ARCHITECTURES SUPPORTED
-----------------------
-Currently, x86 (i386, i486, i586, i686), x86 64-bit, PowerPC 32/64, S390, S390x,
-ARM, Alpha, ia64 and Sparcv9 32/64 are supported. Only tested on Linux so
-far, but should theoretically work on other operating systems.
+Currently, Linux x86 (i386, i486, i586, i686), x86 64-bit, PowerPC 32/64,
+S390, S390x, ARM, Alpha, ia64 and Sparcv9 32/64 are supported. Tested on
+Linux, FreeBSD 8.2/9.0, and Cygwin. Should also work on: Android, NetBSD 5,
+OpenBSD, Darwin (more testing needed before claiming support for these OS).
-ARM depends on running a Linux kernel 2.6.15 or better.
+Linux ARM depends on running a Linux kernel 2.6.15 or better, GCC 4.4 or
+better.
The gcc compiler versions 3.3, 3.4, 4.0, 4.1, 4.2, 4.3, 4.4 and 4.5 are
supported, with the following exceptions:
http://www.mail-archive.com/gcc-bugs@gcc.gnu.org/msg281255.html
- gcc 3.3 cannot match the "xchg" instruction on 32-bit x86 build.
See: http://kerneltrap.org/node/7507
-- Alpha, ia64 and ARM architectures depend on 4.x gcc with atomic builtins
- support.
+- Alpha, ia64 and ARM architectures depend on gcc 4.x with atomic builtins
+ support. For ARM this was introduced with gcc 4.4:
+ http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.4/changes.html
+
+For developers using the git tree:
+
+This source tree is based on the autotools suite from GNU to simplify
+portability. Here are some things you should have on your system in order to
+compile the git repository tree :
+
+- GNU autotools (automake >=1.10, autoconf >=2.50, autoheader >=2.50)
+ (make sure your system wide "automake" points to a recent version!)
+- GNU Libtool >=2.2
+ (for more information, go to http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/)
+
+If you get the tree from the repository, you will need to use the "bootstrap"
+script in the root of the tree. It calls all the GNU tools needed to prepare the
+tree configuration.
+
+Test scripts provided in the tests/ directory of the source tree depend
+on "bash" and the "seq" program.
QUICK START GUIDE
grace periods. A number of additional functions are provided
to manage the helper threads used by call_rcu(), but reasonable
defaults are used if these additional functions are not invoked.
- See API.txt for more details.
+ See rcu-api.txt in userspace-rcu documentation for more details.
Being careful with signals
signal(7). The liburcu-mb and liburcu-qsbr versions of the Userspace RCU
library do not require any signal.
- Read-side critical sections are allowed in a signal handler with
- liburcu and liburcu-mb. Be careful, however, to disable these signals
+ Read-side critical sections are allowed in a signal handler,
+ except those setup with sigaltstack(2), with liburcu and
+ liburcu-mb. Be careful, however, to disable these signals
between thread creation and calls to rcu_register_thread(), because a
- signal handler nesting on an unregistered thread would not be allowed to
- call rcu_read_lock().
+ signal handler nesting on an unregistered thread would not be
+ allowed to call rcu_read_lock().
Read-side critical sections are _not_ allowed in a signal handler with
liburcu-qsbr, unless signals are disabled explicitly around each
must invoke call_rcu_before_fork() before the fork() and
call_rcu_after_fork_parent() after the fork(). The child
process must invoke call_rcu_after_fork_child().
- These three APIs are suitable for passing to pthread_atfork().
+ Even though these three APIs are suitable for passing to
+ pthread_atfork(), use of pthread_atfork() is *STRONGLY
+ DISCOURAGED* for programs calling the glibc memory allocator
+ (malloc(), calloc(), free(), ...) within call_rcu callbacks.
+ This is due to limitations in the way glibc memory allocator
+ handles calls to the memory allocator from concurrent threads
+ while the pthread_atfork() handlers are executing.
+ Combining e.g.:
+ * call to free() from callbacks executed within call_rcu worker
+ threads,
+ * executing call_rcu atfork handlers within the glibc pthread
+ atfork mechanism,
+ will sometimes trigger interesting process hangs. This usually
+ hangs on a memory allocator lock within glibc.
+
+Thread Local Storage (TLS)
+
+ Userspace RCU can fall back on pthread_getspecific() to emulate
+ TLS variables on systems where it is not available. This behavior
+ can be forced by specifying --disable-compiler-tls as configure
+ argument.