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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2021-07-23 11:28:52 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2021-07-23 11:28:52 +0000 |
commit | cca122ce9a0e5c8ebe745b6ae785b5b5c80f4fc6 (patch) | |
tree | ed241f8b8e5344df624226d5217cccec5e84329a /README | |
parent | Adding upstream version 0.6.0. (diff) | |
download | ck-cca122ce9a0e5c8ebe745b6ae785b5b5c80f4fc6.tar.xz ck-cca122ce9a0e5c8ebe745b6ae785b5b5c80f4fc6.zip |
Adding upstream version 0.7.1.upstream/0.7.1
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | README | 21 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | README.md | 204 |
2 files changed, 204 insertions, 21 deletions
@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@ - ____ _ ___ _ - / ___|___ _ __ ___ _ _ _ __ _ __ ___ _ __ ___ _ _ | |/ (_) |_ -| | / _ \| '_ \ / __| | | | '__| '__/ _ \ '_ \ / __| | | | | ' /| | __| -| |__| (_) | | | | (__| |_| | | | | | __/ | | | (__| |_| | | . \| | |_ - \____\___/|_| |_|\___|\__,_|_| |_| \___|_| |_|\___|\__, | |_|\_\_|\__| - |___/ - -Step 1. - ./configure - For additional options try ./configure --help - -Step 2. - In order to compile regressions (requires POSIX threads) use - "make regressions". In order to compile libck use "make all" or "make". - -Step 3. - In order to install use "make install" - To uninstall use "make uninstall". - -See http://concurrencykit.org/ for more information. - diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dbfc0e0 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,204 @@ +### Continuous Integration + +| Drone | Travis | Cirrus | +| -------- | ------ | ------- | +| [![Build Status](https://cloud.drone.io/api/badges/concurrencykit/ck/status.svg)](https://cloud.drone.io/concurrencykit/ck) | [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/concurrencykit/ck.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/concurrencykit/ck) | [![Build Status](https://api.cirrus-ci.com/github/concurrencykit/ck.svg?branch=master)](https://cirrus-ci.com/github/concurrencykit/ck) | + +Compilers tested in the past include gcc, clang, cygwin, icc, mingw32, mingw64 and suncc across all supported architectures. All new architectures are required to pass the integration test and under-go extensive code review. + +Continuous integration is currently enabled for the following targets: + * `darwin/clang/x86-64` + * `freebsd/clang/x86-64` + * `linux/gcc/arm64` + * `linux/gcc/x86-64` + * `linux/clang/x86-64` + * `linux/clang/ppc64le` + +### Compile and Build + +* Step 1. + `./configure` + For additional options try `./configure --help` + +* Step 2. + In order to compile regressions (requires POSIX threads) use + `make regressions`. In order to compile libck use `make all` or `make`. + +* Step 3. + In order to install use `make install` + To uninstall use `make uninstall`. + +See http://concurrencykit.org/ for more information. + +### Supported Architectures + +Concurrency Kit supports any architecture using compiler built-ins as a fallback. There is usually a performance degradation associated with this. + +Concurrency Kit has specialized assembly for the following architectures: + * `aarch64` + * `arm` + * `ppc` + * `ppc64` + * `s390x` + * `sparcv9+` + * `x86` + * `x86_64` + +### Features + +#### Concurrency Primitives + +##### ck_pr + +Concurrency primitives as made available by the underlying architecture, includes support for all atomic operations (natively), transactional memory, pipeline control, read-for-ownership and more. + +##### ck_backoff + +A simple and efficient (minimal noise) backoff function. + +##### ck_cc + +Abstracted compiler builtins when writing efficient concurrent data structures. + +#### Safe Memory Reclamation + +##### ck_epoch + +A scalable safe memory reclamation mechanism with support idle threads and various optimizations that make it better than or competitive with many state-of-the-art solutions. + +##### ck_hp + +Implements support for hazard pointers, a simple and efficient lock-free safe memory reclamation mechanism. + +#### Data Structures + +##### ck_array + +A simple concurrently-readable pointer array structure. + +##### ck_bitmap + +An efficient multi-reader and multi-writer concurrent bitmap structure. + +##### ck_ring + +Efficient concurrent bounded FIFO data structures with various performance trade-off. This includes specialization for single-reader, many-reader, single-writer and many-writer. + +##### ck_fifo + +A reference implementation of the first published lock-free FIFO algorithm, with specialization for single-enqueuer-single-dequeuer and many-enqueuer-single-dequeuer and extensions to allow for node