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13:56
?
Hello!
hi
finally!
:-)
ok....I'll tell you what I think
regarding my Q yesterday
static void Main()
{
bool complete = false;
var t = new Thread(() = > {
bool toggle = false;
while(!complete) toggle = !toggle;
});
t.Start();
Thread.Sleep(1000);
complete = true;
t.Join(); // Blocks indefinitely
}
this code is not terminated becuase the JITER do some optimization
like Eric said
while (true) and stuff....
and NOT becuse of the fences
14:07
I repeat !
NOT becuase of the fences
I agree
(p.s. Im not saying that to you , Im thinking loud)
my test was :
to run this code without the optimize flag ( and without volatile)
and it did terminated after 1 sec.
however when I set the optimzie flag to true(default) it didnt terminate
BUT!
(as the problem shows)
Eric says it is becuase of the fences
and that part - I dont understand
?
r u here?
Yeah, sorry, just referring back to his answer, because I interpreted it differently.
8
A: Volatile fence demo?

Eric LippertMaking complete volatile does two things: It prevents the C# compiler or the jitter from making optimizations that would cache the value of complete. It introduces a fence that tells the processor that caching optimizations of other reads and writes that involve either pre-fetching reads or del...

Why does he say it is becuase of the fences ?
and if you know about fences , hes example can't be in reality.
why ?
I didn't think he said it was because of the fences.
14:13
But what you are looking for is the second effect of volatile.
I thought it was because of the compiler optimisations being disabled.
he said to me : "But what you are looking for is the second effect of volatile. "
and look at the begining of his answer : there are 2 topics : 1) jitter 2)fences
meaning he's talking about fences.
(p.s. english is not my first language. maybe I read it wrong ?)
do you see where im stuck ?
I think I do, and I think it has to do with his wording.
at first he says 1) jitter 2)fences and then he say , "your problem is regarding the second section ( which is the fences and NOT THE JITTER)"
I interpreted his answer like this:
Using volatile has two effects
1. Disabling optimisations (which is what is responsible for the change in behaviour in this example)
2. Introducing fences, which AFAIK have no effect on this example, but do have an effect on other examples, e.g. where you use a volatile variable to signal that other variables have been initialised.
I think his But what you are looking for refers to the fact that you were talking about fences and reordering in your question.
14:17
oh....
(ive been thinking about it all day - about what youve just said)
I'm not certain, but I think that's what he meant.
Because I also can't see how fences affect that situation :D
Look
I asked this question once ( yes and I do like this subject a lot)
19
Q: Volatile Violates its main job?

Royi NamirAccording to MSDN: The volatile keyword indicates that a field might be modified by multiple threads that are executing at the same time. Fields that are declared volatile are not subject to compiler optimizations that assume access by a single thread. This ensures that the most up-to...

Brian ( one of the best threading persons here in SO) SHOWS how volatile can do harm
when there is a READ after WRITE
and he shows that Writes prevents all prev instructions from going to bottom...... and Reads prevents all next instructions from going up
**But I can't see how putting fences in THIS SAMPLE **

static void Main()
{
bool complete = false;
var t = new Thread(() = > {
bool toggle = false;
while(!complete) toggle = !toggle;
});
t.Start();
Thread.Sleep(1000);
complete = true;
t.Join(); // Blocks indefinitely
}
can solve it
That's what Joe Duffy says as well (the article I linked in the comments on your other question) - that volatile gives you acquire on reads and store on writes, and nothing else.
Which is why Eric's answer got me all confused again!
Do you mean the part that he added : ( volatile prevents jitter optimization) ??
14:22
But look
also Joe albahari says it :
Also, after reading the article that Eric linked to, I can see that the point I made about reordering only being prevented within a thread is wrong.
• The compiler, CLR, or CPU may reorder your program’s instructions to improve
efficiency.
• The compiler, CLR, or CPU may introduce caching optimizations such that
assignments to variables won’t be visible to other threads right away.
It does happen across threads.
Reordering within a thread cant be done cause the program wont work as expected.
the reordering is in POV of different threads
It can be, as long as the results are the same as if the program were single-threaded
14:24
NO
reordering is not like optimization!
the transition to while(true) is becuase of optimization
and not reordering
and volatile seems to prevent both
(which I agree)
as Eric says
Yes, that's pretty much the point where I'm at too :P But still confused over the fact that some sources say volatile only affects reordering, while some say it affects compiler optimisations too.
can you **guess** where fences CAN solve this issue ?
static void Main()
{
    bool complete = false;
    var t = new Thread(() = > {
        bool toggle = false;
        while(!complete) toggle = !toggle;
    });
    t.Start();
    Thread.Sleep(1000);
    complete = true;
    t.Join(); // Blocks indefinitely
}
No, that's why I agree that that case must be due to compiler optimisations.
Please confirm What I think that fence will do here:
Could be worth linking Brian to the question that Eric answered :)
:D so you did
the stage where complete = true; is volatile automatically
since all writes in .net are volatile
but lets talk about while(!complete) ( the non optimized ver)
since it is reading , so an aquire fence is created
which prevents from later instruction to move before the fence.
right ?
my question is WHICH " later instruction" ?
That's what I don't get in that example either.
But we need to be careful of confusing instructions with memory operations.
One of the important realisations that I came to yesterday is that "reordering" refers to 2 different things, which both look the same:
14:41
this subject will never ends....
1. Actual *instruction* reordering by the compiler or jitter
2. Caching effects by the processor, which make memory accesses look out of order even if no optimisations have been performed
And I agree, it probably won't :)
Listen. since you know where we both stuck,
and your english is much better than myne
can you please post a comment to Eric answer and describe exactly where we both stuck ?
cause I know what I dont understand
but to express it in precise word ( and you saw I apperently didnt understand his wording) - will be hard
I think your last comment on his answer is a perfectly clear question; let's see what he says.
ok...
do you have an email ?
Have you read the article he linked to?
14:45
I have myne in the profile
no
too deep for what i need to know
Im a web dev and a c# programmer
which read Joe's book
but when I see such sample , and such answer from Eric , Im getting mad.... :-)
I want to close this volatile topic once and for all
I think it might help, at least the first part where Vance Morrison talks about memory models, the idea of "sequential consistency" and how processor caching can have the same effect as as physically reordering instructions.
It's a very difficult topic, but I think we're both close to some kind of breakthrough :)
What's your email ?
( dont worry.... jsut for me and you to close this subject and update each other if anything regarding volatile has occured) myne is on my profile
p.s.
look at the LAST comment of brian to me :
19
Q: Volatile Violates its main job?

