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Austin Schuh745610d2015-09-06 18:19:50 -07001// -*- Mode: C++; c-basic-offset: 2; indent-tabs-mode: nil -*-
2// Copyright (c) 2007, Google Inc.
3// All rights reserved.
4//
5// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
7// met:
8//
9// * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
10// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
11// * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
12// copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
13// in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
14// distribution.
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16// contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
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18//
19// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
20// "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
21// LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
22// A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
23// OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
24// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
25// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
26// DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
27// THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
28// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
29// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
30//
31// ---
32// Author: Craig Silverstein.
33//
34// A simple mutex wrapper, supporting locks and read-write locks.
35// You should assume the locks are *not* re-entrant.
36//
37// To use: you should define the following macros in your configure.ac:
38// ACX_PTHREAD
39// AC_RWLOCK
40// The latter is defined in ../autoconf.
41//
42// This class is meant to be internal-only and should be wrapped by an
43// internal namespace. Before you use this module, please give the
44// name of your internal namespace for this module. Or, if you want
45// to expose it, you'll want to move it to the Google namespace. We
46// cannot put this class in global namespace because there can be some
47// problems when we have multiple versions of Mutex in each shared object.
48//
49// NOTE: TryLock() is broken for NO_THREADS mode, at least in NDEBUG
50// mode.
51//
52// CYGWIN NOTE: Cygwin support for rwlock seems to be buggy:
53// http://www.cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2008-12/msg00017.html
54// Because of that, we might as well use windows locks for
55// cygwin. They seem to be more reliable than the cygwin pthreads layer.
56//
57// TRICKY IMPLEMENTATION NOTE:
58// This class is designed to be safe to use during
59// dynamic-initialization -- that is, by global constructors that are
60// run before main() starts. The issue in this case is that
61// dynamic-initialization happens in an unpredictable order, and it
62// could be that someone else's dynamic initializer could call a
63// function that tries to acquire this mutex -- but that all happens
64// before this mutex's constructor has run. (This can happen even if
65// the mutex and the function that uses the mutex are in the same .cc
66// file.) Basically, because Mutex does non-trivial work in its
67// constructor, it's not, in the naive implementation, safe to use
68// before dynamic initialization has run on it.
69//
70// The solution used here is to pair the actual mutex primitive with a
71// bool that is set to true when the mutex is dynamically initialized.
72// (Before that it's false.) Then we modify all mutex routines to
73// look at the bool, and not try to lock/unlock until the bool makes
74// it to true (which happens after the Mutex constructor has run.)
75//
76// This works because before main() starts -- particularly, during
77// dynamic initialization -- there are no threads, so a) it's ok that
78// the mutex operations are a no-op, since we don't need locking then
79// anyway; and b) we can be quite confident our bool won't change
80// state between a call to Lock() and a call to Unlock() (that would
81// require a global constructor in one translation unit to call Lock()
82// and another global constructor in another translation unit to call
83// Unlock() later, which is pretty perverse).
84//
85// That said, it's tricky, and can conceivably fail; it's safest to
86// avoid trying to acquire a mutex in a global constructor, if you
87// can. One way it can fail is that a really smart compiler might
88// initialize the bool to true at static-initialization time (too
89// early) rather than at dynamic-initialization time. To discourage
90// that, we set is_safe_ to true in code (not the constructor
91// colon-initializer) and set it to true via a function that always
92// evaluates to true, but that the compiler can't know always
93// evaluates to true. This should be good enough.
94//
95// A related issue is code that could try to access the mutex
96// after it's been destroyed in the global destructors (because
97// the Mutex global destructor runs before some other global
98// destructor, that tries to acquire the mutex). The way we
99// deal with this is by taking a constructor arg that global
100// mutexes should pass in, that causes the destructor to do no
101// work. We still depend on the compiler not doing anything
102// weird to a Mutex's memory after it is destroyed, but for a
103// static global variable, that's pretty safe.
104
105#ifndef GOOGLE_MUTEX_H_
106#define GOOGLE_MUTEX_H_
107
108#include <config.h>
109
110#if defined(NO_THREADS)
111 typedef int MutexType; // to keep a lock-count
112#elif defined(_WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__) || defined(__CYGWIN32__)
113# ifndef WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN
114# define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN // We only need minimal includes
115# endif
116 // We need Windows NT or later for TryEnterCriticalSection(). If you
117 // don't need that functionality, you can remove these _WIN32_WINNT
118 // lines, and change TryLock() to assert(0) or something.
119# ifndef _WIN32_WINNT
120# define _WIN32_WINNT 0x0400
121# endif
122# include <windows.h>
123 typedef CRITICAL_SECTION MutexType;
124#elif defined(HAVE_PTHREAD) && defined(HAVE_RWLOCK)
125 // Needed for pthread_rwlock_*. If it causes problems, you could take it
126 // out, but then you'd have to unset HAVE_RWLOCK (at least on linux -- it
127 // *does* cause problems for FreeBSD, or MacOSX, but isn't needed
128 // for locking there.)
