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r: 268972
b: refs/heads/master
c: 6846c0c
h: refs/heads/master
v: v3
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Paul E. McKenney committed Sep 29, 2011
1 parent a711806 commit 5c59290
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Showing 2 changed files with 41 additions and 8 deletions.
2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion [refs]
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@@ -1,2 +1,2 @@
---
refs/heads/master: d322f45ceed525daa9401154590bbae3222cfefb
refs/heads/master: 6846c0c54074d47927c90eab4a805115e1ae3292
47 changes: 40 additions & 7 deletions trunk/include/linux/rcupdate.h
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Expand Up @@ -754,20 +754,53 @@ static inline notrace void rcu_read_unlock_sched_notrace(void)
* any prior initialization. Returns the value assigned.
*
* Inserts memory barriers on architectures that require them
* (pretty much all of them other than x86), and also prevents
* the compiler from reordering the code that initializes the
* structure after the pointer assignment. More importantly, this
* call documents which pointers will be dereferenced by RCU read-side
* code.
* (which is most of them), and also prevents the compiler from
* reordering the code that initializes the structure after the pointer
* assignment. More importantly, this call documents which pointers
* will be dereferenced by RCU read-side code.
*
* In some special cases, you may use RCU_INIT_POINTER() instead
* of rcu_assign_pointer(). RCU_INIT_POINTER() is a bit faster due
* to the fact that it does not constrain either the CPU or the compiler.
* That said, using RCU_INIT_POINTER() when you should have used
* rcu_assign_pointer() is a very bad thing that results in
* impossible-to-diagnose memory corruption. So please be careful.
* See the RCU_INIT_POINTER() comment header for details.
*/
#define rcu_assign_pointer(p, v) \
__rcu_assign_pointer((p), (v), __rcu)

/**
* RCU_INIT_POINTER() - initialize an RCU protected pointer
*
* Initialize an RCU-protected pointer in such a way to avoid RCU-lockdep
* splats.
* Initialize an RCU-protected pointer in special cases where readers
* do not need ordering constraints on the CPU or the compiler. These
* special cases are:
*
* 1. This use of RCU_INIT_POINTER() is NULLing out the pointer -or-
* 2. The caller has taken whatever steps are required to prevent
* RCU readers from concurrently accessing this pointer -or-
* 3. The referenced data structure has already been exposed to
* readers either at compile time or via rcu_assign_pointer() -and-
* a. You have not made -any- reader-visible changes to
* this structure since then -or-
* b. It is OK for readers accessing this structure from its
* new location to see the old state of the structure. (For
* example, the changes were to statistical counters or to
* other state where exact synchronization is not required.)
*
* Failure to follow these rules governing use of RCU_INIT_POINTER() will
* result in impossible-to-diagnose memory corruption. As in the structures
* will look OK in crash dumps, but any concurrent RCU readers might
* see pre-initialized values of the referenced data structure. So
* please be very careful how you use RCU_INIT_POINTER()!!!
*
* If you are creating an RCU-protected linked structure that is accessed
* by a single external-to-structure RCU-protected pointer, then you may
* use RCU_INIT_POINTER() to initialize the internal RCU-protected
* pointers, but you must use rcu_assign_pointer() to initialize the
* external-to-structure pointer -after- you have completely initialized
* the reader-accessible portions of the linked structure.
*/
#define RCU_INIT_POINTER(p, v) \
p = (typeof(*v) __force __rcu *)(v)
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