Read the F-ing Papers! This document describes RCU-related publications, and is followed by the corresponding bibtex entries. The first thing resembling RCU was published in 1980, when Kung and Lehman [Kung80] recommended use of a garbage collector to defer destruction of nodes in a parallel binary search tree in order to simplify its implementation. This works well in environments that have garbage collectors, but current production garbage collectors incur significant read-side overhead. In 1982, Manber and Ladner [Manber82,Manber84] recommended deferring destruction until all threads running at that time have terminated, again for a parallel binary search tree. This approach works well in systems with short-lived threads, such as the K42 research operating system. However, Linux has long-lived tasks, so more is needed. In 1986, Hennessy, Osisek, and Seigh [Hennessy89] introduced passive serialization, which is an RCU-like mechanism that relies on the presence of "quiescent states" in the VM/XA hypervisor that are guaranteed not to be referencing the data structure. However, this mechanism was not optimized for modern computer systems, which is not surprising given that these overheads were not so expensive in the mid-80s. Nonetheless, passive serialization appears to be the first deferred-destruction mechanism to be used in production. Furthermore, the relevant patent has lapsed, so this approach may be used in non-GPL software, if desired. (In contrast, use of RCU is permitted only in software licensed under GPL. Sorry!!!) In 1990, Pugh [Pugh90] noted that explicitly tracking which threads were reading a given data structure permitted deferred free to operate in the presence of non-terminating threads. However, this explicit tracking imposes significant read-side overhead, which is undesirable in read-mostly situations. This algorithm does take pains to avoid write-side contention and parallelize the other write-side overheads by providing a fine-grained locking design, however, it would be interesting to see how much of the performance advantage reported in 1990 remains in 2004. At about this same time, Adams [Adams91] described ``chaotic relaxation'', where the normal barriers between successive iterations of convergent numerical algorithms are relaxed, so that iteration $n$ might use data from iteration $n-1$ or even $n-2$. This introduces error, which typically slows convergence and thus increases the number of iterations required. However, this increase is sometimes more than made up for by a reduction in the number of expensive barrier operations, which are otherwise required to synchronize the threads at the end of each iteration. Unfortunately, chaotic relaxation requires highly structured data, such as the matrices used in scientific programs, and is thus inapplicable to most data structures in operating-system kernels. In 1993, Jacobson [Jacobson93] verbally described what is perhaps the simplest deferred-free technique: simply waiting a fixed amount of time before freeing blocks awaiting deferred free. Jacobson did not describe any write-side changes he might have made in this work using SGI's Irix kernel. Aju John published a similar technique in 1995 [AjuJohn95]. This works well if there is a well-defined upper bound on the length of time that reading threads can hold references, as there might well be in hard real-time systems. However, if this time is exceeded, perhaps due to preemption, excessive interrupts, or larger-than-anticipated load, memory corruption can ensue, with no reasonable means of diagnosis. Jacobson's technique is therefore inappropriate for use in production operating-system kernels, except when such kernels can provide hard real-time response guarantees for all operations. Also in 1995, Pu et al. [Pu95a] applied a technique similar to that of Pugh's read-side-tracking to permit replugging of algorithms within a commercial Unix operating system. However, this replugging permitted only a single reader at a time. The following year, this same group of researchers extended their technique to allow for multiple readers [Cowan96a]. Their approach requires memory barriers (and thus pipeline stalls), but reduces memory latency, contention, and locking overheads. 1995 also saw the first publication of DYNIX/ptx's RCU mechanism [Slingwine95], which was optimized for modern CPU architectures, and was successfully applied to a number of situations within the DYNIX/ptx kernel. The corresponding conference paper appeared in 1998 [McKenney98]. In 1999, the Tornado and K42 groups described their "generations" mechanism, which quite similar to RCU [Gamsa99]. These operating systems made pervasive use of RCU in place of "existence locks", which greatly simplifies locking hierarchies. 