07/05/2022 20:47, Morten Brørup пишет:
From: Konstantin Ananyev [mailto:konstantin.v.anan...@yandex.ru]
Sent: Saturday, 7 May 2022 15.58

Hi Morten,

From: Konstantin Ananyev [mailto:konstantin.v.anan...@yandex.ru]
Sent: Friday, 6 May 2022 21.38

05/05/2022 08:11, Tyler Retzlaff пишет:
On Wed, May 04, 2022 at 11:55:57PM +0100, Konstantin Ananyev wrote:
04/05/2022 16:46, Tyler Retzlaff пишет:
Provide a portable type-safe thread identifier.
Provide rte_thread_self for obtaining current thread identifier.

Signed-off-by: Narcisa Vasile <navas...@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Tyler Retzlaff <roret...@linux.microsoft.com>
Acked-by: Dmitry Kozlyuk <dmitry.kozl...@gmail.com>
---
    lib/eal/include/rte_thread.h | 22 ++++++++++++++++++++++
    lib/eal/unix/rte_thread.c    | 11 +++++++++++
    lib/eal/version.map          |  3 +++
    lib/eal/windows/rte_thread.c | 10 ++++++++++
    4 files changed, 46 insertions(+)

diff --git a/lib/eal/include/rte_thread.h
b/lib/eal/include/rte_thread.h
index 8be8ed8..14478ba 100644
--- a/lib/eal/include/rte_thread.h
+++ b/lib/eal/include/rte_thread.h
@@ -1,7 +1,10 @@
    /* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
     * Copyright(c) 2021 Mellanox Technologies, Ltd
+ * Copyright (C) 2022 Microsoft Corporation
     */
+#include <stdint.h>
+
    #include <rte_os.h>
    #include <rte_compat.h>
@@ -21,10 +24,29 @@
    #endif
    /**
+ * Thread id descriptor.
+ */
+typedef struct {
+       uintptr_t opaque_id; /**< thread identifier */


I know that currently on linux typeof(pthread_id) == unsigned long
int.
Though wouldn't it be safer and cleaner to use pthread_t
explicitly
on posix-like systems?

i believe the previous discussions are.

* preference for reduced or no conditional compilation.
* preference for sizeof(type) to be `the same' on all platforms.


It would be the same as long as sizes of pthread_t uintptr_t are
equal.

They are not. pthread_t (Linux thread ID) and DWORD (Windows thread
ID) are both 32 bit, uintptr_t is 64 or 32 bit depending on pointer
size (32 or 64 bit CPU).

What make you think pthread_t is 32-bit on linux?
  From <pthread.h> on my box:
typedef unsigned long int pthread_t;
So it is either 64-bit or 32-bit depending on arch.
Same as uintptr_t.

You are right, Konstantin. I had overlooked the "long" in there.




* preference for platform agnostic headers. i.e. don't drag
     platform specific headers into the application namespace when
     including rte_xxx.h headers.

So this is an exception from the "don't hide the types" rule that DPDK 
inherited from the Kernel. In theory, this makes really good sense for an EAL that really 
is what it says (i.e. an abstraction layer). In reality, though, this requires that the 
EAL offers all the features of the underlying O/S that the application wants to use - 
otherwise, the application will have to access private members of the EAL structures.

Something like:
typedef struct {
#ifdef WINDOWS
        uintptr_t opaque_id;
#else
        pthread_t opaque_id;
#endif
};
AFAIK POSIX itself doesn't require pthread_t to be an 'arithmetic
type'.

yes, this is correct. newer posix introduced this to allow the use
of
structs. i assume prior reviewers are aware of the recent posix
standard (or should be).

this type makes no attempt to be usable on platforms that use
a handle > sizeof(uintptr_t). though any platform that does is free
to shove a pointer to struct into the handle at the cost of a
dereference if that is their implementation.

Using pthread_t directly still seems like a safest bet to me.
Then we can avoid doing these explicit type conversions before/after
each pthread_xxx() call and wouldn't need to worry if we'll ever
have
platform with bigger pthread_t (though yes, I admit it is very
unlikely).
But, if we still prefer to go ahead with 'arch-neutral' approach,
then I think we need to have compilation time check that opaque_id
is big enough to hold pthread_t value:
RTE_BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(pthread_t) != sizeof(opaque_id)) or so.

Yes, this should be in the O/S specific c files:

RTE_BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(rte_thread_t) < sizeof(pthread_t))

RTE_BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(rte_thread_t) < sizeof(DWORD))



I agree with Konstantin's concerns. All this type casting increases
the risk for bugs. Also, I don't understand the need to use a 64 bit
value when thread IDs are 32 bit in both Linux and Windows.

The thread handling is O/S specific code, so #ifdef is unavoidable.

Furthermore, I don't think we should wrap O/S specific integer types
into structs - it adds unnecessary complexity.

I would prefer:

#ifdef WINDOWS
typedef DWORD rte_thread_t;
#else
typedef pthread_t rte_thread_t;
#endif

OK, I was totally wrong here. But I still don't think we need to wrap the value 
into a structure, but can just use:

typedef uintptr_t rte_thread_t; /* And add comments about the underlying types, 
i.e. DWORD on Windows, pthread_t (not tid_t) on Linux/BSD. */


I think we probably can have what you suggested above.
Though it might be better to move rte_thread_t typedef in OS-specific
header (rte_os.h).


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