Hi Elad,

Thanks very much for your time and clarification!

Best Regards
Nan Xiao

On Mon, Nov 11, 2024 at 8:05 PM Elad Lahav <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Machine-sized means smaller than or equal to sizeof(long).
> >
> > Take a look at the implementation of WRITE_ONCE or READ_ONCE of linux.
>
> That is not necessarily true. What sizes and alignments are guaranteed
> to be atomic for access (i.e., writing a value to a memory location
> results in everyone seeing either the old value or the new value,
> never a mix) is defined by the hardware architecture, and need not
> align with the C definition of long. You can use the C11
> ATOMIC_*_LOCK_FREE() to determine if a type is atomic.
>
> As Akira points out, the term "atomic" is overloaded, and can cause
> much confusion. A type being atomic for read or write access does not
> imply atomic read-modify-write.
>
> --Elad

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