On Fri, Nov 24, 2023 at 08:21:37AM +0100, Christoph Muellner wrote:
From: Christoph Müllner christoph.muellner@vrull.eu
The upcoming RISC-V Ssdtso specification introduces a bit in the senvcfg CSR to switch the memory consistency model at run-time from RVWMO to TSO (and back). The active consistency model can therefore be switched on a per-hart base and managed by the kernel on a per-process/thread base.
You guys, computers are hartless, nobody told ya?
This patch implements basic Ssdtso support and adds a prctl API on top so that user-space processes can switch to a stronger memory consistency model (than the kernel was written for) at run-time.
I am not sure if other architectures support switching the memory consistency model at run-time, but designing the prctl API in an arch-independent way allows reusing it in the future.
IIRC some Sparc chips could do this, but I don't think anybody ever exposed this to userspace (or used it much).
IA64 had planned to do this, except they messed it up and did it the wrong way around (strong first and then relax it later), which lead to the discovery that all existing software broke (d'uh).
I think ARM64 approached this problem by adding the load-acquire/store-release instructions and for TSO based code, translate into those (eg. x86 -> arm64 transpilers).
IIRC Risc-V actually has such instructions as well, so *why* are you doing this?!?!