Bug 1879774 [wpt PR 44524] - WebKit export: Implement field-sizing support for input...
[gecko.git] / mfbt / Atomics.h
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1 /* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 8; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */
2 /* vim: set ts=8 sts=2 et sw=2 tw=80: */
3 /* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
4 * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
5 * file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */
7 /*
8 * Implements (almost always) lock-free atomic operations. The operations here
9 * are a subset of that which can be found in C++11's <atomic> header, with a
10 * different API to enforce consistent memory ordering constraints.
12 * Anyone caught using |volatile| for inter-thread memory safety needs to be
13 * sent a copy of this header and the C++11 standard.
16 #ifndef mozilla_Atomics_h
17 #define mozilla_Atomics_h
19 #include "mozilla/Attributes.h"
21 #ifdef __wasi__
22 # include "mozilla/WasiAtomic.h"
23 #else
24 # include <atomic>
25 #endif // __wasi__
27 #include <stddef.h> // For ptrdiff_t
28 #include <stdint.h>
29 #include <type_traits>
31 namespace mozilla {
33 /**
34 * An enum of memory ordering possibilities for atomics.
36 * Memory ordering is the observable state of distinct values in memory.
37 * (It's a separate concept from atomicity, which concerns whether an
38 * operation can ever be observed in an intermediate state. Don't
39 * conflate the two!) Given a sequence of operations in source code on
40 * memory, it is *not* always the case that, at all times and on all
41 * cores, those operations will appear to have occurred in that exact
42 * sequence. First, the compiler might reorder that sequence, if it
43 * thinks another ordering will be more efficient. Second, the CPU may
44 * not expose so consistent a view of memory. CPUs will often perform
45 * their own instruction reordering, above and beyond that performed by
46 * the compiler. And each core has its own memory caches, and accesses
47 * (reads and writes both) to "memory" may only resolve to out-of-date
48 * cache entries -- not to the "most recently" performed operation in
49 * some global sense. Any access to a value that may be used by
50 * multiple threads, potentially across multiple cores, must therefore
51 * have a memory ordering imposed on it, for all code on all
52 * threads/cores to have a sufficiently coherent worldview.
54 * http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Atomic/GCCMM/AtomicSync and
55 * http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/atomic/memory_order go into more
56 * detail on all this, including examples of how each mode works.
58 * Note that for simplicity and practicality, not all of the modes in
59 * C++11 are supported. The missing C++11 modes are either subsumed by
60 * the modes we provide below, or not relevant for the CPUs we support
61 * in Gecko. These three modes are confusing enough as it is!
63 enum MemoryOrdering {
65 * Relaxed ordering is the simplest memory ordering: none at all.
66 * When the result of a write is observed, nothing may be inferred
67 * about other memory. Writes ostensibly performed "before" on the
68 * writing thread may not yet be visible. Writes performed "after" on
69 * the writing thread may already be visible, if the compiler or CPU
70 * reordered them. (The latter can happen if reads and/or writes get
71 * held up in per-processor caches.) Relaxed ordering means
72 * operations can always use cached values (as long as the actual
73 * updates to atomic values actually occur, correctly, eventually), so
74 * it's usually the fastest sort of atomic access. For this reason,
75 * *it's also the most dangerous kind of access*.
77 * Relaxed ordering is good for things like process-wide statistics
78 * counters that don't need to be consistent with anything else, so
79 * long as updates themselves are atomic. (And so long as any
80 * observations of that value can tolerate being out-of-date -- if you
81 * need some sort of up-to-date value, you need some sort of other
82 * synchronizing operation.) It's *not* good for locks, mutexes,
83 * reference counts, etc. that mediate access to other memory, or must
84 * be observably consistent with other memory.
