On Mon, Jul 27, 2020 at 11:17:46AM -0400, Alan Stern wrote:
> Given a type "T", an object x of type pointer-to-T, and a function
> "func" that takes various arguments and returns a pointer-to-T, the
> accepted API for calling func once would be to create once_func() as
> follows:
> 
> T *once_func(T **ppt, args...)
> {
>       static DEFINE_MUTEX(mut);
>       T *p;
> 
>       p = smp_load_acquire(ppt);      /* Mild optimization */
>       if (p)
>               return p;
> 
>       mutex_lock(mut);
>       p = smp_load_acquire(ppt);
>       if (!p) {
>               p = func(args...);
>               if (!IS_ERR_OR_NULL(p))
>                       smp_store_release(ppt, p);
>       }
>       mutex_unlock(mut);
>       return p;
> }
> 
> Users then would have to call once_func(&x, args...) and check the
> result.  Different x objects would constitute different "once"
> domains.
[...]
> In fact, the only drawback I can think of is that because this relies
> on a single mutex for all the different possible x's, it might lead to
> locking conflicts (if func had to call once_func() recursively, for
> example).  In most reasonable situations such conflicts would not
> arise.

Another drawback for this approach relative to my get_foo() approach
upthread is that, because we don't have compiler support, there's no
enforcement that accesses to 'x' go through once_func().  My approach
wraps accesses in a deliberately-opaque struct so you have to write
some really ugly code to get at the raw value, and it's just easier to
call get_foo().

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