• Home
  • Line#
  • Scopes#
  • Navigate#
  • Raw
  • Download
1
2======================
3Thread Safety Analysis
4======================
5
6Introduction
7============
8
9Clang Thread Safety Analysis is a C++ language extension which warns about
10potential race conditions in code.  The analysis is completely static (i.e.
11compile-time); there is no run-time overhead.  The analysis is still
12under active development, but it is mature enough to be deployed in an
13industrial setting.  It is being developed by Google, in collaboration with
14CERT/SEI, and is used extensively in Google's internal code base.
15
16Thread safety analysis works very much like a type system for multi-threaded
17programs.  In addition to declaring the *type* of data (e.g. ``int``, ``float``,
18etc.), the programmer can (optionally) declare how access to that data is
19controlled in a multi-threaded environment.  For example, if ``foo`` is
20*guarded by* the mutex ``mu``, then the analysis will issue a warning whenever
21a piece of code reads or writes to ``foo`` without first locking ``mu``.
22Similarly, if there are particular routines that should only be called by
23the GUI thread, then the analysis will warn if other threads call those
24routines.
25
26Getting Started
27----------------
28
29.. code-block:: c++
30
31  #include "mutex.h"
32
33  class BankAccount {
34  private:
35    Mutex mu;
36    int   balance GUARDED_BY(mu);
37
38    void depositImpl(int amount) {
39      balance += amount;       // WARNING! Cannot write balance without locking mu.
40    }
41
42    void withdrawImpl(int amount) REQUIRES(mu) {
43      balance -= amount;       // OK. Caller must have locked mu.
44    }
45
46  public:
47    void withdraw(int amount) {
48      mu.Lock();
49      withdrawImpl(amount);    // OK.  We've locked mu.
50    }                          // WARNING!  Failed to unlock mu.
51
52    void transferFrom(BankAccount& b, int amount) {
53      mu.Lock();
54      b.withdrawImpl(amount);  // WARNING!  Calling withdrawImpl() requires locking b.mu.
55      depositImpl(amount);     // OK.  depositImpl() has no requirements.
56      mu.Unlock();
57    }
58  };
59
60This example demonstrates the basic concepts behind the analysis.  The
61``GUARDED_BY`` attribute declares that a thread must lock ``mu`` before it can
62read or write to ``balance``, thus ensuring that the increment and decrement
63operations are atomic.  Similarly, ``REQUIRES`` declares that
64the calling thread must lock ``mu`` before calling ``withdrawImpl``.
65Because the caller is assumed to have locked ``mu``, it is safe to modify
66``balance`` within the body of the method.
67
68The ``depositImpl()`` method does not have ``REQUIRES``, so the
69analysis issues a warning.  Thread safety analysis is not inter-procedural, so
70caller requirements must be explicitly declared.
71There is also a warning in ``transferFrom()``, because although the method
72locks ``this->mu``, it does not lock ``b.mu``.  The analysis understands
73that these are two separate mutexes, in two different objects.
74
75Finally, there is a warning in the ``withdraw()`` method, because it fails to
76unlock ``mu``.  Every lock must have a corresponding unlock, and the analysis
77will detect both double locks, and double unlocks.  A function is allowed to
78acquire a lock without releasing it, (or vice versa), but it must be annotated
79as such (using ``ACQUIRE``/``RELEASE``).
80
81
82Running The Analysis
83--------------------
84
85To run the analysis, simply compile with the ``-Wthread-safety`` flag, e.g.
86
87.. code-block:: bash
88
89  clang -c -Wthread-safety example.cpp
90
91Note that this example assumes the presence of a suitably annotated
92:ref:`mutexheader` that declares which methods perform locking,
93unlocking, and so on.
94
95
96Basic Concepts: Capabilities
97============================
98
99Thread safety analysis provides a way of protecting *resources* with
100*capabilities*.  A resource is either a data member, or a function/method
101that provides access to some underlying resource.  The analysis ensures that
102the calling thread cannot access the *resource* (i.e. call the function, or
103read/write the data) unless it has the *capability* to do so.
