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Memory Pool System Project


                        THREAD SAFETY IN THE MPS
                        design.mps.thread-safety
                           incomplete design
                             dsm 1995-10-03


INTRODUCTION:

This describes how Thread Safety is achieved in the MPS


OVERVIEW:

The MPS is expected to run in an environment with multiple threads all calling 
into the MPS.  The initial approach is very simple.  Some of the code is known 
to operate with exclusive access to the data it manipulates, so this code is 
safe.  For the rest of the code, shared data structures are locked by the use 
of a single binary lock (design.mps.lock(0)) per arena.  This lock is claimed 
on entry to the MPS and released on exit from it.  So there is at most a single 
thread (per arena) running "inside" the MPS at a time.


REQUIREMENTS:

.req.mt: Code must work correctly in presence of multiple threads all calling 
into the MPS.

.req.perf: Performance should not be unreasonably hindered.


ARCHITECTURE:

.arch.arena: Arena Lock: no shared data between arenas
.arch.global.binary: Global binary lock: protects mutable data shared between 
arenas - i.e. the arena ring, see design.mps.arena.static.ring.lock.
.arch.global.recursive: Global recursive lock: protects static data which must 
be initialized once - e.g. pool classes, see design.mps.protocol.impl.init-lock
.
.arch.other: Other: data not shared
.arch.static: static data: sigs: shared-non-mutable always inited to same thing.

.arena-entry: Each arena has a single lock.
Externally visible calls fall into two categories.
Simple: arena lock not held.  Lock is claimed on entry, and released on exit.
Recall: These are callable only after a call-back from the MPS.  In this case a 
arena lock is already held.

.interface: The definition of the interface should guarantee safe use of calls 
(from a locking point of view).  For example, a buffer must be exclusive to a 
thread.

.buffers: The buffer code is designed not to need a lock in the fast case.  A 
lock is only claimed on the exceptional reserve, trip and commit cases (fill 
and trip?).  A buffer contains references to shared data (via pool field).  
Accessing this shared data must involve a lock.  

.deadlock: A strict ordering is required between the global and arena locks to 
prevent deadlock. The binary global lock may not be claimed while either the 
arena or recursive global lock is held; the arena lock may not be claimed while 
the recursive global lock is held. Each arena lock is independent of all other 
arena locks; i.e. a thread may not attempt to claim more than one arena lock at 
a time.



ANALYSIS:

.anal.simple: To have the code functioning correctly it should be easy to 
change correctly.  So a simple approach is desirable.  We have to also ensure 
that performance is not unreasonably downgraded.  

Performance cost of Locking

.lock-cost:  The cost of locking in performance terms are:
.lock-cost.overhead: the overhead of claiming and releasing locks.
.lock-cost.pause: the pauses caused by one thread being blocked on another 
thread.
.lock-cost.wait: the time wasted by one thread being blocked on another thread.

.anal.perf.signif: .lock-cost.pause is significant if there are MPS functions 
that take a long time.  Using more locks, e.g. having a lock per pool as well 
as a lock per arena, is a way of decreasing the locking conflict between 
threads (.lock-cost.pause and .lock-cost.wait).  However this could increase 
.lock-cost.overhead significantly.

.anal.perf.work: But all MPS functions imply a small work-load unless a 
collection is taking place.  In the case of a collection, in practice and 
certainly in the near future, all threads will most likely be suspended while 
the collection work is going on.  (The pages being scanned will need to be 
unprotected which implies the mutator will have to be stopped.)  We also have 
to remember that unless we are running on genuine multiprocessor 
.lock-cost.wait is irrelevant.

.anal.perf.alloc: During typical use we expect that it is allocation that is 
the most frequent activity.  Allocation buffers (design.mps.buffer) are 
designed to allow allocation in concurrent threads without needing a lock.  So 
the most significant time a thread spends in the MPS will be on a buffer-fill 
or during a collection.  The next most significant use is likely to be buffer 
create and deletion, as a separate buffer will be required for each thread.

.anal.perf.lock: So overall the performance cost of locking is, I estimate, 
most significantly the overhead of calling the locking functions.  Hence it 
would be undesirable from a performance point of view to have more than one 
lock.

Recursive vs Binary locks

.anal.reentrance: The simplest way to lock the code safely is to define which 
code runs inside or outside the lock.  Calling from the outside to the inside 
implies a lock has to be claimed.  Returning means the lock has to be 
released.  Control flow from outside to outside and from inside to inside needs 
no locking action.  To implement this a function defined on the external 
interface needs to claim the lock on entry and release it on exit.  Our code 
currently uses some external functions with the lock already held.  There are 
two ways to implement this:

.recursive: Each external function claims a recursive lock.
+ simple
- have to worry about locking depth
- extra locking overhead on internal calls of external functions

.binary: Each external function claims a binary lock.  Replace each internal 
call of an external function with a call to a newly defined internal one.
- more code
+ slightly easier to reason about

.anal.strategy: It seems that the .recursive strategy is the easiest to 
implement first, but could be evolved into a .binary strategy.  (That evolution 
has now happened.  tony 1999-08-31).