129# ifdef __linux__
130# define _XOPEN_SOURCE 500 // may be needed to get the rwlock calls
131# endif
132# include <pthread.h>
133 typedef pthread_rwlock_t MutexType;
134#elif defined(HAVE_PTHREAD)
135# include <pthread.h>
136 typedef pthread_mutex_t MutexType;
137#else
138# error Need to implement mutex.h for your architecture, or #define NO_THREADS
139#endif
140
141#include <assert.h>
142#include <stdlib.h> // for abort()
143
144#define MUTEX_NAMESPACE perftools_mutex_namespace
145
146namespace MUTEX_NAMESPACE {
147
148class Mutex {
149 public:
150 // This is used for the single-arg constructor
151 enum LinkerInitialized { LINKER_INITIALIZED };
152
153 // Create a Mutex that is not held by anybody. This constructor is
154 // typically used for Mutexes allocated on the heap or the stack.
155 inline Mutex();
156 // This constructor should be used for global, static Mutex objects.
157 // It inhibits work being done by the destructor, which makes it
158 // safer for code that tries to acqiure this mutex in their global
159 // destructor.
160 inline Mutex(LinkerInitialized);
161
162 // Destructor
163 inline ~Mutex();
164
165 inline void Lock(); // Block if needed until free then acquire exclusively
166 inline void Unlock(); // Release a lock acquired via Lock()
167 inline bool TryLock(); // If free, Lock() and return true, else return false
168 // Note that on systems that don't support read-write locks, these may
169 // be implemented as synonyms to Lock() and Unlock(). So you can use
170 // these for efficiency, but don't use them anyplace where being able
171 // to do shared reads is necessary to avoid deadlock.
172 inline void ReaderLock(); // Block until free or shared then acquire a share
173 inline void ReaderUnlock(); // Release a read share of this Mutex
174 inline void WriterLock() { Lock(); } // Acquire an exclusive lock
175 inline void WriterUnlock() { Unlock(); } // Release a lock from WriterLock()
176
177 private:
178 MutexType mutex_;
179 // We want to make sure that the compiler sets is_safe_ to true only
180 // when we tell it to, and never makes assumptions is_safe_ is
181 // always true. volatile is the most reliable way to do that.
182 volatile bool is_safe_;
183 // This indicates which constructor was called.
184 bool destroy_;
185
186 inline void SetIsSafe() { is_safe_ = true; }
187
188 // Catch the error of writing Mutex when intending MutexLock.
189 Mutex(Mutex* /*ignored*/) {}
190 // Disallow "evil" constructors
191 Mutex(const Mutex&);
192 void operator=(const Mutex&);
193};
194
195// Now the implementation of Mutex for various systems
196#if defined(NO_THREADS)
197
198// When we don't have threads, we can be either reading or writing,
199// but not both. We can have lots of readers at once (in no-threads
200// mode, that's most likely to happen in recursive function calls),
201// but only one writer. We represent this by having mutex_ be -1 when
202// writing and a number > 0 when reading (and 0 when no lock is held).
203//
204// In debug mode, we assert these invariants, while in non-debug mode
205// we do nothing, for efficiency. That's why everything is in an
206// assert.
207
208Mutex::Mutex() : mutex_(0) { }
209Mutex::Mutex(Mutex::LinkerInitialized) : mutex_(0) { }
210Mutex::~Mutex() { assert(mutex_ == 0); }
211void Mutex::Lock() { assert(--mutex_ == -1); }
212void Mutex::Unlock() { assert(mutex_++ == -1); }
213bool Mutex::TryLock() { if (mutex_) return false; Lock(); return true; }
214void Mutex::ReaderLock() { assert(++mutex_ > 0); }
215void Mutex::ReaderUnlock() { assert(mutex_-- > 0); }
216
217#elif defined(_WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__) || defined(__CYGWIN32__)
218
219Mutex::Mutex() : destroy_(true) {
220 InitializeCriticalSection(&mutex_);
221 SetIsSafe();
222}
223Mutex::Mutex(LinkerInitialized) : destroy_(false) {
224 InitializeCriticalSection(&mutex_);
225 SetIsSafe();
226}
227Mutex::~Mutex() { if (destroy_) DeleteCriticalSection(&mutex_); }
228void Mutex::Lock() { if (is_safe_) EnterCriticalSection(&mutex_); }
229void Mutex::Unlock() { if (is_safe_) LeaveCriticalSection(&mutex_); }
230bool Mutex::TryLock() { return is_safe_ ?
