blob: c9f6ee64f41d89bb093ace84603c9f0ed14f1db1 [file] [log] [blame]
#ifndef __SPARC64_BARRIER_H
#define __SPARC64_BARRIER_H
/* These are here in an effort to more fully work around Spitfire Errata
* #51. Essentially, if a memory barrier occurs soon after a mispredicted
* branch, the chip can stop executing instructions until a trap occurs.
* Therefore, if interrupts are disabled, the chip can hang forever.
*
* It used to be believed that the memory barrier had to be right in the
* delay slot, but a case has been traced recently wherein the memory barrier
* was one instruction after the branch delay slot and the chip still hung.
* The offending sequence was the following in sym_wakeup_done() of the
* sym53c8xx_2 driver:
*
* call sym_ccb_from_dsa, 0
* movge %icc, 0, %l0
* brz,pn %o0, .LL1303
* mov %o0, %l2
* membar #LoadLoad
*
* The branch has to be mispredicted for the bug to occur. Therefore, we put
* the memory barrier explicitly into a "branch always, predicted taken"
* delay slot to avoid the problem case.
*/
#define membar_safe(type) \
do { __asm__ __volatile__("ba,pt %%xcc, 1f\n\t" \
" membar " type "\n" \
"1:\n" \
: : : "memory"); \
} while (0)
/* The kernel always executes in TSO memory model these days,
* and furthermore most sparc64 chips implement more stringent
* memory ordering than required by the specifications.
*/
#define mb() membar_safe("#StoreLoad")
#define rmb() __asm__ __volatile__("":::"memory")
#define wmb() __asm__ __volatile__("":::"memory")
#define __smp_store_release(p, v) \
do { \
compiletime_assert_atomic_type(*p); \
barrier(); \
WRITE_ONCE(*p, v); \
} while (0)
#define __smp_load_acquire(p) \
({ \
typeof(*p) ___p1 = READ_ONCE(*p); \
compiletime_assert_atomic_type(*p); \
barrier(); \
___p1; \
})
#define __smp_mb__before_atomic() barrier()
#define __smp_mb__after_atomic() barrier()
#include <asm-generic/barrier.h>
#endif /* !(__SPARC64_BARRIER_H) */