You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
nomicon/atomics.md

256 lines
10 KiB

% Atomics
Rust pretty blatantly just inherits C11's memory model for atomics. This is not
due this model being particularly excellent or easy to understand. Indeed, this
model is quite complex and known to have [several flaws][C11-busted]. Rather, it
is a pragmatic concession to the fact that *everyone* is pretty bad at modeling
atomics. At very least, we can benefit from existing tooling and research around
C.
10 years ago
Trying to fully explain the model in this book is fairly hopeless. It's defined
in terms of madness-inducing causality graphs that require a full book to
properly understand in a practical way. If you want all the nitty-gritty
details, you should check out [C's specification (Section 7.17)][C11-model].
Still, we'll try to cover the basics and some of the problems Rust developers
face.
The C11 memory model is fundamentally about trying to bridge the gap between the
semantics we want, the optimizations compilers want, and the inconsistent chaos
our hardware wants. *We* would like to just write programs and have them do
9 years ago
exactly what we said but, you know, fast. Wouldn't that be great?
10 years ago
# Compiler Reordering
Compilers fundamentally want to be able to do all sorts of crazy transformations
to reduce data dependencies and eliminate dead code. In particular, they may
10 years ago
radically change the actual order of events, or make events never occur! If we
write something like
```rust,ignore
x = 1;
y = 3;
x = 2;
```
9 years ago
The compiler may conclude that it would be best if your program did
10 years ago
```rust,ignore
x = 2;
y = 3;
```
9 years ago
This has inverted the order of events and completely eliminated one event.
From a single-threaded perspective this is completely unobservable: after all
the statements have executed we are in exactly the same state. But if our
9 years ago
program is multi-threaded, we may have been relying on `x` to actually be
assigned to 1 before `y` was assigned. We would like the compiler to be
able to make these kinds of optimizations, because they can seriously improve
9 years ago
performance. On the other hand, we'd also like to be able to depend on our
program *doing the thing we said*.
10 years ago
# Hardware Reordering
On the other hand, even if the compiler totally understood what we wanted and
9 years ago
respected our wishes, our hardware might instead get us in trouble. Trouble
comes from CPUs in the form of memory hierarchies. There is indeed a global
shared memory space somewhere in your hardware, but from the perspective of each
CPU core it is *so very far away* and *so very slow*. Each CPU would rather work
9 years ago
with its local cache of the data and only go through all the anguish of
talking to shared memory only when it doesn't actually have that memory in
cache.
10 years ago
9 years ago
After all, that's the whole point of the cache, right? If every read from the
10 years ago
cache had to run back to shared memory to double check that it hadn't changed,
what would the point be? The end result is that the hardware doesn't guarantee
that events that occur in the same order on *one* thread, occur in the same
order on *another* thread. To guarantee this, we must issue special instructions
to the CPU telling it to be a bit less smart.
10 years ago
For instance, say we convince the compiler to emit this logic:
```text
initial state: x = 0, y = 1
THREAD 1 THREAD2
y = 3; if x == 1 {
x = 1; y *= 2;
}
```
Ideally this program has 2 possible final states:
9 years ago
* `y = 3`: (thread 2 did the check before thread 1 completed)
* `y = 6`: (thread 2 did the check after thread 1 completed)
10 years ago
However there's a third potential state that the hardware enables:
9 years ago
* `y = 2`: (thread 2 saw `x = 1`, but not `y = 3`, and then overwrote `y = 3`)
10 years ago
It's worth noting that different kinds of CPU provide different guarantees. It
is common to separate hardware into two categories: strongly-ordered and weakly-
ordered. Most notably x86/64 provides strong ordering guarantees, while ARM
provides weak ordering guarantees. This has two consequences for concurrent
programming:
10 years ago
* Asking for stronger guarantees on strongly-ordered hardware may be cheap or
9 years ago
even free because they already provide strong guarantees unconditionally.
10 years ago
Weaker guarantees may only yield performance wins on weakly-ordered hardware.
9 years ago
* Asking for guarantees that are too weak on strongly-ordered hardware is
more likely to *happen* to work, even though your program is strictly
9 years ago
incorrect. If possible, concurrent algorithms should be tested on
weakly-ordered hardware.
10 years ago
# Data Accesses
The C11 memory model attempts to bridge the gap by allowing us to talk about the
*causality* of our program. Generally, this is by establishing a *happens
9 years ago
before* relationship between parts of the program and the threads that are
running them. This gives the hardware and compiler room to optimize the program
more aggressively where a strict happens-before relationship isn't established,
9 years ago
but forces them to be more careful where one is established. The way we
communicate these relationships are through *data accesses* and *atomic
accesses*.
