory across NUMA
3043nodes nor does it align the CPU groups with hardware features such
3044as sockets or cores.
3045Such spreading and alignment is currently believed to be unnecessary
3046because the hotpath read-side primitives do not access the combining
3047tree, nor does <tt>call_rcu()</tt> in the common case.
3048If you believe that your architecture needs such spreading and alignment,
3049then your architecture should also benefit from the
3050<tt>rcutree.rcu_fanout_leaf</tt> boot parameter, which can be set
3051to the number of CPUs in a socket, NUMA node, or whatever.
3052If the number of CPUs is too large, use a fraction of the number of
3053CPUs.
3054If the number of CPUs is a large prime number, well, that certainly
3055is an &ldquo;interesting&rdquo; architectural choice!
3056More flexible arrangements might be considered, but only if
3057<tt>rcutree.rcu_fanout_leaf</tt> has proven inadequate, and only
3058if the inadequacy has been demonstrated by a carefully run and
3059realistic system-level workload.
3060
3061<p>
3062Please note that arrangements that require RCU to remap CPU numbers will
3063require extremely good demonstration of need and full exploration of
3064alternatives.
3065
3066<p>
3067There is an embarrassingly large number of flavors of RCU, and this
3068number has been increasing over time.
3069Perhaps it will be possible to combine some at some future date.
3070
3071<p>
3072RCU's various kthreads are reasonably recent additions.
3073It is quite likely that adjustments will be required to more gracefully
3074handle extreme loads.
3075It might also be necessary to be able to relate CPU utilization by
3076RCU's kthreads and softirq handlers to the code that instigated this
3077CPU utilization.
3078For example, RCU callback overhead might be charged back to the
3079originating <tt>call_rcu()</tt> instance, though probably not
3080in production kernels.
3081
3082<h2><a name="Summary">Summary</a></h2>
3083
3084<p>
3085This document has presented more than two decade's worth of RCU
3086requirements.
3087Given that the requirements keep changing, this will not be the last
3088word on this subject, but at least it serves to get an important
3089subset of the requirements set forth.
3090
3091<h2><a name="Acknowledgments">Acknowledgments</a></h2>
3092
3093I am grateful to Steven Rostedt, Lai Jiangshan, Ingo Molnar,
3094Oleg Nesterov, Borislav Petkov, Peter Zijlstra, Boqun Feng, and
3095Andy Lutomirski for their help in rendering
3096this article human readable, and to Michelle Rankin for her support
3097of this effort.
3098Other contributions are acknowledged in the Linux kernel's git archive.
3099The cartoon is copyright (c) 2013 by Melissa Broussard,
3100and is provided
3101under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
3102United States license.
3103
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