xref: /linux/Documentation/RCU/whatisRCU.rst (revision 3f0a50f345f78183f6e9b39c2f45ca5dcaa511ca)
1.. _whatisrcu_doc:
2
3What is RCU?  --  "Read, Copy, Update"
4======================================
5
6Please note that the "What is RCU?" LWN series is an excellent place
7to start learning about RCU:
8
9| 1.	What is RCU, Fundamentally?  http://lwn.net/Articles/262464/
10| 2.	What is RCU? Part 2: Usage   http://lwn.net/Articles/263130/
11| 3.	RCU part 3: the RCU API      http://lwn.net/Articles/264090/
12| 4.	The RCU API, 2010 Edition    http://lwn.net/Articles/418853/
13| 	2010 Big API Table           http://lwn.net/Articles/419086/
14| 5.	The RCU API, 2014 Edition    http://lwn.net/Articles/609904/
15|	2014 Big API Table           http://lwn.net/Articles/609973/
16
17
18What is RCU?
19
20RCU is a synchronization mechanism that was added to the Linux kernel
21during the 2.5 development effort that is optimized for read-mostly
22situations.  Although RCU is actually quite simple once you understand it,
23getting there can sometimes be a challenge.  Part of the problem is that
24most of the past descriptions of RCU have been written with the mistaken
25assumption that there is "one true way" to describe RCU.  Instead,
26the experience has been that different people must take different paths
27to arrive at an understanding of RCU.  This document provides several
28different paths, as follows:
29
30:ref:`1.	RCU OVERVIEW <1_whatisRCU>`
31
32:ref:`2.	WHAT IS RCU'S CORE API? <2_whatisRCU>`
33
34:ref:`3.	WHAT ARE SOME EXAMPLE USES OF CORE RCU API? <3_whatisRCU>`
35
36:ref:`4.	WHAT IF MY UPDATING THREAD CANNOT BLOCK? <4_whatisRCU>`
37
38:ref:`5.	WHAT ARE SOME SIMPLE IMPLEMENTATIONS OF RCU? <5_whatisRCU>`
39
40:ref:`6.	ANALOGY WITH READER-WRITER LOCKING <6_whatisRCU>`
41
42:ref:`7.	ANALOGY WITH REFERENCE COUNTING <7_whatisRCU>`
43
44:ref:`8.	FULL LIST OF RCU APIs <8_whatisRCU>`
45
46:ref:`9.	ANSWERS TO QUICK QUIZZES <9_whatisRCU>`
47
48People who prefer starting with a conceptual overview should focus on
49Section 1, though most readers will profit by reading this section at
50some point.  People who prefer to start with an API that they can then
51experiment with should focus on Section 2.  People who prefer to start
52with example uses should focus on Sections 3 and 4.  People who need to
53understand the RCU implementation should focus on Section 5, then dive
54into the kernel source code.  People who reason best by analogy should
55focus on Section 6.  Section 7 serves as an index to the docbook API
56documentation, and Section 8 is the traditional answer key.
57
58So, start with the section that makes the most sense to you and your
59preferred method of learning.  If you need to know everything about
60everything, feel free to read the whole thing -- but if you are really
61that type of person, you have perused the source code and will therefore
62never need this document anyway.  ;-)
63
64.. _1_whatisRCU:
65
661.  RCU OVERVIEW
67----------------
68
69The basic idea behind RCU is to split updates into "removal" and
70"reclamation" phases.  The removal phase removes references to data items
71within a data structure (possibly by replacing them with references to
72new versions of these data items), and can run concurrently with readers.
73The reason that it is safe to run the removal phase concurrently with
74readers is the semantics of modern CPUs guarantee that readers will see
75either the old or the new version of the data structure rather than a
76partially updated reference.  The reclamation phase does the work of reclaiming
77(e.g., freeing) the data items removed from the data structure during the
78removal phase.  Because reclaiming data items can disrupt any readers
79concurrently referencing those data items, the reclamation phase must
80not start until readers no longer hold references to those data items.
81
82Splitting the update into removal and reclamation phases permits the
83updater to perform the removal phase immediately, and to defer the
84reclamation phase until all readers active during the removal phase have
85completed, either by blocking until they finish or by registering a
86callback that is invoked after they finish.  Only readers that are active
87during the removal phase need be considered, because any reader starting
88after the removal phase will be unable to gain a reference to the removed
89data items, and therefore cannot be disrupted by the reclamation phase.
90
91So the typical RCU update sequence goes something like the following:
92
93a.	Remove pointers to a data structure, so that subsequent
94	readers cannot gain a reference to it.
95
96b.	Wait for all previous readers to complete their RCU read-side
97	critical sections.
98
99c.	At this point, there cannot be any readers who hold references
100	to the data structure, so it now may safely be reclaimed
101	(e.g., kfree()d).
102
103Step (b) above is the key idea underlying RCU's deferred destruction.
104The ability to wait until all readers are done allows RCU readers to
105use much lighter-weight synchronization, in some cases, absolutely no
106synchronization at all.  In contrast, in more conventional lock-based
107schemes, readers must use heavy-weight synchronization in order to
108prevent an updater from deleting the data structure out from under them.
109This is because lock-based updaters typically update data items in place,
110and must therefore exclude readers.  In contrast, RCU-based updaters
111typically take advantage of the fact that writes to single aligned
112pointers are atomic on modern CPUs, allowing atomic insertion, removal,
113and replacement of data items in a linked structure without disrupting
114readers.  Concurrent RCU readers can then continue accessing the old
115versions, and can dispense with the atomic operations, memory barriers,
116and communications cache misses that are so expensive on present-day
117SMP computer systems, even in absence of lock contention.
118
119In the three-step procedure shown above, the updater is performing both
120the removal and the reclamation step, but it is often helpful for an
121entirely different thread to do the reclamation, as is in fact the case
122in the Linux kernel's directory-entry cache (dcache).  Even if the same
123thread performs both the update step (step (a) above) and the reclamation
124step (step (c) above), it is often helpful to think of them separately.
125For example, RCU readers and updaters need not communicate at all,
126but RCU provides implicit low-overhead communication between readers
127and reclaimers, namely, in step (b) above.