104
105Capabilities are associated with named C++ objects which declare specific
106methods to acquire and release the capability.  The name of the object serves
107to identify the capability.  The most common example is a mutex.  For example,
108if ``mu`` is a mutex, then calling ``mu.Lock()`` causes the calling thread
109to acquire the capability to access data that is protected by ``mu``. Similarly,
110calling ``mu.Unlock()`` releases that capability.
111
112A thread may hold a capability either *exclusively* or *shared*.  An exclusive
113capability can be held by only one thread at a time, while a shared capability
114can be held by many threads at the same time.  This mechanism enforces a
115multiple-reader, single-writer pattern.  Write operations to protected data
116require exclusive access, while read operations require only shared access.
117
118At any given moment during program execution, a thread holds a specific set of
119capabilities (e.g. the set of mutexes that it has locked.)  These act like keys
120or tokens that allow the thread to access a given resource.  Just like physical
121security keys, a thread cannot make copy of a capability, nor can it destroy
122one.  A thread can only release a capability to another thread, or acquire one
123from another thread.  The annotations are deliberately agnostic about the
124exact mechanism used to acquire and release capabilities; it assumes that the
125underlying implementation (e.g. the Mutex implementation) does the handoff in
126an appropriate manner.
127
128The set of capabilities that are actually held by a given thread at a given
129point in program execution is a run-time concept.  The static analysis works
130by calculating an approximation of that set, called the *capability
131environment*.  The capability environment is calculated for every program point,
132and describes the set of capabilities that are statically known to be held, or
133not held, at that particular point.  This environment is a conservative
134approximation of the full set of capabilities that will actually held by a
135thread at run-time.
136
137
138Reference Guide
139===============
140
141The thread safety analysis uses attributes to declare threading constraints.
142Attributes must be attached to named declarations, such as classes, methods,
143and data members. Users are *strongly advised* to define macros for the various
144attributes; example definitions can be found in :ref:`mutexheader`, below.
145The following documentation assumes the use of macros.
146
147For historical reasons, prior versions of thread safety used macro names that
148were very lock-centric.  These macros have since been renamed to fit a more
149general capability model.  The prior names are still in use, and will be
150mentioned under the tag *previously* where appropriate.
151
152
153GUARDED_BY(c) and PT_GUARDED_BY(c)
154----------------------------------
155
156``GUARDED_BY`` is an attribute on data members, which declares that the data
157member is protected by the given capability.  Read operations on the data
158require shared access, while write operations require exclusive access.
159
160``PT_GUARDED_BY`` is similar, but is intended for use on pointers and smart
161pointers. There is no constraint on the data member itself, but the *data that
162it points to* is protected by the given capability.
163
164.. code-block:: c++
165
166  Mutex mu;
167  int *p1             GUARDED_BY(mu);
168  int *p2             PT_GUARDED_BY(mu);
169  unique_ptr<int> p3  PT_GUARDED_BY(mu);
170
171  void test() {
172    p1 = 0;             // Warning!
173
174    *p2 = 42;           // Warning!
175    p2 = new int;       // OK.
176
177    *p3 = 42;           // Warning!
178    p3.reset(new int);  // OK.
179  }
180
181
182REQUIRES(...), REQUIRES_SHARED(...)
183-----------------------------------
184
185*Previously*: ``EXCLUSIVE_LOCKS_REQUIRED``, ``SHARED_LOCKS_REQUIRED``
186
187``REQUIRES`` is an attribute on functions or methods, which
188declares that the calling thread must have exclusive access to the given
189capabilities.  More than one capability may be specified.  The capabilities
190must be held on entry to the function, *and must still be held on exit*.
191
192``REQUIRES_SHARED`` is similar, but requires only shared access.
193
194.. code-block:: c++
195
196  Mutex mu1, mu2;
197  int a GUARDED_BY(mu1);
198  int b GUARDED_BY(mu2);
199
200  void foo() REQUIRES(mu1, mu2) {
201    a = 0;
202    b = 0;
203  }
204
205  void test() {
206    mu1.Lock();
207    foo();         // Warning!  Requires mu2.
208    mu1.Unlock();
209  }
210
211
212ACQUIRE(...), ACQUIRE_SHARED(...), RELEASE(...), RELEASE_SHARED(...)
