Can linux context switch after unlock in the below code if so we have a problem if two threads call this
inline bool CMyAutoLock::Lock(
pthread_mutex_t *pLock,
bool bBlockOk
)
throw ()
{
Unlock();
if (pLock == NULL)
return (false);
// **** can context switch happen here ? ****///
return ((((bBlockOk)? pthread_mutex_lock(pLock) :
pthread_mutex_trylock(pLock)) == 0)? (m_pLock = pLock, true) : false);
}
Inline makes a function work like a macro. Inline is not related to atomic in any way.
AFAIK inline is a hint and gcc might ignore it. When inlining, the code from your inline func, call it B, is copied into the caller func, A. There will be no call from A to B. This probably makes your exe faster at the expense of becomming larger. Probably? The exe could become smaller if your inline function is small. The exe could become slower if the inlining made it more difficult to optimize func A. If you don’t specify inline, gcc will make the inline decision for you in a lot of cases. Member functions of classes are default inline. You need to explicitly tell gcc to not do automatic inlines. Also, gcc will not inline when optimizations are off.
The linker wont inline. So if module A extern referenced a function marked as inline, but the code was in module B, Module A will make calls to the function rather than inlining it. You have to define the function in the header file, and you have to declare it as extern inline func foo(a,b,c). Its actually a lot more complicated.
Not Inline:
Inline:
The only functions you can be sure are atomic are the gcc atomic builtins. Probably simple one opcode assembly instructions are atomic as well, but they might not be. In my experience so far on 6×86 setting or reading a 32 bit integer is atomic. You can guess if a line of c code could be atomic by looking at the generated assembly code.
The above code was compile in 32 bit mode. You can see that the long long takes 2 opcodes to load up. I am guessing that isn’t atomic. The ints and longs take one opcode to set. Probably atomic. y++ is implemented with addl, which is probably atomic. I keep saying probably because the microcode on the cpu could use more than one instruction to implement an op, and knowledge of this is above my pay grade. I assume that all 32 bit writes and reads are atomic. I assume that increments are not, because they generally are performed with a read and a write.
But check this out, when compiled in 64 bit
I’m guessing that addq could be atomic.