86 * x86 architectures don't take advantage of the optimization
87 * opportunities that relaxed ordering permits. Thus it's possible
88 * that using relaxed ordering will "work" on x86 but fail elsewhere
89 * (ARM, say, which *does* implement non-sequentially-consistent
90 * relaxed ordering semantics). Be extra-careful using relaxed
91 * ordering if you can't easily test non-x86 architectures!
93 Relaxed,
96 * When an atomic value is updated with ReleaseAcquire ordering, and
97 * that new value is observed with ReleaseAcquire ordering, prior
98 * writes (atomic or not) are also observable. What ReleaseAcquire
99 * *doesn't* give you is any observable ordering guarantees for
100 * ReleaseAcquire-ordered operations on different objects. For
101 * example, if there are two cores that each perform ReleaseAcquire
102 * operations on separate objects, each core may or may not observe
103 * the operations made by the other core. The only way the cores can
104 * be synchronized with ReleaseAcquire is if they both
105 * ReleaseAcquire-access the same object. This implies that you can't
106 * necessarily describe some global total ordering of ReleaseAcquire
107 * operations.
109 * ReleaseAcquire ordering is good for (as the name implies) atomic
110 * operations on values controlling ownership of things: reference
111 * counts, mutexes, and the like. However, if you are thinking about
112 * using these to implement your own locks or mutexes, you should take
113 * a good, hard look at actual lock or mutex primitives first.
115 ReleaseAcquire,
118 * When an atomic value is updated with SequentiallyConsistent
119 * ordering, all writes observable when the update is observed, just
120 * as with ReleaseAcquire ordering. But, furthermore, a global total
121 * ordering of SequentiallyConsistent operations *can* be described.
122 * For example, if two cores perform SequentiallyConsistent operations
123 * on separate objects, one core will observably perform its update
124 * (and all previous operations will have completed), then the other
125 * core will observably perform its update (and all previous
126 * operations will have completed). (Although those previous
127 * operations aren't themselves ordered -- they could be intermixed,
128 * or ordered if they occur on atomic values with ordering
129 * requirements.) SequentiallyConsistent is the *simplest and safest*
130 * ordering of atomic operations -- it's always as if one operation
131 * happens, then another, then another, in some order -- and every
132 * core observes updates to happen in that single order. Because it
133 * has the most synchronization requirements, operations ordered this
134 * way also tend to be slowest.
136 * SequentiallyConsistent ordering can be desirable when multiple
137 * threads observe objects, and they all have to agree on the
138 * observable order of changes to them. People expect
139 * SequentiallyConsistent ordering, even if they shouldn't, when
140 * writing code, atomic or otherwise. SequentiallyConsistent is also
141 * the ordering of choice when designing lockless data structures. If
142 * you don't know what order to use, use this one.
144 SequentiallyConsistent,
147 namespace detail {
150 * We provide CompareExchangeFailureOrder to work around a bug in some
151 * versions of GCC's <atomic> header. See bug 898491.
