Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
409 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

c - When is pthread_spin_lock the right thing to use (over e.g. a pthread mutex)?

Given that pthread_spin_lock is available, when would I use it, and when should one not use them ?

i.e. how would I decide to protect some shared data structure with either a pthread mutex or a pthread spinlock ?

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Reply

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

The short answer is that a spinlock can be better when you plan to hold the lock for an extremely short interval (for example to do nothing but increment a counter), and contention is expected to be rare, but the operation is occurring often enough to be a potential performance bottleneck. The advantages of a spinlock over a mutex are:

  1. On unlock, there is no need to check if other threads may be waiting for the lock and waking them up. Unlocking is simply a single atomic write instruction.
  2. Failure to immediately obtain the lock does not put your thread to sleep, so it may be able to obtain the lock with much lower latency as soon a it does become available.
  3. There is no risk of cache pollution from entering kernelspace to sleep or wake other threads.

Point 1 will always stand, but point 2 and 3 are of somewhat diminished usefulness if you consider that good mutex implementations will probably spin a decent number of times before asking the kernel for help waiting.

Now, the long answer:

What you need to ask yourself before using spinlocks is whether these potential advantages outweigh one rare but very real disadvantage: what happens when the thread that holds the lock gets interrupted by the scheduler before it can release the lock. This is of course rare, but it can happen even if the lock is just held for a single variable-increment operation or something else equally trivial. In this case, any other threads attempting to obtain the lock will keep spinning until the thread the holds the lock gets scheduled and has a chance to release the lock. This may never happen if the threads trying to obtain the lock have higher priorities than the thread that holds the lock. That may be an extreme case, but even without different priorities in play, there can be very long delays before the lock owner gets scheduled again, and worst of all, once this situation begins, it can quickly escalate as many threads, all hoping to get the lock, begin spinning on it, tying up more processor time, and further delaying the scheduling of the thread that could release the lock.

As such, I would be careful with spinlocks... :-)


与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
OGeek|极客中国-欢迎来到极客的世界,一个免费开放的程序员编程交流平台!开放,进步,分享!让技术改变生活,让极客改变未来! Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...