1completions - wait for completion handling
2==========================================
3
4This document was originally written based on 3.18.0 (linux-next)
5
6Introduction:
7-------------
8
9If you have one or more threads of execution that must wait for some process
10to have reached a point or a specific state, completions can provide a
11race-free solution to this problem. Semantically they are somewhat like a
12pthread_barrier and have similar use-cases.
13
14Completions are a code synchronization mechanism which is preferable to any
15misuse of locks. Any time you think of using yield() or some quirky
16msleep(1) loop to allow something else to proceed, you probably want to
17look into using one of the wait_for_completion*() calls instead. The
18advantage of using completions is clear intent of the code, but also more
19efficient code as both threads can continue until the result is actually
20needed.
21
22Completions are built on top of the generic event infrastructure in Linux,
23with the event reduced to a simple flag (appropriately called "done") in
24struct completion that tells the waiting threads of execution if they
25can continue safely.
26
27As completions are scheduling related, the code is found in
28kernel/sched/completion.c - for details on completion design and
29implementation see completions-design.txt
30
31
32Usage:
33------
34
35There are three parts to using completions, the initialization of the
36struct completion, the waiting part through a call to one of the variants of
37wait_for_completion() and the signaling side through a call to complete()
38or complete_all(). Further there are some helper functions for checking the
39state of completions.
40
41To use completions one needs to include <linux/completion.h> and
42create a variable of type struct completion. The structure used for
43handling of completions is:
44
45	struct completion {
46		unsigned int done;
47		wait_queue_head_t wait;
48	};
49
50providing the wait queue to place tasks on for waiting and the flag for
51indicating the state of affairs.
52
53Completions should be named to convey the intent of the waiter. A good
54example is:
55
56	wait_for_completion(&early_console_added);
57
58	complete(&early_console_added);
59
60Good naming (as always) helps code readability.
61
62
63Initializing completions:
64-------------------------
65
66Initialization of dynamically allocated completions, often embedded in
67other structures, is done with:
68
69	void init_completion(&done);
70
71Initialization is accomplished by initializing the wait queue and setting
72the default state to "not available", that is, "done" is set to 0.
73
74The re-initialization function, reinit_completion(), simply resets the
75done element to "not available", thus again to 0, without touching the
76wait queue. Calling init_completion() twice on the same completion object is
77most likely a bug as it re-initializes the queue to an empty queue and
78enqueued tasks could get "lost" - use reinit_completion() in that case.
79
80For static declaration and initialization, macros are available. These are:
81
82	static DECLARE_COMPLETION(setup_done)
83
84used for static declarations in file scope. Within functions the static
85initialization should always use:
86
87	DECLARE_COMPLETION_ONSTACK(setup_done)
88
89suitable for automatic/local variables on the stack and will make lockdep
90happy. Note also that one needs to make *sure* the completion passed to
91work threads remains in-scope, and no references remain to on-stack data
92when the initiating function returns.
93
94Using on-stack completions for code that calls any of the _timeout or
95_interruptible/_killable variants is not advisable as they will require
96additional synchronization to prevent the on-stack completion object in
97the timeout/signal cases from going out of scope. Consider using dynamically
98allocated completions when intending to use the _interruptible/_killable
99or _timeout variants of wait_for_completion().
100
101
102Waiting for completions:
103------------------------
104
105For a thread of execution to wait for some concurrent work to finish, it
106calls wait_for_completion() on the initialized completion structure.
107A typical usage scenario is:
108
109	struct completion setup_done;
110	init_completion(&setup_done);
111	initialize_work(...,&setup_done,...)
112
113	/* run non-dependent code */              /* do setup */
114
115	wait_for_completion(&setup_done);         complete(setup_done)
116
117This is not implying any temporal order on wait_for_completion() and the
118call to complete() - if the call to complete() happened before the call
119to wait_for_completion() then the waiting side simply will continue
120immediately as all dependencies are satisfied if not it will block until
121completion is signaled by complete().
122
123Note that wait_for_completion() is calling spin_lock_irq()/spin_unlock_irq(),
124so it can only be called safely when you know that interrupts are enabled.
125Calling it from hard-irq or irqs-off atomic contexts will result in
126hard-to-detect spurious enabling of interrupts.
127
128wait_for_completion():
129
130	void wait_for_completion(struct completion *done):
131
132The default behavior is to wait without a timeout and to mark the task as
133uninterruptible. wait_for_completion() and its variants are only safe
134in process context (as they can sleep) but not in atomic context,
135interrupt context, with disabled irqs. or preemption is disabled - see also
136try_wait_for_completion() below for handling completion in atomic/interrupt
137context.
