| Generic Mutex Subsystem |
| |
| started by Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> |
| updated by Davidlohr Bueso <davidlohr@hp.com> |
| |
| What are mutexes? |
| ----------------- |
| |
| In the Linux kernel, mutexes refer to a particular locking primitive |
| that enforces serialization on shared memory systems, and not only to |
| the generic term referring to 'mutual exclusion' found in academia |
| or similar theoretical text books. Mutexes are sleeping locks which |
| behave similarly to binary semaphores, and were introduced in 2006[1] |
| as an alternative to these. This new data structure provided a number |
| of advantages, including simpler interfaces, and at that time smaller |
| code (see Disadvantages). |
| |
| [1] http://lwn.net/Articles/164802/ |
| |
| Implementation |
| -------------- |
| |
| Mutexes are represented by 'struct mutex', defined in include/linux/mutex.h |
| and implemented in kernel/locking/mutex.c. These locks use an atomic variable |
| (->owner) to keep track of the lock state during its lifetime. Field owner |
| actually contains 'struct task_struct *' to the current lock owner and it is |
| therefore NULL if not currently owned. Since task_struct pointers are aligned |
| at at least L1_CACHE_BYTES, low bits (3) are used to store extra state (e.g., |
| if waiter list is non-empty). In its most basic form it also includes a |
| wait-queue and a spinlock that serializes access to it. Furthermore, |
| CONFIG_MUTEX_SPIN_ON_OWNER=y systems use a spinner MCS lock (->osq), described |
| below in (ii). |
| |
| When acquiring a mutex, there are three possible paths that can be |
| taken, depending on the state of the lock: |
| |
| (i) fastpath: tries to atomically acquire the lock by cmpxchg()ing the owner with |
| the current task. This only works in the uncontended case (cmpxchg() checks |
| against 0UL, so all 3 state bits above have to be 0). If the lock is |
| contended it goes to the next possible path. |
| |
| (ii) midpath: aka optimistic spinning, tries to spin for acquisition |
| while the lock owner is running and there are no other tasks ready |
| to run that have higher priority (need_resched). The rationale is |
| that if the lock owner is running, it is likely to release the lock |
| soon. The mutex spinners are queued up using MCS lock so that only |
| one spinner can compete for the mutex. |
| |
| The MCS lock (proposed by Mellor-Crummey and Scott) is a simple spinlock |
| with the desirable properties of being fair and with each cpu trying |
| to acquire the lock spinning on a local variable. It avoids expensive |
| cacheline bouncing that common test-and-set spinlock implementations |
| incur. An MCS-like lock is specially tailored for optimistic spinning |
| for sleeping lock implementation. An important feature of the customized |
| MCS lock is that it has the extra property that spinners are able to exit |
| the MCS spinlock queue when they need to reschedule. This further helps |
| avoid situations where MCS spinners that need to reschedule would continue |
| waiting to spin on mutex owner, only to go directly to slowpath upon |
| obtaining the MCS lock. |
| |
| |
| (iii) slowpath: last resort, if the lock is still unable to be acquired, |
| the task is added to the wait-queue and sleeps until woken up by the |
| unlock path. Under normal circumstances it blocks as TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE. |
| |
| While formally kernel mutexes are sleepable locks, it is path (ii) that |
| makes them more practically a hybrid type. By simply not interrupting a |
| task and busy-waiting for a few cycles instead of immediately sleeping, |
| the performance of this lock has been seen to significantly improve a |
| number of workloads. Note that this technique is also used for rw-semaphores. |
| |
| Semantics |
| --------- |
| |
| The mutex subsystem checks and enforces the following rules: |
| |
| - Only one task can hold the mutex at a time. |
| - Only the owner can unlock the mutex. |
| - Multiple unlocks are not permitted. |
| - Recursive locking/unlocking is not permitted. |
| - A mutex must only be initialized via the API (see below). |
| - A task may not exit with a mutex held. |
| - Memory areas where held locks reside must not be freed. |
| - Held mutexes must not be reinitialized. |
| - Mutexes may not be used in hardware or software interrupt |
| contexts such as tasklets and timers. |
| |
| These semantics are fully enforced when CONFIG DEBUG_MUTEXES is enabled. |
| In addition, the mutex debugging code also implements a number of other |
| features that make lock debugging easier and faster: |
| |
| - Uses symbolic names of mutexes, whenever they are printed |
| in debug output. |
| - Point-of-acquire tracking, symbolic lookup of function names, |
| list of all locks held in the system, printout of them. |
| - Owner tracking. |
| - Detects self-recursing locks and prints out all relevant info. |
| - Detects multi-task circular deadlocks and prints out all affected |
| locks and tasks (and only those tasks). |
| |
| |
| Interfaces |
| ---------- |
| Statically define the mutex: |
| DEFINE_MUTEX(name); |
| |
| Dynamically initialize the mutex: |
| mutex_init(mutex); |
| |
| Acquire the mutex, uninterruptible: |
| void mutex_lock(struct mutex *lock); |
| void mutex_lock_nested(struct mutex *lock, unsigned int subclass); |
| int mutex_trylock(struct mutex *lock); |
| |
| Acquire the mutex, interruptible: |
| int mutex_lock_interruptible_nested(struct mutex *lock, |
| unsigned int subclass); |
| int mutex_lock_interruptible(struct mutex *lock); |
| |
| Acquire the mutex, interruptible, if dec to 0: |
| int atomic_dec_and_mutex_lock(atomic_t *cnt, struct mutex *lock); |
| |
| Unlock the mutex: |
| void mutex_unlock(struct mutex *lock); |
| |
| Test if the mutex is taken: |
| int mutex_is_locked(struct mutex *lock); |
| |
| Disadvantages |
| ------------- |
| |
| Unlike its original design and purpose, 'struct mutex' is among the largest |
| locks in the kernel. E.g: on x86-64 it is 32 bytes, where 'struct semaphore' |
| is 24 bytes and rw_semaphore is 40 bytes. Larger structure sizes mean more CPU |
| cache and memory footprint. |
| |
| When to use mutexes |
| ------------------- |
| |
| Unless the strict semantics of mutexes are unsuitable and/or the critical |
| region prevents the lock from being shared, always prefer them to any other |
| locking primitive. |