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Use a non-locking initial test in TAS_SPIN on AArch64.
Our testing showed that this is helpful at sufficiently high contention levels and doesn't hurt performance on smaller machines. The new TAS_SPIN macro for AArch64 is identical to the ones added for PPC and x86_64 (see commitsbc2a050d40
andb03d196be0
). Reported-by: Salvatore Dipietro Reviewed-by: Jingtang Zhang, Andres Freund Tested-by: Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ZxgDEb_VpWyNZKB_%40nathan
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@ -263,18 +263,24 @@ tas(volatile slock_t *lock)
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#define S_UNLOCK(lock) __sync_lock_release(lock)
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/*
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* Using an ISB instruction to delay in spinlock loops appears beneficial on
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* high-core-count ARM64 processors. It seems mostly a wash for smaller gear,
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* and ISB doesn't exist at all on pre-v7 ARM chips.
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*/
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#if defined(__aarch64__)
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/*
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* On ARM64, it's a win to use a non-locking test before the TAS proper. It
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* may be a win on 32-bit ARM, too, but nobody's tested it yet.
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*/
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#define TAS_SPIN(lock) (*(lock) ? 1 : TAS(lock))
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#define SPIN_DELAY() spin_delay()
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static __inline__ void
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spin_delay(void)
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{
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/*
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* Using an ISB instruction to delay in spinlock loops appears beneficial
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* on high-core-count ARM64 processors. It seems mostly a wash for smaller
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* gear, and ISB doesn't exist at all on pre-v7 ARM chips.
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*/
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__asm__ __volatile__(
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" isb; \n");
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}
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