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<title>GNU libitm: Internals</title>
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<a name="Internals"></a>
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<div class="header">
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<p>
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Next: <a href="GNU-Free-Documentation-License.html#GNU-Free-Documentation-License" accesskey="n" rel="next">GNU Free Documentation License</a>, Previous: <a href="The-libitm-ABI.html#The-libitm-ABI" accesskey="p" rel="prev">The libitm ABI</a>, Up: <a href="index.html#Top" accesskey="u" rel="up">Top</a> [<a href="index.html#SEC_Contents" title="Table of contents" rel="contents">Contents</a>][<a href="Library-Index.html#Library-Index" title="Index" rel="index">Index</a>]</p>
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</div>
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<hr>
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<a name="Internals-1"></a>
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<h2 class="chapter">4 Internals</h2>
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<a name="TM-methods-and-method-groups"></a>
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<h3 class="section">4.1 TM methods and method groups</h3>
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<p>libitm supports several ways of synchronizing transactions with each other.
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These TM methods (or TM algorithms) are implemented in the form of
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subclasses of <code>abi_dispatch</code>, which provide methods for
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transactional loads and stores as well as callbacks for rollback and commit.
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All methods that are compatible with each other (i.e., that let concurrently
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running transactions still synchronize correctly even if different methods
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are used) belong to the same TM method group. Pointers to TM methods can be
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obtained using the factory methods prefixed with <code>dispatch_</code> in
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<samp>libitm_i.h</samp>. There are two special methods, <code>dispatch_serial</code> and
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<code>dispatch_serialirr</code>, that are compatible with all methods because they
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run transactions completely in serial mode.
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</p>
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<a name="TM-method-life-cycle"></a>
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<h4 class="subsection">4.1.1 TM method life cycle</h4>
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<p>The state of TM methods does not change after construction, but they do alter
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the state of transactions that use this method. However, because
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per-transaction data gets used by several methods, <code>gtm_thread</code> is
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responsible for setting an initial state that is useful for all methods.
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After that, methods are responsible for resetting/clearing this state on each
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rollback or commit (of outermost transactions), so that the transaction
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executed next is not affected by the previous transaction.
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</p>
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<p>There is also global state associated with each method group, which is
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initialized and shut down (<code>method_group::init()</code> and <code>fini()</code>)
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when switching between method groups (see <samp>retry.cc</samp>).
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</p>
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<a name="Selecting-the-default-method"></a>
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<h4 class="subsection">4.1.2 Selecting the default method</h4>
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<p>The default method that libitm uses for freshly started transactions (but
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not necessarily for restarted transactions) can be set via an environment
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variable (<code>ITM_DEFAULT_METHOD</code>), whose value should be equal to the name
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of one of the factory methods returning abi_dispatch subclasses but without
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the "dispatch_" prefix (e.g., "serialirr" instead of
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<code>GTM::dispatch_serialirr()</code>).
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</p>
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<p>Note that this environment variable is only a hint for libitm and might not
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be supported in the future.
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</p>
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<a name="Nesting_003a-flat-vs_002e-closed"></a>
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<h3 class="section">4.2 Nesting: flat vs. closed</h3>
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<p>We support two different kinds of nesting of transactions. In the case of
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<em>flat nesting</em>, the nesting structure is flattened and all nested
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transactions are subsumed by the enclosing transaction. In contrast,
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with <em>closed nesting</em>, nested transactions that have not yet committed
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can be rolled back separately from the enclosing transactions; when they
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commit, they are subsumed by the enclosing transaction, and their effects
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will be finally committed when the outermost transaction commits.
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<em>Open nesting</em> (where nested transactions can commit independently of the
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enclosing transactions) are not supported.
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</p>
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<p>Flat nesting is the default nesting mode, but closed nesting is supported and
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used when transactions contain user-controlled aborts
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(<code>__transaction_cancel</code> statements). We assume that user-controlled
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aborts are rare in typical code and used mostly in exceptional situations.
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Thus, it makes more sense to use flat nesting by default to avoid the
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performance overhead of the additional checkpoints required for closed
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nesting. User-controlled aborts will correctly abort the innermost enclosing
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transaction, whereas the whole (i.e., outermost) transaction will be restarted
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otherwise (e.g., when a transaction encounters data conflicts during
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optimistic execution).