Royi NamirAccording to MSDN: The volatile keyword indicates that a field might be modified by multiple threads that are executing at the same time. Fields that are declared volatile are not subject to compiler optimizations that assume access by a single thread. This ensures that the most up-to...

on his lat comment I asked him about what you said to me
"does it regarding thread instruction or from the same thread ?"
and look what he said to me
@RoyiNamir: It is from the perspective of other threads. The same thread will always perceive reads/writes in the order they were entered in the program code...otherwise no program would work correctly. Good question.
did u read it ?
Sorry - conducting more than one conversation at a time here :)
14:54
also about volatile ? :-)
No, my fiancee would kill me :D
hhhhh
lol
OK, so he said the same thread will always perceive reads/writes in the order they were entered; that doesn't mean they can't happen in a different order, only that the result as seen by the same thread must be the same.
If you write:

x = 3;
y = 7;

then nothing prevents the compiler from rewriting it (for whatever reason) to this:

y = 7;
x = 3;
If it's run by only a single thread, there's no difference.
so orders in the same thread can be swapped?
Yes - this is where the compiler/JIT optimisations happen, e.g. the compiler might decide to group reads together. As long as the single-threaded result is the same, then this is legal
So the compiler couldn't reorder these two instructions:

x = 1;
y = x;

Because then the result *as seen by a single thread* would be different, because the read *depends* on the write.
15:02
make sense
but again , do you see any relation to
static void Main()
{
bool complete = false;
var t = new Thread (() =>
{
bool toggle = false;
while (!complete) toggle = !toggle;
});
t.Start();
Thread.Sleep (1000);
complete = true;
t.Join(); // Blocks indefinitely
}
?????
That's why fences are important in this case, if A and B are run on separate threads (from the Albahari book):
class Foo
{
int _answer;
bool _complete;

void A()
{
_answer = 123;
_complete = true;
}

void B()
{
if (_complete) Console.WriteLine (_answer);
}
}
But no, I still don't see how fences apply to your example :)
ok
so lets talk about fences in YOUR sample
(not memory barrier - but half Fences!)
putting volatile on answer will solve it
No, making complete volatile does.
15:04
No
write is always volatile
the Read is what causing us the pain
becuase _answer = 123; will happened before(!) _complete = true;
If you assume that writes are always volatile, then this example isn't a problem and you have no need for the keyword.
Im not assuming
Write is always volatile
Also Eric said it.
On certain architectures, yes.
But the language can't assume any particular architecture; if you leave volatile out, it might work on x86 but fail on something else.
It doesn't matter why the writes are volatile though - if the write to complete is volatile (either because you used the keyword, or because the memory model says all writes are volatile), then you know that the write to answer (even if it isn't volatile) cannot move after the write to complete.
you're right
the Write should prvent it from faling down
So What the hell is going here?
So the point is that B never sees complete == true without answer also being set.
And that's where fences apply to this scenario.
15:10
so even if write is volatile , I should write volatile ?
B either sees complete == false (and ignores answer) or complete == true (and is guaranteed that answer is initialised).
Yes, because writes don't have to be volatile by default. That's part of the memory model of certain architectures.
But just as importantly, it helps to document the places where you depend on this behaviour.
ok thanks man
well be in touch
when there is an answer from eric/brian
@RoyiNamir Just emphasising this point - _answer = 123; is only guaranteed to happen before _complete = true; if _complete is volatile. The instructions themselves can be reordered, because it would make no difference to a single-threaded program.
Yup!
Great chatting to you, thanks :)
And will definitely be keeping an eye on those questions!
Great chatting to you too
bye :-)

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