Operating Systems Lecture Notes
Lecture 5
Implementing Synchronization Operations
Martin C. Rinard
- How do we implement synchronization operations like locks?
Can build synchronization operations out of atomic reads and writes.
There is a lot of literature on how to do this, one algorithm
is called the bakery algorithm. But, this
is slow and cumbersome to use. So, most machines have hardware
support for synchronization - they provide synchronization
instructions.
- On a uniprocessor, the only thing that will make
multiple instruction sequences not atomic is interrupts.
So, if want to do a critical section, turn off interrupts before the
critical section and turn on interrupts after the critical
section. Guaranteed atomicity. It is also fairly efficient.
Early versions of Unix did this.
- Why not just use turning off interrupts? Two main
disadvantages: can't use in a multiprocessor, and can't use
directly from user program for synchronization.
- Test-And-Set. The test and set instruction atomically
checks if a memory location is zero, and if so, sets the
memory location to 1. If the memory location is 1, it does
nothing. It returns the old value of the memory location.
You can use test and set to implement
locks as follows:
The problem with this implementation is busy-waiting. What if
one thread already has the lock, and another thread wants to
acquire the lock? The acquiring thread will spin until the
thread that already has the lock unlocks it.
- What if the threads are running on a uniprocessor?
How long will the acquiring thread spin? Until it expires
its quantum and thread that will unlock the lock runs.
So on a uniprocessor,
if can't get the thread the first time,
should just suspend. So, lock acquisition looks like this:
while (test-and-set(l) == 1) {
currentThread->Yield();
}
Can make it even better by having a queue lock that queues up the
waiting threads and gives the lock to the first thread in the queue.
So, threads never try to acquire lock more than once.
- On a multiprocessor, it is less clear. Process that
will unlock the lock may be running on another processor.
Maybe should spin just a little while, in hopes that other process
will release lock. To evaluate spinning and suspending strategies, need to
come up with a cost for each suspension algorithm. The cost
is the amount of CPU time the algorithm uses to acquire a lock.
- There are three components of the cost: spinning,
suspending and resuming. What is the cost
of spinning? Waste the CPU for the spin time. What is cost
of suspending and resuming? Amount of CPU time it takes to suspend the
thread and restart it when the thread acquires the lock.
- Each lock acquisition algorithm spins for a while, then suspends
if it didn't get the lock. The optimal algorithm is as follows:
- If the lock will be free in less than the suspend and resume time,
spin until acquire the lock.
- If the lock will be free in more than the suspend and resume time,
suspend immediately.
Obviously, cannot implement this algorithm - it requires knowledge of the
future, which we do not in general have.
- How do we evaluate practical algorithms - algorithms that spin for
a while, then suspend. Well, we compare them with the optimal algorithm
in the worst case for the practical algorithm. What is the worst case
for any practical algorithm relative to the optimal algorithm? When
the lock become free just after the practical algorithm stops spinning.
- What is worst-case cost of algorithm that spins for the
suspend and resume time, then suspends? (Will call this the SR algorithm).
Two times the suspend and resume time.
The worst case is when the lock is unlocked just after the thread starts
the suspend. The optimal algorithm just spins until the lock
is unlocked, taking the suspend and resume time to acquire the lock.
The SR algorithm costs twice the suspend and resume time -it first
spins for the suspend and resume time, then suspends, then gets the lock,
then resumes.
- What about other algorithms that
spin for a different fixed amount of time then block? Are all worse than
the SR algorithm.
- If spin for less than suspend and resume time then suspend
(call this the LT-SR algorithm),
worst case is when lock becomes free just after start the suspend.
In this case the the algorithm will cost spinning time plus suspend
and resume time. The SR algorithm will just cost the spinning time.
- If spin for greater than suspend and resume time then suspend
(call this the GR-SR algorithm), worst case is again when lock
becomes free just after start the suspend. In this case the SR algorithm
will also suspend and resume, but it will spin for less time than the
GT-SR algorithm
Of course, in practice locks may not exhibit
worst case behavior, so best algorithm depends on locking and
unlocking patterns actually observed.
- Here is the SR algorithm.
Again, can be improved with use of queueing locks.
notDone = test-and-set(l);
if (!notDone) return;
start = readClock();
while (notDone) {
stop = readClock();
if (stop - start >= suspendAndResumeTime) {
currentThread->Yield();
start = readClock();
}
notDone = test-and-set(l);
}
- There is an orthogonal issue. test-and-set instruction
typically consumes
bus resources every time. But a load instruction caches
the data. Subsequent loads come out of cache and never hit the
bus. So, can do something like this for inital algorithm:
while (1) {
if !test-and-set(l) break;
while (*l == 1);
}
- Are other instructions that can be used to implement spin
locks - swap instruction, for example.
- On modern RISC machines, test-and-set and swap may cause
implementation headaches. Would rather do something that fits
into load/store nature of architecture. So, have a non-blocking
abstraction: Load Linked(LL)/Store Conditional(SC).
- Semantics of LL: Load memory location into register and mark
it as loaded by this processor. A memory location can be marked
as loaded by more than one processor.
- Semantics of SC: if the memory location is marked
as loaded by this processor, store
the new value and remove all marks from the memory location.
Otherwise, don't perform the store. Return whether
or not the store succeeded.
- Here is how to use LL/SC to implement the lock operation:
while (1) {
LL r1, lock
if (r1 == 0) {
LI r2, 1
if (SC r2, lock) break;
}
}
Unlock operation is the same as before.
- Can also use LL/SC to implement some operations (like
increment) directly. People have built up a whole bunch of theory
dealing with the difference in power between stuff like LL/SC
and test-and-set.
while (1) {
LL r1, lock
ADDI r1, 1, r1
if (SC r2, lock) break;
}
- Note that the increment operation is non-blocking. If two threads
start to perform the increment at the same time, neither will block -
both will complete the add and only one will successfully perform
the SC. The other will retry. So, it eliminates problems with locking
like: one thread acquires locks and dies, or one thread acquires locks
and is suspended for a long time, preventing other threads that need
to acquire the lock from proceeding.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute this
material for educational purposes only, provided that the
following credit line is included: "Operating Systems
Lecture Notes, Copyright 1997 Martin C. Rinard."
Permission is granted to alter and distribute this material provided
that the following credit line is included:
"Adapted from Operating Systems
Lecture Notes, Copyright 1997 Martin C. Rinard."
Martin Rinard, osnotes@cag.lcs.mit.edu, www.cag.lcs.mit.edu/~rinard
8/25/1998