Commit Graph

12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kip Macy
61bd5e21b3 track lock class name in a way that doesn't break WITNESS 2006-11-13 05:41:46 +00:00
Kip Macy
7c0435b933 MUTEX_PROFILING has been generalized to LOCK_PROFILING. We now profile
wait (time waited to acquire) and hold times for *all* kernel locks. If
the architecture has a system synchronized TSC, the profiling code will
use that - thereby minimizing profiling overhead. Large chunks of profiling
code have been moved out of line, the overhead measured on the T1 for when
it is compiled in but not enabled is < 1%.

Approved by: scottl (standing in for mentor rwatson)
Reviewed by: des and jhb
2006-11-11 03:18:07 +00:00
John Baldwin
764e4d54e9 Adjust td_locks for non-spin mutexes, rwlocks, and sx locks so that it is
a count of all non-spin locks, not just lockmgr locks.  This can give us a
much cheaper way to see if we have any locks held (such as when returning
to userland via userret()) without requiring WITNESS.

MFC after:	1 week
2006-07-27 21:45:55 +00:00
John Baldwin
fea3efe5bf Implement rw_try_upgrade() and rw_downgrade(). rw_try_upgrade() makes a
single attempt at upgrading a read lock to a write lock, and rw_downgrade()
converts curthread's write lock into a read lock.
2006-04-19 21:06:52 +00:00
Wojciech A. Koszek
5884c1a098 'owner' is not used without SMP. Fix kernel build for such kernel
configurations.

Approved by:	jhb
2006-04-18 20:32:42 +00:00
John Baldwin
efa86db61d Adaptively spin before blocking on the turnstile if an rwlock is write
locked.  In general the adaptive spinning is similar to the same code
for mutexes with some extra trickiness in rw_wunlock_hard().  Specifically,
even though both wait bits might be set and we might have a turnstile with
at least one waiting thread, there might not be any threads blocked on the
queue we are not waking up (they might all be spinning), and we should
only preserve the waiting flag for the queue we aren't waking up if there
are in fact threads blocked on that queue.  Secondly, there might not be
any threads blocked on the queue we have chosen to waken threads from
(there might only be threads blocked on the other queue and the threads
for this queue are all spinning) in which case we disown the turnstile
instead of doing a braodcast and unpend.
2006-04-18 18:27:54 +00:00
John Baldwin
38bf165fa1 - Add a rw_wowner() macro that just returns the owner of a write lock and
use it in places that only care about the write owner instead of
  rw_owner() as a baby step towards limited read-lock owner.
- Tidy the code that sets the WAITER flag bits to not duplicate a test
  around the atomic operation and the KTR trace in both of the lock
  functions.
2006-04-17 21:11:01 +00:00
Scott Long
803e980d03 Fix another compile problem. If I find any more, this file is going in the
Attic until it is properly fixed.
2006-02-01 04:18:07 +00:00
Scott Long
019a2f40ae Regroup order of operations to better reflect what was probably intended.
Submitted by: Peter Jeremy
2006-01-30 19:25:52 +00:00
Scott Long
8ad6b7ab7c Take a stab at making this compile when WITNESS is not defined. gcc can't
figure out the order of operations at line 519, and neither can I, but this
is my best guess.  Also correct a number of typos and syntax errors.
2006-01-29 20:48:25 +00:00
Max Laier
69e99c5d4c Unbreak on archs where %d doesn't print uintptr_t arithmetic. 2006-01-29 02:35:22 +00:00
John Baldwin
3f08bd8bce Add a basic reader/writer lock implementation to the kernel. This
implementation is by no means perfect as far as some of the algorithms
that it uses and the fact that it is missing some functionality (try
locks and upgrades/downgrades are not there yet), however it does seem
to work in my local testing.  There is more detail in the comments in the
code, but the short version follows.

A reader/writer lock is very much like a regular mutex: it cannot be held
across a voluntary sleep; it can be acquired in an interrupt thread; if
the lock is held by a writer then the priority of any threads that block
on the lock will be lent to the owner; the simple case lock operations all
are done in a single atomic op.  It also shares some similiarities
with sx locks: it supports reader/writer semantics (multiple readers,
but single writers); readers are allowed to recurse, but writers are not.

We can extend this implementation further by either improving algorithms
or adding new functionality, but this should at least give us a base to
work with now.

Reviewed by:	arch (in theory)
Tested on:	i386 (4 cpu box with a kernel module that used 4 threads
		that randomly chose between read locks and write locks
		that ran w/o panicing for over a day solid.  It usually
		panic'd within a few seconds when there were bugs during
		testing. :)  The kernel module source is available on
		request.)
2006-01-27 23:13:26 +00:00