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Ingo Molnar authored
the following patch implements proper x86 TLS support in the Linux kernel, via a new system-call, sys_set_thread_area(): http://redhat.com/~mingo/tls-patches/tls-2.5.28-C6 a TLS test utility can be downloaded from: http://redhat.com/~mingo/tls-patches/tls_test.c what is TLS? Thread Local Storage is a concept used by threading abstractions - fast an efficient way to store per-thread local (but not on-stack local) data. The __thread extension is already supported by gcc. proper TLS support in compilers (and glibc/pthreads) is a bit problematic on the x86 platform. There's only 8 general purpose registers available, so on x86 we have to use segments to access the TLS. The approach used by glibc so far was to set up a per-thread LDT entry to describe the TLS. Besides the generic unrobustness of LDTs, this also introduced a limit: the maximum number of LDT entries is 8192, so the maximum number of threads per application is 8192. this patch does it differently - the kernel keeps a specific per-thread GDT entry that can be set up and modified by each thread: asmlinkage int sys_set_thread_area(unsigned int base, unsigned int limit, unsigned int flags) the kernel, upon context-switch, modifies this GDT entry to match that of the thread's TLS setting. This way user-space threaded code can access per-thread data via this descriptor - by using the same, constant %gs (or %gs) selector. The number of TLS areas is unlimited, and there is no additional allocation overhead associated with TLS support. the biggest problem preventing the introduction of this concept was Linux's global shared GDT on SMP systems. The patch fixes this by implementing a per-CPU GDT, which is also a nice context-switch speedup, 2-task lat_ctx context-switching got faster by about 5% on a dual Celeron testbox. [ Could it be that a shared GDT is fundamentally suboptimal on SMP? perhaps updating the 'accessed' bit in the DS/CS descriptors causes some sort locked memory cycle overhead? ] the GDT layout got simplified: * 0 - null * 1 - Thread-Local Storage (TLS) segment * 2 - kernel code segment * 3 - kernel data segment * 4 - user code segment <==== new cacheline * 5 - user data segment * 6 - TSS * 7 - LDT * 8 - APM BIOS support <==== new cacheline * 9 - APM BIOS support * 10 - APM BIOS support * 11 - APM BIOS support * 12 - PNPBIOS support <==== new cacheline * 13 - PNPBIOS support * 14 - PNPBIOS support * 15 - PNPBIOS support * 16 - PNPBIOS support <==== new cacheline * 17 - not used * 18 - not used * 19 - not used set_thread_area() currently recognizes the following flags: #define TLS_FLAG_LIMIT_IN_PAGES 0x00000001 #define TLS_FLAG_WRITABLE 0x00000002 #define TLS_FLAG_CLEAR 0x00000004 - in theory we could avoid the 'limit in pages' bit, but i wanted to preserve the flexibility to potentially enable the setting of byte-granularity stack segments for example. And unlimited segments (granularity = pages, limit = 0xfffff) might have a performance advantage on some CPUs. We could also automatically figure out the best possible granularity for a given limit - but i wanted to avoid this kind of guesswork. Some CPUs might have a plus for page-limit segments - who knows. - The 'writable' flag is straightforward and could be useful to some applications. - The 'clear' flag clears the TLS. [note that a base 0 limit 0 TLS is in fact legal, it's a single-byte segment at address 0.] (the system-call does not expose any other segment options to user-space, priviledge level is 3, the segment is 32-bit, etc. - it's using safe and sane defaults.) NOTE: the interface does not allow the changing of the TLS of another thread on purpose - that would just complicate the interface (and implementation) unnecesserily. Is there any good reason to allow the setting of another thread's TLS? NOTE2: non-pthreads glibc applications can call set_thread_area() to set up a GDT entry just below the end of stack. We could use some sort of default TLS area as well, but that would hard-code a given segment.
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