How are percpu pointers implemented in the Linux kernel?

大兔子大兔子 提交于 2019-11-30 04:56:49

Normal global variables are not per CPU. Automatic variables are on the stack, and different CPUs use different stack, so naturally they get separate variables.

I guess you're referring to Linux's per-CPU variable infrastructure.
Most of the magic is here (asm-generic/percpu.h):

extern unsigned long __per_cpu_offset[NR_CPUS];

#define per_cpu_offset(x) (__per_cpu_offset[x])

/* Separate out the type, so (int[3], foo) works. */
#define DEFINE_PER_CPU(type, name) \
    __attribute__((__section__(".data.percpu"))) __typeof__(type) per_cpu__##name

/* var is in discarded region: offset to particular copy we want */
#define per_cpu(var, cpu) (*RELOC_HIDE(&per_cpu__##var, __per_cpu_offset[cpu]))
#define __get_cpu_var(var) per_cpu(var, smp_processor_id())

The macro RELOC_HIDE(ptr, offset) simply advances ptr by the given offset in bytes (regardless of the pointer type).

What does it do?

  1. When defining DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, x), an integer __per_cpu_x is created in the special .data.percpu section.
  2. When the kernel is loaded, this section is loaded multiple times - once per CPU (this part of the magic isn't in the code above).
  3. The __per_cpu_offset array is filled with the distances between the copies. Supposing 1000 bytes of per cpu data are used, __per_cpu_offset[n] would contain 1000*n.
  4. The symbol per_cpu__x will be relocated, during load, to CPU 0's per_cpu__x.
  5. __get_cpu_var(x), when running on CPU 3, will translate to *RELOC_HIDE(&per_cpu__x, __per_cpu_offset[3]). This starts with CPU 0's x, adds the offset between CPU 0's data and CPU 3's, and eventually dereferences the resulting pointer.
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!