| lglock - local/global locks for mostly local access patterns |
| ------------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Origin: Nick Piggin's VFS scalability series introduced during |
| 2.6.35++ [1] [2] |
| Location: kernel/locking/lglock.c |
| include/linux/lglock.h |
| Users: currently only the VFS and stop_machine related code |
| |
| Design Goal: |
| ------------ |
| |
| Improve scalability of globally used large data sets that are |
| distributed over all CPUs as per_cpu elements. |
| |
| To manage global data structures that are partitioned over all CPUs |
| as per_cpu elements but can be mostly handled by CPU local actions |
| lglock will be used where the majority of accesses are cpu local |
| reading and occasional cpu local writing with very infrequent |
| global write access. |
| |
| |
| * deal with things locally whenever possible |
| - very fast access to the local per_cpu data |
| - reasonably fast access to specific per_cpu data on a different |
| CPU |
| * while making global action possible when needed |
| - by expensive access to all CPUs locks - effectively |
| resulting in a globally visible critical section. |
| |
| Design: |
| ------- |
| |
| Basically it is an array of per_cpu spinlocks with the |
| lg_local_lock/unlock accessing the local CPUs lock object and the |
| lg_local_lock_cpu/unlock_cpu accessing a remote CPUs lock object |
| the lg_local_lock has to disable preemption as migration protection so |
| that the reference to the local CPUs lock does not go out of scope. |
| Due to the lg_local_lock/unlock only touching cpu-local resources it |
| is fast. Taking the local lock on a different CPU will be more |
| expensive but still relatively cheap. |
| |
| One can relax the migration constraints by acquiring the current |
| CPUs lock with lg_local_lock_cpu, remember the cpu, and release that |
| lock at the end of the critical section even if migrated. This should |
| give most of the performance benefits without inhibiting migration |
| though needs careful considerations for nesting of lglocks and |
| consideration of deadlocks with lg_global_lock. |
| |
| The lg_global_lock/unlock locks all underlying spinlocks of all |
| possible CPUs (including those off-line). The preemption disable/enable |
| are needed in the non-RT kernels to prevent deadlocks like: |
| |
| on cpu 1 |
| |
| task A task B |
| lg_global_lock |
| got cpu 0 lock |
| <<<< preempt <<<< |
| lg_local_lock_cpu for cpu 0 |
| spin on cpu 0 lock |
| |
| On -RT this deadlock scenario is resolved by the arch_spin_locks in the |
| lglocks being replaced by rt_mutexes which resolve the above deadlock |
| by boosting the lock-holder. |
| |
| |
| Implementation: |
| --------------- |
| |
| The initial lglock implementation from Nick Piggin used some complex |
| macros to generate the lglock/brlock in lglock.h - they were later |
| turned into a set of functions by Andi Kleen [7]. The change to functions |
| was motivated by the presence of multiple lock users and also by them |
| being easier to maintain than the generating macros. This change to |
| functions is also the basis to eliminated the restriction of not |
| being initializeable in kernel modules (the remaining problem is that |
| locks are not explicitly initialized - see lockdep-design.txt) |
| |
| Declaration and initialization: |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| #include <linux/lglock.h> |
| |
| DEFINE_LGLOCK(name) |
| or: |
| DEFINE_STATIC_LGLOCK(name); |
| |
| lg_lock_init(&name, "lockdep_name_string"); |
| |
| on UP this is mapped to DEFINE_SPINLOCK(name) in both cases, note |
| also that as of 3.18-rc6 all declaration in use are of the _STATIC_ |
| variant (and it seems that the non-static was never in use). |
| lg_lock_init is initializing the lockdep map only. |
| |
| Usage: |
| ------ |
| |
| From the locking semantics it is a spinlock. It could be called a |
| locality aware spinlock. lg_local_* behaves like a per_cpu |
| spinlock and lg_global_* like a global spinlock. |
| No surprises in the API. |
| |
| lg_local_lock(*lglock); |
| access to protected per_cpu object on this CPU |
| lg_local_unlock(*lglock); |
| |
| lg_local_lock_cpu(*lglock, cpu); |
| access to protected per_cpu object on other CPU cpu |
| lg_local_unlock_cpu(*lglock, cpu); |
| |
| lg_global_lock(*lglock); |
| access all protected per_cpu objects on all CPUs |
| lg_global_unlock(*lglock); |
| |
| There are no _trylock variants of the lglocks. |
| |
| Note that the lg_global_lock/unlock has to iterate over all possible |
| CPUs rather than the actually present CPUs or a CPU could go off-line |
| with a held lock [4] and that makes it very expensive. A discussion on |
| these issues can be found at [5] |
| |
| Constraints: |
| ------------ |
| |
| * currently the declaration of lglocks in kernel modules is not |
| possible, though this should be doable with little change. |
| * lglocks are not recursive. |
| * suitable for code that can do most operations on the CPU local |
| data and will very rarely need the global lock |
| * lg_global_lock/unlock is *very* expensive and does not scale |
| * on UP systems all lg_* primitives are simply spinlocks |
| * in PREEMPT_RT the spinlock becomes an rt-mutex and can sleep but |
| does not change the tasks state while sleeping [6]. |
| * in PREEMPT_RT the preempt_disable/enable in lg_local_lock/unlock |
| is downgraded to a migrate_disable/enable, the other |
| preempt_disable/enable are downgraded to barriers [6]. |
| The deadlock noted for non-RT above is resolved due to rt_mutexes |
| boosting the lock-holder in this case which arch_spin_locks do |
| not do. |
| |
| lglocks were designed for very specific problems in the VFS and probably |
| only are the right answer in these corner cases. Any new user that looks |
| at lglocks probably wants to look at the seqlock and RCU alternatives as |
| her first choice. There are also efforts to resolve the RCU issues that |
| currently prevent using RCU in place of view remaining lglocks. |
| |
| Note on brlock history: |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| The 'Big Reader' read-write spinlocks were originally introduced by |
| Ingo Molnar in 2000 (2.4/2.5 kernel series) and removed in 2003. They |
| later were introduced by the VFS scalability patch set in 2.6 series |
| again as the "big reader lock" brlock [2] variant of lglock which has |
| been replaced by seqlock primitives or by RCU based primitives in the |
| 3.13 kernel series as was suggested in [3] in 2003. The brlock was |
| entirely removed in the 3.13 kernel series. |
| |
| Link: 1 http://lkml.org/lkml/2010/8/2/81 |
| Link: 2 http://lwn.net/Articles/401738/ |
| Link: 3 http://lkml.org/lkml/2003/3/9/205 |
| Link: 4 https://lkml.org/lkml/2011/8/24/185 |
| Link: 5 http://lkml.org/lkml/2011/12/18/189 |
| Link: 6 https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/projects/rt/ |
| patch series - lglocks-rt.patch.patch |
| Link: 7 http://lkml.org/lkml/2012/3/5/26 |