File size: 7,403 Bytes
13c2bf6 | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 | // Copyright 2024 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Package sync provides basic synchronization primitives such as mutual
// exclusion locks to internal packages (including ones that depend on sync).
//
// Tests are defined in package [sync].
package sync
import (
"internal/race"
"sync/atomic"
"unsafe"
)
// A Mutex is a mutual exclusion lock.
//
// See package [sync.Mutex] documentation.
type Mutex struct {
state int32
sema uint32
}
const (
mutexLocked = 1 << iota // mutex is locked
mutexWoken
mutexStarving
mutexWaiterShift = iota
// Mutex fairness.
//
// Mutex can be in 2 modes of operations: normal and starvation.
// In normal mode waiters are queued in FIFO order, but a woken up waiter
// does not own the mutex and competes with new arriving goroutines over
// the ownership. New arriving goroutines have an advantage -- they are
// already running on CPU and there can be lots of them, so a woken up
// waiter has good chances of losing. In such case it is queued at front
// of the wait queue. If a waiter fails to acquire the mutex for more than 1ms,
// it switches mutex to the starvation mode.
//
// In starvation mode ownership of the mutex is directly handed off from
// the unlocking goroutine to the waiter at the front of the queue.
// New arriving goroutines don't try to acquire the mutex even if it appears
// to be unlocked, and don't try to spin. Instead they queue themselves at
// the tail of the wait queue.
//
// If a waiter receives ownership of the mutex and sees that either
// (1) it is the last waiter in the queue, or (2) it waited for less than 1 ms,
// it switches mutex back to normal operation mode.
//
// Normal mode has considerably better performance as a goroutine can acquire
// a mutex several times in a row even if there are blocked waiters.
// Starvation mode is important to prevent pathological cases of tail latency.
starvationThresholdNs = 1e6
)
// Lock locks m.
//
// See package [sync.Mutex] documentation.
func (m *Mutex) Lock() {
// Fast path: grab unlocked mutex.
if atomic.CompareAndSwapInt32(&m.state, 0, mutexLocked) {
if race.Enabled {
race.Acquire(unsafe.Pointer(m))
}
return
}
// Slow path (outlined so that the fast path can be inlined)
m.lockSlow()
}
// TryLock tries to lock m and reports whether it succeeded.
//
// See package [sync.Mutex] documentation.
func (m *Mutex) TryLock() bool {
old := m.state
if old&(mutexLocked|mutexStarving) != 0 {
return false
}
// There may be a goroutine waiting for the mutex, but we are
// running now and can try to grab the mutex before that
// goroutine wakes up.
if !atomic.CompareAndSwapInt32(&m.state, old, old|mutexLocked) {
return false
}
if race.Enabled {
race.Acquire(unsafe.Pointer(m))
}
return true
}
func (m *Mutex) lockSlow() {
var waitStartTime int64
starving := false
awoke := false
iter := 0
old := m.state
for {
// Don't spin in starvation mode, ownership is handed off to waiters
// so we won't be able to acquire the mutex anyway.
if old&(mutexLocked|mutexStarving) == mutexLocked && runtime_canSpin(iter) {
// Active spinning makes sense.
// Try to set mutexWoken flag to inform Unlock
// to not wake other blocked goroutines.
if !awoke && old&mutexWoken == 0 && old>>mutexWaiterShift != 0 &&
atomic.CompareAndSwapInt32(&m.state, old, old|mutexWoken) {
awoke = true
}
runtime_doSpin()
iter++
old = m.state
continue
}
new := old
// Don't try to acquire starving mutex, new arriving goroutines must queue.
if old&mutexStarving == 0 {
new |= mutexLocked
}
if old&(mutexLocked|mutexStarving) != 0 {
new += 1 << mutexWaiterShift
}
// The current goroutine switches mutex to starvation mode.
// But if the mutex is currently unlocked, don't do the switch.
// Unlock expects that starving mutex has waiters, which will not
// be true in this case.
if starving && old&mutexLocked != 0 {
new |= mutexStarving
}
if awoke {
// The goroutine has been woken from sleep,
// so we need to reset the flag in either case.
if new&mutexWoken == 0 {
throw("sync: inconsistent mutex state")
}
new &^= mutexWoken
}
if atomic.CompareAndSwapInt32(&m.state, old, new) {
if old&(mutexLocked|mutexStarving) == 0 {
break // locked the mutex with CAS
}
// If we were already waiting before, queue at the front of the queue.
queueLifo := waitStartTime != 0
if waitStartTime == 0 {
waitStartTime = runtime_nanotime()
}
runtime_SemacquireMutex(&m.sema, queueLifo, 2)
starving = starving || runtime_nanotime()-waitStartTime > starvationThresholdNs
old = m.state
if old&mutexStarving != 0 {
// If this goroutine was woken and mutex is in starvation mode,
// ownership was handed off to us but mutex is in somewhat
// inconsistent state: mutexLocked is not set and we are still
// accounted as waiter. Fix that.
if old&(mutexLocked|mutexWoken) != 0 || old>>mutexWaiterShift == 0 {
throw("sync: inconsistent mutex state")
}
delta := int32(mutexLocked - 1<<mutexWaiterShift)
if !starving || old>>mutexWaiterShift == 1 {
// Exit starvation mode.
// Critical to do it here and consider wait time.
// Starvation mode is so inefficient, that two goroutines
// can go lock-step infinitely once they switch mutex
// to starvation mode.
delta -= mutexStarving
}
atomic.AddInt32(&m.state, delta)
break
}
awoke = true
iter = 0
} else {
old = m.state
}
}
if race.Enabled {
race.Acquire(unsafe.Pointer(m))
}
}
// Unlock unlocks m.
//
// See package [sync.Mutex] documentation.
func (m *Mutex) Unlock() {
if race.Enabled {
_ = m.state
race.Release(unsafe.Pointer(m))
}
// Fast path: drop lock bit.
new := atomic.AddInt32(&m.state, -mutexLocked)
if new != 0 {
// Outlined slow path to allow inlining the fast path.
// To hide unlockSlow during tracing we skip one extra frame when tracing GoUnblock.
m.unlockSlow(new)
}
}
func (m *Mutex) unlockSlow(new int32) {
if (new+mutexLocked)&mutexLocked == 0 {
fatal("sync: unlock of unlocked mutex")
}
if new&mutexStarving == 0 {
old := new
for {
// If there are no waiters or a goroutine has already
// been woken or grabbed the lock, no need to wake anyone.
// In starvation mode ownership is directly handed off from unlocking
// goroutine to the next waiter. We are not part of this chain,
// since we did not observe mutexStarving when we unlocked the mutex above.
// So get off the way.
if old>>mutexWaiterShift == 0 || old&(mutexLocked|mutexWoken|mutexStarving) != 0 {
return
}
// Grab the right to wake someone.
new = (old - 1<<mutexWaiterShift) | mutexWoken
if atomic.CompareAndSwapInt32(&m.state, old, new) {
runtime_Semrelease(&m.sema, false, 2)
return
}
old = m.state
}
} else {
// Starving mode: handoff mutex ownership to the next waiter, and yield
// our time slice so that the next waiter can start to run immediately.
// Note: mutexLocked is not set, the waiter will set it after wakeup.
// But mutex is still considered locked if mutexStarving is set,
// so new coming goroutines won't acquire it.
runtime_Semrelease(&m.sema, true, 2)
}
}
|