Fix: urcu-wait: add missing futex.h include
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1Userspace RCU Implementation
2============================
3
4by Mathieu Desnoyers and Paul E. McKenney
5
6
7Building
8--------
9
10 ./bootstrap # skip if using tarball
11 ./configure
12 make
13 make install
14 ldconfig
15
16Hints:
17
18 - Forcing 32-bit build:
19
20 CFLAGS="-m32 -g -O2" ./configure
21
22 - Forcing 64-bit build:
23
24 CFLAGS="-m64 -g -O2" ./configure
25
26 - Forcing a 32-bit build with 386 backward compatibility:
27
28 CFLAGS="-m32 -g -O2" ./configure --host=i386-pc-linux-gnu
29
30 - Forcing a 32-bit build for Sparcv9 (typical for Sparc v9)
31
32 CFLAGS="-m32 -Wa,-Av9a -g -O2" ./configure
33
34
35Architectures supported
36-----------------------
37
38Currently, the following architectures are supported:
39
40 - x86 (i386, i486, i586, i686)
41 - amd64 / x86\_64
42 - PowerPC 32/64
43 - S390, S390x
44 - ARM 32/64
45 - MIPS
46 - NIOS2
47 - Alpha
48 - ia64
49 - Sparcv9 32/64
50 - Tilera
51 - hppa/PA-RISC
52 - m68k
53 - RISC-V
54
55Tested on:
56
57 - Linux all architectures
58 - FreeBSD 13 i386/amd64
59 - Cygwin i386/amd64
60 - MacOS amd64/arm64
61
62Should also work on:
63
64 - Android
65 - NetBSD 5
66 - OpenBSD
67 - Solaris
68
69(more testing needed before claiming support for these OS).
70
71
72Toolchain support
73-----------------
74
75The C compiler used needs to support at least C99. The C++ compiler used needs
76to support at least C++11. The oldest GCC version officialy supported and
77tested is 4.8.
78
79Older GCC versions might still work with the following exceptions:
80
81 - GCC 3.3 and 3.4 have a bug that prevents them from generating volatile
82 accesses to offsets in a TLS structure on 32-bit x86. These versions are
83 therefore not compatible with `liburcu` on x86 32-bit
84 (i386, i486, i586, i686).
85 The problem has been reported to the GCC community:
86 <http://www.mail-archive.com/gcc-bugs@gcc.gnu.org/msg281255.html>
87 - GCC 3.3 cannot match the "xchg" instruction on 32-bit x86 build.
88 See <http://kerneltrap.org/node/7507>
89 - Alpha, ia64 and ARM architectures depend on GCC 4.x with atomic builtins
90 support. For ARM this was introduced with GCC 4.4:
91 <http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.4/changes.html>.
92 - Linux aarch64 depends on GCC 5.1 or better because prior versions
93 perform unsafe access to deallocated stack.
94
95Clang version 3.0 (based on LLVM 3.0) is supported.
96
97Glibc >= 2.4 should work but the older version we test against is
98currently 2.17.
99
100
101Build system
102------------
103
104For developers using the Git tree:
105
106This source tree is based on the autotools suite from GNU to simplify
107portability. Here are some things you should have on your system in order to
108compile the git repository tree :
109
110 - GNU autotools (automake >=1.12, autoconf >=2.69)
111 (make sure your system wide `automake` points to a recent version!)
112 - GNU Libtool >=2.2
113 (for more information, go to <http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/>)
114
115If you get the tree from the repository, you will need to use the `bootstrap`
116script in the root of the tree. It calls all the GNU tools needed to prepare
117the tree configuration.
118
119Test scripts provided in the `tests/` directory of the source tree depend
120on `bash` and the `seq` program.
121
122
123API
124---
125
126See the relevant API documentation files in `doc/`. The APIs provided by
127Userspace RCU are, by prefix:
128
129 - `rcu_`: Read-Copy Update (see [`doc/rcu-api.md`](doc/rcu-api.md))
130 - `cmm_`: Concurrent Memory Model
131 - `caa_`: Concurrent Architecture Abstraction
132 - `cds_`: Concurrent Data Structures
133 (see [`doc/cds-api.md`](doc/cds-api.md))
134 - `uatomic_`: Userspace Atomic
135 (see [`doc/uatomic-api.md`](doc/uatomic-api.md))
136
137
138Quick start guide
139-----------------
140
141### Usage of all urcu libraries:
142
143 - Define `_LGPL_SOURCE` (only) if your code is LGPL or GPL compatible
144 before including the `urcu.h` or `urcu-qsbr.h` header. If your application
145 is distributed under another license, function calls will be generated
146 instead of inlines, so your application can link with the library.