138
139As all variants of wait_for_completion() can (obviously) block for a long
140time, you probably don't want to call this with held mutexes.
141
142
143Variants available:
144-------------------
145
146The below variants all return status and this status should be checked in
147most(/all) cases - in cases where the status is deliberately not checked you
148probably want to make a note explaining this (e.g. see
149arch/arm/kernel/smp.c:__cpu_up()).
150
151A common problem that occurs is to have unclean assignment of return types,
152so care should be taken with assigning return-values to variables of proper
153type. Checking for the specific meaning of return values also has been found
154to be quite inaccurate e.g. constructs like
155if (!wait_for_completion_interruptible_timeout(...)) would execute the same
156code path for successful completion and for the interrupted case - which is
157probably not what you want.
158
159	int wait_for_completion_interruptible(struct completion *done)
160
161This function marks the task TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE. If a signal was received
162while waiting it will return -ERESTARTSYS; 0 otherwise.
163
164	unsigned long wait_for_completion_timeout(struct completion *done,
165		unsigned long timeout)
166
167The task is marked as TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE and will wait at most 'timeout'
168(in jiffies). If timeout occurs it returns 0 else the remaining time in
169jiffies (but at least 1). Timeouts are preferably calculated with
170msecs_to_jiffies() or usecs_to_jiffies(). If the returned timeout value is
171deliberately ignored a comment should probably explain why (e.g. see
172drivers/mfd/wm8350-core.c wm8350_read_auxadc())
173
174	long wait_for_completion_interruptible_timeout(
175		struct completion *done, unsigned long timeout)
176
177This function passes a timeout in jiffies and marks the task as
178TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE. If a signal was received it will return -ERESTARTSYS;
179otherwise it returns 0 if the completion timed out or the remaining time in
180jiffies if completion occurred.
181
182Further variants include _killable which uses TASK_KILLABLE as the
183designated tasks state and will return -ERESTARTSYS if it is interrupted or
184else 0 if completion was achieved.  There is a _timeout variant as well:
185
186	long wait_for_completion_killable(struct completion *done)
187	long wait_for_completion_killable_timeout(struct completion *done,
188		unsigned long timeout)
189
190The _io variants wait_for_completion_io() behave the same as the non-_io
191variants, except for accounting waiting time as waiting on IO, which has
192an impact on how the task is accounted in scheduling stats.
193
194	void wait_for_completion_io(struct completion *done)
195	unsigned long wait_for_completion_io_timeout(struct completion *done
196		unsigned long timeout)
197
198
199Signaling completions:
200----------------------
201
202A thread that wants to signal that the conditions for continuation have been
203achieved calls complete() to signal exactly one of the waiters that it can
204continue.
205
206	void complete(struct completion *done)
207
208or calls complete_all() to signal all current and future waiters.
209
210	void complete_all(struct completion *done)
211
212The signaling will work as expected even if completions are signaled before
213a thread starts waiting. This is achieved by the waiter "consuming"
214(decrementing) the done element of struct completion. Waiting threads
215wakeup order is the same in which they were enqueued (FIFO order).
216
217If complete() is called multiple times then this will allow for that number
218of waiters to continue - each call to complete() will simply increment the
219done element. Calling complete_all() multiple times is a bug though. Both
220complete() and complete_all() can be called in hard-irq/atomic context safely.
221
222There only can be one thread calling complete() or complete_all() on a
223particular struct completion at any time - serialized through the wait
224queue spinlock. Any such concurrent calls to complete() or complete_all()
225probably are a design bug.
226
227Signaling completion from hard-irq context is fine as it will appropriately
228lock with spin_lock_irqsave/spin_unlock_irqrestore and it will never sleep.
229
230
231try_wait_for_completion()/completion_done():
232--------------------------------------------
233
234The try_wait_for_completion() function will not put the thread on the wait
235queue but rather returns false if it would need to enqueue (block) the thread,
236else it consumes one posted completion and returns true.
237
238	bool try_wait_for_completion(struct completion *done)
239
240Finally, to check the state of a completion without changing it in any way, 
241call completion_done(), which returns false if there are no posted
242completions that were not yet consumed by waiters (implying that there are
243waiters) and true otherwise;
244
245	bool completion_done(struct completion *done)
246
247Both try_wait_for_completion() and completion_done() are safe to be called in
248hard-irq or atomic context.
249