128
129So how the heck can a reclaimer tell when a reader is done, given
130that readers are not doing any sort of synchronization operations???
131Read on to learn about how RCU's API makes this easy.
132
133.. _2_whatisRCU:
134
1352.  WHAT IS RCU'S CORE API?
136---------------------------
137
138The core RCU API is quite small:
139
140a.	rcu_read_lock()
141b.	rcu_read_unlock()
142c.	synchronize_rcu() / call_rcu()
143d.	rcu_assign_pointer()
144e.	rcu_dereference()
145
146There are many other members of the RCU API, but the rest can be
147expressed in terms of these five, though most implementations instead
148express synchronize_rcu() in terms of the call_rcu() callback API.
149
150The five core RCU APIs are described below, the other 18 will be enumerated
151later.  See the kernel docbook documentation for more info, or look directly
152at the function header comments.
153
154rcu_read_lock()
155^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
156	void rcu_read_lock(void);
157
158	Used by a reader to inform the reclaimer that the reader is
159	entering an RCU read-side critical section.  It is illegal
160	to block while in an RCU read-side critical section, though
161	kernels built with CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU can preempt RCU
162	read-side critical sections.  Any RCU-protected data structure
163	accessed during an RCU read-side critical section is guaranteed to
164	remain unreclaimed for the full duration of that critical section.
165	Reference counts may be used in conjunction with RCU to maintain
166	longer-term references to data structures.
167
168rcu_read_unlock()
169^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
170	void rcu_read_unlock(void);
171
172	Used by a reader to inform the reclaimer that the reader is
173	exiting an RCU read-side critical section.  Note that RCU
174	read-side critical sections may be nested and/or overlapping.
175
176synchronize_rcu()
177^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
178	void synchronize_rcu(void);
179
180	Marks the end of updater code and the beginning of reclaimer
181	code.  It does this by blocking until all pre-existing RCU
182	read-side critical sections on all CPUs have completed.
183	Note that synchronize_rcu() will **not** necessarily wait for
184	any subsequent RCU read-side critical sections to complete.
185	For example, consider the following sequence of events::
186
187	         CPU 0                  CPU 1                 CPU 2
188	     ----------------- ------------------------- ---------------
189	 1.  rcu_read_lock()
190	 2.                    enters synchronize_rcu()
191	 3.                                               rcu_read_lock()
192	 4.  rcu_read_unlock()
193	 5.                     exits synchronize_rcu()
194	 6.                                              rcu_read_unlock()
195
196	To reiterate, synchronize_rcu() waits only for ongoing RCU
197	read-side critical sections to complete, not necessarily for
198	any that begin after synchronize_rcu() is invoked.
199
200	Of course, synchronize_rcu() does not necessarily return
201	**immediately** after the last pre-existing RCU read-side critical
202	section completes.  For one thing, there might well be scheduling
203	delays.  For another thing, many RCU implementations process
204	requests in batches in order to improve efficiencies, which can
205	further delay synchronize_rcu().
206
207	Since synchronize_rcu() is the API that must figure out when
208	readers are done, its implementation is key to RCU.  For RCU
209	to be useful in all but the most read-intensive situations,
210	synchronize_rcu()'s overhead must also be quite small.
211
212	The call_rcu() API is a callback form of synchronize_rcu(),
213	and is described in more detail in a later section.  Instead of
214	blocking, it registers a function and argument which are invoked
215	after all ongoing RCU read-side critical sections have completed.
216	This callback variant is particularly useful in situations where
217	it is illegal to block or where update-side performance is
218	critically important.
219
220	However, the call_rcu() API should not be used lightly, as use
221	of the synchronize_rcu() API generally results in simpler code.
222	In addition, the synchronize_rcu() API has the nice property
223	of automatically limiting update rate should grace periods
224	be delayed.  This property results in system resilience in face
225	of denial-of-service attacks.  Code using call_rcu() should limit
226	update rate in order to gain this same sort of resilience.  See
227	checklist.txt for some approaches to limiting the update rate.
228
229rcu_assign_pointer()
230^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
231	void rcu_assign_pointer(p, typeof(p) v);
232
233	Yes, rcu_assign_pointer() **is** implemented as a macro, though it
234	would be cool to be able to declare a function in this manner.
235	(Compiler experts will no doubt disagree.)
236
237	The updater uses this function to assign a new value to an
238	RCU-protected pointer, in order to safely communicate the change
239	in value from the updater to the reader.  This macro does not
240	evaluate to an rvalue, but it does execute any memory-barrier
241	instructions required for a given CPU architecture.
242
243	Perhaps just as important, it serves to document (1) which
244	pointers are protected by RCU and (2) the point at which a
245	given structure becomes accessible to other CPUs.  That said,
246	rcu_assign_pointer() is most frequently used indirectly, via
247	the _rcu list-manipulation primitives such as list_add_rcu().
248
249rcu_dereference()
250^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
251	typeof(p) rcu_dereference(p);
252
253	Like rcu_assign_pointer(), rcu_dereference() must be implemented
254	as a macro.
255
256	The reader uses rcu_dereference() to fetch an RCU-protected
257	pointer, which returns a value that may then be safely
258	dereferenced.  Note that rcu_dereference() does not actually
259	dereference the pointer, instead, it protects the pointer for
260	later dereferencing.  It also executes any needed memory-barrier
261	instructions for a given CPU architecture.  Currently, only Alpha
262	needs memory barriers within rcu_dereference() -- on other CPUs,
263	it compiles to nothing, not even a compiler directive.
264
265	Common coding practice uses rcu_dereference() to copy an
266	RCU-protected pointer to a local variable, then dereferences
267	this local variable, for example as follows::
268
269		p = rcu_dereference(head.next);
270		return p->data;
271
272	However, in this case, one could just as easily combine these
273	into one statement::
274
275		return rcu_dereference(head.next)->data;
276
277	If you are going to be fetching multiple fields from the
278	RCU-protected structure, using the local variable is of
279	course preferred.  Repeated rcu_dereference() calls look
280	ugly, do not guarantee that the same pointer will be returned
281	if an update happened while in the critical section, and incur
282	unnecessary overhead on Alpha CPUs.
