cscg22-gearboy

CSCG 2022 Challenge 'Gearboy'
git clone https://git.sinitax.com/sinitax/cscg22-gearboy
Log | Files | Refs | sfeed.txt

SDL_atomic.h (9428B)


      1/*
      2  Simple DirectMedia Layer
      3  Copyright (C) 1997-2014 Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
      4
      5  This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied
      6  warranty.  In no event will the authors be held liable for any damages
      7  arising from the use of this software.
      8
      9  Permission is granted to anyone to use this software for any purpose,
     10  including commercial applications, and to alter it and redistribute it
     11  freely, subject to the following restrictions:
     12
     13  1. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must not
     14     claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this software
     15     in a product, an acknowledgment in the product documentation would be
     16     appreciated but is not required.
     17  2. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be
     18     misrepresented as being the original software.
     19  3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution.
     20*/
     21
     22/**
     23 * \file SDL_atomic.h
     24 *
     25 * Atomic operations.
     26 *
     27 * IMPORTANT:
     28 * If you are not an expert in concurrent lockless programming, you should
     29 * only be using the atomic lock and reference counting functions in this
     30 * file.  In all other cases you should be protecting your data structures
     31 * with full mutexes.
     32 *
     33 * The list of "safe" functions to use are:
     34 *  SDL_AtomicLock()
     35 *  SDL_AtomicUnlock()
     36 *  SDL_AtomicIncRef()
     37 *  SDL_AtomicDecRef()
     38 *
     39 * Seriously, here be dragons!
     40 * ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
     41 *
     42 * You can find out a little more about lockless programming and the
     43 * subtle issues that can arise here:
     44 * http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee418650%28v=vs.85%29.aspx
     45 *
     46 * There's also lots of good information here:
     47 * http://www.1024cores.net/home/lock-free-algorithms
     48 * http://preshing.com/
     49 *
     50 * These operations may or may not actually be implemented using
     51 * processor specific atomic operations. When possible they are
     52 * implemented as true processor specific atomic operations. When that
     53 * is not possible the are implemented using locks that *do* use the
     54 * available atomic operations.
     55 *
     56 * All of the atomic operations that modify memory are full memory barriers.
     57 */
     58
     59#ifndef _SDL_atomic_h_
     60#define _SDL_atomic_h_
     61
     62#include "SDL_stdinc.h"
     63#include "SDL_platform.h"
     64
     65#include "begin_code.h"
     66
     67/* Set up for C function definitions, even when using C++ */
     68#ifdef __cplusplus
     69extern "C" {
     70#endif
     71
     72/**
     73 * \name SDL AtomicLock
     74 *
     75 * The atomic locks are efficient spinlocks using CPU instructions,
     76 * but are vulnerable to starvation and can spin forever if a thread
     77 * holding a lock has been terminated.  For this reason you should
     78 * minimize the code executed inside an atomic lock and never do
     79 * expensive things like API or system calls while holding them.
     80 *
     81 * The atomic locks are not safe to lock recursively.
     82 *
     83 * Porting Note:
     84 * The spin lock functions and type are required and can not be
     85 * emulated because they are used in the atomic emulation code.
     86 */
     87/* @{ */
     88
     89typedef int SDL_SpinLock;
     90
     91/**
     92 * \brief Try to lock a spin lock by setting it to a non-zero value.
     93 *
     94 * \param lock Points to the lock.
     95 *
     96 * \return SDL_TRUE if the lock succeeded, SDL_FALSE if the lock is already held.
     97 */
     98extern DECLSPEC SDL_bool SDLCALL SDL_AtomicTryLock(SDL_SpinLock *lock);
     99
    100/**
    101 * \brief Lock a spin lock by setting it to a non-zero value.
    102 *
    103 * \param lock Points to the lock.
    104 */
    105extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_AtomicLock(SDL_SpinLock *lock);
    106
    107/**
    108 * \brief Unlock a spin lock by setting it to 0. Always returns immediately
    109 *
    110 * \param lock Points to the lock.
