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1 Using RCU (Read-Copy-Update) for synchronization
2 ================================================
3
4 Read-copy update (RCU) is a synchronization mechanism that is used to
5 protect read-mostly data structures. RCU is very efficient and scalable
6 on the read side (it is wait-free), and thus can make the read paths
7 extremely fast.
8
9 RCU supports concurrency between a single writer and multiple readers,
10 thus it is not used alone. Typically, the write-side will use a lock to
11 serialize multiple updates, but other approaches are possible (e.g.,
12 restricting updates to a single task). In QEMU, when a lock is used,
13 this will often be the "iothread mutex", also known as the "big QEMU
14 lock" (BQL). Also, restricting updates to a single task is done in
15 QEMU using the "bottom half" API.
16
17 RCU is fundamentally a "wait-to-finish" mechanism. The read side marks
18 sections of code with "critical sections", and the update side will wait
19 for the execution of all *currently running* critical sections before
20 proceeding, or before asynchronously executing a callback.
21
22 The key point here is that only the currently running critical sections
23 are waited for; critical sections that are started _after_ the beginning
24 of the wait do not extend the wait, despite running concurrently with
25 the updater. This is the reason why RCU is more scalable than,
26 for example, reader-writer locks. It is so much more scalable that
27 the system will have a single instance of the RCU mechanism; a single
28 mechanism can be used for an arbitrary number of "things", without
29 having to worry about things such as contention or deadlocks.
30
31 How is this possible? The basic idea is to split updates in two phases,
32 "removal" and "reclamation". During removal, we ensure that subsequent
33 readers will not be able to get a reference to the old data. After
34 removal has completed, a critical section will not be able to access
35 the old data. Therefore, critical sections that begin after removal
36 do not matter; as soon as all previous critical sections have finished,
37 there cannot be any readers who hold references to the data structure,
38 and these can now be safely reclaimed (e.g., freed or unref'ed).
39
40 Here is a picture:
41
42 thread 1 thread 2 thread 3
43 ------------------- ------------------------ -------------------
44 enter RCU crit.sec.
45 | finish removal phase
46 | begin wait
47 | | enter RCU crit.sec.
48 exit RCU crit.sec | |
49 complete wait |
50 begin reclamation phase |
51 exit RCU crit.sec.
52
53
54 Note how thread 3 is still executing its critical section when thread 2
55 starts reclaiming data. This is possible, because the old version of the
56 data structure was not accessible at the time thread 3 began executing
57 that critical section.
58
59
60 RCU API
61 =======
62
63 The core RCU API is small:
64
65 void rcu_read_lock(void);
66
67 Used by a reader to inform the reclaimer that the reader is
68 entering an RCU read-side critical section.
69
70 void rcu_read_unlock(void);
71
72 Used by a reader to inform the reclaimer that the reader is
73 exiting an RCU read-side critical section. Note that RCU
74 read-side critical sections may be nested and/or overlapping.
75
76 void synchronize_rcu(void);
77
78 Blocks until all pre-existing RCU read-side critical sections
79 on all threads have completed. This marks the end of the removal
80 phase and the beginning of reclamation phase.
81
82 Note that it would be valid for another update to come while
83 synchronize_rcu is running. Because of this, it is better that
84 the updater releases any locks it may hold before calling
85 synchronize_rcu. If this is not possible (for example, because
86 the updater is protected by the BQL), you can use call_rcu.
87
88 void call_rcu1(struct rcu_head * head,
89 void (*func)(struct rcu_head *head));
90
91 This function invokes func(head) after all pre-existing RCU
92 read-side critical sections on all threads have completed. This
93 marks the end of the removal phase, with func taking care
94 asynchronously of the reclamation phase.
95
96 The foo struct needs to have an rcu_head structure added,
97 perhaps as follows:
98
99 struct foo {
100 struct rcu_head rcu;
101 int a;
102 char b;
103 long c;
104 };
105
106 so that the reclaimer function can fetch the struct foo address
107 and free it:
108
109 call_rcu1(&foo.rcu, foo_reclaim);
110
111 void foo_reclaim(struct rcu_head *rp)
112 {
113 struct foo *fp = container_of(rp, struct foo, rcu);
114 g_free(fp);
115 }
116
117 For the common case where the rcu_head member is the first of the
118 struct, you can use the following macro.
