| /* |
| * Implementation of the Global Interpreter Lock (GIL). |
| */ |
| |
| #include <stdlib.h> |
| #include <errno.h> |
| |
| |
| /* First some general settings */ |
| |
| /* microseconds (the Python API uses seconds, though) */ |
| #define DEFAULT_INTERVAL 5000 |
| static unsigned long gil_interval = DEFAULT_INTERVAL; |
| #define INTERVAL (gil_interval >= 1 ? gil_interval : 1) |
| |
| /* Enable if you want to force the switching of threads at least every `gil_interval` */ |
| #undef FORCE_SWITCHING |
| #define FORCE_SWITCHING |
| |
| |
| /* |
| Notes about the implementation: |
| |
| - The GIL is just a boolean variable (gil_locked) whose access is protected |
| by a mutex (gil_mutex), and whose changes are signalled by a condition |
| variable (gil_cond). gil_mutex is taken for short periods of time, |
| and therefore mostly uncontended. |
| |
| - In the GIL-holding thread, the main loop (PyEval_EvalFrameEx) must be |
| able to release the GIL on demand by another thread. A volatile boolean |
| variable (gil_drop_request) is used for that purpose, which is checked |
| at every turn of the eval loop. That variable is set after a wait of |
| `interval` microseconds on `gil_cond` has timed out. |
| |
| [Actually, another volatile boolean variable (eval_breaker) is used |
| which ORs several conditions into one. Volatile booleans are |
| sufficient as inter-thread signalling means since Python is run |
| on cache-coherent architectures only.] |
| |
| - A thread wanting to take the GIL will first let pass a given amount of |
| time (`interval` microseconds) before setting gil_drop_request. This |
| encourages a defined switching period, but doesn't enforce it since |
| opcodes can take an arbitrary time to execute. |
| |
| The `interval` value is available for the user to read and modify |
| using the Python API `sys.{get,set}switchinterval()`. |
| |
| - When a thread releases the GIL and gil_drop_request is set, that thread |
| ensures that another GIL-awaiting thread gets scheduled. |
| It does so by waiting on a condition variable (switch_cond) until |
| the value of gil_last_holder is changed to something else than its |
| own thread state pointer, indicating that another thread was able to |
| take the GIL. |
| |
| This is meant to prohibit the latency-adverse behaviour on multi-core |
| machines where one thread would speculatively release the GIL, but still |
| run and end up being the first to re-acquire it, making the "timeslices" |
| much longer than expected. |
| (Note: this mechanism is enabled with FORCE_SWITCHING above) |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef _POSIX_THREADS |
| /* This means pthreads are not implemented in libc headers, hence the macro |
| not present in unistd.h. But they still can be implemented as an external |
| library (e.g. gnu pth in pthread emulation) */ |
| # ifdef HAVE_PTHREAD_H |
| # include <pthread.h> /* _POSIX_THREADS */ |
| # endif |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| #ifdef _POSIX_THREADS |
| |
| /* |
| * POSIX support |
| */ |
| |
| #include <pthread.h> |
| |
| #define ADD_MICROSECONDS(tv, interval) \ |
| do { \ |
| tv.tv_usec += (long) interval; \ |
| tv.tv_sec += tv.tv_usec / 1000000; \ |
| tv.tv_usec %= 1000000; \ |
| } while (0) |
| |
| /* We assume all modern POSIX systems have gettimeofday() */ |
| #ifdef GETTIMEOFDAY_NO_TZ |
| #define GETTIMEOFDAY(ptv) gettimeofday(ptv) |
| #else |
| #define GETTIMEOFDAY(ptv) gettimeofday(ptv, (struct timezone *)NULL) |
| #endif |
| |
| #define MUTEX_T pthread_mutex_t |
| #define MUTEX_INIT(mut) \ |
| if (pthread_mutex_init(&mut, NULL)) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("pthread_mutex_init(" #mut ") failed"); }; |
| #define MUTEX_LOCK(mut) \ |
| if (pthread_mutex_lock(&mut)) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("pthread_mutex_lock(" #mut ") failed"); }; |
| #define MUTEX_UNLOCK(mut) \ |
| if (pthread_mutex_unlock(&mut)) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("pthread_mutex_unlock(" #mut ") failed"); }; |
| |
| #define COND_T pthread_cond_t |
| #define COND_INIT(cond) \ |
| if (pthread_cond_init(&cond, NULL)) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("pthread_cond_init(" #cond ") failed"); }; |