213--------------------------------------------------------------------
214
215*Previously*: ``EXCLUSIVE_LOCK_FUNCTION``, ``SHARED_LOCK_FUNCTION``,
216``UNLOCK_FUNCTION``
217
218``ACQUIRE`` is an attribute on functions or methods, which
219declares that the function acquires a capability, but does not release it.  The
220caller must not hold the given capability on entry, and it will hold the
221capability on exit.  ``ACQUIRE_SHARED`` is similar.
222
223``RELEASE`` and ``RELEASE_SHARED`` declare that the function releases the given
224capability.  The caller must hold the capability on entry, and will no longer
225hold it on exit. It does not matter whether the given capability is shared or
226exclusive.
227
228.. code-block:: c++
229
230  Mutex mu;
231  MyClass myObject GUARDED_BY(mu);
232
233  void lockAndInit() ACQUIRE(mu) {
234    mu.Lock();
235    myObject.init();
236  }
237
238  void cleanupAndUnlock() RELEASE(mu) {
239    myObject.cleanup();
240  }                          // Warning!  Need to unlock mu.
241
242  void test() {
243    lockAndInit();
244    myObject.doSomething();
245    cleanupAndUnlock();
246    myObject.doSomething();  // Warning, mu is not locked.
247  }
248
249If no argument is passed to ``ACQUIRE`` or ``RELEASE``, then the argument is
250assumed to be ``this``, and the analysis will not check the body of the
251function.  This pattern is intended for use by classes which hide locking
252details behind an abstract interface.  For example:
253
254.. code-block:: c++
255
256  template <class T>
257  class CAPABILITY("mutex") Container {
258  private:
259    Mutex mu;
260    T* data;
261
262  public:
263    // Hide mu from public interface.
264    void Lock()   ACQUIRE() { mu.Lock(); }
265    void Unlock() RELEASE() { mu.Unlock(); }
266
267    T& getElem(int i) { return data[i]; }
268  };
269
270  void test() {
271    Container<int> c;
272    c.Lock();
273    int i = c.getElem(0);
274    c.Unlock();
275  }
276
277
278EXCLUDES(...)
279-------------
280
281*Previously*: ``LOCKS_EXCLUDED``
282
283``EXCLUDES`` is an attribute on functions or methods, which declares that
284the caller must *not* hold the given capabilities.  This annotation is
285used to prevent deadlock.  Many mutex implementations are not re-entrant, so
286deadlock can occur if the function acquires the mutex a second time.
287
288.. code-block:: c++
289
290  Mutex mu;
291  int a GUARDED_BY(mu);
292
293  void clear() EXCLUDES(mu) {
294    mu.Lock();
295    a = 0;
296    mu.Unlock();
297  }
298
299  void reset() {
300    mu.Lock();
301    clear();     // Warning!  Caller cannot hold 'mu'.
302    mu.Unlock();
303  }
304
305Unlike ``REQUIRES``, ``EXCLUDES`` is optional.  The analysis will not issue a
306warning if the attribute is missing, which can lead to false negatives in some
307cases.  This issue is discussed further in :ref:`negative`.
308
309
310NO_THREAD_SAFETY_ANALYSIS
311-------------------------
312
313``NO_THREAD_SAFETY_ANALYSIS`` is an attribute on functions or methods, which
314turns off thread safety checking for that method.  It provides an escape hatch
315for functions which are either (1) deliberately thread-unsafe, or (2) are
316thread-safe, but too complicated for the analysis to understand.  Reasons for
317(2) will be described in the :ref:`limitations`, below.
318
319.. code-block:: c++
320
321  class Counter {
322    Mutex mu;
323    int a GUARDED_BY(mu);
324
325    void unsafeIncrement() NO_THREAD_SAFETY_ANALYSIS { a++; }
326  };
327
328Unlike the other attributes, NO_THREAD_SAFETY_ANALYSIS is not part of the
329interface of a function, and should thus be placed on the function definition
330(in the ``.cc`` or ``.cpp`` file) rather than on the function declaration
331(in the header).
332
333
334RETURN_CAPABILITY(c)
335--------------------
336
337*Previously*: ``LOCK_RETURNED``
338
339``RETURN_CAPABILITY`` is an attribute on functions or methods, which declares
340that the function returns a reference to the given capability.  It is used to
341annotate getter methods that return mutexes.
