Test and Test-and-set
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In computer science, the test-and-set CPU instruction is used to implement mutual exclusion in multiprocessor environments. Although a correct lock can be implemented with test-and-set, it can lead to memory contention in busy lock (caused by bus locking and cache invalidation when test-and-set operation needs to access memory atomically).
To lower the overhead a more elaborate locking protocol test and test-and-set is used. The main idea is not to spin in test-and-set but increase the likelihood of successful test-and-set by using following entry protocol to the lock:
boolean locked := false // shared lock variable procedure EnterCritical() { do { while (locked == true) skip // spin until lock seems free } while TestAndSet(locked) // actual atomic locking }
Exit protocol is:
procedure ExitCritical() { locked := false }
The entry protocol uses normal memory reads to spin, waiting for the lock to become free. Test-and-set is only used to try to get the lock when normal memory read says it's free. Thus the expensive atomic memory operations happens less often than in simple spin around test-and-set.
If the programming language used supports short-circuit evaluation, the entry protocol could be implemented as:
procedure EnterCritical() { while ( locked == true or TestAndSet(locked) == true ) skip // spin until locked }
[edit] Caveat
Although this optimization is useful in system programming it should be avoided in high level concurrent programming. One example of bad usage of this idiom is double-checked locking, which is listed as an anti-pattern.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Gregory R. Andrews, Foundations of Multithreaded, Parallel, and Distributed Programming, pp. 100-101. Addison-Wesley, 2000. ISBN 0-201-35752-6.