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core::pipes::try_recv_ missing an acquire barrier #7021
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This is relevant on architectures with out-of-order memory semantics (ARM, not x86). @eholk and I designed this fastpath before the ARM port came around. Nominating for production-ready milestone. |
@talchas points out that it might also be broken on x86 if LLVM decides to reorder the instruction. So a proper fix (i.e. one that maintains the fastpath performance) would have to use custom LLVM intrinsics for the enum values (analogous to More clearly stated, the goal is to get LLVM to (a) on x86, emit just a "mov" but refuse to reorder it, and (b) on ARM, to emit an acquire barrier after the move. |
Visiting for triage, appears to still be a problem (possibly WONTFIX because newrt will replace this code?). |
yeah there should maybe be a metabug for the list of stuff we can close once all the old rt code is gone |
As of #8008 we now have the corresponding acquire barrier in the new runtime pipes. (Old runtime pipes still an issue.) |
The pipes compiler produced data types that encoded efficient and safe bounded message passing protocols between two endpoints. It was also capable of producing unbounded protocols. It was useful research but was arguably done before its proper time. I am removing it for the following reasons: * In practice we used it only for producing the `oneshot` protcol and the unbounded `stream` protocol and all communication in Rust use those. * The interface between the proto! macro and the standard library has a large surface area and was difficult to maintain through language and library changes. * It is now written in an old dialect of Rust and generates code which would likely be considered non-idiomatic. * Both the compiler and the runtime are difficult to understand, and likewise the relationship between the generated code and the library is hard to understand. Debugging is difficult. * The new scheduler implements `stream` and `oneshot` by hand in a way that will be significantly easier to maintain. This shouldn't be taken as an indication that 'channel protocols' for Rust are not worth pursuing again in the future. Concerned parties may include: @graydon, @pcwalton, @eholk, @bblum The most likely candidates for closing are #7666, #3018, #3020, #7021, #7667, #7303, #3658, #3295.
Fix ICE rust-lang#7012 changelog: none Fixes rust-lang#7012
The read of
p.header.state
needs to be an acquire barrier probably viaatomic_load_acq
to ensure it comes before the read ofp.payload
, matching with the release byswap_state_rel
insend
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