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Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/memory-barriers.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/memory-barriers.txt | 12 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/memory-barriers.txt b/Documentation/memory-barriers.txt index 732f10ea382e..c239a0cf4b1a 100644 --- a/Documentation/memory-barriers.txt +++ b/Documentation/memory-barriers.txt @@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ The purpose of this document is twofold: (2) to provide a guide as to how to use the barriers that are available. Note that an architecture can provide more than the minimum requirement -for any particular barrier, but if the architecure provides less than +for any particular barrier, but if the architecture provides less than that, that architecture is incorrect. Note also that it is possible that a barrier may be a no-op for an @@ -498,11 +498,11 @@ And a couple of implicit varieties: This means that ACQUIRE acts as a minimal "acquire" operation and RELEASE acts as a minimal "release" operation. -A subset of the atomic operations described in atomic_ops.txt have ACQUIRE -and RELEASE variants in addition to fully-ordered and relaxed (no barrier -semantics) definitions. For compound atomics performing both a load and a -store, ACQUIRE semantics apply only to the load and RELEASE semantics apply -only to the store portion of the operation. +A subset of the atomic operations described in core-api/atomic_ops.rst have +ACQUIRE and RELEASE variants in addition to fully-ordered and relaxed (no +barrier semantics) definitions. For compound atomics performing both a load +and a store, ACQUIRE semantics apply only to the load and RELEASE semantics +apply only to the store portion of the operation. Memory barriers are only required where there's a possibility of interaction between two CPUs or between a CPU and a device. If it can be guaranteed that |