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</p>
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<a name="Locking-conventions"></a>
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<h3 class="section">4.3 Locking conventions</h3>
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<p>This section documents the locking scheme and rules for all uses of locking
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in libitm. We have to support serial(-irrevocable) mode, which is implemented
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using a global lock as explained next (called the <em>serial lock</em>). To
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simplify the overall design, we use the same lock as catch-all locking
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mechanism for other infrequent tasks such as (de)registering clone tables or
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threads. Besides the serial lock, there are <em>per-method-group locks</em> that
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are managed by specific method groups (i.e., groups of similar TM concurrency
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control algorithms), and lock-like constructs for quiescence-based operations
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such as ensuring privatization safety.
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</p>
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<p>Thus, the actions that participate in the libitm-internal locking are either
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<em>active transactions</em> that do not run in serial mode, <em>serial
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transactions</em> (which (are about to) run in serial mode), and management tasks
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that do not execute within a transaction but have acquired the serial mode
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like a serial transaction would do (e.g., to be able to register threads with
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libitm). Transactions become active as soon as they have successfully used the
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serial lock to announce this globally (see <a href="#serial_002dlock_002dimpl">Serial lock
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implementation</a>). Likewise, transactions become serial transactions as soon as
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they have acquired the exclusive rights provided by the serial lock (i.e.,
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serial mode, which also means that there are no other concurrent active or
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serial transactions). Note that active transactions can become serial
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transactions when they enter serial mode during the runtime of the
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transaction.
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</p>
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<a name="State_002dto_002dlock-mapping"></a>
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<h4 class="subsection">4.3.1 State-to-lock mapping</h4>
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<p>Application data is protected by the serial lock if there is a serial
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transaction and no concurrently running active transaction (i.e., non-serial).
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Otherwise, application data is protected by the currently selected method
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group, which might use per-method-group locks or other mechanisms. Also note
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that application data that is about to be privatized might not be allowed to be
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accessed by nontransactional code until privatization safety has been ensured;
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the details of this are handled by the current method group.
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</p>
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<p>libitm-internal state is either protected by the serial lock or accessed
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through custom concurrent code. The latter applies to the public/shared part
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of a transaction object and most typical method-group-specific state.
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</p>
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<p>The former category (protected by the serial lock) includes:
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</p><ul>
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<li> The list of active threads that have used transactions.
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</li><li> The tables that map functions to their transactional clones.
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</li><li> The current selection of which method group to use.
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</li><li> Some method-group-specific data, or invariants of this data. For example,
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resetting a method group to its initial state is handled by switching to the
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same method group, so the serial lock protects such resetting as well.
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</li></ul>
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<p>In general, such state is immutable whenever there exists an active
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(non-serial) transaction. If there is no active transaction, a serial
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transaction (or a thread that is not currently executing a transaction but has
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acquired the serial lock) is allowed to modify this state (but must of course
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be careful to not surprise the current method group’s implementation with such
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modifications).
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</p>
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<a name="Lock-acquisition-order"></a>
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<h4 class="subsection">4.3.2 Lock acquisition order</h4>
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<p>To prevent deadlocks, locks acquisition must happen in a globally agreed-upon
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order. Note that this applies to other forms of blocking too, but does not
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necessarily apply to lock acquisitions that do not block (e.g., trylock()
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calls that do not get retried forever). Note that serial transactions are
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never return back to active transactions until the transaction has committed.
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Likewise, active transactions stay active until they have committed.
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Per-method-group locks are typically also not released before commit.
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</p>
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<p>Lock acquisition / blocking rules:
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</p><ul>
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<li> Transactions must become active or serial before they are allowed to
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use method-group-specific locks or blocking (i.e., the serial lock must be
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acquired before those other locks, either in serial or nonserial mode).
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</li><li> Any number of threads that do not currently run active transactions can
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block while trying to get the serial lock in exclusive mode. Note that active
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transactions must not block when trying to upgrade to serial mode unless there
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is no other transaction that is trying that (the latter is ensured by the
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serial lock implementation.