342
343.. code-block:: c++
344
345  class MyClass {
346  private:
347    Mutex mu;
348    int a GUARDED_BY(mu);
349
350  public:
351    Mutex* getMu() RETURN_CAPABILITY(mu) { return &mu; }
352
353    // analysis knows that getMu() == mu
354    void clear() REQUIRES(getMu()) { a = 0; }
355  };
356
357
358ACQUIRED_BEFORE(...), ACQUIRED_AFTER(...)
359-----------------------------------------
360
361``ACQUIRED_BEFORE`` and ``ACQUIRED_AFTER`` are attributes on member
362declarations, specifically declarations of mutexes or other capabilities.
363These declarations enforce a particular order in which the mutexes must be
364acquired, in order to prevent deadlock.
365
366.. code-block:: c++
367
368  Mutex m1;
369  Mutex m2 ACQUIRED_AFTER(m1);
370
371  // Alternative declaration
372  // Mutex m2;
373  // Mutex m1 ACQUIRED_BEFORE(m2);
374
375  void foo() {
376    m2.Lock();
377    m1.Lock();  // Warning!  m2 must be acquired after m1.
378    m1.Unlock();
379    m2.Unlock();
380  }
381
382
383CAPABILITY(<string>)
384--------------------
385
386*Previously*: ``LOCKABLE``
387
388``CAPABILITY`` is an attribute on classes, which specifies that objects of the
389class can be used as a capability.  The string argument specifies the kind of
390capability in error messages, e.g. ``"mutex"``.  See the ``Container`` example
391given above, or the ``Mutex`` class in :ref:`mutexheader`.
392
393
394SCOPED_CAPABILITY
395-----------------
396
397*Previously*: ``SCOPED_LOCKABLE``
398
399``SCOPED_CAPABILITY`` is an attribute on classes that implement RAII-style
400locking, in which a capability is acquired in the constructor, and released in
401the destructor.  Such classes require special handling because the constructor
402and destructor refer to the capability via different names; see the
403``MutexLocker`` class in :ref:`mutexheader`, below.
404
405
406TRY_ACQUIRE(<bool>, ...), TRY_ACQUIRE_SHARED(<bool>, ...)
407---------------------------------------------------------
408
409*Previously:* ``EXCLUSIVE_TRYLOCK_FUNCTION``, ``SHARED_TRYLOCK_FUNCTION``
410
411These are attributes on a function or method that tries to acquire the given
412capability, and returns a boolean value indicating success or failure.
413The first argument must be ``true`` or ``false``, to specify which return value
414indicates success, and the remaining arguments are interpreted in the same way
415as ``ACQUIRE``.  See :ref:`mutexheader`, below, for example uses.
416
417
418ASSERT_CAPABILITY(...) and ASSERT_SHARED_CAPABILITY(...)
419--------------------------------------------------------
420
421*Previously:*  ``ASSERT_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK``, ``ASSERT_SHARED_LOCK``
422
423These are attributes on a function or method that does a run-time test to see
424whether the calling thread holds the given capability.  The function is assumed
425to fail (no return) if the capability is not held.  See :ref:`mutexheader`,
426below, for example uses.
427
428
429GUARDED_VAR and PT_GUARDED_VAR
430------------------------------
431
432Use of these attributes has been deprecated.
433
434
435Warning flags
436-------------
437
438* ``-Wthread-safety``:  Umbrella flag which turns on the following three:
439
440  + ``-Wthread-safety-attributes``: Sanity checks on attribute syntax.
441  + ``-Wthread-safety-analysis``: The core analysis.
442  + ``-Wthread-safety-precise``: Requires that mutex expressions match precisely.
443       This warning can be disabled for code which has a lot of aliases.
444  + ``-Wthread-safety-reference``: Checks when guarded members are passed by reference.
445
446
447:ref:`negative` are an experimental feature, which are enabled with:
448
449* ``-Wthread-safety-negative``:  Negative capabilities.  Off by default.
450
451When new features and checks are added to the analysis, they can often introduce
452additional warnings.  Those warnings are initially released as *beta* warnings
453for a period of time, after which they are migrated into the standard analysis.
454
455* ``-Wthread-safety-beta``:  New features.  Off by default.