153 template <MemoryOrdering Order>
154 struct AtomicOrderConstraints;
156 template <>
157 struct AtomicOrderConstraints<Relaxed> {
158 static const std::memory_order AtomicRMWOrder = std::memory_order_relaxed;
159 static const std::memory_order LoadOrder = std::memory_order_relaxed;
160 static const std::memory_order StoreOrder = std::memory_order_relaxed;
161 static const std::memory_order CompareExchangeFailureOrder =
162 std::memory_order_relaxed;
165 template <>
166 struct AtomicOrderConstraints<ReleaseAcquire> {
167 static const std::memory_order AtomicRMWOrder = std::memory_order_acq_rel;
168 static const std::memory_order LoadOrder = std::memory_order_acquire;
169 static const std::memory_order StoreOrder = std::memory_order_release;
170 static const std::memory_order CompareExchangeFailureOrder =
171 std::memory_order_acquire;
174 template <>
175 struct AtomicOrderConstraints<SequentiallyConsistent> {
176 static const std::memory_order AtomicRMWOrder = std::memory_order_seq_cst;
177 static const std::memory_order LoadOrder = std::memory_order_seq_cst;
178 static const std::memory_order StoreOrder = std::memory_order_seq_cst;
179 static const std::memory_order CompareExchangeFailureOrder =
180 std::memory_order_seq_cst;
183 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
184 struct IntrinsicBase {
185 typedef std::atomic<T> ValueType;
186 typedef AtomicOrderConstraints<Order> OrderedOp;
189 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
190 struct IntrinsicMemoryOps : public IntrinsicBase<T, Order> {
191 typedef IntrinsicBase<T, Order> Base;
193 static T load(const typename Base::ValueType& aPtr) {
194 return aPtr.load(Base::OrderedOp::LoadOrder);
197 static void store(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr, T aVal) {
198 aPtr.store(aVal, Base::OrderedOp::StoreOrder);
201 static T exchange(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr, T aVal) {
202 return aPtr.exchange(aVal, Base::OrderedOp::AtomicRMWOrder);
205 static bool compareExchange(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr, T aOldVal,
206 T aNewVal) {
207 return aPtr.compare_exchange_strong(
208 aOldVal, aNewVal, Base::OrderedOp::AtomicRMWOrder,
209 Base::OrderedOp::CompareExchangeFailureOrder);
213 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
214 struct IntrinsicAddSub : public IntrinsicBase<T, Order> {
215 typedef IntrinsicBase<T, Order> Base;
217 static T add(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr, T aVal) {
218 return aPtr.fetch_add(aVal, Base::OrderedOp::AtomicRMWOrder);
221 static T sub(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr, T aVal) {
222 return aPtr.fetch_sub(aVal, Base::OrderedOp::AtomicRMWOrder);
226 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
227 struct IntrinsicAddSub<T*, Order> : public IntrinsicBase<T*, Order> {
228 typedef IntrinsicBase<T*, Order> Base;
230 static T* add(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr, ptrdiff_t aVal) {
231 return aPtr.fetch_add(aVal, Base::OrderedOp::AtomicRMWOrder);
234 static T* sub(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr, ptrdiff_t aVal) {
235 return aPtr.fetch_sub(aVal, Base::OrderedOp::AtomicRMWOrder);
239 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
240 struct IntrinsicIncDec : public IntrinsicAddSub<T, Order> {
241 typedef IntrinsicBase<T, Order> Base;
243 static T inc(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr) {
244 return IntrinsicAddSub<T, Order>::add(aPtr, 1);
247 static T dec(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr) {
248 return IntrinsicAddSub<T, Order>::sub(aPtr, 1);
252 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
253 struct AtomicIntrinsics : public IntrinsicMemoryOps<T, Order>,
254 public IntrinsicIncDec<T, Order> {
255 typedef IntrinsicBase<T, Order> Base;
257 static T or_(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr, T aVal) {
258 return aPtr.fetch_or(aVal, Base::OrderedOp::AtomicRMWOrder);
261 static T xor_(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr, T aVal) {
262 return aPtr.fetch_xor(aVal, Base::OrderedOp::AtomicRMWOrder);
265 static T and_(typename Base::ValueType& aPtr, T aVal) {
266 return aPtr.fetch_and(aVal, Base::OrderedOp::AtomicRMWOrder);
270 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
271 struct AtomicIntrinsics<T*, Order> : public IntrinsicMemoryOps<T*, Order>,
272 public IntrinsicIncDec<T*, Order> {};
274 template <typename T>
275 struct ToStorageTypeArgument {
276 static constexpr T convert(T aT) { return aT; }
279 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
280 class AtomicBase {
281 static_assert(sizeof(T) == 4 || sizeof(T) == 8,
282 "mozilla/Atomics.h only supports 32-bit and 64-bit types");
284 protected:
285 typedef typename detail::AtomicIntrinsics<T, Order> Intrinsics;
286 typedef typename Intrinsics::ValueType ValueType;
287 ValueType mValue;
289 public:
290 constexpr AtomicBase() : mValue() {}
291 explicit constexpr AtomicBase(T aInit)
292 : mValue(ToStorageTypeArgument<T>::convert(aInit)) {}
294 // Note: we can't provide operator T() here because Atomic<bool> inherits
295 // from AtomcBase with T=uint32_t and not T=bool. If we implemented
296 // operator T() here, it would cause errors when comparing Atomic<bool> with
297 // a regular bool.