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</li><li> Method groups must prevent deadlocks on their locks. In particular, they
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must also be prepared for another active transaction that has acquired
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method-group-specific locks but is blocked during an attempt to upgrade to
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being a serial transaction. See below for details.
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</li><li> Serial transactions can acquire method-group-specific locks because there
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will be no other active nor serial transaction.
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</li></ul>
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<p>There is no single rule for per-method-group blocking because this depends on
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when a TM method might acquire locks. If no active transaction can upgrade to
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being a serial transaction after it has acquired per-method-group locks (e.g.,
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when those locks are only acquired during an attempt to commit), then the TM
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method does not need to consider a potential deadlock due to serial mode.
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</p>
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<p>If there can be upgrades to serial mode after the acquisition of
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per-method-group locks, then TM methods need to avoid those deadlocks:
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</p><ul>
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<li> When upgrading to a serial transaction, after acquiring exclusive rights
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to the serial lock but before waiting for concurrent active transactions to
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finish (see <a href="#serial_002dlock_002dimpl">Serial lock implementation</a> for details),
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we have to wake up all active transactions waiting on the upgrader’s
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per-method-group locks.
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</li><li> Active transactions blocking on per-method-group locks need to check the
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serial lock and abort if there is a pending serial transaction.
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</li><li> Lost wake-ups have to be prevented (e.g., by changing a bit in each
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per-method-group lock before doing the wake-up, and only blocking on this lock
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using a futex if this bit is not group).
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</li></ul>
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<p><strong>TODO</strong>: Can reuse serial lock for gl-*? And if we can, does it make
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sense to introduce further complexity in the serial lock? For gl-*, we can
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really only avoid an abort if we do -wb and -vbv.
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</p>
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<a name="Serial-lock-implementation"></a>
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<h4 class="subsection">4.3.3 Serial lock implementation</h4>
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<a name="serial_002dlock_002dimpl"></a>
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<p>The serial lock implementation is optimized towards assuming that serial
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transactions are infrequent and not the common case. However, the performance
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of entering serial mode can matter because when only few transactions are run
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concurrently or if there are few threads, then it can be efficient to run
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transactions serially.
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</p>
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<p>The serial lock is similar to a multi-reader-single-writer lock in that there
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can be several active transactions but only one serial transaction. However,
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we do want to avoid contention (in the lock implementation) between active
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transactions, so we split up the reader side of the lock into per-transaction
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flags that are true iff the transaction is active. The exclusive writer side
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remains a shared single flag, which is acquired using a CAS, for example.
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On the fast-path, the serial lock then works similar to Dekker’s algorithm but
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with several reader flags that a serial transaction would have to check.
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A serial transaction thus requires a list of all threads with potentially
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active transactions; we can use the serial lock itself to protect this list
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(i.e., only threads that have acquired the serial lock can modify this list).
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</p>
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<p>We want starvation-freedom for the serial lock to allow for using it to ensure
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progress for potentially starved transactions (see <a href="#progress_002dguarantees">Progress Guarantees</a> for details). However, this is currently not enforced by
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the implementation of the serial lock.
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</p>
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<p>Here is pseudo-code for the read/write fast paths of acquiring the serial
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lock (read-to-write upgrade is similar to write_lock:
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</p><div class="example">
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<pre class="example">// read_lock:
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tx->shared_state |= active;
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__sync_synchronize(); // or STLD membar, or C++0x seq-cst fence
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while (!serial_lock.exclusive)
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if (spinning_for_too_long) goto slowpath;
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// write_lock:
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if (CAS(&serial_lock.exclusive, 0, this) != 0)
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goto slowpath; // writer-writer contention
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// need a membar here, but CAS already has full membar semantics
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bool need_blocking = false;
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for (t: all txns)
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{
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for (;t->shared_state & active;)
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if (spinning_for_too_long) { need_blocking = true; break; }
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}
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if (need_blocking) goto slowpath;
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</pre></div>
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<p>Releasing a lock in this spin-lock version then just consists of resetting
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<code>tx->shared_state</code> to inactive or clearing <code>serial_lock.exclusive</code>.
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</p>
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<p>However, we can’t rely on a pure spinlock because we need to get the OS
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involved at some time (e.g., when there are more threads than CPUs to run on).
