On Mon, Jul 27, 2020 at 04:28:27PM +0100, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > On Mon, Jul 27, 2020 at 11:17:46AM -0400, Alan Stern wrote: > > Given a type "T", an object x of type pointer-to-T, and a function > > "func" that takes various arguments and returns a pointer-to-T, the > > accepted API for calling func once would be to create once_func() as > > follows: > > > > T *once_func(T **ppt, args...) > > { > > static DEFINE_MUTEX(mut); > > T *p; > > > > p = smp_load_acquire(ppt); /* Mild optimization */ > > if (p) > > return p; > > > > mutex_lock(mut); > > p = smp_load_acquire(ppt); > > if (!p) { > > p = func(args...); > > if (!IS_ERR_OR_NULL(p)) > > smp_store_release(ppt, p); > > } > > mutex_unlock(mut); > > return p; > > } > > > > Users then would have to call once_func(&x, args...) and check the > > result. Different x objects would constitute different "once" > > domains. > [...] > > In fact, the only drawback I can think of is that because this relies > > on a single mutex for all the different possible x's, it might lead to > > locking conflicts (if func had to call once_func() recursively, for > > example). In most reasonable situations such conflicts would not > > arise. > > Another drawback for this approach relative to my get_foo() approach > upthread is that, because we don't have compiler support, there's no > enforcement that accesses to 'x' go through once_func(). My approach > wraps accesses in a deliberately-opaque struct so you have to write > some really ugly code to get at the raw value, and it's just easier to > call get_foo(). Something like that could be included in once_func too. It's relatively tangential to the main point I was making, which was to settle on an overall API and discuss how it should be described in recipes.txt. Alan Stern