456
457
458.. _negative:
459
460Negative Capabilities
461=====================
462
463Thread Safety Analysis is designed to prevent both race conditions and
464deadlock.  The GUARDED_BY and REQUIRES attributes prevent race conditions, by
465ensuring that a capability is held before reading or writing to guarded data,
466and the EXCLUDES attribute prevents deadlock, by making sure that a mutex is
467*not* held.
468
469However, EXCLUDES is an optional attribute, and does not provide the same
470safety guarantee as REQUIRES.  In particular:
471
472  * A function which acquires a capability does not have to exclude it.
473  * A function which calls a function that excludes a capability does not
474    have transitively exclude that capability.
475
476As a result, EXCLUDES can easily produce false negatives:
477
478.. code-block:: c++
479
480  class Foo {
481    Mutex mu;
482
483    void foo() {
484      mu.Lock();
485      bar();           // No warning.
486      baz();           // No warning.
487      mu.Unlock();
488    }
489
490    void bar() {       // No warning.  (Should have EXCLUDES(mu)).
491      mu.Lock();
492      // ...
493      mu.Unlock();
494    }
495
496    void baz() {
497      bif();           // No warning.  (Should have EXCLUDES(mu)).
498    }
499
500    void bif() EXCLUDES(mu);
501  };
502
503
504Negative requirements are an alternative EXCLUDES that provide
505a stronger safety guarantee.  A negative requirement uses the  REQUIRES
506attribute, in conjunction with the ``!`` operator, to indicate that a capability
507should *not* be held.
508
509For example, using ``REQUIRES(!mu)`` instead of ``EXCLUDES(mu)`` will produce
510the appropriate warnings:
511
512.. code-block:: c++
513
514  class FooNeg {
515    Mutex mu;
516
517    void foo() REQUIRES(!mu) {   // foo() now requires !mu.
518      mu.Lock();
519      bar();
520      baz();
521      mu.Unlock();
522    }
523
524    void bar() {
525      mu.Lock();       // WARNING!  Missing REQUIRES(!mu).
526      // ...
527      mu.Unlock();
528    }
529
530    void baz() {
531      bif();           // WARNING!  Missing REQUIRES(!mu).
532    }
533
534    void bif() REQUIRES(!mu);
535  };
536
537
538Negative requirements are an experimental feature which is off by default,
539because it will produce many warnings in existing code.  It can be enabled
540by passing ``-Wthread-safety-negative``.
541
542
543.. _faq:
544
545Frequently Asked Questions
546==========================
547
548(Q) Should I put attributes in the header file, or in the .cc/.cpp/.cxx file?
549
550(A) Attributes are part of the formal interface of a function, and should
551always go in the header, where they are visible to anything that includes
552the header.  Attributes in the .cpp file are not visible outside of the
553immediate translation unit, which leads to false negatives and false positives.
554
555
556(Q) "*Mutex is not locked on every path through here?*"  What does that mean?
557
558(A) See :ref:`conditional_locks`, below.
559
560
561.. _limitations:
562
563Known Limitations
564=================
565
566Lexical scope
567-------------
568
569Thread safety attributes contain ordinary C++ expressions, and thus follow
570ordinary C++ scoping rules.  In particular, this means that mutexes and other
571capabilities must be declared before they can be used in an attribute.
572Use-before-declaration is okay within a single class, because attributes are
573parsed at the same time as method bodies. (C++ delays parsing of method bodies
574until the end of the class.)  However, use-before-declaration is not allowed
575between classes, as illustrated below.
576
577.. code-block:: c++
578
579  class Foo;
580
581  class Bar {
582    void bar(Foo* f) REQUIRES(f->mu);  // Error: mu undeclared.
583  };
584
585  class Foo {
586    Mutex mu;
587  };
588
589
590Private Mutexes
591---------------
592
593Good software engineering practice dictates that mutexes should be private
594members, because the locking mechanism used by a thread-safe class is part of
595its internal implementation.  However, private mutexes can sometimes leak into
596the public interface of a class.
597Thread safety attributes follow normal C++ access restrictions, so if ``mu``
598is a private member of ``c``, then it is an error to write ``c.mu`` in an
599attribute.