re-use. + +##### ck_hp_fifo + +A reference implementation of the above algorithm, implemented with safe memory reclamation using hazard pointers. + +##### ck_hp_stack + +A reference implementation of a Treiber stack with support for hazard pointers. + +##### ck_stack + +A reference implementation of an efficient lock-free stack, with specialized variants for a variety of memory management strategies and bounded concurrency. + +##### ck_queue + +A concurrently readable friendly derivative of the BSD-queue interface. Coupled with a safe memory reclamation mechanism, implement scalable read-side queues with a simple search and replace. + +##### ck_hs + +An extremely efficient single-writer-many-reader hash set, that satisfies lock-freedom with bounded concurrency without any usage of atomic operations and allows for recycling of unused or deleted slots. This data structure is recommended for use as a general hash-set if it is possible to compute values from keys. Learn more at https://engineering.backtrace.io/workload-specialization/ and http://concurrencykit.org/articles/ck_hs.html. + +##### ck_ht + +A specialization of the `ck_hs` algorithm allowing for disjunct key-value pairs. + +##### ck_rhs + +A variant of `ck_hs` that utilizes robin-hood hashing to allow for improved performance with higher load factors and high deletion rates. + +#### Synchronization Primitives + +##### ck_ec + +An extremely efficient event counter implementation, a better alternative to condition variables. + +##### ck_barrier + +A plethora of execution barriers including: centralized barriers, combining barriers, dissemination barriers, MCS barriers, tournament barriers. + +##### ck_brlock + +A simple big-reader lock implementation, write-biased reader-writer lock with scalable read-side locking. + +##### ck_bytelock + +An implementation of bytelocks, for research purposes, allowing for (in theory), fast read-side acquisition without the use of atomic operations. In reality, memory barriers are required on the fast path. + +##### ck_cohort + +A generic lock cohorting interface, allows you to turn any lock into a NUMA-friendly scalable NUMA lock. There is a significant trade-off in fast path acquisition cost. Specialization is included for all relevant lock implementations in Concurrency Kit. Learn more by reading "Lock Cohorting: A General Technique for Designing NUMA Locks". + +##### ck_elide + +A generic lock elision framework, allows you to turn any lock implementation into an elision-aware implementation. This requires support for restricted transactional memory by the underlying hardware. + +##### ck_pflock + +Phase-fair reader-writer mutex that provides strong fairness guarantees between readers and writers. Learn more by reading "Spin-Based Reader-Writer Synchronization for Multiprocessor Real-Time Systems". + +##### ck_rwcohort + +A generic read-write lock cohorting interface, allows you to turn any read-write lock into a NUMA-friendly scalable NUMA lock. There is a significant trade-off in fast path acquisition cost. Specialization is included for all relevant lock implementations in Concurrency Kit. Learn more by reading "Lock Cohorting: A General Technique for Designing NUMA Locks". + +##### ck_rwlock + +A simple centralized write-biased read-write lock. + +##### ck_sequence + +A sequence counter lock, popularized by the Linux kernel, allows for very fast read and write synchronization for simple data structures where deep copy is permitted. + +##### ck_swlock + +A single-writer specialized read-lock that is copy-safe, useful for data structures that must remain small, be copied and contain in-band mutexes. + +##### ck_tflock + +Task-fair locks are fair read-write locks, derived from "Scalable reader-writer synchronization for shared-memory multiprocessors". + +##### ck_spinlock + +A basic but very fast spinlock implementation. + +##### ck_spinlock_anderson + +Scalable and fast anderson spinlocks. This is here for reference, one of the earliest scalable and fair lock implementations. + +##### ck_spinlock_cas + +A basic spinlock utilizing compare_and_swap. + +##### ck_spinlock_dec + +A basic spinlock, a C adaption of the older optimized Linux kernel spinlock for x86. Primarily here for reference. + +##### ck_spinlock_fas + +A basic spinlock utilizing atomic exchange. + +##### ck_spinlock_clh + +An efficient implementation of the scalable CLH lock, providing many of the same performance properties of MCS with a better fast-path. + +##### ck_spinlock_hclh + +A NUMA-friendly CLH lock. + +##### ck_spinlock_mcs + +An implementation of the seminal scalable and fair MCS lock. + +##### ck_spinlock_ticket + +An implementation of fair centralized locks. + |