Been trying to understand memory ordering, still somewhat stuck As I understand, the best mental model for understanding it is memory barriers, and immediately there is a thing I'm not sure about Are memory barriers (store-load ones etc.) just constructs that say - these instructions shouldn't go up, these shouldn't go down (in relation to the barrier)? Or is there mutual relation of instructions involved? E.g. say we got a load-store barrier and code like 1) load 2) load-store barrier 3) load 4) store Does this code mean that a) load 1 should go first and then load 3 and store 4 in any order (presuming no other barriers, completely relaxed order) or b) load 1 can be reordered with load 3 as long as it (load 1) is not reordered with any store beneath the barrier So 2 models basically 1) simple 'stopper' for instructions 2) thing that enforces mutual relation of instructions but lets them pass through if mutual relation is preserved I'm somewhat sure it's the 1st model that is correct, but not absolutely sure; which one is?