119
120 void call_rcu(T *p,
121 void (*func)(T *p),
122 field-name);
123 void g_free_rcu(T *p,
124 field-name);
125
126 call_rcu1 is typically used through these macro, in the common case
127 where the "struct rcu_head" is the first field in the struct. If
128 the callback function is g_free, in particular, g_free_rcu can be
129 used. In the above case, one could have written simply:
130
131 g_free_rcu(&foo, rcu);
132
133 typeof(*p) atomic_rcu_read(p);
134
135 atomic_rcu_read() is similar to atomic_mb_read(), but it makes
136 some assumptions on the code that calls it. This allows a more
137 optimized implementation.
138
139 atomic_rcu_read assumes that whenever a single RCU critical
140 section reads multiple shared data, these reads are either
141 data-dependent or need no ordering. This is almost always the
142 case when using RCU, because read-side critical sections typically
143 navigate one or more pointers (the pointers that are changed on
144 every update) until reaching a data structure of interest,
145 and then read from there.
146
147 RCU read-side critical sections must use atomic_rcu_read() to
148 read data, unless concurrent writes are prevented by another
149 synchronization mechanism.
150
151 Furthermore, RCU read-side critical sections should traverse the
152 data structure in a single direction, opposite to the direction
153 in which the updater initializes it.
154
155 void atomic_rcu_set(p, typeof(*p) v);
156
157 atomic_rcu_set() is also similar to atomic_mb_set(), and it also
158 makes assumptions on the code that calls it in order to allow a more
159 optimized implementation.
160
161 In particular, atomic_rcu_set() suffices for synchronization
162 with readers, if the updater never mutates a field within a
163 data item that is already accessible to readers. This is the
164 case when initializing a new copy of the RCU-protected data
165 structure; just ensure that initialization of *p is carried out
166 before atomic_rcu_set() makes the data item visible to readers.
167 If this rule is observed, writes will happen in the opposite
168 order as reads in the RCU read-side critical sections (or if
169 there is just one update), and there will be no need for other
170 synchronization mechanism to coordinate the accesses.
171
172 The following APIs must be used before RCU is used in a thread:
173
174 void rcu_register_thread(void);
175
176 Mark a thread as taking part in the RCU mechanism. Such a thread
177 will have to report quiescent points regularly, either manually
178 or through the QemuCond/QemuSemaphore/QemuEvent APIs.
179
180 void rcu_unregister_thread(void);
181
182 Mark a thread as not taking part anymore in the RCU mechanism.
183 It is not a problem if such a thread reports quiescent points,
184 either manually or by using the QemuCond/QemuSemaphore/QemuEvent
185 APIs.
186
187 Note that these APIs are relatively heavyweight, and should _not_ be
188 nested.
189
190
191 DIFFERENCES WITH LINUX
192 ======================
193
194 - Waiting on a mutex is possible, though discouraged, within an RCU critical
195 section. This is because spinlocks are rarely (if ever) used in userspace
196 programming; not allowing this would prevent upgrading an RCU read-side
197 critical section to become an updater.
198
199 - atomic_rcu_read and atomic_rcu_set replace rcu_dereference and
200 rcu_assign_pointer. They take a _pointer_ to the variable being accessed.
201
202 - call_rcu is a macro that has an extra argument (the name of the first
203 field in the struct, which must be a struct rcu_head), and expects the
204 type of the callback's argument to be the type of the first argument.
205 call_rcu1 is the same as Linux's call_rcu.
206
207
208 RCU PATTERNS
209 ============
210
211 Many patterns using read-writer locks translate directly to RCU, with
212 the advantages of higher scalability and deadlock immunity.
213
214 In general, RCU can be used whenever it is possible to create a new
215 "version" of a data structure every time the updater runs. This may
216 sound like a very strict restriction, however:
217
218 - the updater does not mean "everything that writes to a data structure",
219 but rather "everything that involves a reclamation step". See the
220 array example below
221
222 - in some cases, creating a new version of a data structure may actually
223 be very cheap. For example, modifying the "next" pointer of a singly
224 linked list is effectively creating a new version of the list.
225
226 Here are some frequently-used RCU idioms that are worth noting.
227
228
229 RCU list processing
230 -------------------
231
232 TBD (not yet used in QEMU)
233
234
235 RCU reference counting
236 ----------------------
237
238 Because grace periods are not allowed to complete while there is an RCU
239 read-side critical section in progress, the RCU read-side primitives
240 may be used as a restricted reference-counting mechanism. For example,
241 consider the following code fragment:
242
243 rcu_read_lock();
244 p = atomic_rcu_read(&foo);
245 /* do something with p. */
246 rcu_read_unlock();
247
248 The RCU read-side critical section ensures that the value of "p" remains
249 valid until after the rcu_read_unlock(). In some sense, it is acquiring
250 a reference to p that is later released when the critical section ends.
