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92 lines
2.8 KiB
Go
92 lines
2.8 KiB
Go
// Copyright (c) 2018 Shivaram Lingamneni <slingamn@cs.stanford.edu>
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// released under the MIT license
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package utils
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import "sync/atomic"
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// Library functions for lock-free bitsets, typically (constant-sized) arrays of uint64.
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// For examples of use, see caps.Set and modes.ModeSet; the array has to be converted to a
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// slice to use these functions.
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// BitsetInitialize initializes a bitset.
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func BitsetInitialize(set []uint64) {
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// XXX re-zero the bitset using atomic stores. it's unclear whether this is required,
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// however, golang issue #5045 suggests that you shouldn't mix atomic operations
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// with non-atomic operations (such as the runtime's automatic zero-initialization) on
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// the same word
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for i := 0; i < len(set); i++ {
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atomic.StoreUint64(&set[i], 0)
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}
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}
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// BitsetGet returns whether a given bit of the bitset is set.
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func BitsetGet(set []uint64, position uint) bool {
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idx := position / 64
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bit := position % 64
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block := atomic.LoadUint64(&set[idx])
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return (block & (1 << bit)) != 0
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}
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// BitsetSet sets a given bit of the bitset to 0 or 1, returning whether it changed.
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func BitsetSet(set []uint64, position uint, on bool) (changed bool) {
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idx := position / 64
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bit := position % 64
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addr := &set[idx]
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var mask uint64
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mask = 1 << bit
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for {
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current := atomic.LoadUint64(addr)
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var desired uint64
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if on {
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desired = current | mask
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} else {
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desired = current & (^mask)
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}
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if current == desired {
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return false
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} else if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(addr, current, desired) {
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return true
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}
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}
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}
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// BitsetEmpty returns whether the bitset is empty.
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// This has false positives under concurrent modification (i.e., it can return true
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// even though w.r.t. the sequence of atomic modifications, there was no point at
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// which the bitset was completely empty), but that's not how we're using this method.
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func BitsetEmpty(set []uint64) (empty bool) {
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for i := 0; i < len(set); i++ {
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if atomic.LoadUint64(&set[i]) != 0 {
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return false
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}
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}
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return true
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}
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// BitsetUnion modifies `set` to be the union of `set` and `other`.
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// This has race conditions in that we don't necessarily get a single
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// consistent view of `other` across word boundaries.
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func BitsetUnion(set []uint64, other []uint64) {
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for i := 0; i < len(set); i++ {
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for {
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ourAddr := &set[i]
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ourBlock := atomic.LoadUint64(ourAddr)
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otherBlock := atomic.LoadUint64(&other[i])
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newBlock := ourBlock | otherBlock
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if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(ourAddr, ourBlock, newBlock) {
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break
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}
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}
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}
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}
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// BitsetCopy copies the contents of `other` over `set`.
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// Similar caveats about race conditions as with `BitsetUnion` apply.
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func BitsetCopy(set []uint64, other []uint64) {
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for i := 0; i < len(set); i++ {
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data := atomic.LoadUint64(&other[i])
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atomic.StoreUint64(&set[i], data)
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}
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}
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