This issue has been discussed by the authors at every recent Standards meetings, yet a full solution has been elusive despite helpful proposals. We believe that this proposal can fix this oft-encountered problem once and for all.
[P0528r0] details extensive background on this problem (not repeated here),
and proposed standardizing a trait, , and using it on . [P0528r1] applied EWG guidance and simply added
wording directing implementations to ensure that the desired behavior occur. At
SG1’s request this paper follows EWG’s guidance but uses different wording.
1. Edit History
1.1. r1 → r2
In Jacksonville, SG1 supported the paper but suggested an alternate way to approach the wording than the one EWG proposed in Albuquerque: don’t talk about contents of the memory, but rather discuss the value representation to describe compare-and-exchange. This paper follows SG1’s guidance and offers different wording, with the intent that the semantics be equivalent. EWG reviewed the updated wording an voted to support it and forward to Core.
1.2. r0 → r1
In Albuquerque, EWG voted to make the padding bits of and the incoming
value of have a consistent value for the purposes of read/modify/write
atomic operations?
Purposefully not addressed in this paper:
-
with padding bitsunion -
Types with trap representations
2. Proposed Wording
Edit ❡17 and onwards as follows:
Requires: The
argument shall not befailure normemory_order :: release .memory_order :: acq_rel Effects: Retrieves the value in
. It then atomically compares theexpected contents of the memory pointed to byvalue representation ofthis for equality with that previously retrieved from* this , and if true, replaces theexpected contents of the memory pointed to byvalue representation ofthis with that in* this . If and only if the comparison is true, memory is affected according to the value ofdesired , and if the comparison is false, memory is affected according to the value ofsuccess . When only onefailure argument is supplied, the value ofmemory_order issuccess , and the value oforder isfailure except that a value oforder shall be replaced by the valuememory_order :: acq_rel and a value ofmemory_order :: acquire shall be replaced by the valuememory_order :: release . If and only if the comparison is false then, after the atomic operation, thememory_order :: relaxed contents of the memorythe value representation inare replaced by the value representation read from the memory pointed to byexpected during the atomic comparison. If the operation returnsthis true, these operations are atomic read-modify-write operations on the memory pointed to by. Otherwise, these operations are atomic load operations on that memory.this Returns: The result of the comparison.
[Note:
For example, the effect of
on objects without padding bits iscompare_exchange_strong if ( memcmp ( this , & expected , sizeof ( * this )) == 0 ) memcpy ( this , & desired , sizeof ( * this )); else memcpy ( expected , this , sizeof ( * this )); —end note]
[Example:
The expected use of the compare-and-exchange operations is as follows. The compare-and-exchange operations will update
when another iteration of the loop is needed.expected expected = current . load (); do { desired = function ( expected ); } while ( ! current . compare_exchange_weak ( expected , desired )); —end example]
[Example:
Because the expected value is updated only on failure, code releasing the memory containing the
value on success will work. E.g. list head insertion will act atomically and would not introduce a data race in the following code:expected do { p -> next = head ; // make new list node point to the current head } while ( ! head . compare_exchange_weak ( p -> next , p )); // try to insert —end example]
Implementations should ensure that weak compare-and-exchange operations do not consistently return
falseunless either the atomic object has value different fromor there are concurrent modifications to the atomic object.expected Remarks: A weak compare-and-exchange operation may fail spuriously. That is, even when the contents of memory referred to by
andexpected are equal, it may returnthis falseand store back tothe same memory contents that were originally there.expected [Note:
This spurious failure enables implementation of compare-and-exchange on a broader class of machines, e.g., load-locked store-conditional machines. A consequence of spurious failure is that nearly all uses of weak compare-and-exchange will be in a loop. When a compare-and-exchange is in a loop, the weak version will yield better performance on some platforms. When a weak compare-and-exchange would require a loop and a strong one would not, the strong one is preferable.
—end note]
[Note:
The
andmemcpy semantics of the compare-and-exchange operations may result in failed comparisons for values that compare equal withmemcmp if the underlying type has padding bits which sometimes participate in the object’s representation , trap bits, or alternate representations of the same value other than those caused by padding bits which never participate in the object’s representation . Notably, on implementations conforming to ISO/IEC/IEEE 60559, floating-pointoperator == and- 0.0 will not compare equal with+ 0.0 but will compare equal withmemcmp , and NaNs with the same payload will compare equal withoperator == but will not compare equal withmemcmp .operator == —end note]
[Note:
Compare-and-exchange acts on an object’s value representation, ensuring that padding bits which never participate in the object’s representation are ignored.
As a consequence, the following code is guaranteed to avoid spurious failure:
struct padded { char clank = 0x42 ; // Padding here. unsigned biff = 0xC0DEFEFE ; }; atomic < padded > pad = ATOMIC_VAR_INIT ({}); bool zap () { padded expected , desired { 0 , 0 }; return pad . compare_exchange_strong ( expected , desired ); } —end note]
[Note:
Types which contain bits that sometimes participate in the object’s representation, such as a
containing a type with padding bits and a type without, may always fail compare-and-exchange when these bits are not participating in the object’s representation because they have an indeterminate value.union —end note]