283
284	Note that the value returned by rcu_dereference() is valid
285	only within the enclosing RCU read-side critical section [1]_.
286	For example, the following is **not** legal::
287
288		rcu_read_lock();
289		p = rcu_dereference(head.next);
290		rcu_read_unlock();
291		x = p->address;	/* BUG!!! */
292		rcu_read_lock();
293		y = p->data;	/* BUG!!! */
294		rcu_read_unlock();
295
296	Holding a reference from one RCU read-side critical section
297	to another is just as illegal as holding a reference from
298	one lock-based critical section to another!  Similarly,
299	using a reference outside of the critical section in which
300	it was acquired is just as illegal as doing so with normal
301	locking.
302
303	As with rcu_assign_pointer(), an important function of
304	rcu_dereference() is to document which pointers are protected by
305	RCU, in particular, flagging a pointer that is subject to changing
306	at any time, including immediately after the rcu_dereference().
307	And, again like rcu_assign_pointer(), rcu_dereference() is
308	typically used indirectly, via the _rcu list-manipulation
309	primitives, such as list_for_each_entry_rcu() [2]_.
310
311.. 	[1] The variant rcu_dereference_protected() can be used outside
312	of an RCU read-side critical section as long as the usage is
313	protected by locks acquired by the update-side code.  This variant
314	avoids the lockdep warning that would happen when using (for
315	example) rcu_dereference() without rcu_read_lock() protection.
316	Using rcu_dereference_protected() also has the advantage
317	of permitting compiler optimizations that rcu_dereference()
318	must prohibit.	The rcu_dereference_protected() variant takes
319	a lockdep expression to indicate which locks must be acquired
320	by the caller. If the indicated protection is not provided,
321	a lockdep splat is emitted.  See Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.rst
322	and the API's code comments for more details and example usage.
323
324.. 	[2] If the list_for_each_entry_rcu() instance might be used by
325	update-side code as well as by RCU readers, then an additional
326	lockdep expression can be added to its list of arguments.
327	For example, given an additional "lock_is_held(&mylock)" argument,
328	the RCU lockdep code would complain only if this instance was
329	invoked outside of an RCU read-side critical section and without
330	the protection of mylock.
331
332The following diagram shows how each API communicates among the
333reader, updater, and reclaimer.
334::
335
336
337	    rcu_assign_pointer()
338	                            +--------+
339	    +---------------------->| reader |---------+
340	    |                       +--------+         |
341	    |                           |              |
342	    |                           |              | Protect:
343	    |                           |              | rcu_read_lock()
344	    |                           |              | rcu_read_unlock()
345	    |        rcu_dereference()  |              |
346	    +---------+                 |              |
347	    | updater |<----------------+              |
348	    +---------+                                V
349	    |                                    +-----------+
350	    +----------------------------------->| reclaimer |
351	                                         +-----------+
352	      Defer:
353	      synchronize_rcu() & call_rcu()
354
355
356The RCU infrastructure observes the time sequence of rcu_read_lock(),
357rcu_read_unlock(), synchronize_rcu(), and call_rcu() invocations in
358order to determine when (1) synchronize_rcu() invocations may return
359to their callers and (2) call_rcu() callbacks may be invoked.  Efficient
360implementations of the RCU infrastructure make heavy use of batching in
361order to amortize their overhead over many uses of the corresponding APIs.
362
363There are at least three flavors of RCU usage in the Linux kernel. The diagram
364above shows the most common one. On the updater side, the rcu_assign_pointer(),
365synchronize_rcu() and call_rcu() primitives used are the same for all three
366flavors. However for protection (on the reader side), the primitives used vary
367depending on the flavor:
368
369a.	rcu_read_lock() / rcu_read_unlock()
370	rcu_dereference()
371
372b.	rcu_read_lock_bh() / rcu_read_unlock_bh()
373	local_bh_disable() / local_bh_enable()
374	rcu_dereference_bh()
375
376c.	rcu_read_lock_sched() / rcu_read_unlock_sched()
377	preempt_disable() / preempt_enable()
378	local_irq_save() / local_irq_restore()
379	hardirq enter / hardirq exit
380	NMI enter / NMI exit
381	rcu_dereference_sched()
382
383These three flavors are used as follows:
384
385a.	RCU applied to normal data structures.
386
387b.	RCU applied to networking data structures that may be subjected
388	to remote denial-of-service attacks.
389
390c.	RCU applied to scheduler and interrupt/NMI-handler tasks.
391
392Again, most uses will be of (a).  The (b) and (c) cases are important
393for specialized uses, but are relatively uncommon.
394
395.. _3_whatisRCU:
396
3973.  WHAT ARE SOME EXAMPLE USES OF CORE RCU API?
398-----------------------------------------------
399
400This section shows a simple use of the core RCU API to protect a
401global pointer to a dynamically allocated structure.  More-typical
402uses of RCU may be found in :ref:`listRCU.rst <list_rcu_doc>`,
403:ref:`arrayRCU.rst <array_rcu_doc>`, and :ref:`NMI-RCU.rst <NMI_rcu_doc>`.
404::
405
406	struct foo {
407		int a;
408		char b;
409		long c;
410	};
411	DEFINE_SPINLOCK(foo_mutex);
412
413	struct foo __rcu *gbl_foo;
414
415	/*
416	 * Create a new struct foo that is the same as the one currently
417	 * pointed to by gbl_foo, except that field "a" is replaced
418	 * with "new_a".  Points gbl_foo to the new structure, and
419	 * frees up the old structure after a grace period.
420	 *
421	 * Uses rcu_assign_pointer() to ensure that concurrent readers
422	 * see the initialized version of the new structure.
423	 *
424	 * Uses synchronize_rcu() to ensure that any readers that might
425	 * have references to the old structure complete before freeing
426	 * the old structure.