| #define COND_RESET(cond) |
| #define COND_SIGNAL(cond) \ |
| if (pthread_cond_signal(&cond)) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("pthread_cond_signal(" #cond ") failed"); }; |
| #define COND_WAIT(cond, mut) \ |
| if (pthread_cond_wait(&cond, &mut)) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("pthread_cond_wait(" #cond ") failed"); }; |
| #define COND_TIMED_WAIT(cond, mut, microseconds, timeout_result) \ |
| { \ |
| int r; \ |
| struct timespec ts; \ |
| struct timeval deadline; \ |
| \ |
| GETTIMEOFDAY(&deadline); \ |
| ADD_MICROSECONDS(deadline, microseconds); \ |
| ts.tv_sec = deadline.tv_sec; \ |
| ts.tv_nsec = deadline.tv_usec * 1000; \ |
| \ |
| r = pthread_cond_timedwait(&cond, &mut, &ts); \ |
| if (r == ETIMEDOUT) \ |
| timeout_result = 1; \ |
| else if (r) \ |
| Py_FatalError("pthread_cond_timedwait(" #cond ") failed"); \ |
| else \ |
| timeout_result = 0; \ |
| } \ |
| |
| #elif defined(NT_THREADS) |
| |
| /* |
| * Windows (2000 and later, as well as (hopefully) CE) support |
| */ |
| |
| #include <windows.h> |
| |
| #define MUTEX_T HANDLE |
| #define MUTEX_INIT(mut) \ |
| if (!(mut = CreateMutex(NULL, FALSE, NULL))) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("CreateMutex(" #mut ") failed"); }; |
| #define MUTEX_LOCK(mut) \ |
| if (WaitForSingleObject(mut, INFINITE) != WAIT_OBJECT_0) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("WaitForSingleObject(" #mut ") failed"); }; |
| #define MUTEX_UNLOCK(mut) \ |
| if (!ReleaseMutex(mut)) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("ReleaseMutex(" #mut ") failed"); }; |
| |
| /* We emulate condition variables with events. It is sufficient here. |
| WaitForMultipleObjects() allows the event to be caught and the mutex |
| to be taken atomically. |
| As for SignalObjectAndWait(), its semantics are unfortunately a bit |
| more foggy. Many sources on the Web define it as atomically releasing |
| the first object while starting to wait on the second, but MSDN states |
| it is *not* atomic... |
| |
| In any case, the emulation here is tailored for our particular use case. |
| For example, we don't care how many threads are woken up when a condition |
| gets signalled. Generic emulations of the pthread_cond_* API using |
| Win32 functions can be found on the Web. |
| The following read can be edificating (or not): |
| http://www.cse.wustl.edu/~schmidt/win32-cv-1.html |
| */ |
| #define COND_T HANDLE |
| #define COND_INIT(cond) \ |
| /* auto-reset, non-signalled */ \ |
| if (!(cond = CreateEvent(NULL, FALSE, FALSE, NULL))) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("CreateMutex(" #cond ") failed"); }; |
| #define COND_RESET(cond) \ |
| if (!ResetEvent(cond)) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("ResetEvent(" #cond ") failed"); }; |
| #define COND_SIGNAL(cond) \ |
| if (!SetEvent(cond)) { \ |
| Py_FatalError("SetEvent(" #cond ") failed"); }; |
| #define COND_WAIT(cond, mut) \ |
| { \ |
| if (SignalObjectAndWait(mut, cond, INFINITE, FALSE) != WAIT_OBJECT_0) \ |
| Py_FatalError("SignalObjectAndWait(" #mut ", " #cond") failed"); \ |
| MUTEX_LOCK(mut); \ |
| } |
| #define COND_TIMED_WAIT(cond, mut, microseconds, timeout_result) \ |
| { \ |
| DWORD r; \ |
| HANDLE objects[2] = { cond, mut }; \ |
| MUTEX_UNLOCK(mut); \ |
| r = WaitForMultipleObjects(2, objects, TRUE, microseconds / 1000); \ |
| if (r == WAIT_TIMEOUT) { \ |
| MUTEX_LOCK(mut); \ |
| timeout_result = 1; \ |
| } \ |
| else if (r != WAIT_OBJECT_0) \ |
| Py_FatalError("WaitForSingleObject(" #cond ") failed"); \ |
| else \ |
| timeout_result = 0; \ |
| } |
| |
| #else |
| |
| #error You need either a POSIX-compatible or a Windows system! |
| |
| #endif /* _POSIX_THREADS, NT_THREADS */ |
| |
| |
| /* Whether the GIL is already taken (-1 if uninitialized). This is atomic |
| because it can be read without any lock taken in ceval.c. */ |
| static _Py_atomic_int gil_locked = {-1}; |
| /* Number of GIL switches since the beginning. */ |
| static unsigned long gil_switch_number = 0; |
| /* Last PyThreadState holding / having held the GIL. This helps us know |
