• David Howells's avatar
    pipe: Use head and tail pointers for the ring, not cursor and length · 8cefc107
    David Howells authored
    Convert pipes to use head and tail pointers for the buffer ring rather than
    pointer and length as the latter requires two atomic ops to update (or a
    combined op) whereas the former only requires one.
    
     (1) The head pointer is the point at which production occurs and points to
         the slot in which the next buffer will be placed.  This is equivalent
         to pipe->curbuf + pipe->nrbufs.
    
         The head pointer belongs to the write-side.
    
     (2) The tail pointer is the point at which consumption occurs.  It points
         to the next slot to be consumed.  This is equivalent to pipe->curbuf.
    
         The tail pointer belongs to the read-side.
    
     (3) head and tail are allowed to run to UINT_MAX and wrap naturally.  They
         are only masked off when the array is being accessed, e.g.:
    
    	pipe->bufs[head & mask]
    
         This means that it is not necessary to have a dead slot in the ring as
         head == tail isn't ambiguous.
    
     (4) The ring is empty if "head == tail".
    
         A helper, pipe_empty(), is provided for this.
    
     (5) The occupancy of the ring is "head - tail".
    
         A helper, pipe_occupancy(), is provided for this.
    
     (6) The number of free slots in the ring is "pipe->ring_size - occupancy".
    
         A helper, pipe_space_for_user() is provided to indicate how many slots
         userspace may use.
    
     (7) The ring is full if "head - tail >= pipe->ring_size".
    
         A helper, pipe_full(), is provided for this.
    Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
    8cefc107
iov_iter.c 41.9 KB