2023-11-24 07:46:50 +00:00
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/*
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* BIRD Library -- Generic lock-free structures
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*
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* (c) 2023 Maria Matejka <mq@jmq.cz>
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* (c) 2023 CZ.NIC, z.s.p.o.
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*
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* Can be freely distributed and used under the terms of the GNU GPL.
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*/
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#ifndef _BIRD_LOCKFREE_H_
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#define _BIRD_LOCKFREE_H_
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#include "lib/event.h"
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#include "lib/rcu.h"
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#include <stdatomic.h>
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/**
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* Lock-free usecounts.
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*/
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struct lfuc {
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_Atomic u64 uc;
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};
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#define LFUC_PU_SHIFT 44
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#define LFUC_IN_PROGRESS (1ULL << LFUC_PU_SHIFT)
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/**
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* lfuc_lock - increase an atomic usecount
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* @c: the usecount structure
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*/
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2024-01-10 08:10:03 +00:00
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static inline u64 lfuc_lock(struct lfuc *c)
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2023-11-24 07:46:50 +00:00
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{
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/* Locking is trivial; somebody already holds the underlying data structure
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* so we just increase the use count. Nothing can be freed underneath our hands. */
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u64 uc = atomic_fetch_add_explicit(&c->uc, 1, memory_order_acq_rel);
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ASSERT_DIE(uc > 0);
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2024-01-10 08:10:03 +00:00
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return uc & (LFUC_IN_PROGRESS - 1);
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2023-11-24 07:46:50 +00:00
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}
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/**
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* lfuc_lock_revive - increase an atomic usecount even if it's zero
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* @c: the usecount structure
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*
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* If the caller is sure that they can't collide with the prune routine,
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* they can call this even on structures with already zeroed usecount.
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* Handy for situations with flapping routes. Use only from the same
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* loop as which runs the prune routine.
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*/
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2024-01-10 08:10:03 +00:00
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static inline u64 lfuc_lock_revive(struct lfuc *c)
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2023-11-24 07:46:50 +00:00
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{
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2024-01-10 08:10:03 +00:00
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u64 uc = atomic_fetch_add_explicit(&c->uc, 1, memory_order_acq_rel);
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return uc & (LFUC_IN_PROGRESS - 1);
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2023-11-24 07:46:50 +00:00
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}
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/**
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* lfuc_unlock - decrease an atomic usecount
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* @c: the usecount structure
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* @el: prune event list
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* @ev: prune event itself
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*
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* If the usecount reaches zero, a prune event is run to possibly free the object.
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* The prune event MUST use lfuc_finished() to check the object state.
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*/
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2024-01-10 08:10:03 +00:00
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static inline u64 lfuc_unlock(struct lfuc *c, event_list *el, event *ev)
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{
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/* Unlocking is tricky. We do it lockless so at the same time, the prune
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* event may be running, therefore if the unlock gets us to zero, it must be
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* the last thing in this routine, otherwise the prune routine may find the
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* source's usecount zeroed, freeing it prematurely.
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*
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* The usecount is split into two parts:
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* the top 20 bits are an in-progress indicator
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* the bottom 44 bits keep the actual usecount.
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*
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* Therefore at most 1 million of writers can simultaneously unlock the same
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* structure, while at most ~17T different places can reference it. Both limits
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* are insanely high from the 2022 point of view. Let's suppose that when 17T
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* routes or 1M peers/tables get real, we get also 128bit atomic variables in the
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* C norm. */
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/* First, we push the in-progress indicator */
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u64 uc = atomic_fetch_add_explicit(&c->uc, LFUC_IN_PROGRESS, memory_order_acq_rel);
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/* Then we split the indicator to its parts. Remember, we got the value
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* before the operation happened so we're re-doing the operation locally
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* to get a view how the indicator _would_ look if nobody else was interacting.
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*/
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u64 pending = (uc >> LFUC_PU_SHIFT) + 1;
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uc &= LFUC_IN_PROGRESS - 1;
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/* We per-use the RCU critical section indicator to make the prune event wait
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* until we finish here in the rare case we get preempted. */
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rcu_read_lock();
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/* Obviously, there can't be more pending unlocks than the usecount itself */
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if (uc == pending)
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/* If we're the last unlocker (every owner is already unlocking), schedule
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* the owner's prune event */
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ev_send(el, ev);
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else
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ASSERT_DIE(uc > pending);
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/* And now, finally, simultaneously pop the in-progress indicator and the
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* usecount, possibly allowing the pruning routine to free this structure */
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2024-01-10 08:10:03 +00:00
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uc = atomic_fetch_sub_explicit(&c->uc, LFUC_IN_PROGRESS + 1, memory_order_acq_rel);
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2023-11-24 07:46:50 +00:00
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/* ... and to reduce the load a bit, the pruning routine will better wait for
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* RCU synchronization instead of a busy loop. */
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rcu_read_unlock();
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2024-01-10 08:10:03 +00:00
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return uc - LFUC_IN_PROGRESS - 1;
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2023-11-24 07:46:50 +00:00
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}
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/**
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* lfuc_finished - auxiliary routine for prune event
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* @c: usecount structure
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*
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* This routine simply waits until all unlockers finish their job and leave
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* the critical section of lfuc_unlock(). Then we decide whether the usecount
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* is indeed zero or not, and therefore whether the structure is free to be freed.
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*/
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static inline _Bool
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lfuc_finished(struct lfuc *c)
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{
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u64 uc;
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/* Wait until all unlockers finish */
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while ((uc = atomic_load_explicit(&c->uc, memory_order_acquire)) >> LFUC_PU_SHIFT)
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synchronize_rcu();
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/* All of them are now done and if the usecount is now zero, then we're
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* the last place to reference the object and we can call it finished. */
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return (uc == 0);
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}
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/**
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* lfuc_init - auxiliary routine for usecount initialization
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* @c: usecount structure
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*
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* Called on object initialization, sets the usecount to an initial one to make
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* sure that the prune routine doesn't free it before somebody else references it.
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*/
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static inline void
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lfuc_init(struct lfuc *c)
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{
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atomic_store_explicit(&c->uc, 1, memory_order_release);
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}
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#endif
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