427	 */
428	void foo_update_a(int new_a)
429	{
430		struct foo *new_fp;
431		struct foo *old_fp;
432
433		new_fp = kmalloc(sizeof(*new_fp), GFP_KERNEL);
434		spin_lock(&foo_mutex);
435		old_fp = rcu_dereference_protected(gbl_foo, lockdep_is_held(&foo_mutex));
436		*new_fp = *old_fp;
437		new_fp->a = new_a;
438		rcu_assign_pointer(gbl_foo, new_fp);
439		spin_unlock(&foo_mutex);
440		synchronize_rcu();
441		kfree(old_fp);
442	}
443
444	/*
445	 * Return the value of field "a" of the current gbl_foo
446	 * structure.  Use rcu_read_lock() and rcu_read_unlock()
447	 * to ensure that the structure does not get deleted out
448	 * from under us, and use rcu_dereference() to ensure that
449	 * we see the initialized version of the structure (important
450	 * for DEC Alpha and for people reading the code).
451	 */
452	int foo_get_a(void)
453	{
454		int retval;
455
456		rcu_read_lock();
457		retval = rcu_dereference(gbl_foo)->a;
458		rcu_read_unlock();
459		return retval;
460	}
461
462So, to sum up:
463
464-	Use rcu_read_lock() and rcu_read_unlock() to guard RCU
465	read-side critical sections.
466
467-	Within an RCU read-side critical section, use rcu_dereference()
468	to dereference RCU-protected pointers.
469
470-	Use some solid scheme (such as locks or semaphores) to
471	keep concurrent updates from interfering with each other.
472
473-	Use rcu_assign_pointer() to update an RCU-protected pointer.
474	This primitive protects concurrent readers from the updater,
475	**not** concurrent updates from each other!  You therefore still
476	need to use locking (or something similar) to keep concurrent
477	rcu_assign_pointer() primitives from interfering with each other.
478
479-	Use synchronize_rcu() **after** removing a data element from an
480	RCU-protected data structure, but **before** reclaiming/freeing
481	the data element, in order to wait for the completion of all
482	RCU read-side critical sections that might be referencing that
483	data item.
484
485See checklist.txt for additional rules to follow when using RCU.
486And again, more-typical uses of RCU may be found in :ref:`listRCU.rst
487<list_rcu_doc>`, :ref:`arrayRCU.rst <array_rcu_doc>`, and :ref:`NMI-RCU.rst
488<NMI_rcu_doc>`.
489
490.. _4_whatisRCU:
491
4924.  WHAT IF MY UPDATING THREAD CANNOT BLOCK?
493--------------------------------------------
494
495In the example above, foo_update_a() blocks until a grace period elapses.
496This is quite simple, but in some cases one cannot afford to wait so
497long -- there might be other high-priority work to be done.
498
499In such cases, one uses call_rcu() rather than synchronize_rcu().
500The call_rcu() API is as follows::
501
502	void call_rcu(struct rcu_head *head, rcu_callback_t func);
503
504This function invokes func(head) after a grace period has elapsed.
505This invocation might happen from either softirq or process context,
506so the function is not permitted to block.  The foo struct needs to
507have an rcu_head structure added, perhaps as follows::
508
509	struct foo {
510		int a;
511		char b;
512		long c;
513		struct rcu_head rcu;
514	};
515
516The foo_update_a() function might then be written as follows::
517
518	/*
519	 * Create a new struct foo that is the same as the one currently
520	 * pointed to by gbl_foo, except that field "a" is replaced
521	 * with "new_a".  Points gbl_foo to the new structure, and
522	 * frees up the old structure after a grace period.
523	 *
524	 * Uses rcu_assign_pointer() to ensure that concurrent readers
525	 * see the initialized version of the new structure.
526	 *
527	 * Uses call_rcu() to ensure that any readers that might have
528	 * references to the old structure complete before freeing the
529	 * old structure.
530	 */
531	void foo_update_a(int new_a)
532	{
533		struct foo *new_fp;
534		struct foo *old_fp;
535
536		new_fp = kmalloc(sizeof(*new_fp), GFP_KERNEL);
537		spin_lock(&foo_mutex);
538		old_fp = rcu_dereference_protected(gbl_foo, lockdep_is_held(&foo_mutex));
539		*new_fp = *old_fp;
540		new_fp->a = new_a;
541		rcu_assign_pointer(gbl_foo, new_fp);
542		spin_unlock(&foo_mutex);
543		call_rcu(&old_fp->rcu, foo_reclaim);
544	}
545
546The foo_reclaim() function might appear as follows::
547
548	void foo_reclaim(struct rcu_head *rp)
549	{
550		struct foo *fp = container_of(rp, struct foo, rcu);
551
552		foo_cleanup(fp->a);
553
554		kfree(fp);
555	}
556
557The container_of() primitive is a macro that, given a pointer into a
558struct, the type of the struct, and the pointed-to field within the
559struct, returns a pointer to the beginning of the struct.
560
561The use of call_rcu() permits the caller of foo_update_a() to
562immediately regain control, without needing to worry further about the
563old version of the newly updated element.  It also clearly shows the
564RCU distinction between updater, namely foo_update_a(), and reclaimer,
565namely foo_reclaim().
566
567The summary of advice is the same as for the previous section, except
568that we are now using call_rcu() rather than synchronize_rcu():
569
570-	Use call_rcu() **after** removing a data element from an
571	RCU-protected data structure in order to register a callback
572	function that will be invoked after the completion of all RCU
573	read-side critical sections that might be referencing that
574	data item.
575
576If the callback for call_rcu() is not doing anything more than calling
577kfree() on the structure, you can use kfree_rcu() instead of call_rcu()
578to avoid having to write your own callback::
579
580	kfree_rcu(old_fp, rcu);
581
582Again, see checklist.txt for additional rules governing the use of RCU.
583
584.. _5_whatisRCU:
585
5865.  WHAT ARE SOME SIMPLE IMPLEMENTATIONS OF RCU?
587------------------------------------------------
588
589One of the nice things about RCU is that it has extremely simple "toy"
590implementations that are a good first step towards understanding the
591production-quality implementations in the Linux kernel.  This section
592presents two such "toy" implementations of RCU, one that is implemented
593in terms of familiar locking primitives, and another that more closely
594resembles "classic" RCU.  Both are way too simple for real-world use,
595lacking both functionality and performance.  However, they are useful
596in getting a feel for how RCU works.  See kernel/rcu/update.c for a
597production-quality implementation, and see:
598
599	http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/RCU
600
601for papers describing the Linux kernel RCU implementation.  The OLS'01
602and OLS'02 papers are a good introduction, and the dissertation provides
603more details on the current implementation as of early 2004.
