The distinction between additive/exponential implementation
and geometric implementation does little but confuse users.
The terminology used in ck_backoff now reflects terminology
used in literature.
ck_backoff_gb has been removed.
Execution history exists such that first thread will dequeue
from an uninitialized ring buffer. The unit test has been
(un)fortunate in that it would busy-wait during dequeue.
Full barrier semantics will enforce visibility.
Reported by: Maxime Henrion <mhenrion@gma....>.
This operation is of format:
CK_S*LIST_MOVE(a, b, linkage) and is equivalent to intializing
a with the contents of b. This is done in a manner that is atomic
with respect to readers. Read-only operations are still valid in
b, but behavior is undefined for write-side operations on b after
a MOVE operation.
I had the pleasure of spending a significant amount of time at the most
recent LPC with Mathieu Desnoyers and Paul McKenney. In discussing
RCU semantics in relation to epoch reclamation, it was argued that
epoch reclamation is a specialisation of RCU (rather than a generalization).
In light of this discussion, I thought it would make more sense to not expose
write-side synchronization semantics aside from ck_epoch_call (similar to
RCU call), ck_epoch_poll (identical to tick), ck_epoch_barrier and
ck_epoch_synchronization (similar to ck_epoch_synchronization). Writers will
now longer have to use write-side epoch sections but can instead rely on
epoch_barrier/synchronization for blocking semantics and ck_epoch_poll
for old tick semantics.
One advantage of this is we can avoid write-side recursion for certain workloads.
Additionally, for infrequent writes, epoch_barrier and epoch_synchronization both
allow for blocking semantics to be used so you don't have to pay the cost of
epoch_entry for non-blocking dispatch.
Example usage:
e = stack_pop(mystack);
ck_epoch_synchronize(...);
free(e);
read_begin and read_end has been replaced with ck_epoch_begin and ck_epoch_end.
If multiple writers need SMR guarantees, then they can also use ck_epoch_begin
and ck_epoch_end. Any dispatch in presence of multiple writers should be done
with-in an epoch section (for now).
There are some follow-up commits to come.