I assume that on a 32-bit device like the iPhone, assigning a short float is an atomic, thread-safe operation. I want to make sure it is. I have a C function that I want to call from an Objective-C thread, and I don’t want to acquire a lock before calling it:
void setFloatValue(float value) {
globalFloat = value;
}
In 32-bit ARM, the function above will be compiled to
As there are 2 instructions, and the CPU is free to perform anything between them, but only the second instruction
str r0, [r2]affects memory. UnlessglobalFloatis unaligned, the CPU can perform single-copy atomic write to it.The assignment can be non-atomic when the global pointer is unaligned. It is also non-atomic if you are writing to a larger structure e.g. CGRect.
Being atomic is not enough for thread safety. Due to caching and instruction reordering, your change may not be visible to other CPU cores. You may need to insert an
OSMemoryBarrier()to “publish” the change.Atomic operations are usually interesting when it involves compound operations (e.g.
globalFloat += value). You may want to check out the built-inOSAtomiclibrary for it.