2001 saw the first RCU presentation involving Linux [McKenney01a] at OLS. The resulting abundance of RCU patches was presented the following year [McKenney02a], and use of RCU in dcache was first described that same year [Linder02a]. Also in 2002, Michael [Michael02b,Michael02a] presented techniques that defer the destruction of data structures to simplify non-blocking synchronization (wait-free synchronization, lock-free synchronization, and obstruction-free synchronization are all examples of non-blocking synchronization). In particular, this technique eliminates locking, reduces contention, reduces memory latency for readers, and parallelizes pipeline stalls and memory latency for writers. However, these techniques still impose significant read-side overhead in the form of memory barriers. Researchers at Sun worked along similar lines in the same timeframe [HerlihyLM02,HerlihyLMS03]. In 2003, the K42 group described how RCU could be used to create hot-pluggable implementations of operating-system functions. Later that year saw a paper describing an RCU implementation of System V IPC [Arcangeli03], and an introduction to RCU in Linux Journal [McKenney03a]. 2004 has seen a Linux-Journal article on use of RCU in dcache [McKenney04a], a performance comparison of locking to RCU on several different CPUs [McKenney04b], a dissertation describing use of RCU in a number of operating-system kernels [PaulEdwardMcKenneyPhD], a paper describing how to make RCU safe for soft-realtime applications [Sarma04c], and a paper describing SELinux performance with RCU [JamesMorris04b]. Bibtex Entries @article{Kung80 ,author="H. T. Kung and Q. Lehman" ,title="Concurrent Maintenance of Binary Search Trees" ,Year="1980" ,Month="September" ,journal="ACM Transactions on Database Systems" ,volume="5" ,number="3" ,pages="354-382" } @techreport{Manber82 ,author="Udi Manber and Richard E. Ladner" ,title="Concurrency Control in a Dynamic Search Structure" ,institution="Department of Computer Science, University of Washington" ,address="Seattle, Washington" ,year="1982" ,number="82-01-01" ,month="January" ,pages="28" } @article{Manber84 ,author="Udi Manber and Richard E. Ladner" ,title="Concurrency Control in a Dynamic Search Structure" ,Year="1984" ,Month="September" ,journal="ACM Transactions on Database Systems" ,volume="9" ,number="3" ,pages="439-455" } @techreport{Hennessy89 ,author="James P. Hennessy and Damian L. Osisek and Joseph W. {Seigh II}" ,title="Passive Serialization in a Multitasking Environment" ,institution="US Patent and Trademark Office" ,address="Washington, DC" ,year="1989" ,number="US Patent 4,809,168 (lapsed)" ,month="February" ,pages="11" } @techreport{Pugh90 ,author="William Pugh" ,title="Concurrent Maintenance of Skip Lists" ,institution="Institute of Advanced Computer Science Studies, Department of Computer Science, University of Maryland" ,address="College Park, Maryland" ,year="1990" ,number="CS-TR-2222.1" ,month="June" } @Book{Adams91 ,Author="Gregory R. Adams" ,title="Concurrent Programming, Principles, and Practices" ,Publisher="Benjamin Cummins" ,Year="1991" } @unpublished{Jacobson93 ,author="Van Jacobson" ,title="Avoid Read-Side Locking Via Delayed Free" ,year="1993" ,month="September" ,note="Verbal discussion" } @Conference{AjuJohn95 ,Author="Aju John" ,Title="Dynamic vnodes -- Design and Implementation" ,Booktitle="{USENIX Winter 1995}" ,Publisher="USENIX Association" ,Month="January" ,Year="1995" ,pages="11-23" ,Address="New Orleans, LA" } @techreport{Slingwine95 ,author="John D. Slingwine and Paul E. McKenney" ,title="Apparatus and Method for Achieving Reduced Overhead Mutual Exclusion and Maintaining Coherency in a Multiprocessor System Utilizing Execution History and Thread Monitoring" ,institution="US Patent and Trademark Office" ,address="Washington, DC" ,year="1995" ,number="US Patent 5,442,758 (contributed under GPL)" ,month="August" } @techreport{Slingwine97 ,author="John D. Slingwine and Paul E. McKenney" ,title="Method for maintaining data coherency using thread activity summaries in a multicomputer system" ,institution="US Patent and Trademark Office" ,address="Washington, DC" ,year="1997" ,number="US Patent 5,608,893 (contributed under GPL)" ,month="March" } @techreport{Slingwine98 ,author="John D. Slingwine and Paul E. McKenney" ,title="Apparatus and method for achieving reduced overhead mutual exclusion and maintaining coherency in a multiprocessor system utilizing execution history and thread monitoring" ,institution="US Patent and Trademark Office" ,address="Washington, DC" ,year="1998" ,number="US Patent 5,727,209 (contributed under GPL)" ,month="March" } @Conference{McKenney98 ,Author="Paul E. McKenney and John D. Slingwine" ,Title="Read-Copy Update: Using Execution History to Solve Concurrency Problems" ,Booktitle="{Parallel and Distributed Computing and Systems}" ,Month="October" ,Year="1998" ,pages="509-518" ,Address="Las