ck_epoch_reclaim is now the replacement for ck_epoch_flush.
ck_epoch_purge guarantees that all entries are reclaimed
for the provided record before exiting.
n_peak counter has been added, which provides the peak number
of items across all reclamation lists. n_reclamations provides
the number of reclamations across the lifetime of the record.
These are cleared on unregister.
ck_epoch_update has been renamed to ck_epoch_tick.
Hazardous sections which mutate shared structures are now
expected to begin with ck_epoch_write_begin and end with
ck_epoch_end.
Hazardous sections which read shared structures are now
expected to begin with ck_epoch_read_begin and end with
ck_epoch_end.
ck_hp_free is now more aggressive. It will attempt a
reclamation cycle any time the pending count is long.
I should probably add a ck_hp_retire to have a version
which allows for bulk updates to local reclamation lists.
Recycle will just be a bottleneck. The MPMC interface should instead
return a junk pointer and allow the user to manage its lifetime in
a way they see fit.
There is a bug first generation AMD Opteron processors'
with cpuid family 0Fh and models less than 40h when it
comes to read-modify write operations after load/store
sequence. Not worth supporting this processor.
If you are on this processor, you can find more information
at: http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=11305#c2
The barriers have been restructured into individual file
per implementation. Some micro-optimizations were implemented
for some barriers (caching common computations in the barrier).
State subsription is now explicit with the TID counter allocated
on a per-barrier basis.
Tournament barriers remaining and then another round will be done
for correctness and algorithmic improvements.