Data accesses are the bread-and-butter of the programming world. They are
fundamentally unsynchronized and compilers are free to aggressively optimize
them. In particular, data accesses are free to be reordered by the compiler on
the assumption that the program is single-threaded. The hardware is also free to
propagate the changes made in data accesses to other threads as lazily and
inconsistently as it wants. Mostly critically, data accesses are how data races
happen. Data accesses are very friendly to the hardware and compiler, but as
we've seen they offer *awful* semantics to try to write synchronized code with.
9 years ago
Actually, that's too weak.
**It is literally impossible to write correct synchronized code using only data
accesses.**
10 years ago
Atomic accesses are how we tell the hardware and compiler that our program is
multi-threaded. Each atomic access can be marked with an *ordering* that
specifies what kind of relationship it establishes with other accesses. In
practice, this boils down to telling the compiler and hardware certain things
they *can't* do. For the compiler, this largely revolves around re-ordering of
instructions. For the hardware, this largely revolves around how writes are
propagated to other threads. The set of orderings Rust exposes are:
9 years ago
* Sequentially Consistent (SeqCst)
* Release
* Acquire
* Relaxed
(Note: We explicitly do not expose the C11 *consume* ordering)
TODO: negative reasoning vs positive reasoning? TODO: "can't forget to
synchronize"
10 years ago
# Sequentially Consistent
Sequentially Consistent is the most powerful of all, implying the restrictions
of all other orderings. Intuitively, a sequentially consistent operation
9 years ago
cannot be reordered: all accesses on one thread that happen before and after a
SeqCst access stay before and after it. A data-race-free program that uses
only sequentially consistent atomics and data accesses has the very nice
property that there is a single global execution of the program's instructions
that all threads agree on. This execution is also particularly nice to reason
about: it's just an interleaving of each thread's individual executions. This
9 years ago
does not hold if you start using the weaker atomic orderings.
10 years ago
The relative developer-friendliness of sequential consistency doesn't come for
10 years ago
free. Even on strongly-ordered platforms sequential consistency involves
10 years ago
emitting memory fences.
In practice, sequential consistency is rarely necessary for program correctness.
However sequential consistency is definitely the right choice if you're not
confident about the other memory orders. Having your program run a bit slower
than it needs to is certainly better than it running incorrectly! It's also
9 years ago
mechanically trivial to downgrade atomic operations to have a weaker
consistency later on. Just change `SeqCst` to `Relaxed` and you're done! Of
course, proving that this transformation is *correct* is a whole other matter.
10 years ago
# Acquire-Release
Acquire and Release are largely intended to be paired. Their names hint at their
use case: they're perfectly suited for acquiring and releasing locks, and
ensuring that critical sections don't overlap.
9 years ago
Intuitively, an acquire access ensures that every access after it stays after
10 years ago
it. However operations that occur before an acquire are free to be reordered to
occur after it. Similarly, a release access ensures that every access before it
9 years ago
stays before it. However operations that occur after a release are free to be
reordered to occur before it.
10 years ago
When thread A releases a location in memory and then thread B subsequently
acquires *the same* location in memory, causality is established. Every write
9 years ago
that happened before A's release will be observed by B after its release.
10 years ago
However no causality is established with any other threads. Similarly, no
causality is established if A and B access *different* locations in memory.
Basic use of release-acquire is therefore simple: you acquire a location of
memory to begin the critical section, and then release that location to end it.
For instance, a simple spinlock might look like:
```rust
use std::sync::Arc;
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicBool, Ordering};
use std::thread;
10 years ago
fn main() {
let lock = Arc::new(AtomicBool::new(true)); // value answers "am I locked?"
10 years ago
10 years ago
// ... distribute lock to threads somehow ...
// Try to acquire the lock by setting it to false
while !lock.compare_and_swap(true, false, Ordering::Acquire) { }
// broke out of the loop, so we successfully acquired the lock!
// ... scary data accesses ...
// ok we're done, release the lock
lock.store(true, Ordering::Release);
}
```
10 years ago
On strongly-ordered platforms most accesses have release or acquire semantics,
making release and acquire often totally free. This is not the case on
weakly-ordered platforms.
# Relaxed
Relaxed accesses are the absolute weakest. They can be freely re-ordered and
9 years ago
provide no happens-before relationship. Still, relaxed operations are still
10 years ago
atomic. That is, they don't count as data accesses and any read-modify-write
operations done to them occur atomically. Relaxed operations are appropriate for
things that you definitely want to happen, but don't particularly otherwise care
about. For instance, incrementing a counter can be safely done by multiple
threads using a relaxed `fetch_add` if you're not using the counter to
synchronize any other accesses.
10 years ago
There's rarely a benefit in making an operation relaxed on strongly-ordered
platforms, since they usually provide release-acquire semantics anyway. However
relaxed operations can be cheaper on weakly-ordered platforms.
[C11-busted]: http://plv.mpi-sws.org/c11comp/popl15.pdf
10 years ago
[C11-model]: http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/standards.html#9899