Vegas, NV" } @Conference{Gamsa99 ,Author="Ben Gamsa and Orran Krieger and Jonathan Appavoo and Michael Stumm" ,Title="Tornado: Maximizing Locality and Concurrency in a Shared Memory Multiprocessor Operating System" ,Booktitle="{Proceedings of the 3\textsuperscript{rd} Symposium on Operating System Design and Implementation}" ,Month="February" ,Year="1999" ,pages="87-100" ,Address="New Orleans, LA" } @techreport{Slingwine01 ,author="John D. Slingwine and Paul E. McKenney" ,title="Apparatus and method for achieving reduced overhead mutual exclusion and maintaining coherency in a multiprocessor system utilizing execution history and thread monitoring" ,institution="US Patent and Trademark Office" ,address="Washington, DC" ,year="2001" ,number="US Patent 5,219,690 (contributed under GPL)" ,month="April" } @Conference{McKenney01a ,Author="Paul E. McKenney and Jonathan Appavoo and Andi Kleen and Orran Krieger and Rusty Russell and Dipankar Sarma and Maneesh Soni" ,Title="Read-Copy Update" ,Booktitle="{Ottawa Linux Symposium}" ,Month="July" ,Year="2001" ,note="Available: \url{http://www.linuxsymposium.org/2001/abstracts/readcopy.php} \url{http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/rclock/rclock_OLS.2001.05.01c.pdf} [Viewed June 23, 2004]" annotation=" Described RCU, and presented some patches implementing and using it in the Linux kernel. " } @Conference{Linder02a ,Author="Hanna Linder and Dipankar Sarma and Maneesh Soni" ,Title="Scalability of the Directory Entry Cache" ,Booktitle="{Ottawa Linux Symposium}" ,Month="June" ,Year="2002" ,pages="289-300" } @Conference{McKenney02a ,Author="Paul E. McKenney and Dipankar Sarma and Andrea Arcangeli and Andi Kleen and Orran Krieger and Rusty Russell" ,Title="Read-Copy Update" ,Booktitle="{Ottawa Linux Symposium}" ,Month="June" ,Year="2002" ,pages="338-367" ,note="Available: \url{http://www.linux.org.uk/~ajh/ols2002_proceedings.pdf.gz} [Viewed June 23, 2004]" } @article{Appavoo03a ,author="J. Appavoo and K. Hui and C. A. N. Soules and R. W. Wisniewski and D. M. {Da Silva} and O. Krieger and M. A. Auslander and D. J. Edelsohn and B. Gamsa and G. R. Ganger and P. McKenney and M. Ostrowski and B. Rosenburg and M. Stumm and J. Xenidis" ,title="Enabling Autonomic Behavior in Systems Software With Hot Swapping" ,Year="2003" ,Month="January" ,journal="IBM Systems Journal" ,volume="42" ,number="1" ,pages="60-76" } @Conference{Arcangeli03 ,Author="Andrea Arcangeli and Mingming Cao and Paul E. McKenney and Dipankar Sarma" ,Title="Using Read-Copy Update Techniques for {System V IPC} in the {Linux} 2.5 Kernel" ,Booktitle="Proceedings of the 2003 USENIX Annual Technical Conference (FREENIX Track)" ,Publisher="USENIX Association" ,year="2003" ,month="June" ,pages="297-310" } @article{McKenney03a ,author="Paul E. McKenney" ,title="Using {RCU} in the {Linux} 2.5 Kernel" ,Year="2003" ,Month="October" ,journal="Linux Journal" ,volume="1" ,number="114" ,pages="18-26" } @techreport{Friedberg03a ,author="Stuart A. Friedberg" ,title="Lock-Free Wild Card Search Data Structure and Method" ,institution="US Patent and Trademark Office" ,address="Washington, DC" ,year="2003" ,number="US Patent 6,662,184 (contributed under GPL)" ,month="December" ,pages="112" } @article{McKenney04a ,author="Paul E. McKenney and Dipankar Sarma and Maneesh Soni" ,title="Scaling dcache with {RCU}" ,Year="2004" ,Month="January" ,journal="Linux Journal" ,volume="1" ,number="118" ,pages="38-46" } @Conference{McKenney04b ,Author="Paul E. McKenney" ,Title="{RCU} vs. Locking Performance on Different {CPUs}" ,Booktitle="{linux.conf.au}" ,Month="January" ,Year="2004" ,Address="Adelaide, Australia" ,note="Available: \url{http://www.linux.org.au/conf/2004/abstracts.html#90} \url{http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/rclock/lockperf.2004.01.17a.pdf} [Viewed June 23, 2004]" } @phdthesis{PaulEdwardMcKenneyPhD ,author="Paul E. McKenney" ,title="Exploiting Deferred Destruction: An Analysis of Read-Copy-Update Techniques in Operating System Kernels" ,school="OGI School of Science and Engineering at Oregon Health and Sciences University" ,year="2004" ,note="Available: \url{http://www.rdrop.com/users/paulmck/RCU/RCUdissertation.2004.07.14e1.pdf} [Viewed October 15, 2004]" } @Conference{Sarma04c ,Author="Dipankar Sarma and Paul E. McKenney" ,Title="Making RCU Safe for Deep Sub-Millisecond Response Realtime Applications" ,Booktitle="Proceedings of the 2004 USENIX Annual Technical Conference (FREENIX Track)" ,Publisher="USENIX Association" ,year="2004" ,month="June" ,pages="182-191" } @unpublished{JamesMorris04b ,Author="James Morris" ,Title="Recent Developments in {SELinux} Kernel Performance" ,month="December" ,year="2004" ,note="Available: \url{http://www.livejournal.com/users/james_morris/2153.html} [Viewed December 10, 2004]" }