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concurrency - Concurrent stores seen in a consistent order

The Intel Architectures Software Developer's Manual, Aug. 2012, vol. 3A, sect. 8.2.2:

Any two stores are seen in a consistent order by processors other than those performing the stores.

But can this be so?

The reason I ask is this: Consider a dual-core Intel i7 processor with HyperThreading. According to the Manual's vol. 1, Fig. 2-8, the i7's logical processors 0 and 1 share an L1/L2 cache, but its logical processors 2 and 3 share a different L1/L2 cache -- whereas all the logical processors share a single L3 cache. Suppose that logical processors 0 and 2 -- which do not share an L1/L2 cache -- write to the same memory location at about the same time, and that the writes go no deeper than L2 for the moment. Could not logical processors 1 and 3 (which are "processors other than those performing the stores") then see the "two stores in an inconsistent order"?

To achieve consistency, must not logical processors 0 and 2 issue SFENCE instructions, and logical processors 1 and 3 issue LFENCE instructions? Notwithstanding, the Manual seems to think otherwise, and its opinion in the matter does not have the look of a mere misprint. It looks deliberate. I'm confused.

UPDATE

In light of @Benoit's answer, a following question: The only purpose of L1 and L2 therefore is to speed loads. It is L3 that speeds stores. Is that right?

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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Intel CPUs (like all normal SMP systems) use (a variant of) MESI to ensure cache coherency for cached loads/stores. i.e. that all cores see the same view of memory through their caches.

A core can only write to a cache line after doing a Read For Ownership (RFO), getting the line in Exclusive state (no other caches have a valid copy of the line that could satisfy loads). Related: atomic RMW operations prevent other cores from doing anything to the target cache-line by locking it in Modified state for the duration of the operation.

To test for this kind of reordering, you need two other threads which both read both stores (in opposite order). Your proposed scenario has one core (reader2) reading an old value from memory (or L3, or its own private L2/L1) after another core (reader1) has read the new value of the same line stored by writer1. This is impossible: for reader1 to see writer1's store, writer1 must have already completed a RFO that invalidates all other copies of the cache line anywhere. And reading directly from DRAM without (effectively) snooping any write-back caches is not allowed. (Wikipedia's MESI article has diagrams.)

When a store commits (from the store buffer inside a core) to L1d cache, it becomes globally visible to all other cores at the same time. Before that, only the local core could "see" it (via store->load forwarding from the store buffer).

On a system where the only way for data to propagate from one core to another is through the global cache-coherency domain, MESI cache coherency alone guarantees that a single global store order exists, that all threads can agree on. x86's strong memory ordering rules make this global store order be some interleaving of program order, and we call this a Total Store Order memory model.

x86's strong memory model disallows LoadLoad reordering, so loads take their data from cache in program order without any barrier instructions in the reader threads.1

Loads actually snoop the local store buffer before taking data from the coherent cache. This is the reason the consistent order rule you quoted excludes the case where either store was done by the same core that's doing the loads. See Globally Invisible load instructions for more about where load data really comes from. But when the load addresses don't overlap with any recent stores, what I said above applies: load order is the order of sampling from the shared globally coherent cache domain.


The consistent order rule is a pretty weak requirement. Many non-x86 ISAs don't guarantee it on paper, but very few actual (non-x86) CPU designs have a mechanism by which one core can see store data from another core before it becomes globally visible to all cores. IBM POWER with SMT is one such example: Will two atomic writes to different locations in different threads always be seen in the same order by other threads? explains how forwarding between logical cores within one physical core can cause it. (This is a like what you proposed, but within the store buffer rather than L2).

x86 microarchitectures with HyperThreading (or AMD's SMT in Ryzen) obey that requirement by statically partitioning the store buffer between the logical cores on one physical core. What will be used for data exchange between threads are executing on one Core with HT? So even within one physical core, a store has to commit to L1d (and become globally visible) before the other logical core can load the new data.

It's probably simpler to not have forwarding from retired-but-not-committed stores in one logical core to the other logical cores on the same physical core.

(The other requirements of x86's TSO memory model, like loads and stores appearing in program order, are harder. Modern x86 CPUs execute out of order, but use a Memory Order Buffer to maintain the illusion and have stores commit to L1d in program order. Loads can speculatively take values earlier than they're "supposed" to, and then check later. This is why Intel CPUs have "memory-order mis-speculation" pipeline nukes: What are the latency and throughput costs of producer-consumer sharing of a memory location between hyper-siblings versus non-hyper siblings?.)

As @BeeOnRope points out, there is an interaction between HT and maintaining the illusion of no LoadLoad reordering: normally a CPU can detect when another core touched a cache line after a load actual read it but before it was architecturally allowed to have read it: the load port can track invalidations to that cache line. But with HT, load ports also have to snoop the stores that the other hyperthread commits to L1d cache, because they won't invalidate the line. (Other mechanisms are possible, but it is a problem that CPU designers have to solve if they want high performance for "normal" loads.)


Footnote 1: On a weakly-ordered ISA, you'd use load-ordering barriers to control the order in which the 2 loads in each reader take their data from the globally coherent cache domain.

The writer threads are only doing a single store each so a fence is meaningless. Because all cores share a single coherent cache domain, fences only need to control local reordering within a core. The store buffer in each core already tries to make stores globally visible as quickly as possible (while respecting the ordering rules of the ISA), so a barrier just makes the CPU wait before doing later operations.

x86 lfence has basically no memory-ordering use cases, and sfence is only useful with NT stores. Only mfence is useful for "normal" stuff, when one thread is writing something and then reading another location. http://preshing.com/20120515/memory-reordering-caught-in-the-act/. So it blocks StoreLoad reordering and store-forwarding across the barrier.


In light of @Benoit's answer, a following question: The only purpose of L1 and L2 therefore is to speed loads. It is L3 that speeds stores. Is that right?

No, L1d and L2 are write-back caches: Which cache mapping technique is used in intel core i7 processor?. Repeated stores to the same line can be absorbed by L1d.

But Intel uses inclusive L3 caches, so how can L1d in one core have the only copy? L3 is actually tag-inclusive, which is all that's needed for L3 tags work as a snoop filter (instead of broadcasting RFO requests to every core). The actual data in dirty lines is private to the per-core inner caches, but L3 knows which core has the current data for a line (and thus where to send a request when another core wants to read a line that another core has in Modified state). Clean cache lines (in Shared state) are data-inclusive of L3, but writing to a cache line doesn't write-through to L3.


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