From ace9429bb58fd418f0c81d4c2835699bddf6bde6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Thu, 11 Apr 2024 10:27:49 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 6.6.15. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- .../RCU/Design/Data-Structures/Data-Structures.rst | 1163 ++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 1163 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/Data-Structures.rst (limited to 'Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/Data-Structures.rst') diff --git a/Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/Data-Structures.rst b/Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/Data-Structures.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..b34990c7c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/RCU/Design/Data-Structures/Data-Structures.rst @@ -0,0 +1,1163 @@ +=================================================== +A Tour Through TREE_RCU's Data Structures [LWN.net] +=================================================== + +December 18, 2016 + +This article was contributed by Paul E. McKenney + +Introduction +============ + +This document describes RCU's major data structures and their relationship +to each other. + +Data-Structure Relationships +============================ + +RCU is for all intents and purposes a large state machine, and its +data structures maintain the state in such a way as to allow RCU readers +to execute extremely quickly, while also processing the RCU grace periods +requested by updaters in an efficient and extremely scalable fashion. +The efficiency and scalability of RCU updaters is provided primarily +by a combining tree, as shown below: + +.. kernel-figure:: BigTreeClassicRCU.svg + +This diagram shows an enclosing ``rcu_state`` structure containing a tree +of ``rcu_node`` structures. Each leaf node of the ``rcu_node`` tree has up +to 16 ``rcu_data`` structures associated with it, so that there are +``NR_CPUS`` number of ``rcu_data`` structures, one for each possible CPU. +This structure is adjusted at boot time, if needed, to handle the common +case where ``nr_cpu_ids`` is much less than ``NR_CPUs``. +For example, a number of Linux distributions set ``NR_CPUs=4096``, +which results in a three-level ``rcu_node`` tree. +If the actual hardware has only 16 CPUs, RCU will adjust itself +at boot time, resulting in an ``rcu_node`` tree with only a single node. + +The purpose of this combining tree is to allow per-CPU events +such as quiescent states, dyntick-idle transitions, +and CPU hotplug operations to be processed efficiently +and scalably. +Quiescent states are recorded by the per-CPU ``rcu_data`` structures, +and other events are recorded by the leaf-level ``rcu_node`` +structures. +All of these events are combined at each level of the tree until finally +grace periods are completed at the tree's root ``rcu_node`` +structure. +A grace period can be completed at the root once every CPU +(or, in the case of ``CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU``, task) +has passed through a quiescent state. +Once a grace period has completed, record of that fact is propagated +back down the tree. + +As can be seen from the diagram, on a 64-bit system +a two-level tree with 64 leaves can accommodate 1,024 CPUs, with a fanout +of 64 at the root and a fanout of 16 at the leaves. + ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Quick Quiz**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Why isn't the fanout at the leaves also 64? | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Answer**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Because there are more types of events that affect the leaf-level | +| ``rcu_node`` structures than further up the tree. Therefore, if the | +| leaf ``rcu_node`` structures have fanout of 64, the contention on | +| these structures' ``->structures`` becomes excessive. Experimentation | +| on a wide variety of systems has shown that a fanout of 16 works well | +| for the leaves of the ``rcu_node`` tree. | +| | +| Of course, further experience with systems having hundreds or | +| thousands of CPUs may demonstrate that the fanout for the non-leaf | +| ``rcu_node`` structures must also be reduced. Such reduction can be | +| easily carried out when and if it proves necessary. In the meantime, | +| if you are using such a system and running into contention problems | +| on the non-leaf ``rcu_node`` structures, you may use the | +| ``CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT`` kernel configuration parameter to reduce the | +| non-leaf fanout as needed. | +| | +| Kernels built for systems with strong NUMA characteristics might | +| also need to adjust ``CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT`` so that the domains of | +| the ``rcu_node`` structures align with hardware boundaries. | +| However, there has thus far been no need for this. | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ + +If your system has more than 1,024 CPUs (or more than 512 CPUs on a +32-bit system), then RCU will automatically add more levels to the tree. +For example, if you are crazy enough to build a 64-bit system with +65,536 CPUs, RCU would configure the ``rcu_node`` tree as follows: + +.. kernel-figure:: HugeTreeClassicRCU.svg + +RCU currently permits up to a four-level tree, which on a 64-bit system +accommodates up to 4,194,304 CPUs, though only a mere 524,288 CPUs for +32-bit systems. On the other hand, you can set both +``CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT`` and ``CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT_LEAF`` to be as small as +2, which would result in a 16-CPU test using a 4-level tree. This can be +useful for testing large-system capabilities on small test machines. + +This multi-level combining tree allows us to get most of the performance +and scalability benefits of partitioning, even though RCU grace-period +detection is inherently a global operation. The trick here is that only +the last CPU to report a quiescent state into a given ``rcu_node`` +structure need advance to the ``rcu_node`` structure at the next level +up the tree. This means that at the leaf-level ``rcu_node`` structure, +only one access out of sixteen will progress up the tree. For the +internal ``rcu_node`` structures, the situation is even more extreme: +Only one access out of sixty-four will progress up the tree. Because the +vast majority of the CPUs do not progress up the tree, the lock +contention remains roughly constant up the tree. No matter how many CPUs +there are in the system, at most 64 quiescent-state reports per grace +period will progress all the way to the root ``rcu_node`` structure, +thus ensuring that the lock contention on that root ``rcu_node`` +structure remains acceptably low. + +In effect, the combining tree acts like a big shock absorber, keeping +lock contention under control at all tree levels regardless of the level +of loading on the system. + +RCU updaters wait for normal