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Therefore, the real implementation falls back to a blocking slow path, either
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based on pthread mutexes or Linux futexes.
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</p>
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<a name="Reentrancy"></a>
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<h4 class="subsection">4.3.4 Reentrancy</h4>
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<p>libitm has to consider the following cases of reentrancy:
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</p><ul>
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<li> Transaction calls unsafe code that starts a new transaction: The outer
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transaction will become a serial transaction before executing unsafe code.
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Therefore, nesting within serial transactions must work, even if the nested
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transaction is called from within uninstrumented code.
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</li><li> Transaction calls either a transactional wrapper or safe code, which in
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turn starts a new transaction: It is not yet defined in the specification
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whether this is allowed. Thus, it is undefined whether libitm supports this.
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</li><li> Code that starts new transactions might be called from within any part
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of libitm: This kind of reentrancy would likely be rather complex and can
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probably be avoided. Therefore, it is not supported.
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</li></ul>
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<a name="Privatization-safety"></a>
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<h4 class="subsection">4.3.5 Privatization safety</h4>
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<p>Privatization safety is ensured by libitm using a quiescence-based approach.
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Basically, a privatizing transaction waits until all concurrent active
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transactions will either have finished (are not active anymore) or operate on
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a sufficiently recent snapshot to not access the privatized data anymore. This
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happens after the privatizing transaction has stopped being an active
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transaction, so waiting for quiescence does not contribute to deadlocks.
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</p>
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<p>In method groups that need to ensure publication safety explicitly, active
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transactions maintain a flag or timestamp in the public/shared part of the
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transaction descriptor. Before blocking, privatizers need to let the other
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transactions know that they should wake up the privatizer.
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</p>
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<p><strong>TODO</strong> Ho to implement the waiters? Should those flags be
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per-transaction or at a central place? We want to avoid one wake/wait call
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per active transactions, so we might want to use either a tree or combining
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to reduce the syscall overhead, or rather spin for a long amount of time
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instead of doing blocking. Also, it would be good if only the last transaction
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that the privatizer waits for would do the wake-up.
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</p>
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<a name="Progress-guarantees"></a>
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<h4 class="subsection">4.3.6 Progress guarantees</h4>
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<a name="progress_002dguarantees"></a>
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<p>Transactions that do not make progress when using the current TM method will
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eventually try to execute in serial mode. Thus, the serial lock’s progress
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guarantees determine the progress guarantees of the whole TM. Obviously, we at
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least need deadlock-freedom for the serial lock, but it would also be good to
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provide starvation-freedom (informally, all threads will finish executing a
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transaction eventually iff they get enough cycles).
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</p>
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<p>However, the scheduling of transactions (e.g., thread scheduling by the OS)
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also affects the handling of progress guarantees by the TM. First, the TM
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can only guarantee deadlock-freedom if threads do not get stopped. Likewise,
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low-priority threads can starve if they do not get scheduled when other
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high-priority threads get those cycles instead.
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</p>
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<p>If all threads get scheduled eventually, correct lock implementations will
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provide deadlock-freedom, but might not provide starvation-freedom. We can
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either enforce the latter in the TM’s lock implementation, or assume that
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the scheduling is sufficiently random to yield a probabilistic guarantee that
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no thread will starve (because eventually, a transaction will encounter a
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scheduling that will allow it to run). This can indeed work well in practice
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but is not necessarily guaranteed to work (e.g., simple spin locks can be
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pretty efficient).
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</p>
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<p>Because enforcing stronger progress guarantees in the TM has a higher runtime
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overhead, we focus on deadlock-freedom right now and assume that the threads
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will get scheduled eventually by the OS (but don’t consider threads with
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different priorities). We should support starvation-freedom for serial
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transactions in the future. Everything beyond that is highly related to proper
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contention management across all of the TM (including with TM method to
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choose), and is future work.
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</p>
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<p><strong>TODO</strong> Handling thread priorities: We want to avoid priority inversion
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but it’s unclear how often that actually matters in practice. Workloads that
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have threads with different priorities will likely also require lower latency
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or higher throughput for high-priority threads. Therefore, it probably makes
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not that much sense (except for eventual progress guarantees) to use
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priority inheritance until the TM has priority-aware contention management.
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