Andres Freund <and...@anarazel.de> wrote: > On March 5, 2020 9:21:55 AM PST, Antonin Houska <a...@cybertec.at> wrote: > >What's the reason to use pg_atomic...read_...() and > >pg_atomic...write_...() > >functions in localbuf.c? > > > >It looks like there was an intention not to use them > > > >https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAPpHfdtfr3Aj7xJonXaKR8iY2p8uXOQ%2Be4BMpMDAM_5R4OcaDA%40mail.gmail.com > > > >but the following discussion does not explain the decision to use them. > > Read/write don't trigger locked/atomic operations. They just guarantee that > you're not gonna read/write a torn value. Or a cached one. Since > local/shared buffers share the buffer header definition, we still have to > use proper functions to access the atomic variables.
Sure, the atomic operations are necessary for shared buffers, but I still don't understand why they are needed for *local* buffers - local buffers their headers (BufferDesc) in process local memory, so there should be no concerns about concurrent access. Another thing that makes me confused is this comment in InitLocalBuffers(): /* * Intentionally do not initialize the buffer's atomic variable * (besides zeroing the underlying memory above). That way we get * errors on platforms without atomics, if somebody (re-)introduces * atomic operations for local buffers. */ That sounds like there was an intention not to use the atomic functions in localbuf.c, but eventually they ended up there. Do I still miss something? -- Antonin Houska Web: https://www.cybertec-postgresql.com