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NAME

       atomic_add,  atomic_clear,  atomic_cmpset, atomic_fetchadd, atomic_load, atomic_readandclear, atomic_set,
       atomic_subtract, atomic_store — atomic operations

SYNOPSIS

       #include <sys/types.h>
       #include <machine/atomic.h>

       void
       atomic_add_[acq_|rel_]<type>(volatile <type> *p, <type> v);

       void
       atomic_clear_[acq_|rel_]<type>(volatile <type> *p, <type> v);

       int
       atomic_cmpset_[acq_|rel_]<type>(volatile <type> *dst, <type> old, <type> new);

       <type>
       atomic_fetchadd_<type>(volatile <type> *p, <type> v);

       <type>
       atomic_load_acq_<type>(volatile <type> *p);

       <type>
       atomic_readandclear_<type>(volatile <type> *p);

       void
       atomic_set_[acq_|rel_]<type>(volatile <type> *p, <type> v);

       void
       atomic_subtract_[acq_|rel_]<type>(volatile <type> *p, <type> v);

       void
       atomic_store_rel_<type>(volatile <type> *p, <type> v);

DESCRIPTION

       Each of the atomic operations is guaranteed to be atomic in the presence of interrupts.  They can be used
       to implement reference counts or as building blocks for more advanced synchronization primitives such  as
       mutexes.

   Types
       Each  atomic  operation  operates on a specific type.  The type to use is indicated in the function name.
       The available types that can be used are:

             int    unsigned integer
             long   unsigned long integer
             ptr    unsigned integer the size of a pointer
             32     unsigned 32-bit integer
             64     unsigned 64-bit integer

       For example, the function to atomically add two integers is called atomic_add_int().

       Certain architectures also provide operations for types smaller than “int”.

             char   unsigned character
             short  unsigned short integer
             8      unsigned 8-bit integer
             16     unsigned 16-bit integer

       These must not be used in MI code because the instructions to  implement  them  efficiently  may  not  be
       available.

   Memory Barriers
       Memory  barriers are used to guarantee the order of data accesses in two ways.  First, they specify hints
       to the compiler to not re-order or optimize  the  operations.   Second,  on  architectures  that  do  not
       guarantee  ordered  data  accesses,  special instructions or special variants of instructions are used to
       indicate to the processor that data accesses need to occur in a certain order.  As a result, most of  the
       atomic  operations have three variants in order to include optional memory barriers.  The first form just
       performs the operation without any explicit barriers.  The second form uses a read  memory  barrier,  and
       the third variant uses a write memory barrier.

       The  second  variant  of  each  operation  includes a read memory barrier.  This barrier ensures that the
       effects of this operation are completed before the effects of any later data accesses.  As a result,  the
       operation  is said to have acquire semantics as it acquires a pseudo-lock requiring further operations to
       wait until it has completed.  To denote this, the suffix  “_acq”  is  inserted  into  the  function  name
       immediately prior to the “_type⟩” suffix.  For example, to subtract two integers ensuring that any later
       writes will happen after the subtraction is performed, use atomic_subtract_acq_int().

       The  third  variant  of each operation includes a write memory barrier.  This ensures that all effects of
       all previous data accesses are completed before this operation takes place.  As a result,  the  operation
       is  said  to  have  release semantics as it releases any pending data accesses to be completed before its
       operation is performed.  To denote this, the suffix “_rel” is inserted into the function name immediately
       prior to the “_type⟩” suffix.  For example, to add two long integers ensuring that all  previous  writes
       will happen first, use atomic_add_rel_long().

       A practical example of using memory barriers is to ensure that data accesses that are protected by a lock
       are  all  performed while the lock is held.  To achieve this, one would use a read barrier when acquiring
       the lock to guarantee that the lock is held before any protected operations are performed.  Finally,  one
       would  use  a  write  barrier  when releasing the lock to ensure that all of the protected operations are
       completed before the lock is released.