600
601One workaround is to (ab)use the ``RETURN_CAPABILITY`` attribute to provide a
602public *name* for a private mutex, without actually exposing the underlying
603mutex.  For example:
604
605.. code-block:: c++
606
607  class MyClass {
608  private:
609    Mutex mu;
610
611  public:
612    // For thread safety analysis only.  Does not actually return mu.
613    Mutex* getMu() RETURN_CAPABILITY(mu) { return 0; }
614
615    void doSomething() REQUIRES(mu);
616  };
617
618  void doSomethingTwice(MyClass& c) REQUIRES(c.getMu()) {
619    // The analysis thinks that c.getMu() == c.mu
620    c.doSomething();
621    c.doSomething();
622  }
623
624In the above example, ``doSomethingTwice()`` is an external routine that
625requires ``c.mu`` to be locked, which cannot be declared directly because ``mu``
626is private.  This pattern is discouraged because it
627violates encapsulation, but it is sometimes necessary, especially when adding
628annotations to an existing code base.  The workaround is to define ``getMu()``
629as a fake getter method, which is provided only for the benefit of thread
630safety analysis.
631
632
633.. _conditional_locks:
634
635No conditionally held locks.
636----------------------------
637
638The analysis must be able to determine whether a lock is held, or not held, at
639every program point.  Thus, sections of code where a lock *might be held* will
640generate spurious warnings (false positives).  For example:
641
642.. code-block:: c++
643
644  void foo() {
645    bool b = needsToLock();
646    if (b) mu.Lock();
647    ...  // Warning!  Mutex 'mu' is not held on every path through here.
648    if (b) mu.Unlock();
649  }
650
651
652No checking inside constructors and destructors.
653------------------------------------------------
654
655The analysis currently does not do any checking inside constructors or
656destructors.  In other words, every constructor and destructor is treated as
657if it was annotated with ``NO_THREAD_SAFETY_ANALYSIS``.
658The reason for this is that during initialization, only one thread typically
659has access to the object which is being initialized, and it is thus safe (and
660common practice) to initialize guarded members without acquiring any locks.
661The same is true of destructors.
662
663Ideally, the analysis would allow initialization of guarded members inside the
664object being initialized or destroyed, while still enforcing the usual access
665restrictions on everything else.  However, this is difficult to enforce in
666practice, because in complex pointer-based data structures, it is hard to
667determine what data is owned by the enclosing object.
668
669No inlining.
670------------
671
672Thread safety analysis is strictly intra-procedural, just like ordinary type
673checking.  It relies only on the declared attributes of a function, and will
674not attempt to inline any method calls.  As a result, code such as the
675following will not work:
676
677.. code-block:: c++
678
679  template<class T>
680  class AutoCleanup {
681    T* object;
682    void (T::*mp)();
683
684  public:
685    AutoCleanup(T* obj, void (T::*imp)()) : object(obj), mp(imp) { }
686    ~AutoCleanup() { (object->*mp)(); }
687  };
688
689  Mutex mu;
690  void foo() {
691    mu.Lock();
692    AutoCleanup<Mutex>(&mu, &Mutex::Unlock);
693    // ...
694  }  // Warning, mu is not unlocked.
695
696In this case, the destructor of ``Autocleanup`` calls ``mu.Unlock()``, so
697the warning is bogus.  However,
698thread safety analysis cannot see the unlock, because it does not attempt to
699inline the destructor.  Moreover, there is no way to annotate the destructor,
700because the destructor is calling a function that is not statically known.
701This pattern is simply not supported.
702
703
704No alias analysis.
705------------------
706
707The analysis currently does not track pointer aliases.  Thus, there can be
708false positives if two pointers both point to the same mutex.
709
710
711.. code-block:: c++
712
713  class MutexUnlocker {
714    Mutex* mu;
715
716  public:
717    MutexUnlocker(Mutex* m) RELEASE(m) : mu(m)  { mu->Unlock(); }
718    ~MutexUnlocker() ACQUIRE(mu) { mu->Lock(); }
719  };
720
721  Mutex mutex;
722  void test() REQUIRES(mutex) {
723    {
724      MutexUnlocker munl(&mutex);  // unlocks mutex
725      doSomeIO();
726    }                              // Warning: locks munl.mu
727  }
728
729The MutexUnlocker class is intended to be the dual of the MutexLocker class,
730defined in :ref:`mutexheader`.  However, it doesn't work because the analysis
731doesn't know that munl.mu == mutex.  The SCOPED_CAPABILITY attribute handles
732aliasing for MutexLocker, but does so only for that particular pattern.