grace periods by registering RCU callbacks, +either directly via ``call_rcu()`` or indirectly via +``synchronize_rcu()`` and friends. RCU callbacks are represented by +``rcu_head`` structures, which are queued on ``rcu_data`` structures +while they are waiting for a grace period to elapse, as shown in the +following figure: + +.. kernel-figure:: BigTreePreemptRCUBHdyntickCB.svg + +This figure shows how ``TREE_RCU``'s and ``PREEMPT_RCU``'s major data +structures are related. Lesser data structures will be introduced with +the algorithms that make use of them. + +Note that each of the data structures in the above figure has its own +synchronization: + +#. Each ``rcu_state`` structures has a lock and a mutex, and some fields + are protected by the corresponding root ``rcu_node`` structure's lock. +#. Each ``rcu_node`` structure has a spinlock. +#. The fields in ``rcu_data`` are private to the corresponding CPU, + although a few can be read and written by other CPUs. + +It is important to note that different data structures can have very +different ideas about the state of RCU at any given time. For but one +example, awareness of the start or end of a given RCU grace period +propagates slowly through the data structures. This slow propagation is +absolutely necessary for RCU to have good read-side performance. If this +balkanized implementation seems foreign to you, one useful trick is to +consider each instance of these data structures to be a different +person, each having the usual slightly different view of reality. + +The general role of each of these data structures is as follows: + +#. ``rcu_state``: This structure forms the interconnection between the + ``rcu_node`` and ``rcu_data`` structures, tracks grace periods, + serves as short-term repository for callbacks orphaned by CPU-hotplug + events, maintains ``rcu_barrier()`` state, tracks expedited + grace-period state, and maintains state used to force quiescent + states when grace periods extend too long, +#. ``rcu_node``: This structure forms the combining tree that propagates + quiescent-state information from the leaves to the root, and also + propagates grace-period information from the root to the leaves. It + provides local copies of the grace-period state in order to allow + this information to be accessed in a synchronized manner without + suffering the scalability limitations that would otherwise be imposed + by global locking. In ``CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU`` kernels, it manages the + lists of tasks that have blocked while in their current RCU read-side + critical section. In ``CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU`` with + ``CONFIG_RCU_BOOST``, it manages the per-\ ``rcu_node`` + priority-boosting kernel threads (kthreads) and state. Finally, it + records CPU-hotplug state in order to determine which CPUs should be + ignored during a given grace period. +#. ``rcu_data``: This per-CPU structure is the focus of quiescent-state + detection and RCU callback queuing. It also tracks its relationship + to the corresponding leaf ``rcu_node`` structure to allow + more-efficient propagation of quiescent states up the ``rcu_node`` + combining tree. Like the ``rcu_node`` structure, it provides a local + copy of the grace-period information to allow for-free synchronized + access to this information from the corresponding CPU. Finally, this + structure records past dyntick-idle state for the corresponding CPU + and also tracks statistics. +#. ``rcu_head``: This structure represents RCU callbacks, and is the + only structure allocated and managed by RCU users. The ``rcu_head`` + structure is normally embedded within the RCU-protected data + structure. + +If all you wanted from this article was a general notion of how RCU's +data structures are related, you are done. Otherwise, each of the +following sections give more details on the ``rcu_state``, ``rcu_node`` +and ``rcu_data`` data structures. + +The ``rcu_state`` Structure +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The ``rcu_state`` structure is the base structure that represents the +state of RCU in the system. This structure forms the interconnection +between the ``rcu_node`` and ``rcu_data`` structures, tracks grace +periods, contains the lock used to synchronize with CPU-hotplug events, +and maintains state used to force quiescent states when grace periods +extend too long, + +A few of the ``rcu_state`` structure's fields are discussed, singly and +in groups, in the following sections. The more specialized fields are +covered in the discussion of their use. + +Relationship to rcu_node and rcu_data Structures +'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' + +This portion of the ``rcu_state`` structure is declared as follows: + +:: + + 1 struct rcu_node node[NUM_RCU_NODES]; + 2 struct rcu_node *level[NUM_RCU_LVLS + 1]; + 3 struct rcu_data __percpu *rda; + ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Quick Quiz**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Wait a minute! You said that the ``rcu_node`` structures formed a | +| tree, but they are declared as a flat array! What gives? | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Answer**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| The tree is laid out in the array. The first node In the array is the | +| head, the next set of nodes in the array are children of the head | +| node, and so on until the last set of nodes in the array are the | +| leaves. | +| See the following diagrams to see how this works. | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ + +The ``rcu_node`` tree is embedded into the ``->node[]`` array as shown +in the following figure: + +.. kernel-figure:: TreeMapping.svg + +One interesting consequence of this mapping is that a breadth-first +traversal of the tree is implemented as a simple linear scan of the +array, which is in fact what the ``rcu_for_each_node_breadth_first()`` +macro does. This macro is used at the beginning and ends of grace +periods. + +Each entry of the ``->level`` array references the first ``rcu_node`` +structure on the corresponding level of the tree, for example, as shown +below: + +.. kernel-figure:: TreeMappingLevel.svg + +The zero\ :sup:`th` element of the array references the root +``rcu_node`` structure, the first element references the first child of +the root ``rcu_node``, and finally the second element references the +first leaf ``rcu_node`` structure. + +For whatever it is worth, if you draw the tree to be tree-shaped rather +than array-shaped, it is easy to draw a planar representation: + +.. kernel-figure:: TreeLevel.svg + +Finally, the ``->rda`` field references a per-CPU pointer to the +corresponding CPU's ``rcu_data`` structure. + +All of these fields are constant once initialization is complete, and +therefore need no protection. + +Grace-Period Tracking +''''''''''''''''''''' + +This portion of the ``rcu_state`` structure is declared as follows: + +:: + + 1 unsigned long