299 T operator=(T aVal) {
300 Intrinsics::store(mValue, aVal);
301 return aVal;
305 * Performs an atomic swap operation. aVal is stored and the previous
306 * value of this variable is returned.
308 T exchange(T aVal) { return Intrinsics::exchange(mValue, aVal); }
311 * Performs an atomic compare-and-swap operation and returns true if it
312 * succeeded. This is equivalent to atomically doing
314 * if (mValue == aOldValue) {
315 * mValue = aNewValue;
316 * return true;
317 * } else {
318 * return false;
321 bool compareExchange(T aOldValue, T aNewValue) {
322 return Intrinsics::compareExchange(mValue, aOldValue, aNewValue);
325 private:
326 AtomicBase(const AtomicBase& aCopy) = delete;
329 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
330 class AtomicBaseIncDec : public AtomicBase<T, Order> {
331 typedef typename detail::AtomicBase<T, Order> Base;
333 public:
334 constexpr AtomicBaseIncDec() : Base() {}
335 explicit constexpr AtomicBaseIncDec(T aInit) : Base(aInit) {}
337 using Base::operator=;
339 operator T() const { return Base::Intrinsics::load(Base::mValue); }
340 T operator++(int) { return Base::Intrinsics::inc(Base::mValue); }
341 T operator--(int) { return Base::Intrinsics::dec(Base::mValue); }
342 T operator++() { return Base::Intrinsics::inc(Base::mValue) + 1; }
343 T operator--() { return Base::Intrinsics::dec(Base::mValue) - 1; }
345 private:
346 AtomicBaseIncDec(const AtomicBaseIncDec& aCopy) = delete;
349 } // namespace detail
352 * A wrapper for a type that enforces that all memory accesses are atomic.
354 * In general, where a variable |T foo| exists, |Atomic<T> foo| can be used in
355 * its place. Implementations for integral and pointer types are provided
356 * below.
358 * Atomic accesses are sequentially consistent by default. You should
359 * use the default unless you are tall enough to ride the
360 * memory-ordering roller coaster (if you're not sure, you aren't) and
361 * you have a compelling reason to do otherwise.
363 * There is one exception to the case of atomic memory accesses: providing an
364 * initial value of the atomic value is not guaranteed to be atomic. This is a
365 * deliberate design choice that enables static atomic variables to be declared
366 * without introducing extra static constructors.
368 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order = SequentiallyConsistent,
369 typename Enable = void>
370 class Atomic;
373 * Atomic<T> implementation for integral types.
375 * In addition to atomic store and load operations, compound assignment and
376 * increment/decrement operators are implemented which perform the
377 * corresponding read-modify-write operation atomically. Finally, an atomic
378 * swap method is provided.
380 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
381 class Atomic<
382 T, Order,
383 std::enable_if_t<std::is_integral_v<T> && !std::is_same_v<T, bool>>>
384 : public detail::AtomicBaseIncDec<T, Order> {
385 typedef typename detail::AtomicBaseIncDec<T, Order> Base;
387 public:
388 constexpr Atomic() : Base() {}
389 explicit constexpr Atomic(T aInit) : Base(aInit) {}
391 using Base::operator=;
393 T operator+=(T aDelta) {
394 return Base::Intrinsics::add(Base::mValue, aDelta) + aDelta;
397 T operator-=(T aDelta) {
398 return Base::Intrinsics::sub(Base::mValue, aDelta) - aDelta;
401 T operator|=(T aVal) {
402 return Base::Intrinsics::or_(Base::mValue, aVal) | aVal;
405 T operator^=(T aVal) {
406 return Base::Intrinsics::xor_(Base::mValue, aVal) ^ aVal;
409 T operator&=(T aVal) {
410 return Base::Intrinsics::and_(Base::mValue, aVal) & aVal;
413 private:
414 Atomic(Atomic& aOther) = delete;
418 * Atomic<T> implementation for pointer types.