147 - Linking with one of the libraries below is always necessary even for
148 LGPL and GPL applications.
149 - Define `URCU_INLINE_SMALL_FUNCTIONS` before including Userspace RCU
150 headers if you want Userspace RCU to inline small functions (10
151 lines or less) into the application. It can be used by applications
152 distributed under any kind of license, and does *not* make the
153 application a derived work of Userspace RCU.
154
155Those small inlined functions are guaranteed to match the library
156content as long as the library major version is unchanged.
157Therefore, the application *must* be compiled with headers matching
158the library major version number. Applications using
159`URCU_INLINE_SMALL_FUNCTIONS` may be unable to use debugging
160features of Userspace RCU without being recompiled.
161
162There are multiple flavors of liburcu available:
163
164 - `memb`,
165 - `qsbr`,
166 - `mb`,
167 - `signal`,
168 - `bp`.
169
170The API members start with the prefix `urcu_<flavor>_`, where
171`<flavor>` is the chosen flavor name.
172
173
174### Usage of `liburcu-memb`
175
176 1. `#include <urcu/urcu-memb.h>`
177 2. Link the application with `-lurcu-memb`
178
179This is the preferred version of the library, in terms of
180grace-period detection speed, read-side speed and flexibility.
181Dynamically detects kernel support for `sys_membarrier()`. Falls back
182on `urcu-mb` scheme if support is not present, which has slower
183read-side. Use the `--disable-sys-membarrier-fallback` configure option
184to disable the fall back, thus requiring `sys_membarrier()` to be
185available. This gives a small speedup when `sys_membarrier()` is
186supported by the kernel, and aborts in the library constructor if not
187supported.
188
189
190### Usage of `liburcu-qsbr`
191
192 1. `#include <urcu/urcu-qsbr.h>`
193 2. Link with `-lurcu-qsbr`
194
195The QSBR flavor of RCU needs to have each reader thread executing
196`rcu_quiescent_state()` periodically to progress. `rcu_thread_online()`
197and `rcu_thread_offline()` can be used to mark long periods for which
198the threads are not active. It provides the fastest read-side at the
199expense of more intrusiveness in the application code.
200
201
202### Usage of `liburcu-mb`
203
204 1. `#include <urcu/urcu-mb.h>`
205 2. Link with `-lurcu-mb`
206
207This version of the urcu library uses memory barriers on the writer
208and reader sides. This results in faster grace-period detection, but
209results in slower reads.
210
211
212### Usage of `liburcu-signal`
213
214 1. `#include <urcu/urcu-signal.h>`
215 2. Link the application with `-lurcu-signal`
216
217Version of the library that requires a signal, typically `SIGUSR1`. Can
218be overridden with `-DSIGRCU` by modifying `Makefile.build.inc`.
219
220
221### Usage of `liburcu-bp`
222
223 1. `#include <urcu/urcu-bp.h>`
224 2. Link with `-lurcu-bp`
225
226The BP library flavor stands for "bulletproof". It is specifically
227designed to help tracing library to hook on applications without
228requiring to modify these applications. `urcu_bp_init()`, and
229`urcu_bp_unregister_thread()` all become nops, whereas calling
230`urcu_bp_register_thread()` becomes optional. The state is dealt with by
231the library internally at the expense of read-side and write-side
232performance.
233
234
235### Initialization
236
237Each thread that has reader critical sections (that uses
238`urcu_<flavor>_read_lock()`/`urcu_<flavor>_read_unlock()` must first
239register to the URCU library. This is done by calling
240`urcu_<flavor>_register_thread()`. Unregistration must be performed
241before exiting the thread by using `urcu_<flavor>_unregister_thread()`.
242
243
244### Reading
245
246Reader critical sections must be protected by locating them between
247calls to `urcu_<flavor>_read_lock()` and `urcu_<flavor>_read_unlock()`.
248Inside that lock, `rcu_dereference()` may be called to read an RCU
249protected pointer.
250
251
252### Writing
253
254`rcu_assign_pointer()` and `rcu_xchg_pointer()` may be called anywhere.
255After, `urcu_<flavor>_synchronize_rcu()` must be called. When it
256returns, the old values are not in usage anymore.
257
258As an alternative to `urcu_<flavor>_synchronize_rcu()`,
259it is also possible to use the urcu polling mechanism to wait for a
260grace period to elapse. This can be done by using
261`urcu_<flavor>_start_poll_synchronize_rcu()`
262to start the grace period polling, and then invoke
263`urcu_<flavor>_poll_state_synchronize_rcu()`, which returns true if
264the grace period has completed, false otherwise.
