On Tue, Mar 03, 2020 at 02:47:11PM +0100, Florian Weimer wrote: > (added missing Cc: for linux-api, better late than never I guess) > > * Peter Zijlstra: > > >> What's the actual type of *uaddr? Does it vary by size (which I assume > >> is in bits?)? Are there alignment constraints? > > > > Yeah, u8, u16, u32, u64 depending on the size specified in flags. > > Naturally aligned. > > So 4-byte alignment for u32 and 8-byte alignment for u64 on all > architectures? > > (I really want to nail this down, sorry.) Exactly so. > >> These system calls seemed to be type-polymorphic still, which is > >> problematic for defining a really nice C interface. I would really like > >> to have a strongly typed interface for this, with a nice struct futex > >> wrapper type (even if it means that we need four of them). > > > > You mean like: futex_wait1(u8 *,...) futex_wait2(u16 *,...) > > futex_wait4(u32 *,...) etc.. ? > > > > I suppose making it 16 or so syscalls (more if we want WAKE_OP or > > requeue across size) is a bit daft, so yeah, sucks. > > We could abstract this in the userspace wrapper. It would help to have > an explicit size argument, or at least an extension-safe way to pass > this information to the kernel. I guess if everything else fails, we > could use the flags bits for that, as long as it is clear that the > interface will only support these six types (four without NUMA, two with > NUMA). The problem is the cmp_requeue syscall, that already has 6 arguments. I don't see where else than the flags field we can stuff this :/ > >> Will all architectures support all sizes? If not, how do we probe which > >> size/flags combinations are supported? > > > > Up to the native word size (long), IOW ILP32 will not support u64. > > Many ILP32 targets could support atomic accesses on 8-byte storage > units, as long as there is 8-byte alignment. But given how common > 4-byte-align u64 is on 32-bit, maybe that's not such a good idea. 'Many' might be over-stating it, but yeah, there are definitely a bunch of them that can do it (x86, armv7-lpae, arc, are the ones I know from memory). The problem is that the syscalls then look like: sys_futex_wait(void *uaddr, u64 val, unsigned long flags, ktime_t *timo); struct futex_wait { void *uaddr; u64 val; u64 flags; }; sys_futex_waitv(struct futex_wait *waiters, unsigned int nr_waiters, u64 flags, ktime_t *timo); sys_futex_wake(void *uaddr, unsigned int nr, u64 flags); sys_futex_cmp_requeue(void *uaddr1, void *uaddr2, unsigned int nr_wake, unsigned int nr_requeue, u64 cmpval, unsigned long flags); And that makes 7 arguments for cmp_requeue, which can't be. Maybe we if combine nr_wake and nr_requeue in one as 2 u16... ? And then we need to go detector if the platform supports it or not.. > >> > For NUMA I propose that when NUMA_FLAG is set, uaddr-4 will be 'int > >> > node_id', with the following semantics: > >> > > >> > - on WAIT, node_id is read and when 0 <= node_id <= nr_nodes, is > >> > directly used to index into per-node hash-tables. When -1, it is > >> > replaced by the current node_id and an smp_mb() is issued before we > >> > load and compare the @uaddr. > >> > > >> > - on WAKE/REQUEUE, it is an immediate index. > >> > >> Does this mean the first waiter determines the NUMA index, and all > >> future waiters use the same chain even if they are on different nodes? > > > > Every new waiter could (re)set node_id, after all, when its not actually > > waiting, nobody cares what's in that field. > > > >> I think documenting this as a node index would be a mistake. It could > >> be an arbitrary hint for locating the corresponding kernel data > >> structures. > > > > Nah, it allows explicit placement, after all, we have set_mempolicy() > > and sched_setaffinity() and all the other NUMA crud so that programs > > that think they know what they're doing, can do explicit placement. > > But I'm not sure if it makes sense to read the node ID from the > neighboring value of a futex used in this way. Or do you think that > userspace might set the node ID to help the kernel implementation, and > not just relying on it to be set by the kernel after initializing it to > -1? I'm fairly sure that there will be a number of users that will definitely want to do that; this would be the same people that use set_mempolicy() and sched_setaffinity() and do all the other numa binding crud. HPC, certain database vendors, possibly RT and KVM users. > Conversely, even for non-NUMA systems, a lookup hint that allows to > reduce in-kernel futex contention might be helpful. If it's documented > to be the NUME node ID, that wouldn't be possible. Do we really have significant contention on small systems? And how would increasing the hash-table not solve that? > >> > Any invalid value with result in EINVAL. > >> > >> Using uaddr-4 is slightly tricky with a 64-bit futex value, due to the > >> need to maintain alignment and avoid padding. > > > > Yes, but it works, unlike uaddr+4 :-) Also, 1 and 2 byte futexes and > > NUMA_FLAG are incompatible due to this, but I feel short futexes and > > NUMA don't really make sense anyway, the only reason to use a short > > futex is to save space, so you don't want another 4 bytes for numa on > > top of that anyway. > > I think it would be much easier to make the NUMA hint the same size of > the futex, so 4 and 8 bytes. It could also make sense to require 8 and > 16 byte alignment, to permit different implementation choices in the > future. > > So we'd have: > > struct futex8 { u8 value; }; > struct futex16 { u16 value __attribute__ ((aligned (2))); }; > struct futex32 { u32 value __attribute__ ((aligned (4))); }; > struct futex64 { u64 value __attribute__ ((aligned (8))); }; > struct futex32_numa { u32 value __attribute__ ((aligned (8))); u32 hint; }; > struct futex64_numa { u64 value __attribute__ ((aligned (16))); u64 hint; }; That works, I suppose... although I'm sure someone will curse us for it when trying to pack some extra things in his cacheline.