On Fri, Jun 14, 2024 at 09:22:24PM +0000, Benno Lossin wrote: > On 14.06.24 16:33, Boqun Feng wrote: > > On Fri, Jun 14, 2024 at 11:59:58AM +0200, Miguel Ojeda wrote: > >> On Thu, Jun 13, 2024 at 9:05 PM Boqun Feng <boqun.feng@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> > >>> Does this make sense? > >> > >> Implementation-wise, if you think it is simpler or more clear/elegant > >> to have the extra lower level layer, then that sounds fine. > >> > >> However, I was mainly talking about what we would eventually expose to > >> users, i.e. do we want to provide `Atomic<T>` to begin with? If yes, > > > > The truth is I don't know ;-) I don't have much data on which one is > > better. Personally, I think AtomicI32 and AtomicI64 make the users have > > to think about size, alignment, etc, and I think that's important for > > atomic users and people who review their code, because before one uses > > atomics, one should ask themselves: why don't I use a lock? Atomics > > provide the ablities to do low level stuffs and when doing low level > > stuffs, you want to be more explicit than ergonomic. > > How would this be different with `Atomic<i32>` and `Atomic<i64>`? Just The difference is that with Atomic{I32,I64} APIs, one has to choose (and think about) the size when using atomics, and cannot leave that option open. It's somewhere unconvenient, but as I said, atomics variables are different. For example, if someone is going to implement a reference counter struct, they can define as follow: struct Refcount<T> { refcount: AtomicI32, data: UnsafeCell<T> } but with atomic generic, people can leave that option open and do: struct Refcount<R, T> { refcount: Atomic<R>, data: UnsafeCell<T> } while it provides configurable options for experienced users, but it also provides opportunities for sub-optimal types, e.g. Refcount<u8, T>: on ll/sc architectures, because `data` and `refcount` can be in the same machine-word, the accesses of `refcount` are affected by the accesses of `data`. The point I'm trying to make here is: when you are using atomics, you care about performance a lot (otherwise, why don't you use a lock?), and because of that, you should care about the size of the atomics, because it may affect the performance significantly. Regards, Boqun > because the underlying `Atomic<I>` type is generic shouldn't change > this, right? > > --- > Cheers, > Benno >