265
266
267### Usage of `liburcu-defer`
268
269 - Follow instructions for either `liburcu-memb`, `liburcu-qsbr`,
270 `liburcu-mb`, `liburcu-signal`, or `liburcu-bp` above.
271 The `liburcu-defer` functionality is pulled into each of
272 those library modules.
273 - Provides `urcu_<flavor>_defer_rcu()` primitive to enqueue delayed
274 callbacks. Queued callbacks are executed in batch periodically after
275 a grace period. Do _not_ use `urcu_<flavor>_defer_rcu()` within a
276 read-side critical section, because it may call
277 `urcu_<flavor>_synchronize_rcu()` if the thread queue is full. This
278 can lead to deadlock or worse.
279 - Requires that `urcu_<flavor>_defer_barrier()` must be called in
280 library destructor if a library queues callbacks and is expected to
281 be unloaded with `dlclose()`.
282
283Its API is currently experimental. It may change in future library releases.
284
285
286### Usage of `urcu-call-rcu`
287
288 - Follow instructions for either `liburcu-memb`, `liburcu-qsbr`,
289 `liburcu-mb`, `liburcu-signal`, or `liburcu-bp` above.
290 The `urcu-call-rcu` functionality is pulled into each of
291 those library modules.
292 - Provides the `urcu_<flavor>_call_rcu()` primitive to enqueue delayed
293 callbacks in a manner similar to `urcu_<flavor>_defer_rcu()`, but
294 without ever delaying for a grace period. On the other hand,
295 `urcu_<flavor>_call_rcu()`'s best-case overhead is not quite as good
296 as that of `urcu_<flavor>_defer_rcu()`.
297 - Provides `urcu_<flavor>_call_rcu()` to allow asynchronous handling
298 of RCU grace periods. A number of additional functions are provided
299 to manage the helper threads used by `urcu_<flavor>_call_rcu()`, but
300 reasonable defaults are used if these additional functions are not
301 invoked. See [`doc/rcu-api.md`](doc/rcu-api.md) in userspace-rcu
302 documentation for more details.
303
304
305### Being careful with signals
306
307The `liburcu-signal` library uses signals internally. The signal handler is
308registered with the `SA_RESTART` flag. However, these signals may cause
309some non-restartable system calls to fail with `errno = EINTR`. Care
310should be taken to restart system calls manually if they fail with this
311error. A list of non-restartable system calls may be found in
312`signal(7)`.
313
314Read-side critical sections are allowed in a signal handler,
315except those setup with `sigaltstack(2)`, with `liburcu-memb` and
316`liburcu-mb`. Be careful, however, to disable these signals
317between thread creation and calls to `urcu_<flavor>_register_thread()`,
318because a signal handler nesting on an unregistered thread would not be
319allowed to call `urcu_<flavor>_read_lock()`.
320
321Read-side critical sections are _not_ allowed in a signal handler with
322`liburcu-qsbr`, unless signals are disabled explicitly around each
323`urcu_qsbr_quiescent_state()` calls, when threads are put offline and around
324calls to `urcu_qsbr_synchronize_rcu()`. Even then, we do not recommend it.
325
326
327### Interaction with mutexes
328
329One must be careful to do not cause deadlocks due to interaction of
330`urcu_<flavor>_synchronize_rcu()` and RCU read-side with mutexes. If
331`urcu_<flavor>_synchronize_rcu()` is called with a mutex held, this
332mutex (or any mutex which has this mutex in its dependency chain) should
333not be acquired from within a RCU read-side critical section.
334
335This is especially important to understand in the context of the
336QSBR flavor: a registered reader thread being "online" by
337default should be considered as within a RCU read-side critical
338section unless explicitly put "offline". Therefore, if
339`urcu_qsbr_synchronize_rcu()` is called with a mutex held, this mutex,
340as well as any mutex which has this mutex in its dependency chain should
341only be taken when the RCU reader thread is "offline" (this can be
342performed by calling `urcu_qsbr_thread_offline()`).
343
344
345### Interaction with `fork()`
346
347Special care must be taken for applications performing `fork()` without
348any following `exec()`. This is caused by the fact that Linux only clones
349the thread calling `fork()`, and thus never replicates any of the other
350parent thread into the child process. Most `liburcu` implementations
351require that all registrations (as reader, `defer_rcu` and `call_rcu`
352threads) should be released before a `fork()` is performed, except for the
353rather common scenario where `fork()` is immediately followed by `exec()` in
354the child process. The only implementation not subject to that rule is
355`liburcu-bp`, which is designed to handle `fork()` by calling
356`urcu_bp_before_fork`, `urcu_bp_after_fork_parent` and
357`urcu_bp_after_fork_child`.