733
734
735ACQUIRED_BEFORE(...) and ACQUIRED_AFTER(...) are currently unimplemented.
736-------------------------------------------------------------------------
737
738To be fixed in a future update.
739
740
741.. _mutexheader:
742
743mutex.h
744=======
745
746Thread safety analysis can be used with any threading library, but it does
747require that the threading API be wrapped in classes and methods which have the
748appropriate annotations.  The following code provides ``mutex.h`` as an example;
749these methods should be filled in to call the appropriate underlying
750implementation.
751
752
753.. code-block:: c++
754
755
756  #ifndef THREAD_SAFETY_ANALYSIS_MUTEX_H
757  #define THREAD_SAFETY_ANALYSIS_MUTEX_H
758
759  // Enable thread safety attributes only with clang.
760  // The attributes can be safely erased when compiling with other compilers.
761  #if defined(__clang__) && (!defined(SWIG))
762  #define THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(x)   __attribute__((x))
763  #else
764  #define THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(x)   // no-op
765  #endif
766
767  #define THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(x)   __attribute__((x))
768
769  #define CAPABILITY(x) \
770    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(capability(x))
771
772  #define SCOPED_CAPABILITY \
773    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(scoped_lockable)
774
775  #define GUARDED_BY(x) \
776    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(guarded_by(x))
777
778  #define PT_GUARDED_BY(x) \
779    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(pt_guarded_by(x))
780
781  #define ACQUIRED_BEFORE(...) \
782    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(acquired_before(__VA_ARGS__))
783
784  #define ACQUIRED_AFTER(...) \
785    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(acquired_after(__VA_ARGS__))
786
787  #define REQUIRES(...) \
788    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(requires_capability(__VA_ARGS__))
789
790  #define REQUIRES_SHARED(...) \
791    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(requires_shared_capability(__VA_ARGS__))
792
793  #define ACQUIRE(...) \
794    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(acquire_capability(__VA_ARGS__))
795
796  #define ACQUIRE_SHARED(...) \
797    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(acquire_shared_capability(__VA_ARGS__))
798
799  #define RELEASE(...) \
800    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(release_capability(__VA_ARGS__))
801
802  #define RELEASE_SHARED(...) \
803    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(release_shared_capability(__VA_ARGS__))
804
805  #define TRY_ACQUIRE(...) \
806    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(try_acquire_capability(__VA_ARGS__))
807
808  #define TRY_ACQUIRE_SHARED(...) \
809    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(try_acquire_shared_capability(__VA_ARGS__))
810
811  #define EXCLUDES(...) \
812    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(locks_excluded(__VA_ARGS__))
813
814  #define ASSERT_CAPABILITY(x) \
815    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(assert_capability(x))
816
817  #define ASSERT_SHARED_CAPABILITY(x) \
818    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(assert_shared_capability(x))
819
820  #define RETURN_CAPABILITY(x) \
821    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(lock_returned(x))
822
823  #define NO_THREAD_SAFETY_ANALYSIS \
824    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(no_thread_safety_analysis)
825
826
827  // Defines an annotated interface for mutexes.
828  // These methods can be implemented to use any internal mutex implementation.
829  class CAPABILITY("mutex") Mutex {
830  public:
831    // Acquire/lock this mutex exclusively.  Only one thread can have exclusive
832    // access at any one time.  Write operations to guarded data require an
833    // exclusive lock.
834    void Lock() ACQUIRE();
835
836    // Acquire/lock this mutex for read operations, which require only a shared
837    // lock.  This assumes a multiple-reader, single writer semantics.  Multiple
838    // threads may acquire the mutex simultaneously as readers, but a writer
839    // must wait for all of them to release the mutex before it can acquire it
840    // exclusively.
841    void ReaderLock() ACQUIRE_SHARED();
842
843    // Release/unlock an exclusive mutex.
