On Sep 30, 2024, at 17:33, Jonas Oberhauser <jonas.oberhau...@huaweicloud.com> 
wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> Am 9/30/2024 um 11:27 AM schrieb Alan Huang:
>> 2024年9月30日 17:15,Alan Huang <mmpgour...@gmail.com> 写道:
>>> 
>>> 2024年9月30日 16:57,Jonas Oberhauser <jonas.oberhau...@huaweicloud.com> 写道:
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Am 9/29/2024 um 12:26 AM schrieb Alan Huang:
>>>>> 2024年9月28日 23:55,Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoy...@efficios.com> wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> The motivation for introducing ptr_eq() is indeed because the
>>>>>> compiler barrier is not sufficient to prevent the compiler from
>>>>>> using one pointer instead of the other.
>>>>> barrier_data(&b) prevents that.
>>>> 
>>>> I don't think one barrier_data can garantuee preventing this, because 
>>>> right after doing the comparison, the compiler still could do b=a.
>>>> 
>>>> In that case you would be guaranteed to use the value in b, but that value 
>>>> is not the value loaded into b originally but rather the value loaded into 
>>>> a, and hence your address dependency goes to the wrong load still.
>>> 
>>> After barrier_data(&b), *b will be loaded from memory, you mean even if *b 
>>> is loaded from memory, the address dependency goes to the wrong load still?
>> Sorry, *b should b.
> 
> That's exactly what I meant to say. In my understanding, it can happen like 
> this:
> 
> a = READ_ONCE(*p);
> ...
> b = READ_ONCE(*p);
> if (a == b) {
>   b = a; // inserted by compiler
> 
>   barrier_data(&b);
> 
>   foo(*b); // compiler definitely use the current value in b
> }
> 
> 
> 
> In the end, the address dependency is from the first load, and the CPU can 
> speculatively (with register renaming, forwarding etc) execute
> 
> a = READ_ONCE(*p);
> b2 = a; // speculatively
> tmp = load *b2 // speculatively
> b1 = READ_ONCE(*p);
> if (a == b1) { // confirmed
>   foo(tmp);
> }

I get it now, thanks for the explanation.

> 
> 
> best wishes,
>  jonas
> 


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