604
605
6065A.  "TOY" IMPLEMENTATION #1: LOCKING
607^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
608This section presents a "toy" RCU implementation that is based on
609familiar locking primitives.  Its overhead makes it a non-starter for
610real-life use, as does its lack of scalability.  It is also unsuitable
611for realtime use, since it allows scheduling latency to "bleed" from
612one read-side critical section to another.  It also assumes recursive
613reader-writer locks:  If you try this with non-recursive locks, and
614you allow nested rcu_read_lock() calls, you can deadlock.
615
616However, it is probably the easiest implementation to relate to, so is
617a good starting point.
618
619It is extremely simple::
620
621	static DEFINE_RWLOCK(rcu_gp_mutex);
622
623	void rcu_read_lock(void)
624	{
625		read_lock(&rcu_gp_mutex);
626	}
627
628	void rcu_read_unlock(void)
629	{
630		read_unlock(&rcu_gp_mutex);
631	}
632
633	void synchronize_rcu(void)
634	{
635		write_lock(&rcu_gp_mutex);
636		smp_mb__after_spinlock();
637		write_unlock(&rcu_gp_mutex);
638	}
639
640[You can ignore rcu_assign_pointer() and rcu_dereference() without missing
641much.  But here are simplified versions anyway.  And whatever you do,
642don't forget about them when submitting patches making use of RCU!]::
643
644	#define rcu_assign_pointer(p, v) \
645	({ \
646		smp_store_release(&(p), (v)); \
647	})
648
649	#define rcu_dereference(p) \
650	({ \
651		typeof(p) _________p1 = READ_ONCE(p); \
652		(_________p1); \
653	})
654
655
656The rcu_read_lock() and rcu_read_unlock() primitive read-acquire
657and release a global reader-writer lock.  The synchronize_rcu()
658primitive write-acquires this same lock, then releases it.  This means
659that once synchronize_rcu() exits, all RCU read-side critical sections
660that were in progress before synchronize_rcu() was called are guaranteed
661to have completed -- there is no way that synchronize_rcu() would have
662been able to write-acquire the lock otherwise.  The smp_mb__after_spinlock()
663promotes synchronize_rcu() to a full memory barrier in compliance with
664the "Memory-Barrier Guarantees" listed in:
665
666	Documentation/RCU/Design/Requirements/Requirements.rst
667
668It is possible to nest rcu_read_lock(), since reader-writer locks may
669be recursively acquired.  Note also that rcu_read_lock() is immune
670from deadlock (an important property of RCU).  The reason for this is
671that the only thing that can block rcu_read_lock() is a synchronize_rcu().
672But synchronize_rcu() does not acquire any locks while holding rcu_gp_mutex,
673so there can be no deadlock cycle.
674
675.. _quiz_1:
676
677Quick Quiz #1:
678		Why is this argument naive?  How could a deadlock
679		occur when using this algorithm in a real-world Linux
680		kernel?  How could this deadlock be avoided?
681
682:ref:`Answers to Quick Quiz <9_whatisRCU>`
683
6845B.  "TOY" EXAMPLE #2: CLASSIC RCU
685^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
686This section presents a "toy" RCU implementation that is based on
687"classic RCU".  It is also short on performance (but only for updates) and
688on features such as hotplug CPU and the ability to run in CONFIG_PREEMPTION
689kernels.  The definitions of rcu_dereference() and rcu_assign_pointer()
690are the same as those shown in the preceding section, so they are omitted.
691::
692
693	void rcu_read_lock(void) { }
694
695	void rcu_read_unlock(void) { }
696
697	void synchronize_rcu(void)
698	{
699		int cpu;
700
701		for_each_possible_cpu(cpu)
702			run_on(cpu);
703	}
704
705Note that rcu_read_lock() and rcu_read_unlock() do absolutely nothing.
706This is the great strength of classic RCU in a non-preemptive kernel:
707read-side overhead is precisely zero, at least on non-Alpha CPUs.
708And there is absolutely no way that rcu_read_lock() can possibly
709participate in a deadlock cycle!
710
711The implementation of synchronize_rcu() simply schedules itself on each
712CPU in turn.  The run_on() primitive can be implemented straightforwardly
713in terms of the sched_setaffinity() primitive.  Of course, a somewhat less
714"toy" implementation would restore the affinity upon completion rather
715than just leaving all tasks running on the last CPU, but when I said
716"toy", I meant **toy**!
717
718So how the heck is this supposed to work???
719
720Remember that it is illegal to block while in an RCU read-side critical
721section.  Therefore, if a given CPU executes a context switch, we know
722that it must have completed all preceding RCU read-side critical sections.
723Once **all** CPUs have executed a context switch, then **all** preceding
724RCU read-side critical sections will have completed.
725
726So, suppose that we remove a data item from its structure and then invoke
727synchronize_rcu().  Once synchronize_rcu() returns, we are guaranteed
728that there are no RCU read-side critical sections holding a reference
729to that data item, so we can safely reclaim it.
730
731.. _quiz_2:
732
733Quick Quiz #2:
734		Give an example where Classic RCU's read-side
735		overhead is **negative**.
736
737:ref:`Answers to Quick Quiz <9_whatisRCU>`
738
739.. _quiz_3:
740
741Quick Quiz #3:
742		If it is illegal to block in an RCU read-side
743		critical section, what the heck do you do in
744		CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT, where normal spinlocks can block???
745
746:ref:`Answers to Quick Quiz <9_whatisRCU>`
747
748.. _6_whatisRCU:
749
7506.  ANALOGY WITH READER-WRITER LOCKING
751--------------------------------------
752
753Although RCU can be used in many different ways, a very common use of
754RCU is analogous to reader-writer locking.  The following unified
755diff shows how closely related RCU and reader-writer locking can be.