420 * An atomic compare-and-swap primitive for pointer variables is provided, as
421 * are atomic increment and decement operators. Also provided are the compound
422 * assignment operators for addition and subtraction. Atomic swap (via
423 * exchange()) is included as well.
425 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
426 class Atomic<T*, Order> : public detail::AtomicBaseIncDec<T*, Order> {
427 typedef typename detail::AtomicBaseIncDec<T*, Order> Base;
429 public:
430 constexpr Atomic() : Base() {}
431 explicit constexpr Atomic(T* aInit) : Base(aInit) {}
433 using Base::operator=;
435 T* operator+=(ptrdiff_t aDelta) {
436 return Base::Intrinsics::add(Base::mValue, aDelta) + aDelta;
439 T* operator-=(ptrdiff_t aDelta) {
440 return Base::Intrinsics::sub(Base::mValue, aDelta) - aDelta;
443 private:
444 Atomic(Atomic& aOther) = delete;
448 * Atomic<T> implementation for enum types.
450 * The atomic store and load operations and the atomic swap method is provided.
452 template <typename T, MemoryOrdering Order>
453 class Atomic<T, Order, std::enable_if_t<std::is_enum_v<T>>>
454 : public detail::AtomicBase<T, Order> {
455 typedef typename detail::AtomicBase<T, Order> Base;
457 public:
458 constexpr Atomic() : Base() {}
459 explicit constexpr Atomic(T aInit) : Base(aInit) {}
461 operator T() const { return T(Base::Intrinsics::load(Base::mValue)); }
463 using Base::operator=;
465 private:
466 Atomic(Atomic& aOther) = delete;
470 * Atomic<T> implementation for boolean types.
472 * The atomic store and load operations and the atomic swap method is provided.
474 * Note:
476 * - sizeof(Atomic<bool>) != sizeof(bool) for some implementations of
477 * bool and/or some implementations of std::atomic. This is allowed in
478 * [atomic.types.generic]p9.
480 * - It's not obvious whether the 8-bit atomic functions on Windows are always
481 * inlined or not. If they are not inlined, the corresponding functions in the
482 * runtime library are not available on Windows XP. This is why we implement
483 * Atomic<bool> with an underlying type of uint32_t.
485 template <MemoryOrdering Order>
486 class Atomic<bool, Order> : protected detail::AtomicBase<uint32_t, Order> {
487 typedef typename detail::AtomicBase<uint32_t, Order> Base;
489 public:
490 constexpr Atomic() : Base() {}
491 explicit constexpr Atomic(bool aInit) : Base(aInit) {}
493 // We provide boolean wrappers for the underlying AtomicBase methods.
494 MOZ_IMPLICIT operator bool() const {
495 return Base::Intrinsics::load(Base::mValue);
498 bool operator=(bool aVal) { return Base::operator=(aVal); }
500 bool exchange(bool aVal) { return Base::exchange(aVal); }
502 bool compareExchange(bool aOldValue, bool aNewValue) {
503 return Base::compareExchange(aOldValue, aNewValue);
506 private:
507 Atomic(Atomic& aOther) = delete;
510 } // namespace mozilla
512 namespace std {
514 // If you want to atomically swap two atomic values, use exchange().
515 template <typename T, mozilla::MemoryOrdering Order>
516 void swap(mozilla::Atomic<T, Order>&, mozilla::Atomic<T, Order>&) = delete;
518 } // namespace std
520 #endif /* mozilla_Atomics_h */