| whether anyone else was scheduled after we dropped the GIL. */ |
| static _Py_atomic_address gil_last_holder = {NULL}; |
| |
| /* This condition variable allows one or several threads to wait until |
| the GIL is released. In addition, the mutex also protects the above |
| variables. */ |
| static COND_T gil_cond; |
| static MUTEX_T gil_mutex; |
| |
| #ifdef FORCE_SWITCHING |
| /* This condition variable helps the GIL-releasing thread wait for |
| a GIL-awaiting thread to be scheduled and take the GIL. */ |
| static COND_T switch_cond; |
| static MUTEX_T switch_mutex; |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| static int gil_created(void) |
| { |
| return _Py_atomic_load_explicit(&gil_locked, _Py_memory_order_acquire) >= 0; |
| } |
| |
| static void create_gil(void) |
| { |
| MUTEX_INIT(gil_mutex); |
| #ifdef FORCE_SWITCHING |
| MUTEX_INIT(switch_mutex); |
| #endif |
| COND_INIT(gil_cond); |
| #ifdef FORCE_SWITCHING |
| COND_INIT(switch_cond); |
| #endif |
| _Py_atomic_store_relaxed(&gil_last_holder, NULL); |
| _Py_ANNOTATE_RWLOCK_CREATE(&gil_locked); |
| _Py_atomic_store_explicit(&gil_locked, 0, _Py_memory_order_release); |
| } |
| |
| static void recreate_gil(void) |
| { |
| _Py_ANNOTATE_RWLOCK_DESTROY(&gil_locked); |
| create_gil(); |
| } |
| |
| static void drop_gil(PyThreadState *tstate) |
| { |
| /* NOTE: tstate is allowed to be NULL. */ |
| if (!_Py_atomic_load_relaxed(&gil_locked)) |
| Py_FatalError("drop_gil: GIL is not locked"); |
| if (tstate != NULL && |
| tstate != _Py_atomic_load_relaxed(&gil_last_holder)) |
| Py_FatalError("drop_gil: wrong thread state"); |
| |
| MUTEX_LOCK(gil_mutex); |
| _Py_ANNOTATE_RWLOCK_RELEASED(&gil_locked, /*is_write=*/1); |
| _Py_atomic_store_relaxed(&gil_locked, 0); |
| COND_SIGNAL(gil_cond); |
| MUTEX_UNLOCK(gil_mutex); |
| |
| #ifdef FORCE_SWITCHING |
| if (_Py_atomic_load_relaxed(&gil_drop_request) && tstate != NULL) { |
| MUTEX_LOCK(switch_mutex); |
| /* Not switched yet => wait */ |
| if (_Py_atomic_load_relaxed(&gil_last_holder) == tstate) { |
| RESET_GIL_DROP_REQUEST(); |
| /* NOTE: if COND_WAIT does not atomically start waiting when |
| releasing the mutex, another thread can run through, take |
| the GIL and drop it again, and reset the condition |
| before we even had a chance to wait for it. */ |
| COND_WAIT(switch_cond, switch_mutex); |
| COND_RESET(switch_cond); |
| } |
| MUTEX_UNLOCK(switch_mutex); |
| } |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| static void take_gil(PyThreadState *tstate) |
| { |
| int err; |
| if (tstate == NULL) |
| Py_FatalError("take_gil: NULL tstate"); |
| |
| err = errno; |
| MUTEX_LOCK(gil_mutex); |
| |
| if (!_Py_atomic_load_relaxed(&gil_locked)) |
| goto _ready; |
| |
| COND_RESET(gil_cond); |
| while (_Py_atomic_load_relaxed(&gil_locked)) { |
| int timed_out = 0; |
| unsigned long saved_switchnum; |
| |
| saved_switchnum = gil_switch_number; |
| COND_TIMED_WAIT(gil_cond, gil_mutex, INTERVAL, timed_out); |
| /* If we timed out and no switch occurred in the meantime, it is time |
| to ask the GIL-holding thread to drop it. */ |
| if (timed_out && |
| _Py_atomic_load_relaxed(&gil_locked) && |
| gil_switch_number == saved_switchnum) { |
| SET_GIL_DROP_REQUEST(); |
| } |
| } |
| _ready: |
| #ifdef FORCE_SWITCHING |
| /* This mutex must be taken before modifying gil_last_holder (see drop_gil()). */ |
| MUTEX_LOCK(switch_mutex); |
| #endif |
| /* We now hold the GIL */ |
| _Py_atomic_store_relaxed(&gil_locked, 1); |
| _Py_ANNOTATE_RWLOCK_ACQUIRED(&gil_locked, /*is_write=*/1); |
| |
| if (tstate != _Py_atomic_load_relaxed(&gil_last_holder)) { |
| _Py_atomic_store_relaxed(&gil_last_holder, tstate); |
| ++gil_switch_number; |
| } |
| |
| #ifdef FORCE_SWITCHING |
| COND_SIGNAL(switch_cond); |
| MUTEX_UNLOCK(switch_mutex); |
| #endif |
| if (_Py_atomic_load_relaxed(&gil_drop_request)) { |
| RESET_GIL_DROP_REQUEST(); |
| } |
| if (tstate->async_exc != NULL) { |
| _PyEval_SignalAsyncExc(); |
| } |
| |
| MUTEX_UNLOCK(gil_mutex); |
| errno = err; |
| } |
| |
| void _PyEval_SetSwitchInterval(unsigned long microseconds) |
| { |
| gil_interval = microseconds; |
| } |
| |
| unsigned long _PyEval_GetSwitchInterval() |
| { |
| return gil_interval; |
| } |