358
359Applications that use `urcu_<flavor>_call_rcu()` and that `fork()`
360without doing an immediate `exec()` must take special action. The
361parent must invoke `urcu_<flavor>_call_rcu_before_fork()` before the
362`fork()` and `urcu_<flavor>_call_rcu_after_fork_parent()` after the
363`fork()`. The child process must invoke
364`urcu_<flavor>_call_rcu_after_fork_child()`. Even though these three
365APIs are suitable for passing to `pthread_atfork()`, use of
366`pthread_atfork()` is **STRONGLY DISCOURAGED** for programs calling the
367glibc memory allocator (`malloc()`, `calloc()`, `free()`, ...) within
368`urcu_<flavor>_call_rcu` callbacks. This is due to limitations in the
369way glibc memory allocator handles calls to the memory allocator from
370concurrent threads while the `pthread_atfork()` handlers are executing.
371
372Combining e.g.:
373
374 - call to `free()` from callbacks executed within
375 `urcu_<flavor>_call_rcu` worker threads,
376 - executing `urcu_<flavor>_call_rcu` atfork handlers within the glibc
377 pthread atfork mechanism,
378
379will sometimes trigger interesting process hangs. This usually
380hangs on a memory allocator lock within glibc.
381
382
383### Thread Local Storage (TLS)
384
385Userspace RCU can fall back on `pthread_getspecific()` to emulate
386TLS variables on systems where it is not available. This behavior
387can be forced by specifying `--disable-compiler-tls` as configure
388argument.
389
390
391### Usage of `DEBUG_RCU` & `--enable-rcu-debug`
392
393By default the library is configured with internal debugging
394self-checks disabled.
395
396For always-on debugging self-checks:
397
398 ./configure --enable-rcu-debug
399
400For fine grained enabling of debugging self-checks, build
401userspace-rcu with `DEBUG_RCU` defined and compile dependent
402applications with `DEBUG_RCU` defined when necessary.
403
404Warning: Enabling this feature result in a performance penalty.
405
406
407### Usage of `DEBUG_YIELD`
408
409`DEBUG_YIELD` is used to add random delays in the code for testing
410purposes.
411
412
413### SMP support
414
415By default the library is configured to use synchronization primitives
416adequate for SMP systems. On uniprocessor systems, support for SMP
417systems can be disabled with:
418
419 ./configure --disable-smp-support
420
421theoretically yielding slightly better performance.
422
423
424### Usage of `--enable-cds-lfht-iter-debug`
425
426By default the library is configured with extra debugging checks for
427lock-free hash table iterator traversal disabled.
428
429Building liburcu with `--enable-cds-lfht-iter-debug` and rebuilding
430application to match the ABI change allows finding cases where the hash
431table iterator is re-purposed to be used on a different hash table while
432still being used to iterate on a hash table.
433
434This option alters the rculfhash ABI. Make sure to compile both library
435and application with matching configuration.
436
437
438Make targets
439------------
440
441In addition to the usual `make check` target, Userspace RCU features
442`make regtest`, `make short_bench` and `make long_bench` targets:
443
444 - `make check`: short tests, meant to be run when rebuilding or
445 porting Userspace RCU.
446 - `make regtest`: long (many hours) test, meant to be run when
447 modifying Userspace RCU or porting it to a new architecture or
448 operating system.
449 - `make short_bench`: short benchmarks, 3 seconds per test.
450 - `make long_bench`: long (many hours) benchmarks, 30 seconds per test.
451
452
453Known issues
454------------
455
456There is an application vs library compatibility issue between
457applications built using Userspace RCU 0.10 headers linked against
458Userspace RCU 0.11 or 0.12 shared objects. The problem occurs as
459follows:
460
461 - An application executable is built with `_LGPL_SOURCE` defined, includes
462 any of the Userspace RCU 0.10 urcu flavor headers, and is built
463 without the `-fpic` compiler option.
464
465 - The Userspace RCU 0.10 library shared objects are updated to 0.11
466 or 0.12 without rebuilding the application.
467
468 - The application will hang, typically when RCU grace period
469 (synchronize_rcu) is invoked.
470
471Some possible work-arounds for this are:
472
473 - Rebuild the application against Userspace RCU 0.11+.
474
475 - Rebuild the application with `-fpic`.
476
477 - Upgrade Userspace RCU to 0.13+ without installing 0.11 nor 0.12.
478
479
480Contacts
481--------
482
483You can contact the maintainers on the following mailing list:
484`lttng-dev@lists.lttng.org`.
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