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Date:      Sat, 19 Dec 2009 15:56:38 +0100 (CET)
From:      Harti Brandt <hartmut.brandt@dlr.de>
To:        Ulrich =?utf-8?B?U3DDtnJsZWlu?= <uqs@spoerlein.net>
Cc:        freebsd-arch@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: network statistics in SMP
Message-ID:  <20091219154206.E93919@beagle.kn.op.dlr.de>
In-Reply-To: <20091219112711.GR55913@acme.spoerlein.net>
References:  <20091215103759.P97203@beagle.kn.op.dlr.de> <200912150812.35521.jhb@freebsd.org> <20091215183859.S53283@beagle.kn.op.dlr.de> <200912151313.28326.jhb@freebsd.org> <20091219112711.GR55913@acme.spoerlein.net>

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On Sat, 19 Dec 2009, Ulrich Sprlein wrote:

US>On Tue, 15.12.2009 at 13:13:28 -0500, John Baldwin wrote:
US>> On Tuesday 15 December 2009 12:45:13 pm Harti Brandt wrote:
US>> > I see. I was also thinking along these lines, but was not sure whether it 
US>> > is worth the trouble. I suppose this does not help to implement 64-bit 
US>> > counters on 32-bit architectures, though, because you cannot read them 
US>> > reliably without locking to sum them up, right?
US>> 
US>> Either that or you just accept that you have a small race since it is only stats. :)
US>
US>This might be stupid, but can we not easily *read* 64bit counters
US>on 32bit machines like this:
US>
US>do {
US>    h1 = read_upper_32bits;
US>    l1 = read_lower_32bits;
US>    h2 = read_upper_32bits;
US>    l2 = read_lower_32bits; /* not needed */
US>} while (h1 != h2);
US>
US>sum64 = (h1<<32) + l1;
US>
US>or something like that? If h2 does not change between readings, no
US>wrap-around has occured. If l1 was read in between the readings of h1
US>and h2, the code above is sound. Right?

I suppose this works only if it would be guaranteed that the CPU modifying 
the 64-bit value does this somehow faster than the CPU reading the data:

CPU1                    CPU2
----                    ----
write new h
			read h1 (new h)
			read l1 (old l)
			read h2 (new h)
write new l

It doesn't work too when the CPU first writes L and the H.

harti



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