#define pr_fmt(fmt) "%s: " fmt "\n", __func__ #include #include /* * Initially, a percpu refcount is just a set of percpu counters. Initially, we * don't try to detect the ref hitting 0 - which means that get/put can just * increment or decrement the local counter. Note that the counter on a * particular cpu can (and will) wrap - this is fine, when we go to shutdown the * percpu counters will all sum to the correct value * * (More precisely: because moduler arithmatic is commutative the sum of all the * pcpu_count vars will be equal to what it would have been if all the gets and * puts were done to a single integer, even if some of the percpu integers * overflow or underflow). * * The real trick to implementing percpu refcounts is shutdown. We can't detect * the ref hitting 0 on every put - this would require global synchronization * and defeat the whole purpose of using percpu refs. * * What we do is require the user to keep track of the initial refcount; we know * the ref can't hit 0 before the user drops the initial ref, so as long as we * convert to non percpu mode before the initial ref is dropped everything * works. * * Converting to non percpu mode is done with some RCUish stuff in * percpu_ref_kill. Additionally, we need a bias value so that the atomic_t * can't hit 0 before we've added up all the percpu refs. */ #define PCPU_COUNT_BIAS (1U << 31) static unsigned __percpu *pcpu_count_ptr(struct percpu_ref *ref) { return (unsigned __percpu *)(ref->pcpu_count_ptr & ~PCPU_REF_DEAD); } /** * percpu_ref_init - initialize a percpu refcount * @ref: percpu_ref to initialize * @release: function which will be called when refcount hits 0 * * Initializes the refcount in single atomic counter mode with a refcount of 1; * analagous to atomic_set(ref, 1). * * Note that @release must not sleep - it may potentially be called from RCU * callback context by percpu_ref_kill(). */ int percpu_ref_init(struct percpu_ref *ref, percpu_ref_func_t *release) { atomic_set(&ref->count, 1 + PCPU_COUNT_BIAS); ref->pcpu_count_ptr = (unsigned long)alloc_percpu(unsigned); if (!ref->pcpu_count_ptr) return -ENOMEM; ref->release = release; return 0; } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(percpu_ref_init); /** * percpu_ref_exit - undo percpu_ref_init() * @ref: percpu_ref to exit * * This function exits @ref. The caller is responsible for ensuring that * @ref is no longer in active use. The usual places to invoke this * function from are the @ref->release() callback or in init failure path * where percpu_ref_init() succeeded but other parts of the initialization * of the embedding object failed. */ void percpu_ref_exit(struct percpu_ref *ref) { unsigned __percpu *pcpu_count = pcpu_count_ptr(ref); if (pcpu_count) { free_percpu(pcpu_count); ref->pcpu_count_ptr = PCPU_REF_DEAD; } } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(percpu_ref_exit); static void percpu_ref_kill_rcu(struct rcu_head *rcu) { struct percpu_ref *ref = container_of(rcu, struct percpu_ref, rcu); unsigned __percpu *pcpu_count = pcpu_count_ptr(ref); unsigned count = 0; int cpu; for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) count += *per_cpu_ptr(pcpu_count, cpu); pr_debug("global %i pcpu %i", atomic_read(&ref->count), (int) count); /* * It's crucial that we sum the percpu counters _before_ adding the sum * to &ref->count; since gets could be happening on one cpu while puts * happen on another, adding a single cpu's count could cause * @ref->count to hit 0 before we've got a consistent value - but the * sum of all the counts will be consistent and correct. * * Subtracting the bias value then has to happen _after_ adding count to * &ref->count; we need the bias value to prevent &ref->count from * reaching 0 before we add the percpu counts. But doing it at the same * time is equivalent and saves us atomic operations: */ atomic_add((int) count - PCPU_COUNT_BIAS, &ref->count); WARN_ONCE(atomic_read(&ref->count) <= 0, "percpu ref <= 0 (%i)", atomic_read(&ref->count)); /* @ref is viewed as dead on all CPUs, send out kill confirmation */ if (ref->confirm_kill) ref->confirm_kill(ref); /* * Now we're in single atomic_t mode with a consistent refcount, so it's * safe to drop our initial ref: */ percpu_ref_put(ref); } /** * percpu_ref_kill_and_confirm - drop the initial ref and schedule confirmation * @ref: percpu_ref to kill * @confirm_kill: optional confirmation callback * * Equivalent to percpu_ref_kill() but also schedules kill confirmation if * @confirm_kill is not NULL. @confirm_kill, which may not block, will be * called after @ref is seen as dead from all CPUs - all further * invocations of percpu_ref_tryget() will fail. See percpu_ref_tryget() * for more details. * * Due to the way percpu_ref is implemented, @confirm_kill will be called * after at least one full RCU grace period has passed but this is an * implementation detail and callers must not depend on it. */ void percpu_ref_kill_and_confirm(struct percpu_ref *ref, percpu_ref_func_t *confirm_kill) { WARN_ONCE(ref->pcpu_count_ptr & PCPU_REF_DEAD, "percpu_ref_kill() called more than once!\n"); ref->pcpu_count_ptr |= PCPU_REF_DEAD; ref->confirm_kill = confirm_kill; call_rcu_sched(&ref->rcu, percpu_ref_kill_rcu); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(percpu_ref_kill_and_confirm);