231 TryEnterCriticalSection(&mutex_) != 0 : true; }
232void Mutex::ReaderLock() { Lock(); } // we don't have read-write locks
233void Mutex::ReaderUnlock() { Unlock(); }
234
235#elif defined(HAVE_PTHREAD) && defined(HAVE_RWLOCK)
236
237#define SAFE_PTHREAD(fncall) do { /* run fncall if is_safe_ is true */ \
238 if (is_safe_ && fncall(&mutex_) != 0) abort(); \
239} while (0)
240
241Mutex::Mutex() : destroy_(true) {
242 SetIsSafe();
243 if (is_safe_ && pthread_rwlock_init(&mutex_, NULL) != 0) abort();
244}
245Mutex::Mutex(Mutex::LinkerInitialized) : destroy_(false) {
246 SetIsSafe();
247 if (is_safe_ && pthread_rwlock_init(&mutex_, NULL) != 0) abort();
248}
249Mutex::~Mutex() { if (destroy_) SAFE_PTHREAD(pthread_rwlock_destroy); }
250void Mutex::Lock() { SAFE_PTHREAD(pthread_rwlock_wrlock); }
251void Mutex::Unlock() { SAFE_PTHREAD(pthread_rwlock_unlock); }
252bool Mutex::TryLock() { return is_safe_ ?
253 pthread_rwlock_trywrlock(&mutex_) == 0 : true; }
254void Mutex::ReaderLock() { SAFE_PTHREAD(pthread_rwlock_rdlock); }
255void Mutex::ReaderUnlock() { SAFE_PTHREAD(pthread_rwlock_unlock); }
256#undef SAFE_PTHREAD
257
258#elif defined(HAVE_PTHREAD)
259
260#define SAFE_PTHREAD(fncall) do { /* run fncall if is_safe_ is true */ \
261 if (is_safe_ && fncall(&mutex_) != 0) abort(); \
262} while (0)
263
264Mutex::Mutex() : destroy_(true) {
265 SetIsSafe();
266 if (is_safe_ && pthread_mutex_init(&mutex_, NULL) != 0) abort();
267}
268Mutex::Mutex(Mutex::LinkerInitialized) : destroy_(false) {
269 SetIsSafe();
270 if (is_safe_ && pthread_mutex_init(&mutex_, NULL) != 0) abort();
271}
272Mutex::~Mutex() { if (destroy_) SAFE_PTHREAD(pthread_mutex_destroy); }
273void Mutex::Lock() { SAFE_PTHREAD(pthread_mutex_lock); }
274void Mutex::Unlock() { SAFE_PTHREAD(pthread_mutex_unlock); }
275bool Mutex::TryLock() { return is_safe_ ?
276 pthread_mutex_trylock(&mutex_) == 0 : true; }
277void Mutex::ReaderLock() { Lock(); }
278void Mutex::ReaderUnlock() { Unlock(); }
279#undef SAFE_PTHREAD
280
281#endif
282
283// --------------------------------------------------------------------------
284// Some helper classes
285
286// MutexLock(mu) acquires mu when constructed and releases it when destroyed.
287class MutexLock {
288 public:
289 explicit MutexLock(Mutex *mu) : mu_(mu) { mu_->Lock(); }
290 ~MutexLock() { mu_->Unlock(); }
291 private:
292 Mutex * const mu_;
293 // Disallow "evil" constructors
294 MutexLock(const MutexLock&);
295 void operator=(const MutexLock&);
296};
297
298// ReaderMutexLock and WriterMutexLock do the same, for rwlocks
299class ReaderMutexLock {
300 public:
301 explicit ReaderMutexLock(Mutex *mu) : mu_(mu) { mu_->ReaderLock(); }
302 ~ReaderMutexLock() { mu_->ReaderUnlock(); }
303 private:
304 Mutex * const mu_;
305 // Disallow "evil" constructors
306 ReaderMutexLock(const ReaderMutexLock&);
307 void operator=(const ReaderMutexLock&);
308};
309
310class WriterMutexLock {
311 public:
312 explicit WriterMutexLock(Mutex *mu) : mu_(mu) { mu_->WriterLock(); }
313 ~WriterMutexLock() { mu_->WriterUnlock(); }
314 private:
315 Mutex * const mu_;
316 // Disallow "evil" constructors
317 WriterMutexLock(const WriterMutexLock&);
318 void operator=(const WriterMutexLock&);
319};
320
321// Catch bug where variable name is omitted, e.g. MutexLock (&mu);
322#define MutexLock(x) COMPILE_ASSERT(0, mutex_lock_decl_missing_var_name)
323#define ReaderMutexLock(x) COMPILE_ASSERT(0, rmutex_lock_decl_missing_var_name)
324#define WriterMutexLock(x) COMPILE_ASSERT(0, wmutex_lock_decl_missing_var_name)
325
326} // namespace MUTEX_NAMESPACE
327
328using namespace MUTEX_NAMESPACE;
329
330#undef MUTEX_NAMESPACE
331
332#endif /* #define GOOGLE_SIMPLE_MUTEX_H_ */