   Multiple Processors
       The current set of atomic operations do not necessarily guarantee atomicity across  multiple  processors.
       To guarantee atomicity across processors, not only does the individual operation need to be atomic on the
       processor  performing  the  operation,  but  the result of the operation needs to be pushed out to stable
       storage and the caches of all other processors on the system need to  invalidate  any  cache  lines  that
       include  the  affected  memory region.  On the i386 architecture, the cache coherency model requires that
       the hardware perform this task, thus the atomic operations are atomic across multiple processors.  On the
       ia64 architecture, coherency is only guaranteed for pages that are configured to using a  caching  policy
       of either uncached or write back.

   Semantics
       This section describes the semantics of each operation using a C like notation.

       atomic_add(p, v)
               *p += v;

       atomic_clear(p, v)
               *p &= ~v;

       atomic_cmpset(dst, old, new)
               if (*dst == old) {
                       *dst = new;
                       return 1;
               } else
                       return 0;

       The atomic_cmpset() functions are not implemented for the types “char”, “short”, “8”, and “16”.

       atomic_fetchadd(p, v)
               tmp = *p;
               *p += v;
               return tmp;

       The atomic_fetchadd() functions are only implemented for the types “int”, “long” and “32” and do not have
       any variants with memory barriers at this time.

       atomic_load(addr)
               return (*addr)

       The atomic_load() functions are only provided with acquire memory barriers.

       atomic_readandclear(addr)
               temp = *addr;
               *addr = 0;
               return (temp);

       The  atomic_readandclear()  functions  are not implemented for the types “char”, “short”, “ptr”, “8”, and
       “16” and do not have any variants with memory barriers at this time.

       atomic_set(p, v)
               *p |= v;

       atomic_subtract(p, v)
               *p -= v;

       atomic_store(p, v)
               *p = v;

       The atomic_store() functions are only provided with release memory barriers.

       The type “64” is currently not implemented for any of the atomic operations on the arm, i386, and powerpc
       architectures.

RETURN VALUES

       The atomic_cmpset() function returns  the  result  of  the  compare  operation.   The  atomic_fetchadd(),
       atomic_load(), and atomic_readandclear() functions return the value at the specified address.

EXAMPLES

       This  example uses the atomic_cmpset_acq_ptr() and atomic_set_ptr() functions to obtain a sleep mutex and
       handle recursion.  Since the mtx_lock member of a struct mtx is a pointer, the “ptr” type is used.

       /* Try to obtain mtx_lock once. */
       #define _obtain_lock(mp, tid)                                           \
               atomic_cmpset_acq_ptr(&(mp)->mtx_lock, MTX_UNOWNED, (tid))

       /* Get a sleep lock, deal with recursion inline. */
       #define _get_sleep_lock(mp, tid, opts, file, line) do {                 \
               uintptr_t _tid = (uintptr_t)(tid);                              \
                                                                               \
               if (!_obtain_lock(mp, tid)) {                                   \
                       if (((mp)->mtx_lock & MTX_FLAGMASK) != _tid)            \
                               _mtx_lock_sleep((mp), _tid, (opts), (file), (line));\
                       else {                                                  \
                               atomic_set_ptr(&(mp)->mtx_lock, MTX_RECURSE);   \
                               (mp)->mtx_recurse++;                            \
                       }                                                       \
               }                                                               \
       } while (0)

HISTORY

       The atomic_add(), atomic_clear(), atomic_set(), and atomic_subtract() operations were first introduced in
       FreeBSD 3.0.  This first  set  only  supported  the  types  “char”,  “short”,  “int”,  and  “long”.   The
       atomic_cmpset(),  atomic_load(),  atomic_readandclear(),  and  atomic_store()  operations  were  added in
       FreeBSD 5.0.  The types “8”, “16”, “32”, “64”, and “ptr” and all of the acquire and release variants were
       added in FreeBSD 5.0 as well.  The atomic_fetchadd() operations were added in FreeBSD 6.0.

Debian                                         September 27, 2005                                      ATOMIC(9)