    111 */
    112extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_AtomicUnlock(SDL_SpinLock *lock);
    113
    114/* @} *//* SDL AtomicLock */
    115
    116
    117/**
    118 * The compiler barrier prevents the compiler from reordering
    119 * reads and writes to globally visible variables across the call.
    120 */
    121#if defined(_MSC_VER) && (_MSC_VER > 1200)
    122void _ReadWriteBarrier(void);
    123#pragma intrinsic(_ReadWriteBarrier)
    124#define SDL_CompilerBarrier()   _ReadWriteBarrier()
    125#elif defined(__GNUC__) || (defined(__SUNPRO_C) && (__SUNPRO_C >= 0x5120))
    126/* This is correct for all CPUs when using GCC or Solaris Studio 12.1+. */
    127#define SDL_CompilerBarrier()   __asm__ __volatile__ ("" : : : "memory")
    128#else
    129#define SDL_CompilerBarrier()   \
    130{ SDL_SpinLock _tmp = 0; SDL_AtomicLock(&_tmp); SDL_AtomicUnlock(&_tmp); }
    131#endif
    132
    133/**
    134 * Memory barriers are designed to prevent reads and writes from being
    135 * reordered by the compiler and being seen out of order on multi-core CPUs.
    136 *
    137 * A typical pattern would be for thread A to write some data and a flag,
    138 * and for thread B to read the flag and get the data. In this case you
    139 * would insert a release barrier between writing the data and the flag,
    140 * guaranteeing that the data write completes no later than the flag is
    141 * written, and you would insert an acquire barrier between reading the
    142 * flag and reading the data, to ensure that all the reads associated
    143 * with the flag have completed.
    144 *
    145 * In this pattern you should always see a release barrier paired with
    146 * an acquire barrier and you should gate the data reads/writes with a
    147 * single flag variable.
    148 *
    149 * For more information on these semantics, take a look at the blog post:
    150 * http://preshing.com/20120913/acquire-and-release-semantics
    151 */
    152#if defined(__GNUC__) && (defined(__powerpc__) || defined(__ppc__))
    153#define SDL_MemoryBarrierRelease()   __asm__ __volatile__ ("lwsync" : : : "memory")
    154#define SDL_MemoryBarrierAcquire()   __asm__ __volatile__ ("lwsync" : : : "memory")
    155#elif defined(__GNUC__) && defined(__arm__)
    156#if defined(__ARM_ARCH_7__) || defined(__ARM_ARCH_7A__) || defined(__ARM_ARCH_7EM__) || defined(__ARM_ARCH_7R__) || defined(__ARM_ARCH_7M__) || defined(__ARM_ARCH_7S__)
    157#define SDL_MemoryBarrierRelease()   __asm__ __volatile__ ("dmb ish" : : : "memory")
    158#define SDL_MemoryBarrierAcquire()   __asm__ __volatile__ ("dmb ish" : : : "memory")
    159#elif defined(__ARM_ARCH_6__) || defined(__ARM_ARCH_6J__) || defined(__ARM_ARCH_6K__) || defined(__ARM_ARCH_6T2__) || defined(__ARM_ARCH_6Z__) || defined(__ARM_ARCH_6ZK__)
    160#ifdef __thumb__
    161/* The mcr instruction isn't available in thumb mode, use real functions */
    162extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_MemoryBarrierRelease();
    163extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_MemoryBarrierAcquire();
    164#else
    165#define SDL_MemoryBarrierRelease()   __asm__ __volatile__ ("mcr p15, 0, %0, c7, c10, 5" : : "r"(0) : "memory")
    166#define SDL_MemoryBarrierAcquire()   __asm__ __volatile__ ("mcr p15, 0, %0, c7, c10, 5" : : "r"(0) : "memory")
    167#endif /* __thumb__ */
    168#else
    169#define SDL_MemoryBarrierRelease()   __asm__ __volatile__ ("" : : : "memory")
    170#define SDL_MemoryBarrierAcquire()   __asm__ __volatile__ ("" : : : "memory")
    171#endif /* __GNUC__ && __arm__ */
    172#else
    173#if (defined(__SUNPRO_C) && (__SUNPRO_C >= 0x5120))
    174/* This is correct for all CPUs on Solaris when using Solaris Studio 12.1+. */
    175#include <mbarrier.h>
    176#define SDL_MemoryBarrierRelease()  __machine_rel_barrier()
    177#define SDL_MemoryBarrierAcquire()  __machine_acq_barrier()
    178#else
    179/* This is correct for the x86 and x64 CPUs, and we'll expand this over time. */
    180#define SDL_MemoryBarrierRelease()  SDL_CompilerBarrier()
    181#define SDL_MemoryBarrierAcquire()  SDL_CompilerBarrier()
    182#endif
    183#endif
    184
    185/**
    186 * \brief A type representing an atomic integer value.  It is a struct
    187 *        so people don't accidentally use numeric operations on it.
