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mirror of https://github.com/golang/go synced 2024-11-06 09:26:18 -07:00
go/src/sync/waitgroup.go
Russ Cox a71ca3dfbd runtime, sync, sync/atomic: document happens-before guarantees
A few of these are copied from the memory model doc.
Many are entirely new, following discussion on #47141.
See https://research.swtch.com/gomm for background.

The rule we are establishing is that each type that is meant
to help synchronize a Go program should document its
happens-before guarantees.

For #50859.

Change-Id: I947c40639b263abe67499fa74f68711a97873a39
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/381316
Auto-Submit: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Alan Donovan <adonovan@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Roland Shoemaker <roland@golang.org>
2022-06-06 20:48:03 +00:00

151 lines
4.8 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2011 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package sync
import (
"internal/race"
"sync/atomic"
"unsafe"
)
// A WaitGroup waits for a collection of goroutines to finish.
// The main goroutine calls Add to set the number of
// goroutines to wait for. Then each of the goroutines
// runs and calls Done when finished. At the same time,
// Wait can be used to block until all goroutines have finished.
//
// A WaitGroup must not be copied after first use.
//
// In the terminology of the Go memory model, a call to Done
// “synchronizes before” the return of any Wait call that it unblocks.
type WaitGroup struct {
noCopy noCopy
// 64-bit value: high 32 bits are counter, low 32 bits are waiter count.
// 64-bit atomic operations require 64-bit alignment, but 32-bit
// compilers only guarantee that 64-bit fields are 32-bit aligned.
// For this reason on 32 bit architectures we need to check in state()
// if state1 is aligned or not, and dynamically "swap" the field order if
// needed.
state1 uint64
state2 uint32
}
// state returns pointers to the state and sema fields stored within wg.state*.
func (wg *WaitGroup) state() (statep *uint64, semap *uint32) {
if unsafe.Alignof(wg.state1) == 8 || uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&wg.state1))%8 == 0 {
// state1 is 64-bit aligned: nothing to do.
return &wg.state1, &wg.state2
} else {
// state1 is 32-bit aligned but not 64-bit aligned: this means that
// (&state1)+4 is 64-bit aligned.
state := (*[3]uint32)(unsafe.Pointer(&wg.state1))
return (*uint64)(unsafe.Pointer(&state[1])), &state[0]
}
}
// Add adds delta, which may be negative, to the WaitGroup counter.
// If the counter becomes zero, all goroutines blocked on Wait are released.
// If the counter goes negative, Add panics.
//
// Note that calls with a positive delta that occur when the counter is zero
// must happen before a Wait. Calls with a negative delta, or calls with a
// positive delta that start when the counter is greater than zero, may happen
// at any time.
// Typically this means the calls to Add should execute before the statement
// creating the goroutine or other event to be waited for.
// If a WaitGroup is reused to wait for several independent sets of events,
// new Add calls must happen after all previous Wait calls have returned.
// See the WaitGroup example.
func (wg *WaitGroup) Add(delta int) {
statep, semap := wg.state()
if race.Enabled {
_ = *statep // trigger nil deref early
if delta < 0 {
// Synchronize decrements with Wait.
race.ReleaseMerge(unsafe.Pointer(wg))
}
race.Disable()
defer race.Enable()
}
state := atomic.AddUint64(statep, uint64(delta)<<32)
v := int32(state >> 32)
w := uint32(state)
if race.Enabled && delta > 0 && v == int32(delta) {
// The first increment must be synchronized with Wait.
// Need to model this as a read, because there can be
// several concurrent wg.counter transitions from 0.
race.Read(unsafe.Pointer(semap))
}
if v < 0 {
panic("sync: negative WaitGroup counter")
}
if w != 0 && delta > 0 && v == int32(delta) {
panic("sync: WaitGroup misuse: Add called concurrently with Wait")
}
if v > 0 || w == 0 {
return
}
// This goroutine has set counter to 0 when waiters > 0.
// Now there can't be concurrent mutations of state:
// - Adds must not happen concurrently with Wait,
// - Wait does not increment waiters if it sees counter == 0.
// Still do a cheap sanity check to detect WaitGroup misuse.
if *statep != state {
panic("sync: WaitGroup misuse: Add called concurrently with Wait")
}
// Reset waiters count to 0.
*statep = 0
for ; w != 0; w-- {
runtime_Semrelease(semap, false, 0)
}
}
// Done decrements the WaitGroup counter by one.
func (wg *WaitGroup) Done() {
wg.Add(-1)
}
// Wait blocks until the WaitGroup counter is zero.
func (wg *WaitGroup) Wait() {
statep, semap := wg.state()
if race.Enabled {
_ = *statep // trigger nil deref early
race.Disable()
}
for {
state := atomic.LoadUint64(statep)
v := int32(state >> 32)
w := uint32(state)
if v == 0 {
// Counter is 0, no need to wait.
if race.Enabled {
race.Enable()
race.Acquire(unsafe.Pointer(wg))
}
return
}
// Increment waiters count.
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(statep, state, state+1) {
if race.Enabled && w == 0 {
// Wait must be synchronized with the first Add.
// Need to model this is as a write to race with the read in Add.
// As a consequence, can do the write only for the first waiter,
// otherwise concurrent Waits will race with each other.
race.Write(unsafe.Pointer(semap))
}
runtime_Semacquire(semap)
if *statep != 0 {
panic("sync: WaitGroup is reused before previous Wait has returned")
}
if race.Enabled {
race.Enable()
race.Acquire(unsafe.Pointer(wg))
}
return
}
}
}