Mutexes are the most basic and primary method of thread synchronization.
The major design considerations for mutexes are:
- Acquiring and releasing uncontested mutexes should be as cheap
as possible.
- They must have the information and storage space to support
priority propagation.
- A thread must be able to recursively acquire a mutex,
provided that the mutex is initialized to support recursion.
There are currently two flavors of mutexes, those that context switch
when they block and those that do not.
By default,
MTX_DEF
mutexes will context switch when they are already held.
As an optimization,
they may spin for some amount
of time before context switching.
It is important to remember that since a thread may be preempted at any time,
the possible context switch introduced by acquiring a mutex is guaranteed
to not break anything that is not already broken.
Mutexes which do not context switch are
MTX_SPIN
mutexes.
These should only be used to protect data shared with primary interrupt
code.
This includes
INTR_FAST
interrupt handlers and low level scheduling code.
In all architectures both acquiring and releasing of a
uncontested spin mutex is more expensive than the same operation
on a non-spin mutex.
In order to protect an interrupt service routine from blocking
against itself all interrupts are either blocked or deferred on a processor
while holding a spin lock.
It is permissible to hold multiple spin mutexes.
Once a spin mutex has been acquired it is not permissible to acquire a
blocking mutex.
The storage needed to implement a mutex is provided by a
.Vt struct mtx .
In general this should be treated as an opaque object and
referenced only with the mutex primitives.
The
mtx_init
function must be used to initialize a mutex
before it can be passed to any of the other mutex functions.
The
name
option is used to identify the lock in debugging output etc.
The
type
option is used by the witness code to classify a mutex when doing checks
of lock ordering.
If
type
is
NULL,
name
is used in its place.
The pointer passed in as
name
and
type
is saved rather than the data it points to.
The data pointed to must remain stable
until the mutex is destroyed.
The
opts
argument is used to set the type of mutex.
It may contain either
MTX_DEF
or
MTX_SPIN
but not both.
See below for additional initialization options.
It is not permissible to pass the same
mutex
to
mtx_init
multiple times without intervening calls to
mtx_destroy.
The
mtx_lock
function acquires a
MTX_DEF
mutual exclusion lock
on behalf of the currently running kernel thread.
If another kernel thread is holding the mutex,
the caller will be disconnected from the CPU
until the mutex is available
(i.e., it will block).
The
mtx_lock_spin
function acquires a
MTX_SPIN
mutual exclusion lock
on behalf of the currently running kernel thread.
If another kernel thread is holding the mutex,
the caller will spin until the mutex becomes available.
Interrupts are disabled during the spin and remain disabled
following the acquiring of the lock.
It is possible for the same thread to recursively acquire a mutex
with no ill effects, provided that the
MTX_RECURSE
bit was passed to
mtx_init
during the initialization of the mutex.
The
mtx_lock_flags
and
mtx_lock_spin_flags
functions acquire a
MTX_DEF
or
MTX_SPIN
lock, respectively, and also accept a
flags
argument.
In both cases, the only flag presently available for lock acquires is
MTX_QUIET.
If the
MTX_QUIET
bit is turned on in the
flags
argument, then if
KTR_LOCK
tracing is being done,
it will be silenced during the lock acquire.
The
mtx_trylock
attempts to acquire the
MTX_DEF
mutex pointed to by
mutex.
If the mutex cannot be immediately acquired
mtx_trylock
will return 0,
otherwise the mutex will be acquired
and a non-zero value will be returned.
The
mtx_trylock_flags
function has the same behavior as
mtx_trylock
but should be used when the caller desires to pass in a
flags
value.
Presently, the only valid value in the
mtx_trylock
case is
MTX_QUIET,
and its effects are identical to those described for
mtx_lock
above.
The
mtx_unlock
function releases a
MTX_DEF
mutual exclusion lock.
The current thread may be preempted if a higher priority thread is waiting
for the mutex.
The
mtx_unlock_spin
function releases a
MTX_SPIN
mutual exclusion lock.
The
mtx_unlock_flags
and
mtx_unlock_spin_flags
functions behave in exactly the same way as do the standard mutex
unlock routines above, while also allowing a
flags
argument which may specify
MTX_QUIET.
The behavior of
MTX_QUIET
is identical to its behavior in the mutex lock routines.
The
mtx_destroy
function is used to destroy
mutex
so the data associated with it may be freed
or otherwise overwritten.
Any mutex which is destroyed
must previously have been initialized with
mtx_init.
It is permissible to have a single hold count
on a mutex when it is destroyed.
It is not permissible to hold the mutex recursively,
or have another thread blocked on the mutex
when it is destroyed.
The
mtx_initialized
function returns non-zero if
mutex
has been initialized and zero otherwise.
The
mtx_owned
function returns non-zero
if the current thread holds
mutex.
If the current thread does not hold
mutex
zero is returned.
The
mtx_recursed
function returns non-zero if the
mutex
is recursed.
This check should only be made if the running thread already owns
mutex.
The
mtx_assert
function allows assertions specified in
what
to be made about
mutex.
If the assertions are not true and the kernel is compiled with
.Cd options INVARIANTS
and
.Cd options INVARIANT_SUPPORT ,
the kernel will panic.
Currently the following assertions are supported:
| MA_OWNED
|
Assert that the current thread
holds the mutex
pointed to by the first argument.
|
| MA_NOTOWNED
|
Assert that the current thread
does not hold the mutex
pointed to by the first argument.
|
| MA_RECURSED
|
Assert that the current thread has recursed on the mutex
pointed to by the first argument.
This assertion is only valid in conjunction with
MA_OWNED.
|
| MA_NOTRECURSED
|
| |
Assert that the current thread has not recursed on the mutex
pointed to by the first argument.
This assertion is only valid in conjunction with
MA_OWNED.
|
|
The
MTX_SYSINIT
macro is used to generate a call to the
mtx_sysinit
routine at system startup in order to initialize a given mutex lock.
The parameters are the same as
mtx_init
but with an additional argument,
name,
that is used in generating unique variable names for the related structures associated with the lock and the sysinit routine.