gp_seq; + +RCU grace periods are numbered, and the ``->gp_seq`` field contains the +current grace-period sequence number. The bottom two bits are the state +of the current grace period, which can be zero for not yet started or +one for in progress. In other words, if the bottom two bits of +``->gp_seq`` are zero, then RCU is idle. Any other value in the bottom +two bits indicates that something is broken. This field is protected by +the root ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->lock`` field. + +There are ``->gp_seq`` fields in the ``rcu_node`` and ``rcu_data`` +structures as well. The fields in the ``rcu_state`` structure represent +the most current value, and those of the other structures are compared +in order to detect the beginnings and ends of grace periods in a +distributed fashion. The values flow from ``rcu_state`` to ``rcu_node`` +(down the tree from the root to the leaves) to ``rcu_data``. + +Miscellaneous +''''''''''''' + +This portion of the ``rcu_state`` structure is declared as follows: + +:: + + 1 unsigned long gp_max; + 2 char abbr; + 3 char *name; + +The ``->gp_max`` field tracks the duration of the longest grace period +in jiffies. It is protected by the root ``rcu_node``'s ``->lock``. + +The ``->name`` and ``->abbr`` fields distinguish between preemptible RCU +(“rcu_preempt” and “p”) and non-preemptible RCU (“rcu_sched” and “s”). +These fields are used for diagnostic and tracing purposes. + +The ``rcu_node`` Structure +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The ``rcu_node`` structures form the combining tree that propagates +quiescent-state information from the leaves to the root and also that +propagates grace-period information from the root down to the leaves. +They provides local copies of the grace-period state in order to allow +this information to be accessed in a synchronized manner without +suffering the scalability limitations that would otherwise be imposed by +global locking. In ``CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU`` kernels, they manage the lists +of tasks that have blocked while in their current RCU read-side critical +section. In ``CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU`` with ``CONFIG_RCU_BOOST``, they +manage the per-\ ``rcu_node`` priority-boosting kernel threads +(kthreads) and state. Finally, they record CPU-hotplug state in order to +determine which CPUs should be ignored during a given grace period. + +The ``rcu_node`` structure's fields are discussed, singly and in groups, +in the following sections. + +Connection to Combining Tree +'''''''''''''''''''''''''''' + +This portion of the ``rcu_node`` structure is declared as follows: + +:: + + 1 struct rcu_node *parent; + 2 u8 level; + 3 u8 grpnum; + 4 unsigned long grpmask; + 5 int grplo; + 6 int grphi; + +The ``->parent`` pointer references the ``rcu_node`` one level up in the +tree, and is ``NULL`` for the root ``rcu_node``. The RCU implementation +makes heavy use of this field to push quiescent states up the tree. The +``->level`` field gives the level in the tree, with the root being at +level zero, its children at level one, and so on. The ``->grpnum`` field +gives this node's position within the children of its parent, so this +number can range between 0 and 31 on 32-bit systems and between 0 and 63 +on 64-bit systems. The ``->level`` and ``->grpnum`` fields are used only +during initialization and for tracing. The ``->grpmask`` field is the +bitmask counterpart of ``->grpnum``, and therefore always has exactly +one bit set. This mask is used to clear the bit corresponding to this +``rcu_node`` structure in its parent's bitmasks, which are described +later. Finally, the ``->grplo`` and ``->grphi`` fields contain the +lowest and highest numbered CPU served by this ``rcu_node`` structure, +respectively. + +All of these fields are constant, and thus do not require any +synchronization. + +Synchronization +''''''''''''''' + +This field of the ``rcu_node`` structure is declared as follows: + +:: + + 1 raw_spinlock_t lock; + +This field is used to protect the remaining fields in this structure, +unless otherwise stated. That said, all of the fields in this structure +can be accessed without locking for tracing purposes. Yes, this can +result in confusing traces, but better some tracing confusion than to be +heisenbugged out of existence. + +.. _grace-period-tracking-1: + +Grace-Period Tracking +''''''''''''''''''''' + +This portion of the ``rcu_node`` structure is declared as follows: + +:: + + 1 unsigned long gp_seq; + 2 unsigned long gp_seq_needed; + +The ``rcu_node`` structures' ``->gp_seq`` fields are the counterparts of +the field of the same name in the ``rcu_state`` structure. They each may +lag up to one step behind their ``rcu_state`` counterpart. If the bottom +two bits of a given ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->gp_seq`` field is zero, +then this ``rcu_node`` structure believes that RCU is idle. + +The ``>gp_seq`` field of each ``rcu_node`` structure is updated at the +beginning and the end of each grace period. + +The ``->gp_seq_needed`` fields record the furthest-in-the-future grace +period request seen by the corresponding ``rcu_node`` structure. The +request is considered fulfilled when the value of the ``->gp_seq`` field +equals or exceeds that of the ``->gp_seq_needed`` field. + ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Quick Quiz**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Suppose that this ``rcu_node`` structure doesn't see a request for a | +| very long time. Won't wrapping of the ``->gp_seq`` field cause | +| problems? | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Answer**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| No, because if the ``->gp_seq_needed`` field lags behind the | +| ``->gp_seq`` field, the ``->gp_seq_needed`` field will be updated at | +| the end of the grace period. Modulo-arithmetic comparisons therefore | +| will always get the correct answer, even with wrapping. | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ + +Quiescent-State Tracking +'''''''''''''''''''''''' + +These fields manage the propagation of quiescent states up the combining +tree. + +This portion of the ``rcu_node`` structure has fields as follows: + +:: + + 1 unsigned long qsmask; + 2 unsigned long expmask; + 3 unsigned long qsmaskinit; + 4 unsigned long expmaskinit; + +The ``->qsmask`` field tracks which of this ``rcu_node`` structure's +children still need to report quiescent states for the current normal +grace period. Such children will have a value of 1 in their +corresponding bit. Note that the leaf ``rcu_node`` structures should be +thought of as having ``rcu_data`` structures as their children. +Similarly, the ``->expmask`` field tracks which of this ``rcu_node`` +structure's children still need to report quiescent states for the +current expedited grace period. An expedited grace period has the same +conceptual properties as a normal grace period, but