Add deprecating the generic rte_atomic_xx APIs to c11 atomic built-ins guide and examples.
Signed-off-by: Phil Yang <phil.y...@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Honnappa Nagarahalli <honnappa.nagaraha...@arm.com> --- doc/guides/prog_guide/writing_efficient_code.rst | 139 ++++++++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 138 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/doc/guides/prog_guide/writing_efficient_code.rst b/doc/guides/prog_guide/writing_efficient_code.rst index 849f63e..3bd2601 100644 --- a/doc/guides/prog_guide/writing_efficient_code.rst +++ b/doc/guides/prog_guide/writing_efficient_code.rst @@ -167,7 +167,13 @@ but with the added cost of lower throughput. Locks and Atomic Operations --------------------------- -Atomic operations imply a lock prefix before the instruction, +This section describes some key considerations when using locks and atomic +operations in the DPDK environment. + +Locks +~~~~~ + +On x86, atomic operations imply a lock prefix before the instruction, causing the processor's LOCK# signal to be asserted during execution of the following instruction. This has a big impact on performance in a multicore environment. @@ -176,6 +182,137 @@ It can often be replaced by other solutions like per-lcore variables. Also, some locking techniques are more efficient than others. For instance, the Read-Copy-Update (RCU) algorithm can frequently replace simple rwlocks. +Atomic Operations: Use C11 Atomic Built-ins +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +DPDK `generic rte_atomic <https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/blob/v20.02/lib/librte_eal/common/include/generic/rte_atomic.h>`_ operations are +implemented by `__sync built-ins <https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/_005f_005fsync-Builtins.html>`_. +These __sync built-ins result in full barriers on aarch64, which are unnecessary +in many use cases. They can be replaced by `__atomic built-ins <https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/_005f_005fatomic-Builtins.html>`_ that +conform to the C11 memory model and provide finer memory order control. + +So replacing the rte_atomic operations with __atomic built-ins might improve +performance for aarch64 machines. `More details <https://www.dpdk.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/35/2019/10/StateofC11Code.pdf>`_. + +Some typical optimization cases are listed below: + +Atomicity +^^^^^^^^^ + +Some use cases require atomicity alone, the ordering of the memory operations +does not matter. For example the packets statistics in the `vhost <https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/blob/v20.02/examples/vhost/main.c#L796>`_ example application. + +It just updates the number of transmitted packets, no subsequent logic depends +on these counters. So the RELAXED memory ordering is sufficient: + +.. code-block:: c + + static __rte_always_inline void + virtio_xmit(struct vhost_dev *dst_vdev, struct vhost_dev *src_vdev, + struct rte_mbuf *m) + { + ... + ... + if (enable_stats) { + __atomic_add_fetch(&dst_vdev->stats.rx_total_atomic, 1, __ATOMIC_RELAXED); + __atomic_add_fetch(&dst_vdev->stats.rx_atomic, ret, __ATOMIC_RELAXED); + ... + } + } + +One-way Barrier +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Some use cases allow for memory reordering in one way while requiring memory +ordering in the other direction. + +For example, the memory operations before the `lock <https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/blob/v20.02/lib/librte_eal/common/include/generic/rte_spinlock.h#L66>`_ can move to the +critical section, but the memory operations in the critical section cannot move +above the lock. In this case, the full memory barrier in the CAS operation can +be replaced to ACQUIRE. On the other hand, the memory operations after the +`unlock <https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/blob/v20.02/lib/librte_eal/common/include/generic/rte_spinlock.h#L88>`_ can move to the critical section, but the memory operations in the +critical section cannot move below the unlock. So the full barrier in the STORE +operation can be replaced with RELEASE. + +Reader-Writer Concurrency +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +Lock-free reader-writer concurrency is one of the common use cases in DPDK. + +The payload or the data that the writer wants to communicate to the reader, +can be written with RELAXED memory order. However, the guard variable should +be written with RELEASE memory order. This ensures that the store to guard +variable is observable only after the store to payload is observable. +Refer to `rte_hash insert <https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/blob/v20.02/lib/librte_hash/rte_cuckoo_hash.c#L737>`_ for an example. + +.. code-block:: c + + static inline int32_t + rte_hash_cuckoo_insert_mw(const struct rte_hash *h, + ... + int32_t *ret_val) + { + ... + ... + + /* Insert new entry if there is room in the primary + * bucket. + */ + for (i = 0; i < RTE_HASH_BUCKET_ENTRIES; i++) { + /* Check if slot is available */ + if (likely(prim_bkt->key_idx[i] == EMPTY_SLOT)) { + prim_bkt->sig_current[i] = sig; + /* Store to signature and key should not + * leak after the store to key_idx. i.e. + * key_idx is the guard variable for signature + * and key. + */ + __atomic_store_n(&prim_bkt->key_idx[i], + new_idx, + __ATOMIC_RELEASE); + break; + } + } + + ... + } + +Correspondingly, on the reader side, the guard variable should be read +with ACQUIRE memory order. The payload or the data the writer communicated, +can be read with RELAXED memory order. This ensures that, if the store to +guard variable is observable, the store to payload is also observable. Refer to `rte_hash lookup <https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/blob/v20.02/lib/librte_hash/rte_cuckoo_hash.c#L1215>`_ for an example. + +.. code-block:: c + + static inline int32_t + search_one_bucket_lf(const struct rte_hash *h, const void *key, uint16_t sig, + void **data, const struct rte_hash_bucket *bkt) + { + ... + + for (i = 0; i < RTE_HASH_BUCKET_ENTRIES; i++) { + .... + if (bkt->sig_current[i] == sig) { + key_idx = __atomic_load_n(&bkt->key_idx[i], + __ATOMIC_ACQUIRE); + if (key_idx != EMPTY_SLOT) { + k = (struct rte_hash_key *) ((char *)keys + + key_idx * h->key_entry_size); + + if (rte_hash_cmp_eq(key, k->key, h) == 0) { + if (data != NULL) { + *data = __atomic_load_n(&k->pdata, + __ATOMIC_ACQUIRE); + } + + /* + * Return index where key is stored, + * subtracting the first dummy index + */ + return key_idx - 1; + } + ... + } + Coding Considerations --------------------- -- 2.7.4