756::
757
758	@@ -5,5 +5,5 @@ struct el {
759	 	int data;
760	 	/* Other data fields */
761	 };
762	-rwlock_t listmutex;
763	+spinlock_t listmutex;
764	 struct el head;
765
766	@@ -13,15 +14,15 @@
767		struct list_head *lp;
768		struct el *p;
769
770	-	read_lock(&listmutex);
771	-	list_for_each_entry(p, head, lp) {
772	+	rcu_read_lock();
773	+	list_for_each_entry_rcu(p, head, lp) {
774			if (p->key == key) {
775				*result = p->data;
776	-			read_unlock(&listmutex);
777	+			rcu_read_unlock();
778				return 1;
779			}
780		}
781	-	read_unlock(&listmutex);
782	+	rcu_read_unlock();
783		return 0;
784	 }
785
786	@@ -29,15 +30,16 @@
787	 {
788		struct el *p;
789
790	-	write_lock(&listmutex);
791	+	spin_lock(&listmutex);
792		list_for_each_entry(p, head, lp) {
793			if (p->key == key) {
794	-			list_del(&p->list);
795	-			write_unlock(&listmutex);
796	+			list_del_rcu(&p->list);
797	+			spin_unlock(&listmutex);
798	+			synchronize_rcu();
799				kfree(p);
800				return 1;
801			}
802		}
803	-	write_unlock(&listmutex);
804	+	spin_unlock(&listmutex);
805		return 0;
806	 }
807
808Or, for those who prefer a side-by-side listing::
809
810 1 struct el {                          1 struct el {
811 2   struct list_head list;             2   struct list_head list;
812 3   long key;                          3   long key;
813 4   spinlock_t mutex;                  4   spinlock_t mutex;
814 5   int data;                          5   int data;
815 6   /* Other data fields */            6   /* Other data fields */
816 7 };                                   7 };
817 8 rwlock_t listmutex;                  8 spinlock_t listmutex;
818 9 struct el head;                      9 struct el head;
819
820::
821
822  1 int search(long key, int *result)    1 int search(long key, int *result)
823  2 {                                    2 {
824  3   struct list_head *lp;              3   struct list_head *lp;
825  4   struct el *p;                      4   struct el *p;
826  5                                      5
827  6   read_lock(&listmutex);             6   rcu_read_lock();
828  7   list_for_each_entry(p, head, lp) { 7   list_for_each_entry_rcu(p, head, lp) {
829  8     if (p->key == key) {             8     if (p->key == key) {
830  9       *result = p->data;             9       *result = p->data;
831 10       read_unlock(&listmutex);      10       rcu_read_unlock();
832 11       return 1;                     11       return 1;
833 12     }                               12     }
834 13   }                                 13   }
835 14   read_unlock(&listmutex);          14   rcu_read_unlock();
836 15   return 0;                         15   return 0;
837 16 }                                   16 }
838
839::
840
841  1 int delete(long key)                 1 int delete(long key)
842  2 {                                    2 {
843  3   struct el *p;                      3   struct el *p;
844  4                                      4
845  5   write_lock(&listmutex);            5   spin_lock(&listmutex);
846  6   list_for_each_entry(p, head, lp) { 6   list_for_each_entry(p, head, lp) {
847  7     if (p->key == key) {             7     if (p->key == key) {
848  8       list_del(&p->list);            8       list_del_rcu(&p->list);
849  9       write_unlock(&listmutex);      9       spin_unlock(&listmutex);
850                                        10       synchronize_rcu();
851 10       kfree(p);                     11       kfree(p);
852 11       return 1;                     12       return 1;
853 12     }                               13     }
854 13   }                                 14   }
855 14   write_unlock(&listmutex);         15   spin_unlock(&listmutex);
856 15   return 0;                         16   return 0;
857 16 }                                   17 }
858
859Either way, the differences are quite small.  Read-side locking moves
860to rcu_read_lock() and rcu_read_unlock, update-side locking moves from
861a reader-writer lock to a simple spinlock, and a synchronize_rcu()
862precedes the kfree().
863
864However, there is one potential catch: the read-side and update-side
865critical sections can now run concurrently.  In many cases, this will
866not be a problem, but it is necessary to check carefully regardless.
867For example, if multiple independent list updates must be seen as
868a single atomic update, converting to RCU will require special care.
869
870Also, the presence of synchronize_rcu() means that the RCU version of
871delete() can now block.  If this is a problem, there is a callback-based
872mechanism that never blocks, namely call_rcu() or kfree_rcu(), that can
873be used in place of synchronize_rcu().
874
875.. _7_whatisRCU:
876
8777.  ANALOGY WITH REFERENCE COUNTING
878-----------------------------------
879
880The reader-writer analogy (illustrated by the previous section) is not
881always the best way to think about using RCU.  Another helpful analogy
882considers RCU an effective reference count on everything which is
883protected by RCU.
884
885A reference count typically does not prevent the referenced object's
886values from changing, but does prevent changes to type -- particularly the
887gross change of type that happens when that object's memory is freed and
888re-allocated for some other purpose.  Once a type-safe reference to the
889object is obtained, some other mechanism is needed to ensure consistent
890access to the data in the object.  This could involve taking a spinlock,
891but with RCU the typical approach is to perform reads with SMP-aware
892operations such as smp_load_acquire(), to perform updates with atomic
893read-modify-write operations, and to provide the necessary ordering.
894RCU provides a number of support functions that embed the required
895operations and ordering, such as the list_for_each_entry_rcu() macro
896used in the previous section.
897
898A more focused view of the reference counting behavior is that,
899between rcu_read_lock() and rcu_read_unlock(), any reference taken with
900rcu_dereference() on a pointer marked as ``__rcu`` can be treated as
901though a reference-count on that object has been temporarily increased.
902This prevents the object from changing type.  Exactly what this means
903will depend on normal expectations of objects of that type, but it
904typically includes that spinlocks can still be safely locked, normal
905reference counters can be safely manipulated, and ``__rcu`` pointers
906can be safely dereferenced.
907
908Some operations that one might expect to see on an object for
909which an RCU reference is held include:
910
911 - Copying out data that is guaranteed to be stable by the object's type.
912 - Using kref_get_unless_zero() or similar to get a longer-term
913   reference.  This may fail of course.
914 - Acquiring a spinlock in the object, and checking if the object still
915   is the expected object and if so, manipulating it freely.