the expedited +implementation accepts extreme CPU overhead to obtain much lower +grace-period latency, for example, consuming a few tens of microseconds +worth of CPU time to reduce grace-period duration from milliseconds to +tens of microseconds. The ``->qsmaskinit`` field tracks which of this +``rcu_node`` structure's children cover for at least one online CPU. +This mask is used to initialize ``->qsmask``, and ``->expmaskinit`` is +used to initialize ``->expmask`` and the beginning of the normal and +expedited grace periods, respectively. + ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Quick Quiz**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Why are these bitmasks protected by locking? Come on, haven't you | +| heard of atomic instructions??? | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Answer**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Lockless grace-period computation! Such a tantalizing possibility! | +| But consider the following sequence of events: | +| | +| #. CPU 0 has been in dyntick-idle mode for quite some time. When it | +| wakes up, it notices that the current RCU grace period needs it to | +| report in, so it sets a flag where the scheduling clock interrupt | +| will find it. | +| #. Meanwhile, CPU 1 is running ``force_quiescent_state()``, and | +| notices that CPU 0 has been in dyntick idle mode, which qualifies | +| as an extended quiescent state. | +| #. CPU 0's scheduling clock interrupt fires in the middle of an RCU | +| read-side critical section, and notices that the RCU core needs | +| something, so commences RCU softirq processing. | +| #. CPU 0's softirq handler executes and is just about ready to report | +| its quiescent state up the ``rcu_node`` tree. | +| #. But CPU 1 beats it to the punch, completing the current grace | +| period and starting a new one. | +| #. CPU 0 now reports its quiescent state for the wrong grace period. | +| That grace period might now end before the RCU read-side critical | +| section. If that happens, disaster will ensue. | +| | +| So the locking is absolutely required in order to coordinate clearing | +| of the bits with updating of the grace-period sequence number in | +| ``->gp_seq``. | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ + +Blocked-Task Management +''''''''''''''''''''''' + +``PREEMPT_RCU`` allows tasks to be preempted in the midst of their RCU +read-side critical sections, and these tasks must be tracked explicitly. +The details of exactly why and how they are tracked will be covered in a +separate article on RCU read-side processing. For now, it is enough to +know that the ``rcu_node`` structure tracks them. + +:: + + 1 struct list_head blkd_tasks; + 2 struct list_head *gp_tasks; + 3 struct list_head *exp_tasks; + 4 bool wait_blkd_tasks; + +The ``->blkd_tasks`` field is a list header for the list of blocked and +preempted tasks. As tasks undergo context switches within RCU read-side +critical sections, their ``task_struct`` structures are enqueued (via +the ``task_struct``'s ``->rcu_node_entry`` field) onto the head of the +``->blkd_tasks`` list for the leaf ``rcu_node`` structure corresponding +to the CPU on which the outgoing context switch executed. As these tasks +later exit their RCU read-side critical sections, they remove themselves +from the list. This list is therefore in reverse time order, so that if +one of the tasks is blocking the current grace period, all subsequent +tasks must also be blocking that same grace period. Therefore, a single +pointer into this list suffices to track all tasks blocking a given +grace period. That pointer is stored in ``->gp_tasks`` for normal grace +periods and in ``->exp_tasks`` for expedited grace periods. These last +two fields are ``NULL`` if either there is no grace period in flight or +if there are no blocked tasks preventing that grace period from +completing. If either of these two pointers is referencing a task that +removes itself from the ``->blkd_tasks`` list, then that task must +advance the pointer to the next task on the list, or set the pointer to +``NULL`` if there are no subsequent tasks on the list. + +For example, suppose that tasks T1, T2, and T3 are all hard-affinitied +to the largest-numbered CPU in the system. Then if task T1 blocked in an +RCU read-side critical section, then an expedited grace period started, +then task T2 blocked in an RCU read-side critical section, then a normal +grace period started, and finally task 3 blocked in an RCU read-side +critical section, then the state of the last leaf ``rcu_node`` +structure's blocked-task list would be as shown below: + +.. kernel-figure:: blkd_task.svg + +Task T1 is blocking both grace periods, task T2 is blocking only the +normal grace period, and task T3 is blocking neither grace period. Note +that these tasks will not remove themselves from this list immediately +upon resuming execution. They will instead remain on the list until they +execute the outermost ``rcu_read_unlock()`` that ends their RCU +read-side critical section. + +The ``->wait_blkd_tasks`` field indicates whether or not the current +grace period is waiting on a blocked task. + +Sizing the ``rcu_node`` Array +''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' + +The ``rcu_node`` array is sized via a series of C-preprocessor +expressions as follows: + +:: + + 1 #ifdef CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT + 2 #define RCU_FANOUT CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT + 3 #else + 4 # ifdef CONFIG_64BIT + 5 # define RCU_FANOUT 64 + 6 # else + 7 # define RCU_FANOUT 32 + 8 # endif + 9 #endif + 10 + 11 #ifdef CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT_LEAF + 12 #define RCU_FANOUT_LEAF CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT_LEAF + 13 #else + 14 # ifdef CONFIG_64BIT + 15 # define RCU_FANOUT_LEAF 64 + 16 # else + 17 # define RCU_FANOUT_LEAF 32 + 18 # endif + 19 #endif + 20 + 21 #define RCU_FANOUT_1 (RCU_FANOUT_LEAF) + 22 #define RCU_FANOUT_2 (RCU_FANOUT_1 * RCU_FANOUT) + 23 #define RCU_FANOUT_3 (RCU_FANOUT_2 * RCU_FANOUT) + 24 #define RCU_FANOUT_4 (RCU_FANOUT_3 * RCU_FANOUT) + 25 + 26 #if NR_CPUS <= RCU_FANOUT_1 + 27 # define RCU_NUM_LVLS 1 + 28 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_0 1 + 29 # define NUM_RCU_NODES NUM_RCU_LVL_0 + 30 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_INIT { NUM_RCU_LVL_0 } + 31 # define RCU_NODE_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_0" } + 32 # define RCU_FQS_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_fqs_0" } + 33 # define RCU_EXP_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_exp_0" } + 34 #elif NR_CPUS <= RCU_FANOUT_2 + 35 # define RCU_NUM_LVLS 2 + 36 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_0 1 + 37 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_1 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_1) + 38 # define NUM_RCU_NODES (NUM_RCU_LVL_0 + NUM_RCU_LVL_1) + 39 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_INIT { NUM_RCU_LVL_0, NUM_RCU_LVL_1 } + 40 # define RCU_NODE_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_0", "rcu_node_1" } + 41 # define RCU_FQS_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_fqs_0", "rcu_node_fqs_1" } + 42 # define RCU_EXP_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_exp_0", "rcu_node_exp_1" } + 43 #elif NR_CPUS <= RCU_FANOUT_3 + 44 # define RCU_NUM_LVLS 3 + 45 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_0 1 + 46 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_1 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_2) + 47 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_2 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_1) + 48 # define NUM_RCU_NODES (NUM_RCU_LVL_0 + NUM_RCU_LVL_1 + NUM_RCU_LVL_2) + 49 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_INIT { NUM_RCU_LVL_0, NUM_RCU_LVL_1, NUM_RCU_LVL_2 } + 50 # define RCU_NODE_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_0", "rcu_node_1", "rcu_node_2" } + 51 # define RCU_FQS_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_fqs_0", "rcu_node_fqs_1", "rcu_node_fqs_2" } + 52 # define RCU_EXP_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_exp_0", "rcu_node_exp_1", "rcu_node_exp_2" } + 53 #elif NR_CPUS <= RCU_FANOUT_4 + 54 # define RCU_NUM_LVLS 4 + 55 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_0 1 + 56 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_1 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_3) + 57 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_2 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_2) + 58 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_3 DIV_ROUND_UP(NR_CPUS, RCU_FANOUT_1) + 59 # define NUM_RCU_NODES (NUM_RCU_LVL_0 + NUM_RCU_LVL_1 + NUM_RCU_LVL_2 + NUM_RCU_LVL_3) + 60 # define NUM_RCU_LVL_INIT { NUM_RCU_LVL_0, NUM_RCU_LVL_1, NUM_RCU_LVL_2, NUM_RCU_LVL_3 } + 61 # define RCU_NODE_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_0", "rcu_node_1", "rcu_node_2", "rcu_node_3" } + 62 # define RCU_FQS_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_fqs_0", "rcu_node_fqs_1", "rcu_node_fqs_2", "rcu_node_fqs_3" } + 63 # define RCU_EXP_NAME_INIT { "rcu_node_exp_0", "rcu_node_exp_1", "rcu_node_exp_2", "rcu_node_exp_3" } + 64 #else + 65 # error "CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT insufficient for NR_CPUS" + 66 #endif + +The maximum number of levels in the ``rcu_node`` structure is currently +limited to four, as specified by lines 21-24 and the structure of the +subsequent “if” statement. For 32-bit systems, this allows +16*32*32*32=524,288 CPUs, which should be sufficient for the next few +years at least. For 64-bit systems, 16*64*64*64=4,194,304 CPUs is +allowed, which should see us through the next decade or so. This +four-level tree also allows kernels built with ``CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT=8`` +to support up to 4096 CPUs, which might be useful in very large systems +having eight CPUs per socket (but please note that no one has yet shown +any measurable performance degradation due to misaligned socket and +``rcu_node`` boundaries). In addition, building kernels with a full four +levels of ``rcu_node`` tree permits better testing of RCU's +combining-tree code. + +The ``RCU_FANOUT`` symbol controls how many children are permitted at +each non-leaf level of the ``rcu_node`` tree. If the +``CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT`` Kconfig option is not specified, it is set based +on the word size of the system, which is also the Kconfig default. + +The ``RCU_FANOUT_LEAF`` symbol controls how many CPUs are handled by +each leaf ``rcu_node`` structure. Experience has shown that allowing a +given leaf ``rcu_node`` structure to handle 64 CPUs, as permitted by the +number of bits in the ``->qsmask`` field on a 64-bit system, results in +excessive contention for the leaf ``rcu_node`` structures' ``->lock`` +fields. The number of CPUs per leaf ``rcu_node`` structure is therefore +limited to 16 given the default value of ``CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT_LEAF``. If +``CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT_LEAF`` is unspecified, the value selected is based +on the word size of the system, just as for ``CONFIG_RCU_FANOUT``. +Lines 11-19 perform this computation. + +Lines 21-24 compute the maximum number of CPUs supported by a +single-level (which contains a single ``rcu_node`` structure), +two-level, three-level, and four-level ``rcu_node`` tree, respectively, +given the fanout specified by ``RCU_FANOUT`` and ``RCU_FANOUT_LEAF``. +These numbers of CPUs are retained in the ``RCU_FANOUT_1``, +``RCU_FANOUT_2``, ``RCU_FANOUT_3``, and ``RCU_FANOUT_4`` C-preprocessor +variables, respectively. + +These variables are used to control the C-preprocessor ``#if`` statement +spanning lines 26-66 that computes the number of ``rcu_node`` structures +required for each level of the tree, as well as the number of levels +required. The number of levels is placed in the ``NUM_RCU_LVLS`` +C-preprocessor variable by lines 27, 35, 44, and 54. The number of +``rcu_node`` structures for the topmost level of the tree is always +exactly one, and this value is unconditionally placed into +``NUM_RCU_LVL_0`` by lines 28, 36, 45, and 55. The rest of the levels +(if any) of the ``rcu_node`` tree are computed by dividing the maximum +number of CPUs by the fanout supported by the number of levels from the +current level down, rounding up. This computation is performed by +lines 37, 46-47, and 56-58. Lines 31-33, 40-42, 50-52, and 62-63 create +initializers for lockdep lock-class names. Finally, lines 64-66 produce +an error if the maximum number of CPUs is too large for the specified +fanout. + +The ``rcu_segcblist`` Structure +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The ``rcu_segcblist`` structure maintains a segmented list of callbacks +as follows: + +:: + + 1 #define RCU_DONE_TAIL 0 + 2 #define RCU_WAIT_TAIL 1 + 3 #define RCU_NEXT_READY_TAIL 2 + 4 #define RCU_NEXT_TAIL 3 + 5 #define RCU_CBLIST_NSEGS 4 + 6 + 7 struct rcu_segcblist { + 8 struct rcu_head *head; + 9 struct rcu_head **tails[RCU_CBLIST_NSEGS]; + 10 unsigned long gp_seq[RCU_CBLIST_NSEGS]; + 11 long len; + 12 long len_lazy; + 13 }; + +The segments are as follows: + +#. ``RCU_DONE_TAIL``: Callbacks whose grace periods have elapsed. These + callbacks are ready to be invoked. +#. ``RCU_WAIT_TAIL``: Callbacks that are waiting for the current grace + period. Note that different CPUs can have different ideas about which + grace period is current, hence the ``->gp_seq`` field. +#. ``RCU_NEXT_READY_TAIL``: Callbacks waiting for the next grace period + to start. +#. ``RCU_NEXT_TAIL``: Callbacks that have not yet been associated with a + grace period. + +The ``->head`` pointer references the first callback or is ``NULL`` if +the list contains no callbacks (which is *not* the same as being empty). +Each element of the ``->tails[]`` array references the ``->next`` +pointer of the last callback in the corresponding segment of the list, +or the list's ``->head`` pointer if that segment and all previous +segments are empty. If the corresponding segment is empty but some +previous segment is not empty, then the array element is identical to +its predecessor. Older callbacks are closer to the head of the list, and +new callbacks are added at the tail. This relationship between the +``->head`` pointer, the ``->tails[]`` array, and the callbacks is shown +in this diagram: + +.. kernel-figure:: nxtlist.svg + +In this figure, the ``->head`` pointer references the first RCU callback +in the list. The ``->tails[RCU_DONE_TAIL]`` array element references the +``->head`` pointer itself, indicating that none of the callbacks is +ready to invoke. The ``->tails[RCU_WAIT_TAIL]`` array element references +callback CB 2's ``->next`` pointer, which indicates that CB 1 and CB 2 +are both waiting on the current grace period, give or take possible +disagreements about exactly which grace period is the current one. The +``->tails[RCU_NEXT_READY_TAIL]`` array element references the same RCU +callback that ``->tails[RCU_WAIT_TAIL]`` does, which indicates that +there are no callbacks waiting on the next RCU grace period. The +``->tails[RCU_NEXT_TAIL]`` array element references CB 4's ``->next`` +pointer, indicating that all the remaining RCU callbacks have not yet +been assigned to an RCU grace period. Note that the +``->tails[RCU_NEXT_TAIL]`` array element always references the last RCU +callback's ``->next`` pointer unless the callback list is empty, in +which case it references the ``->head`` pointer. + +There is one additional important special case for the +``->tails[RCU_NEXT_TAIL]`` array element: It can be ``NULL`` when this +list is *disabled*. Lists are disabled when the corresponding CPU is +offline or when the corresponding CPU's callbacks are offloaded to a +kthread, both of which are described elsewhere. + +CPUs advance their callbacks from the ``RCU_NEXT_TAIL`` to the +``RCU_NEXT_READY_TAIL`` to the ``RCU_WAIT_TAIL`` to the +``RCU_DONE_TAIL`` list segments as grace periods advance. + +The ``->gp_seq[]`` array records grace-period numbers corresponding to +the list segments. This is what allows different CPUs to have different +ideas as to which is the current grace period while still avoiding +premature invocation of their callbacks. In particular, this allows CPUs +that go idle for extended periods to determine which of their callbacks +are ready to be invoked after reawakening. + +The ``->len`` counter contains the number of callbacks in ``->head``, +and the ``->len_lazy`` contains the number of those callbacks that are +known to only free memory, and whose invocation can therefore be safely +deferred. + +.. important:: + + It is the ``->len`` field that determines whether or + not there are callbacks associated with this ``rcu_segcblist`` + structure, *not* the ``->head`` pointer. The reason for this is that all + the ready-to-invoke callbacks (that is, those in the ``RCU_DONE_TAIL`` + segment) are extracted all at once at callback-invocation time + (``rcu_do_batch``), due to which ``->head`` may be set to NULL if there + are no not-done callbacks remaining in the ``rcu_segcblist``. If + callback invocation must be postponed, for example, because a + high-priority process just woke up on this CPU, then the remaining + callbacks are placed back on the ``RCU_DONE_TAIL`` segment and + ``->head`` once again points to the start of the segment. In short, the + head field can briefly be ``NULL`` even though the CPU has callbacks + present the entire time. Therefore, it is not appropriate to test the + ``->head`` pointer for ``NULL``. + +In contrast, the ``->len`` and ``->len_lazy`` counts are adjusted only +after the corresponding callbacks have been invoked. This means that the +``->len`` count is zero only if the ``rcu_segcblist`` structure really +is devoid of callbacks. Of course, off-CPU sampling of the ``->len`` +count requires careful use of appropriate synchronization, for example, +memory barriers. This synchronization can be a bit subtle, particularly +in the case of ``rcu_barrier()``. + +The ``rcu_data`` Structure +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The ``rcu_data`` maintains the per-CPU state for the RCU subsystem. The +fields in this structure may be accessed only from the corresponding CPU +(and from tracing) unless otherwise stated. This structure is the focus +of quiescent-state detection and RCU callback queuing. It also tracks +its relationship to the corresponding leaf ``rcu_node`` structure to +allow more-efficient propagation of quiescent states up the ``rcu_node`` +combining tree. Like the ``rcu_node`` structure, it provides a local +copy of the grace-period information to allow for-free synchronized +access to this information from the corresponding CPU. Finally, this +structure records past dyntick-idle state for the corresponding CPU and +also tracks statistics. + +The ``rcu_data`` structure's fields are discussed, singly and in groups, +in the following sections. + +Connection to Other Data Structures +''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' + +This portion of the ``rcu_data`` structure is declared as follows: + +:: + + 1 int cpu; + 2 struct rcu_node *mynode; + 3 unsigned long grpmask; + 4 bool beenonline; + +The ``->cpu`` field contains the number of the corresponding CPU and the +``->mynode`` field references the corresponding ``rcu_node`` structure. +The ``->mynode`` is used to propagate quiescent states up the combining +tree. These two fields are constant and therefore do not require +synchronization. + +The ``->grpmask`` field indicates the bit in the ``->mynode->qsmask`` +corresponding to this ``rcu_data`` structure, and is also used when +propagating quiescent states. The ``->beenonline`` flag is set whenever +the corresponding CPU comes online, which means that the debugfs tracing +need not dump out any ``rcu_data`` structure for which this flag is not +set. + +Quiescent-State and Grace-Period Tracking +''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' + +This portion of the ``rcu_data`` structure is declared as follows: + +:: + + 1 unsigned long gp_seq; + 2 unsigned long gp_seq_needed; + 3 bool cpu_no_qs; + 4 bool core_needs_qs; + 5 bool gpwrap; + +The ``->gp_seq`` field is the counterpart of the field of the same name +in the ``rcu_state`` and ``rcu_node`` structures. The +``->gp_seq_needed`` field is the counterpart of the field of the same +name in the rcu_node structure. They may each lag up to one behind their +``rcu_node`` counterparts, but in ``CONFIG_NO_HZ_IDLE`` and +``CONFIG_NO_HZ_FULL`` kernels can lag arbitrarily far behind for CPUs in +dyntick-idle mode (but these counters will catch up upon exit from +dyntick-idle mode). If the lower two bits of a given ``rcu_data`` +structure's ``->gp_seq`` are zero, then this ``rcu_data`` structure +believes that RCU is idle. + ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Quick Quiz**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| All this replication of the grace period numbers can only cause | +| massive confusion. Why not just keep a global sequence number and be | +| done with it??? | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Answer**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Because if there was only a single global sequence numbers, there | +| would need to be a single global lock to allow safely accessing and | +| updating it. And if we are not going to have a single global lock, we | +| need to carefully manage the numbers on a per-node basis. Recall from | +| the answer to a previous Quick Quiz that the consequences of applying | +| a previously sampled quiescent state to the wrong grace period are | +| quite severe. | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ + +The ``->cpu_no_qs`` flag indicates that the CPU has not yet passed +through a quiescent state, while the ``->core_needs_qs`` flag indicates +that the RCU core needs a quiescent state from the corresponding CPU. +The ``->gpwrap`` field indicates that the corresponding CPU has remained +idle for so long that the ``gp_seq`` counter is in danger of overflow, +which will cause the CPU to disregard the values of its counters on its +next exit from idle. + +RCU Callback Handling +''''''''''''''''''''' + +In the absence of CPU-hotplug events, RCU callbacks are invoked by the +same CPU that registered them. This is strictly a cache-locality +optimization: callbacks can and do get invoked on CPUs other than the +one that registered them. After all, if the CPU that registered a given +callback has gone offline before the callback can be invoked, there +really is no other choice. + +This portion of the ``rcu_data`` structure is declared as follows: + +:: + + 1 struct rcu_segcblist cblist; + 2 long qlen_last_fqs_check; + 3 unsigned long n_cbs_invoked; + 4 unsigned long n_nocbs_invoked; + 5 unsigned long n_cbs_orphaned; + 6 unsigned long n_cbs_adopted; + 7 unsigned long n_force_qs_snap; + 8 long blimit; + +The ``->cblist`` structure is the segmented callback list described +earlier. The CPU advances the callbacks in its ``rcu_data`` structure +whenever it notices that another RCU grace period has completed. The CPU +detects the completion of an RCU grace period by noticing that the value +of its ``rcu_data`` structure's ``->gp_seq`` field differs from that of +its leaf ``rcu_node`` structure. Recall that each ``rcu_node`` +structure's ``->gp_seq`` field is updated at the beginnings and ends of +each grace period. + +The ``->qlen_last_fqs_check`` and ``->n_force_qs_snap`` coordinate the +forcing of quiescent states from ``call_rcu()`` and friends when +callback lists grow excessively long. + +The ``->n_cbs_invoked``, ``->n_cbs_orphaned``, and ``->n_cbs_adopted`` +fields count the number of callbacks invoked, sent to other CPUs when +this CPU goes offline, and received from other CPUs when those other +CPUs go offline. The ``->n_nocbs_invoked`` is used when the CPU's +callbacks are offloaded to a kthread. + +Finally, the ``->blimit`` counter is the maximum number of RCU callbacks +that may be invoked at a given time. + +Dyntick-Idle Handling +''''''''''''''''''''' + +This portion of the ``rcu_data`` structure is declared as follows: + +:: + + 1 int dynticks_snap; + 2 unsigned long dynticks_fqs; + +The ``->dynticks_snap`` field is used to take a snapshot of the +corresponding CPU's dyntick-idle state when forcing quiescent states, +and is therefore accessed from other CPUs. Finally, the +``->dynticks_fqs`` field is used to count the number of times this CPU +is determined to be in dyntick-idle state, and is used for tracing and +debugging purposes. + +This portion of the rcu_data structure is declared as follows: + +:: + + 1 long dynticks_nesting; + 2 long dynticks_nmi_nesting; + 3 atomic_t dynticks; + 4 bool rcu_need_heavy_qs; + 5 bool rcu_urgent_qs; + +These fields in the rcu_data structure maintain the per-CPU dyntick-idle +state for the corresponding CPU. The fields may be accessed only from +the corresponding CPU (and from tracing) unless otherwise stated. + +The ``->dynticks_nesting`` field counts the nesting depth of process +execution, so that in normal circumstances this counter has value zero +or one. NMIs, irqs, and tracers are counted by the +``->dynticks_nmi_nesting`` field. Because NMIs cannot be masked, changes +to this variable have to be undertaken carefully using an algorithm +provided by Andy Lutomirski. The initial transition from idle adds one, +and nested transitions add two, so that a nesting level of five is +represented by a ``->dynticks_nmi_nesting`` value of nine. This counter +can therefore be thought of as counting the number of reasons why this +CPU cannot be permitted to enter dyntick-idle mode, aside from +process-level transitions. + +However, it turns out that when running in non-idle kernel context, the +Linux kernel is fully capable of entering interrupt handlers that never +exit and perhaps also vice versa. Therefore, whenever the +``->dynticks_nesting`` field is incremented up from zero, the +``->dynticks_nmi_nesting`` field is set to a large positive number, and +whenever the ``->dynticks_nesting`` field is decremented down to zero, +the ``->dynticks_nmi_nesting`` field is set to zero. Assuming that +the number of misnested interrupts is not sufficient to overflow the +counter, this approach corrects the ``->dynticks_nmi_nesting`` field +every time the corresponding CPU enters the idle loop from process +context. + +The ``->dynticks`` field counts the corresponding CPU's transitions to +and from either dyntick-idle or user mode, so that this counter has an +even value when the CPU is in dyntick-idle mode or user mode and an odd +value otherwise. The transitions to/from user mode need to be counted +for user mode adaptive-ticks support (see Documentation/timers/no_hz.rst). + +The ``->rcu_need_heavy_qs`` field is used to record the fact that the +RCU core code would really like to see a quiescent state from the +corresponding CPU, so much so that it is willing to call for +heavy-weight dyntick-counter operations. This flag is checked by RCU's +context-switch and ``cond_resched()`` code, which provide a momentary +idle sojourn in response. + +Finally, the ``->rcu_urgent_qs`` field is used to record the fact that +the RCU core code would really like to see a quiescent state from the +corresponding CPU, with the various other fields indicating just how +badly RCU wants this quiescent state. This flag is checked by RCU's +context-switch path (``rcu_note_context_switch``) and the cond_resched +code. + ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Quick Quiz**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Why not simply combine the ``->dynticks_nesting`` and | +| ``->dynticks_nmi_nesting`` counters into a single counter that just | +| counts the number of reasons that the