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Re: Synchronizing auxiliary mutex data


On Tue, 20 Jun 2017, Andreas Schwab wrote:

> On Jun 19 2017, Torvald Riegel <triegel@redhat.com> wrote:
> 
> > __owner accesses need to use atomics (which they don't, currently).
> 
> Does that mean mutexes are broken right now?

Plain accesses to fields like __data.owner are fine as long as they all are
within critical sections set up by LLL_MUTEX_{LOCK,UNLOCK}, but there are some
outside of them. So e.g. in nptl/pthread_mutex_lock:

  95   else if (__builtin_expect (PTHREAD_MUTEX_TYPE (mutex)
  96                              == PTHREAD_MUTEX_RECURSIVE_NP, 1))
  97     {
  98       /* Recursive mutex.  */
  99       pid_t id = THREAD_GETMEM (THREAD_SELF, tid);
 100 
 101       /* Check whether we already hold the mutex.  */
 102       if (mutex->__data.__owner == id)
 103         {
 104           /* Just bump the counter.  */
 105           if (__glibc_unlikely (mutex->__data.__count + 1 == 0))
 106             /* Overflow of the counter.  */
 107             return EAGAIN;
 108 
 109           ++mutex->__data.__count;
 110 
 111           return 0;
 112         }
 113 
 114       /* We have to get the mutex.  */
 115       LLL_MUTEX_LOCK (mutex);
 116 
 117       assert (mutex->__data.__owner == 0);

afaict the access at line 102 can invoke undefined behavior due to a data race.

In practice I think it works fine because the compiler doesn't tear the load,
and the hardware also doesn't tear the load. I think in this specific example
no-tearing guarantee is sufficient: if this thread never owned this mutex, it
cannot observe __owner == id, or if it is no longer an owner, it stored 0 to
__owner during unlock, followed by a release barrier, and will now observe the
result of that or any later store.

Alexander


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