Lines Matching full:side
18 tool for the job. Yes, RCU does reduce read-side overhead by
19 increasing write-side overhead, which is exactly why normal uses
28 read-side primitives is critically important.
59 2. Do the RCU read-side critical sections make proper use of
63 under your read-side code, which can greatly increase the
68 rcu_read_lock_sched(), or by the appropriate update-side lock.
72 Letting RCU-protected pointers "leak" out of an RCU read-side
76 -before- letting them out of the RCU read-side critical section.
151 perfectly legal (if redundant) for update-side code to
156 of an RCU read-side critical section. See lockdep.txt
187 be traversed by an RCU read-side critical section.
267 One way to stall the updates is to acquire the update-side
303 list_for_each_safe_rcu(), must be either within an RCU read-side
304 critical section or must be protected by appropriate update-side
305 locks. RCU read-side critical sections are delimited by
312 primitives when the update-side lock is held is that doing so
317 10. Conversely, if you are in an RCU read-side critical section,
318 and you don't hold the appropriate update-side lock, you -must-
350 SRCU read-side critical section (demarked by srcu_read_lock()
352 Please note that if you don't need to sleep in read-side critical
364 synchronize_srcu() waits only for SRCU read-side critical
367 is what makes sleeping read-side critical sections tolerable --
370 system than RCU would be if RCU's read-side critical sections
373 The ability to sleep in read-side critical sections does not
381 requiring SRCU's read-side deadlock immunity or low read-side
405 15. The various RCU read-side primitives do -not- necessarily contain
408 read-side critical sections. It is the responsibility of the
409 RCU update-side primitives to deal with this.
421 read-side critical section, while holding the right