corresponding CPU is non-idle? | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Answer**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Because this would fail in the presence of interrupts whose handlers | +| never return and of handlers that manage to return from a made-up | +| interrupt. | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ + +Additional fields are present for some special-purpose builds, and are +discussed separately. + +The ``rcu_head`` Structure +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Each ``rcu_head`` structure represents an RCU callback. These structures +are normally embedded within RCU-protected data structures whose +algorithms use asynchronous grace periods. In contrast, when using +algorithms that block waiting for RCU grace periods, RCU users need not +provide ``rcu_head`` structures. + +The ``rcu_head`` structure has fields as follows: + +:: + + 1 struct rcu_head *next; + 2 void (*func)(struct rcu_head *head); + +The ``->next`` field is used to link the ``rcu_head`` structures +together in the lists within the ``rcu_data`` structures. The ``->func`` +field is a pointer to the function to be called when the callback is +ready to be invoked, and this function is passed a pointer to the +``rcu_head`` structure. However, ``kfree_rcu()`` uses the ``->func`` +field to record the offset of the ``rcu_head`` structure within the +enclosing RCU-protected data structure. + +Both of these fields are used internally by RCU. From the viewpoint of +RCU users, this structure is an opaque “cookie”. + ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Quick Quiz**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Given that the callback function ``->func`` is passed a pointer to | +| the ``rcu_head`` structure, how is that function supposed to find the | +| beginning of the enclosing RCU-protected data structure? | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Answer**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| In actual practice, there is a separate callback function per type of | +| RCU-protected data structure. The callback function can therefore use | +| the ``container_of()`` macro in the Linux kernel (or other | +| pointer-manipulation facilities in other software environments) to | +| find the beginning of the enclosing structure. | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ + +RCU-Specific Fields in the ``task_struct`` Structure +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The ``CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU`` implementation uses some additional fields in +the ``task_struct`` structure: + +:: + + 1 #ifdef CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU + 2 int rcu_read_lock_nesting; + 3 union rcu_special rcu_read_unlock_special; + 4 struct list_head rcu_node_entry; + 5 struct rcu_node *rcu_blocked_node; + 6 #endif /* #ifdef CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU */ + 7 #ifdef CONFIG_TASKS_RCU + 8 unsigned long rcu_tasks_nvcsw; + 9 bool rcu_tasks_holdout; + 10 struct list_head rcu_tasks_holdout_list; + 11 int rcu_tasks_idle_cpu; + 12 #endif /* #ifdef CONFIG_TASKS_RCU */ + +The ``->rcu_read_lock_nesting`` field records the nesting level for RCU +read-side critical sections, and the ``->rcu_read_unlock_special`` field +is a bitmask that records special conditions that require +``rcu_read_unlock()`` to do additional work. The ``->rcu_node_entry`` +field is used to form lists of tasks that have blocked within +preemptible-RCU read-side critical sections and the +``->rcu_blocked_node`` field references the ``rcu_node`` structure whose +list this task is a member of, or ``NULL`` if it is not blocked within a +preemptible-RCU read-side critical section. + +The ``->rcu_tasks_nvcsw`` field tracks the number of voluntary context +switches that this task had undergone at the beginning of the current +tasks-RCU grace period, ``->rcu_tasks_holdout`` is set if the current +tasks-RCU grace period is waiting on this task, +``->rcu_tasks_holdout_list`` is a list element enqueuing this task on +the holdout list, and ``->rcu_tasks_idle_cpu`` tracks which CPU this +idle task is running, but only if the task is currently running, that +is, if the CPU is currently idle. + +Accessor Functions +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The following listing shows the ``rcu_get_root()``, +``rcu_for_each_node_breadth_first`` and ``rcu_for_each_leaf_node()`` +function and macros: + +:: + + 1 static struct rcu_node *rcu_get_root(struct rcu_state *rsp) + 2 { + 3 return &rsp->node[0]; + 4 } + 5 + 6 #define rcu_for_each_node_breadth_first(rsp, rnp) \ + 7 for ((rnp) = &(rsp)->node[0]; \ + 8 (rnp) < &(rsp)->node[NUM_RCU_NODES]; (rnp)++) + 9 + 10 #define rcu_for_each_leaf_node(rsp, rnp) \ + 11 for ((rnp) = (rsp)->level[NUM_RCU_LVLS - 1]; \ + 12 (rnp) < &(rsp)->node[NUM_RCU_NODES]; (rnp)++) + +The ``rcu_get_root()`` simply returns a pointer to the first element of +the specified ``rcu_state`` structure's ``->node[]`` array, which is the +root ``rcu_node`` structure. + +As noted earlier, the ``rcu_for_each_node_breadth_first()`` macro takes +advantage of the layout of the ``rcu_node`` structures in the +``rcu_state`` structure's ``->node[]`` array, performing a breadth-first +traversal by simply traversing the array in order. Similarly, the +``rcu_for_each_leaf_node()`` macro traverses only the last part of the +array, thus traversing only the leaf ``rcu_node`` structures. + ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Quick Quiz**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| What does ``rcu_for_each_leaf_node()`` do if the ``rcu_node`` tree | +| contains only a single node? | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| **Answer**: | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| In the single-node case, ``rcu_for_each_leaf_node()`` traverses the | +| single node. | ++-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ + +Summary +~~~~~~~ + +So the state of RCU is represented by an ``rcu_state`` structure, which +contains a combining tree of ``rcu_node`` and ``rcu_data`` structures. +Finally, in ``CONFIG_NO_HZ_IDLE`` kernels, each CPU's dyntick-idle state +is tracked by dynticks-related fields in the ``rcu_data`` structure. If +you made it this far, you are well prepared to read the code +walkthroughs in the other articles in this series. + +Acknowledgments +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +I owe thanks to Cyrill Gorcunov, Mathieu Desnoyers, Dhaval Giani, Paul +Turner, Abhishek Srivastava, Matt Kowalczyk, and Serge Hallyn for +helping me get this document into a more human-readable state. + +Legal Statement +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +This work represents the view of the author and does not necessarily +represent the view of IBM. + +Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. + +Other company, product, and service names may be trademarks or service +marks of others. -- cgit v1.2.3