844    void Unlock() RELEASE();
845
846    // Release/unlock a shared mutex.
847    void ReaderUnlock() RELEASE_SHARED();
848
849    // Try to acquire the mutex.  Returns true on success, and false on failure.
850    bool TryLock() TRY_ACQUIRE(true);
851
852    // Try to acquire the mutex for read operations.
853    bool ReaderTryLock() TRY_ACQUIRE_SHARED(true);
854
855    // Assert that this mutex is currently held by the calling thread.
856    void AssertHeld() ASSERT_CAPABILITY(this);
857
858    // Assert that is mutex is currently held for read operations.
859    void AssertReaderHeld() ASSERT_SHARED_CAPABILITY(this);
860
861    // For negative capabilities.
862    const Mutex& operator!() const { return *this; }
863  };
864
865
866  // MutexLocker is an RAII class that acquires a mutex in its constructor, and
867  // releases it in its destructor.
868  class SCOPED_CAPABILITY MutexLocker {
869  private:
870    Mutex* mut;
871
872  public:
873    MutexLocker(Mutex *mu) ACQUIRE(mu) : mut(mu) {
874      mu->Lock();
875    }
876    ~MutexLocker() RELEASE() {
877      mut->Unlock();
878    }
879  };
880
881
882  #ifdef USE_LOCK_STYLE_THREAD_SAFETY_ATTRIBUTES
883  // The original version of thread safety analysis the following attribute
884  // definitions.  These use a lock-based terminology.  They are still in use
885  // by existing thread safety code, and will continue to be supported.
886
887  // Deprecated.
888  #define PT_GUARDED_VAR \
889    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(pt_guarded)
890
891  // Deprecated.
892  #define GUARDED_VAR \
893    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(guarded)
894
895  // Replaced by REQUIRES
896  #define EXCLUSIVE_LOCKS_REQUIRED(...) \
897    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(exclusive_locks_required(__VA_ARGS__))
898
899  // Replaced by REQUIRES_SHARED
900  #define SHARED_LOCKS_REQUIRED(...) \
901    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(shared_locks_required(__VA_ARGS__))
902
903  // Replaced by CAPABILITY
904  #define LOCKABLE \
905    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(lockable)
906
907  // Replaced by SCOPED_CAPABILITY
908  #define SCOPED_LOCKABLE \
909    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(scoped_lockable)
910
911  // Replaced by ACQUIRE
912  #define EXCLUSIVE_LOCK_FUNCTION(...) \
913    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(exclusive_lock_function(__VA_ARGS__))
914
915  // Replaced by ACQUIRE_SHARED
916  #define SHARED_LOCK_FUNCTION(...) \
917    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(shared_lock_function(__VA_ARGS__))
918
919  // Replaced by RELEASE and RELEASE_SHARED
920  #define UNLOCK_FUNCTION(...) \
921    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(unlock_function(__VA_ARGS__))
922
923  // Replaced by TRY_ACQUIRE
924  #define EXCLUSIVE_TRYLOCK_FUNCTION(...) \
925    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(exclusive_trylock_function(__VA_ARGS__))
926
927  // Replaced by TRY_ACQUIRE_SHARED
928  #define SHARED_TRYLOCK_FUNCTION(...) \
929    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(shared_trylock_function(__VA_ARGS__))
930
931  // Replaced by ASSERT_CAPABILITY
932  #define ASSERT_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK(...) \
933    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(assert_exclusive_lock(__VA_ARGS__))
934
935  // Replaced by ASSERT_SHARED_CAPABILITY
936  #define ASSERT_SHARED_LOCK(...) \
937    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(assert_shared_lock(__VA_ARGS__))
938
939  // Replaced by EXCLUDE_CAPABILITY.
940  #define LOCKS_EXCLUDED(...) \
941    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(locks_excluded(__VA_ARGS__))
942
943  // Replaced by RETURN_CAPABILITY
944  #define LOCK_RETURNED(x) \
945    THREAD_ANNOTATION_ATTRIBUTE__(lock_returned(x))
946
947  #endif  // USE_LOCK_STYLE_THREAD_SAFETY_ATTRIBUTES
948
949  #endif  // THREAD_SAFETY_ANALYSIS_MUTEX_H
950
951