| 1 | //! The global epoch |
| 2 | //! |
| 3 | //! The last bit in this number is unused and is always zero. Every so often the global epoch is |
| 4 | //! incremented, i.e. we say it "advances". A pinned participant may advance the global epoch only |
| 5 | //! if all currently pinned participants have been pinned in the current epoch. |
| 6 | //! |
| 7 | //! If an object became garbage in some epoch, then we can be sure that after two advancements no |
| 8 | //! participant will hold a reference to it. That is the crux of safe memory reclamation. |
| 9 | |
| 10 | use crate::primitive::sync::atomic::{AtomicUsize, Ordering}; |
| 11 | |
| 12 | /// An epoch that can be marked as pinned or unpinned. |
| 13 | /// |
| 14 | /// Internally, the epoch is represented as an integer that wraps around at some unspecified point |
| 15 | /// and a flag that represents whether it is pinned or unpinned. |
| 16 | #[derive (Copy, Clone, Default, Debug, Eq, PartialEq)] |
| 17 | pub(crate) struct Epoch { |
| 18 | /// The least significant bit is set if pinned. The rest of the bits hold the epoch. |
| 19 | data: usize, |
| 20 | } |
| 21 | |
| 22 | impl Epoch { |
| 23 | /// Returns the starting epoch in unpinned state. |
| 24 | #[inline ] |
| 25 | pub(crate) fn starting() -> Self { |
| 26 | Self::default() |
| 27 | } |
| 28 | |
| 29 | /// Returns the number of epochs `self` is ahead of `rhs`. |
| 30 | /// |
| 31 | /// Internally, epochs are represented as numbers in the range `(isize::MIN / 2) .. (isize::MAX |
| 32 | /// / 2)`, so the returned distance will be in the same interval. |
| 33 | pub(crate) fn wrapping_sub(self, rhs: Self) -> isize { |
| 34 | // The result is the same with `(self.data & !1).wrapping_sub(rhs.data & !1) as isize >> 1`, |
| 35 | // because the possible difference of LSB in `(self.data & !1).wrapping_sub(rhs.data & !1)` |
| 36 | // will be ignored in the shift operation. |
| 37 | self.data.wrapping_sub(rhs.data & !1) as isize >> 1 |
| 38 | } |
| 39 | |
| 40 | /// Returns `true` if the epoch is marked as pinned. |
| 41 | #[inline ] |
| 42 | pub(crate) fn is_pinned(self) -> bool { |
| 43 | (self.data & 1) == 1 |
| 44 | } |
| 45 | |
| 46 | /// Returns the same epoch, but marked as pinned. |
| 47 | #[inline ] |
| 48 | pub(crate) fn pinned(self) -> Epoch { |
| 49 | Epoch { |
| 50 | data: self.data | 1, |
| 51 | } |
| 52 | } |
| 53 | |
| 54 | /// Returns the same epoch, but marked as unpinned. |
| 55 | #[inline ] |
| 56 | pub(crate) fn unpinned(self) -> Epoch { |
| 57 | Epoch { |
| 58 | data: self.data & !1, |
| 59 | } |
| 60 | } |
| 61 | |
| 62 | /// Returns the successor epoch. |
| 63 | /// |
| 64 | /// The returned epoch will be marked as pinned only if the previous one was as well. |
| 65 | #[inline ] |
| 66 | pub(crate) fn successor(self) -> Epoch { |
| 67 | Epoch { |
| 68 | data: self.data.wrapping_add(2), |
| 69 | } |
| 70 | } |
| 71 | } |
| 72 | |
| 73 | /// An atomic value that holds an `Epoch`. |
| 74 | #[derive (Default, Debug)] |
| 75 | pub(crate) struct AtomicEpoch { |
| 76 | /// Since `Epoch` is just a wrapper around `usize`, an `AtomicEpoch` is similarly represented |
| 77 | /// using an `AtomicUsize`. |
| 78 | data: AtomicUsize, |
| 79 | } |
| 80 | |
| 81 | impl AtomicEpoch { |
| 82 | /// Creates a new atomic epoch. |
| 83 | #[inline ] |
| 84 | pub(crate) fn new(epoch: Epoch) -> Self { |
| 85 | let data = AtomicUsize::new(epoch.data); |
| 86 | AtomicEpoch { data } |
| 87 | } |
| 88 | |
| 89 | /// Loads a value from the atomic epoch. |
| 90 | #[inline ] |
| 91 | pub(crate) fn load(&self, ord: Ordering) -> Epoch { |
| 92 | Epoch { |
| 93 | data: self.data.load(ord), |
| 94 | } |
| 95 | } |
| 96 | |
| 97 | /// Stores a value into the atomic epoch. |
| 98 | #[inline ] |
| 99 | pub(crate) fn store(&self, epoch: Epoch, ord: Ordering) { |
| 100 | self.data.store(epoch.data, ord); |
| 101 | } |
| 102 | |
| 103 | /// Stores a value into the atomic epoch if the current value is the same as `current`. |
| 104 | /// |
| 105 | /// The return value is a result indicating whether the new value was written and containing |
| 106 | /// the previous value. On success this value is guaranteed to be equal to `current`. |
| 107 | /// |
| 108 | /// This method takes two `Ordering` arguments to describe the memory |
| 109 | /// ordering of this operation. `success` describes the required ordering for the |
| 110 | /// read-modify-write operation that takes place if the comparison with `current` succeeds. |
| 111 | /// `failure` describes the required ordering for the load operation that takes place when |
| 112 | /// the comparison fails. Using `Acquire` as success ordering makes the store part |
| 113 | /// of this operation `Relaxed`, and using `Release` makes the successful load |
| 114 | /// `Relaxed`. The failure ordering can only be `SeqCst`, `Acquire` or `Relaxed` |
| 115 | /// and must be equivalent to or weaker than the success ordering. |
| 116 | #[inline ] |
| 117 | pub(crate) fn compare_exchange( |
| 118 | &self, |
| 119 | current: Epoch, |
| 120 | new: Epoch, |
| 121 | success: Ordering, |
| 122 | failure: Ordering, |
| 123 | ) -> Result<Epoch, Epoch> { |
| 124 | match self |
| 125 | .data |
| 126 | .compare_exchange(current.data, new.data, success, failure) |
| 127 | { |
| 128 | Ok(data) => Ok(Epoch { data }), |
| 129 | Err(data) => Err(Epoch { data }), |
| 130 | } |
| 131 | } |
| 132 | } |
| 133 | |