251 The write side looks simply like this (with appropriate locking):
252
253 qemu_mutex_lock(&foo_mutex);
254 old = foo;
255 atomic_rcu_set(&foo, new);
256 qemu_mutex_unlock(&foo_mutex);
257 synchronize_rcu();
258 free(old);
259
260 If the processing cannot be done purely within the critical section, it
261 is possible to combine this idiom with a "real" reference count:
262
263 rcu_read_lock();
264 p = atomic_rcu_read(&foo);
265 foo_ref(p);
266 rcu_read_unlock();
267 /* do something with p. */
268 foo_unref(p);
269
270 The write side can be like this:
271
272 qemu_mutex_lock(&foo_mutex);
273 old = foo;
274 atomic_rcu_set(&foo, new);
275 qemu_mutex_unlock(&foo_mutex);
276 synchronize_rcu();
277 foo_unref(old);
278
279 or with call_rcu:
280
281 qemu_mutex_lock(&foo_mutex);
282 old = foo;
283 atomic_rcu_set(&foo, new);
284 qemu_mutex_unlock(&foo_mutex);
285 call_rcu(foo_unref, old, rcu);
286
287 In both cases, the write side only performs removal. Reclamation
288 happens when the last reference to a "foo" object is dropped.
289 Using synchronize_rcu() is undesirably expensive, because the
290 last reference may be dropped on the read side. Hence you can
291 use call_rcu() instead:
292
293 foo_unref(struct foo *p) {
294 if (atomic_fetch_dec(&p->refcount) == 1) {
295 call_rcu(foo_destroy, p, rcu);
296 }
297 }
298
299
300 Note that the same idioms would be possible with reader/writer
301 locks:
302
303 read_lock(&foo_rwlock); write_mutex_lock(&foo_rwlock);
304 p = foo; p = foo;
305 /* do something with p. */ foo = new;
306 read_unlock(&foo_rwlock); free(p);
307 write_mutex_unlock(&foo_rwlock);
308 free(p);
309
310 ------------------------------------------------------------------
311
312 read_lock(&foo_rwlock); write_mutex_lock(&foo_rwlock);
313 p = foo; old = foo;
314 foo_ref(p); foo = new;
315 read_unlock(&foo_rwlock); foo_unref(old);
316 /* do something with p. */ write_mutex_unlock(&foo_rwlock);
317 read_lock(&foo_rwlock);
318 foo_unref(p);
319 read_unlock(&foo_rwlock);
320
321 foo_unref could use a mechanism such as bottom halves to move deallocation
322 out of the write-side critical section.
323
324
325 RCU resizable arrays
326 --------------------
327
328 Resizable arrays can be used with RCU. The expensive RCU synchronization
329 (or call_rcu) only needs to take place when the array is resized.
330 The two items to take care of are:
331
332 - ensuring that the old version of the array is available between removal
333 and reclamation;
334
335 - avoiding mismatches in the read side between the array data and the
336 array size.
337
338 The first problem is avoided simply by not using realloc. Instead,
339 each resize will allocate a new array and copy the old data into it.
340 The second problem would arise if the size and the data pointers were
341 two members of a larger struct:
342
343 struct mystuff {
344 ...
345 int data_size;
346 int data_alloc;
347 T *data;
348 ...
349 };
350
351 Instead, we store the size of the array with the array itself:
352
353 struct arr {
354 int size;
355 int alloc;
356 T data[];
357 };
358 struct arr *global_array;
359
360 read side:
361 rcu_read_lock();
362 struct arr *array = atomic_rcu_read(&global_array);
363 x = i < array->size ? array->data[i] : -1;
364 rcu_read_unlock();
365 return x;
366
367 write side (running under a lock):
368 if (global_array->size == global_array->alloc) {
369 /* Creating a new version. */
370 new_array = g_malloc(sizeof(struct arr) +
371 global_array->alloc * 2 * sizeof(T));
372 new_array->size = global_array->size;
373 new_array->alloc = global_array->alloc * 2;
374 memcpy(new_array->data, global_array->data,
375 global_array->alloc * sizeof(T));
376
377 /* Removal phase. */
378 old_array = global_array;
379 atomic_rcu_set(&new_array->data, new_array);
380 synchronize_rcu();
381
382 /* Reclamation phase. */
383 free(old_array);
384 }
385
386
387 SOURCES
388 =======
389
390 * Documentation/RCU/ from the Linux kernel