IDEAS:

.sol.arena-lock: Lock per arena which locks all MPS structures associated with 
the arena, except allocation buffers.

.sol.init: Shared static data may not be changed.  It is initialised before 
being read, and if re-initalised the values written must be identical to those 
already there.  Essentially only read-only shared static data is allowed.

.sol.fine-grain: Use finer grained locks, e.g. a lock per per pool instance.  
Arena lock locks only operations on arena.  Pool locks are claimed per pool.  
An ordering on pool instances would avoid deadlock.

.sol.global: Use global locks for genuinely global data which must be updated 
dynamically. An ordering between global and arena locks would avoid deadlock.



IMPLEMENTATION:

Use MPS locks (design.mps.lock) to do locking.

Locking Functions

ArenaEnter/ArenaLeave are used to claim and release the arena lock.  To 
implement this:
- there is a lock for every arena. The arena class init function allocates the 
lock as well as the arena itself.
- ArenaInit LockInits the lock and initializes the pointer to it from the arena.
- ArenaDestroy LockFinishs it.
- ArenaEnter function for claiming the lock
- ArenaLeave function for releasing the lock

Shared and Non-Shared Data

non-shared data is data for which no other thread has a handle on it.
shared-non-mutable data is data which is never changed after initialisation.  
It may be re-initialised, if re-initialisation does not change its value.
atomically updatable data is data which is not locked, but may be shared 
because it is in a consistent state before and after an update.

A function is "safe" if it may safely execute without exclusive access to the 
data it manipulates.

A "safe" function may:
- call other safe functions
- manipulate non-shared data
- read shared-non-mutable data
- claim the arena lock around code which may manipulate shared data in the 
arena.

For each function in the external MPS interface either
- the function ArenaEnter on entry and ArenaLeave on exit
- the function uses PoolArena to identify the arena, before claiming the lock
- the function uses BufferPool & PoolArena to identify the arena, before 
claiming the lock
- the function is not defined as external but is listed for explicitness.
- only claim the lock in otherwise unsafe situations (buffer code)????
- the function may be called externally but only in a situation where the arena 
lock is already held
- the function is the unique accessor of its data.

So PoolArena and BufferPool must be "safe".
pool->arena is shared-non-mutable
buffer->pool is shared-non-mutable

Validation

We have to be careful about validation.  Any function that is called from a 
arena-safe function without the arena-lock held, must itself be safe, or 
manipulating non-shared data.
For example calling PoolIsValid before claiming the lock would be wrong if 
PoolIsValid is unsafe.  Defining it to be safe would involve locking it, which 
if done in all similar situations would be very expensive.

Possibly remove validation from accessor methods; replace with sig check and 
isvalid calls in callers of accessor functions.

Annotations?:
  safe
  non-shared
  shared-non-mutable

Safe functions:

Arena
  ArenaCreate      no shared data; no lock; calls LockInit
  ArenaDestroy     no shared data; no lock (should only finish arena after 
use); calls LockFinish
  ArenaDescribe    lock

Root
For the purposes of locking this module can be thought of as external.  
  RootCreate       calls create
  RootCreateTable  calls create
  create           lock
  RootDestroy      lock
  RootDescribe     lock

will be attached to arena, can lock now.


Pool               
  PoolCreate / PoolCreateV   lock (Create calls CreateV which locks).
  PoolDestroy      lock
  PoolAlloc        lock
  PoolFree         lock
  PoolArena        accesses shared-non-mutable data only
  PoolDescribe     lock

Format
  FormatCreate   lock
  FormatDestroy  lock

Buffer
  BufferCreate   lock
  BufferDestroy  lock
  BufferFill     lock
  BufferTrip     lock
  BufferPool     accesses shared-non-mutable data only
  BufferDescribe lock
  BufferCommit   "unsafe": buffer may be used by single thread only. (but safe 
wrt arena)
  BufferReserve  "unsafe": also


PoolClass      -- only shared data is static and non-mutable
  PoolClass
  PoolClassAMC
  PoolClassMV
  PoolClassMFS

Sig            -- as with PoolClasses, relies on static data reinitialised to 
constant value

Collect
  Collect           lock

Thread
  ThreadRegister    lock
  ThreadDeregister  lock



A. References

B. Document History

2002-06-21 RB Converted from MMInfo database design document.

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