Op 27-05-13 11:13, Peter Zijlstra schreef: > On Mon, May 27, 2013 at 10:26:39AM +0200, Maarten Lankhorst wrote: >> Op 27-05-13 10:00, Peter Zijlstra schreef: >>> On Wed, May 22, 2013 at 07:24:38PM +0200, Maarten Lankhorst wrote: >>>>>> +- Functions to only acquire a single w/w mutex, which results in the >>>>>> exact same >>>>>> + semantics as a normal mutex. These functions have the _single postfix. >>>>> This is missing rationale. >>>> trylock_single is useful when iterating over a list, and you want to evict >>>> a bo, but only the first one that can be acquired. >>>> lock_single is useful when only a single bo needs to be acquired, for >>>> example to lock a buffer during mmap. >>> OK, so given that its still early, monday and I haven't actually spend >>> much time thinking on this; would it be possible to make: >>> ww_mutex_lock(.ctx=NULL) act like ww_mutex_lock_single()? >>> >>> The idea is that if we don't provide a ctx, we'll get a different >>> lockdep annotation; mutex_lock() vs mutex_lock_nest_lock(). So if we >>> then go and make a mistake, lockdep should warn us. >>> >>> Would that work or should I stock up on morning juice? >>> >> It's easy to merge unlock_single and unlock, which I did in the next version >> I'll post. >> Lockdep will already warn if ww_mutex_lock and ww_mutex_lock_single are both >> used. ww_test_block_context and ww_test_context_block in >> lib/locking-selftest.c >> are the testcases for this. >> >> The locking paths are too different, it will end up with doing "if (ctx == >> NULL) mutex_lock(); else ww_mutex_lock();" > I was more thinking like: > > int __sched ww_mutex_lock(struct ww_mutex *lock, struct ww_acquire_ctx *ctx) > { > might_sleep(); > return __mutex_lock_common(&lock->base, TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE, 0, > ctx ? ctx->dep_map : NULL, _RET_IP_, > ctx, 0); > } > > That should make ww_mutex_lock(.ctx=NULL) equivalent to > mutex_lock(&lock->base), no? > > Anyway, implementation aside, it would again reduce the interface some. > It doesn't work like that. __builtin_constant_p(ctx == NULL) will evaluate to false in __mutex_lock_common, even if you call ww_mutex_lock(lock, NULL); gcc cannot prove at compile time whether ctx == NULL is true or false for the __mutex_lock_common inlining here, so __builtin_constant_p() will return false.
And again, that's just saying ww_mutex_lock() { if (ctx) original ww_mutex_lock's slowpath(lock, ctx); else mutex_lock's slowpath(lock->base); } And the next version will already remove unlock_single, and this is the implementation for lock_single currently: static inline void ww_mutex_lock_single(struct ww_mutex *lock) { mutex_lock(&lock->base); } So why do you want to merge it? ~Maarten -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/