916
917The understanding that RCU provides a reference that only prevents a
918change of type is particularly visible with objects allocated from a
919slab cache marked ``SLAB_TYPESAFE_BY_RCU``.  RCU operations may yield a
920reference to an object from such a cache that has been concurrently
921freed and the memory reallocated to a completely different object,
922though of the same type.  In this case RCU doesn't even protect the
923identity of the object from changing, only its type.  So the object
924found may not be the one expected, but it will be one where it is safe
925to take a reference or spinlock and then confirm that the identity
926matches the expectations.
927
928With traditional reference counting -- such as that implemented by the
929kref library in Linux -- there is typically code that runs when the last
930reference to an object is dropped.  With kref, this is the function
931passed to kref_put().  When RCU is being used, such finalization code
932must not be run until all ``__rcu`` pointers referencing the object have
933been updated, and then a grace period has passed.  Every remaining
934globally visible pointer to the object must be considered to be a
935potential counted reference, and the finalization code is typically run
936using call_rcu() only after all those pointers have been changed.
937
938To see how to choose between these two analogies -- of RCU as a
939reader-writer lock and RCU as a reference counting system -- it is useful
940to reflect on the scale of the thing being protected.  The reader-writer
941lock analogy looks at larger multi-part objects such as a linked list
942and shows how RCU can facilitate concurrency while elements are added
943to, and removed from, the list.  The reference-count analogy looks at
944the individual objects and looks at how they can be accessed safely
945within whatever whole they are a part of.
946
947.. _8_whatisRCU:
948
9498.  FULL LIST OF RCU APIs
950-------------------------
951
952The RCU APIs are documented in docbook-format header comments in the
953Linux-kernel source code, but it helps to have a full list of the
954APIs, since there does not appear to be a way to categorize them
955in docbook.  Here is the list, by category.
956
957RCU list traversal::
958
959	list_entry_rcu
960	list_entry_lockless
961	list_first_entry_rcu
962	list_next_rcu
963	list_for_each_entry_rcu
964	list_for_each_entry_continue_rcu
965	list_for_each_entry_from_rcu
966	list_first_or_null_rcu
967	list_next_or_null_rcu
968	hlist_first_rcu
969	hlist_next_rcu
970	hlist_pprev_rcu
971	hlist_for_each_entry_rcu
972	hlist_for_each_entry_rcu_bh
973	hlist_for_each_entry_from_rcu
974	hlist_for_each_entry_continue_rcu
975	hlist_for_each_entry_continue_rcu_bh
976	hlist_nulls_first_rcu
977	hlist_nulls_for_each_entry_rcu
978	hlist_bl_first_rcu
979	hlist_bl_for_each_entry_rcu
980
981RCU pointer/list update::
982
983	rcu_assign_pointer
984	list_add_rcu
985	list_add_tail_rcu
986	list_del_rcu
987	list_replace_rcu
988	hlist_add_behind_rcu
989	hlist_add_before_rcu
990	hlist_add_head_rcu
991	hlist_add_tail_rcu
992	hlist_del_rcu
993	hlist_del_init_rcu
994	hlist_replace_rcu
995	list_splice_init_rcu
996	list_splice_tail_init_rcu
997	hlist_nulls_del_init_rcu
998	hlist_nulls_del_rcu
999	hlist_nulls_add_head_rcu
1000	hlist_bl_add_head_rcu
1001	hlist_bl_del_init_rcu
1002	hlist_bl_del_rcu
1003	hlist_bl_set_first_rcu
1004
1005RCU::
1006
1007	Critical sections	Grace period		Barrier
1008
1009	rcu_read_lock		synchronize_net		rcu_barrier
1010	rcu_read_unlock		synchronize_rcu
1011	rcu_dereference		synchronize_rcu_expedited
1012	rcu_read_lock_held	call_rcu
1013	rcu_dereference_check	kfree_rcu
1014	rcu_dereference_protected
1015
1016bh::
1017
1018	Critical sections	Grace period		Barrier
1019
1020	rcu_read_lock_bh	call_rcu		rcu_barrier
1021	rcu_read_unlock_bh	synchronize_rcu
1022	[local_bh_disable]	synchronize_rcu_expedited
1023	[and friends]
1024	rcu_dereference_bh
1025	rcu_dereference_bh_check
1026	rcu_dereference_bh_protected
1027	rcu_read_lock_bh_held
1028
1029sched::
1030
1031	Critical sections	Grace period		Barrier
1032
1033	rcu_read_lock_sched	call_rcu		rcu_barrier
1034	rcu_read_unlock_sched	synchronize_rcu
1035	[preempt_disable]	synchronize_rcu_expedited
1036	[and friends]
1037	rcu_read_lock_sched_notrace
1038	rcu_read_unlock_sched_notrace
1039	rcu_dereference_sched
1040	rcu_dereference_sched_check
1041	rcu_dereference_sched_protected
1042	rcu_read_lock_sched_held
1043
1044
1045SRCU::
1046
1047	Critical sections	Grace period		Barrier
1048
1049	srcu_read_lock		call_srcu		srcu_barrier
1050	srcu_read_unlock	synchronize_srcu
1051	srcu_dereference	synchronize_srcu_expedited
1052	srcu_dereference_check
1053	srcu_read_lock_held
1054
1055SRCU: Initialization/cleanup::
1056
1057	DEFINE_SRCU
1058	DEFINE_STATIC_SRCU
1059	init_srcu_struct
1060	cleanup_srcu_struct
1061
1062All: lockdep-checked RCU-protected pointer access::
1063
1064	rcu_access_pointer
1065	rcu_dereference_raw
1066	RCU_LOCKDEP_WARN
1067	rcu_sleep_check
1068	RCU_NONIDLE
1069
1070See the comment headers in the source code (or the docbook generated
1071from them) for more information.
1072
1073However, given that there are no fewer than four families of RCU APIs
1074in the Linux kernel, how do you choose which one to use?  The following
1075list can be helpful:
1076
1077a.	Will readers need to block?  If so, you need SRCU.