    188 */
    189typedef struct { int value; } SDL_atomic_t;
    190
    191/**
    192 * \brief Set an atomic variable to a new value if it is currently an old value.
    193 *
    194 * \return SDL_TRUE if the atomic variable was set, SDL_FALSE otherwise.
    195 *
    196 * \note If you don't know what this function is for, you shouldn't use it!
    197*/
    198extern DECLSPEC SDL_bool SDLCALL SDL_AtomicCAS(SDL_atomic_t *a, int oldval, int newval);
    199
    200/**
    201 * \brief Set an atomic variable to a value.
    202 *
    203 * \return The previous value of the atomic variable.
    204 */
    205extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_AtomicSet(SDL_atomic_t *a, int v);
    206
    207/**
    208 * \brief Get the value of an atomic variable
    209 */
    210extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_AtomicGet(SDL_atomic_t *a);
    211
    212/**
    213 * \brief Add to an atomic variable.
    214 *
    215 * \return The previous value of the atomic variable.
    216 *
    217 * \note This same style can be used for any number operation
    218 */
    219extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_AtomicAdd(SDL_atomic_t *a, int v);
    220
    221/**
    222 * \brief Increment an atomic variable used as a reference count.
    223 */
    224#ifndef SDL_AtomicIncRef
    225#define SDL_AtomicIncRef(a)    SDL_AtomicAdd(a, 1)
    226#endif
    227
    228/**
    229 * \brief Decrement an atomic variable used as a reference count.
    230 *
    231 * \return SDL_TRUE if the variable reached zero after decrementing,
    232 *         SDL_FALSE otherwise
    233 */
    234#ifndef SDL_AtomicDecRef
    235#define SDL_AtomicDecRef(a)    (SDL_AtomicAdd(a, -1) == 1)
    236#endif
    237
    238/**
    239 * \brief Set a pointer to a new value if it is currently an old value.
    240 *
    241 * \return SDL_TRUE if the pointer was set, SDL_FALSE otherwise.
    242 *
    243 * \note If you don't know what this function is for, you shouldn't use it!
    244*/
    245extern DECLSPEC SDL_bool SDLCALL SDL_AtomicCASPtr(void **a, void *oldval, void *newval);
    246
    247/**
    248 * \brief Set a pointer to a value atomically.
    249 *
    250 * \return The previous value of the pointer.
    251 */
    252extern DECLSPEC void* SDLCALL SDL_AtomicSetPtr(void **a, void* v);
    253
    254/**
    255 * \brief Get the value of a pointer atomically.
    256 */
    257extern DECLSPEC void* SDLCALL SDL_AtomicGetPtr(void **a);
    258
    259/* Ends C function definitions when using C++ */
    260#ifdef __cplusplus
    261}
    262#endif
    263
    264#include "close_code.h"
    265
    266#endif /* _SDL_atomic_h_ */
    267
    268/* vi: set ts=4 sw=4 expandtab: */