1078
1079b.	What about the -rt patchset?  If readers would need to block
1080	in an non-rt kernel, you need SRCU.  If readers would block
1081	in a -rt kernel, but not in a non-rt kernel, SRCU is not
1082	necessary.  (The -rt patchset turns spinlocks into sleeplocks,
1083	hence this distinction.)
1084
1085c.	Do you need to treat NMI handlers, hardirq handlers,
1086	and code segments with preemption disabled (whether
1087	via preempt_disable(), local_irq_save(), local_bh_disable(),
1088	or some other mechanism) as if they were explicit RCU readers?
1089	If so, RCU-sched is the only choice that will work for you.
1090
1091d.	Do you need RCU grace periods to complete even in the face
1092	of softirq monopolization of one or more of the CPUs?  For
1093	example, is your code subject to network-based denial-of-service
1094	attacks?  If so, you should disable softirq across your readers,
1095	for example, by using rcu_read_lock_bh().
1096
1097e.	Is your workload too update-intensive for normal use of
1098	RCU, but inappropriate for other synchronization mechanisms?
1099	If so, consider SLAB_TYPESAFE_BY_RCU (which was originally
1100	named SLAB_DESTROY_BY_RCU).  But please be careful!
1101
1102f.	Do you need read-side critical sections that are respected
1103	even though they are in the middle of the idle loop, during
1104	user-mode execution, or on an offlined CPU?  If so, SRCU is the
1105	only choice that will work for you.
1106
1107g.	Otherwise, use RCU.
1108
1109Of course, this all assumes that you have determined that RCU is in fact
1110the right tool for your job.
1111
1112.. _9_whatisRCU:
1113
11149.  ANSWERS TO QUICK QUIZZES
1115----------------------------
1116
1117Quick Quiz #1:
1118		Why is this argument naive?  How could a deadlock
1119		occur when using this algorithm in a real-world Linux
1120		kernel?  [Referring to the lock-based "toy" RCU
1121		algorithm.]
1122
1123Answer:
1124		Consider the following sequence of events:
1125
1126		1.	CPU 0 acquires some unrelated lock, call it
1127			"problematic_lock", disabling irq via
1128			spin_lock_irqsave().
1129
1130		2.	CPU 1 enters synchronize_rcu(), write-acquiring
1131			rcu_gp_mutex.
1132
1133		3.	CPU 0 enters rcu_read_lock(), but must wait
1134			because CPU 1 holds rcu_gp_mutex.
1135
1136		4.	CPU 1 is interrupted, and the irq handler
1137			attempts to acquire problematic_lock.
1138
1139		The system is now deadlocked.
1140
1141		One way to avoid this deadlock is to use an approach like
1142		that of CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT, where all normal spinlocks
1143		become blocking locks, and all irq handlers execute in
1144		the context of special tasks.  In this case, in step 4
1145		above, the irq handler would block, allowing CPU 1 to
1146		release rcu_gp_mutex, avoiding the deadlock.
1147
1148		Even in the absence of deadlock, this RCU implementation
1149		allows latency to "bleed" from readers to other
1150		readers through synchronize_rcu().  To see this,
1151		consider task A in an RCU read-side critical section
1152		(thus read-holding rcu_gp_mutex), task B blocked
1153		attempting to write-acquire rcu_gp_mutex, and
1154		task C blocked in rcu_read_lock() attempting to
1155		read_acquire rcu_gp_mutex.  Task A's RCU read-side
1156		latency is holding up task C, albeit indirectly via
1157		task B.
1158
1159		Realtime RCU implementations therefore use a counter-based
1160		approach where tasks in RCU read-side critical sections
1161		cannot be blocked by tasks executing synchronize_rcu().
1162
1163:ref:`Back to Quick Quiz #1 <quiz_1>`
1164
1165Quick Quiz #2:
1166		Give an example where Classic RCU's read-side
1167		overhead is **negative**.
1168
1169Answer:
1170		Imagine a single-CPU system with a non-CONFIG_PREEMPTION
1171		kernel where a routing table is used by process-context
1172		code, but can be updated by irq-context code (for example,
1173		by an "ICMP REDIRECT" packet).	The usual way of handling
1174		this would be to have the process-context code disable
1175		interrupts while searching the routing table.  Use of
1176		RCU allows such interrupt-disabling to be dispensed with.
1177		Thus, without RCU, you pay the cost of disabling interrupts,
1178		and with RCU you don't.
1179
1180		One can argue that the overhead of RCU in this
1181		case is negative with respect to the single-CPU
1182		interrupt-disabling approach.  Others might argue that
1183		the overhead of RCU is merely zero, and that replacing
1184		the positive overhead of the interrupt-disabling scheme
1185		with the zero-overhead RCU scheme does not constitute
1186		negative overhead.
1187
1188		In real life, of course, things are more complex.  But
1189		even the theoretical possibility of negative overhead for
1190		a synchronization primitive is a bit unexpected.  ;-)
1191
1192:ref:`Back to Quick Quiz #2 <quiz_2>`
1193
1194Quick Quiz #3:
1195		If it is illegal to block in an RCU read-side
1196		critical section, what the heck do you do in
1197		CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT, where normal spinlocks can block???
1198
1199Answer:
1200		Just as CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT permits preemption of spinlock
1201		critical sections, it permits preemption of RCU
1202		read-side critical sections.  It also permits
1203		spinlocks blocking while in RCU read-side critical
1204		sections.
1205
1206		Why the apparent inconsistency?  Because it is
1207		possible to use priority boosting to keep the RCU
1208		grace periods short if need be (for example, if running
1209		short of memory).  In contrast, if blocking waiting
1210		for (say) network reception, there is no way to know
1211		what should be boosted.  Especially given that the
1212		process we need to boost might well be a human being
1213		who just went out for a pizza or something.  And although
1214		a computer-operated cattle prod might arouse serious
1215		interest, it might also provoke serious objections.
1216		Besides, how does the computer know what pizza parlor
1217		the human being went to???
1218
1219:ref:`Back to Quick Quiz #3 <quiz_3>`
1220
1221ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
1222
1223My thanks to the people who helped make this human-readable, including
1224Jon Walpole, Josh Triplett, Serge Hallyn, Suzanne Wood, and Alan Stern.
1225
1226
1227For more information, see http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/RCU.
1228