Bottom line (TL;DR): LFENCE
alone indeed seems useless for memory ordering, however it does not make SFENCE
a substitute for MFENCE
. The "arithmetic" logic in the question is not applicable.
Here is an excerpt from Intel's Software Developers Manual, volume 3, section 8.2.2 (the edition 325384-052US of September 2014), the same that I used in another answer
- Reads are not reordered with other reads.
- Writes are not reordered with older reads.
- Writes to memory are not reordered with other writes, with the following exceptions:
- writes executed with the CLFLUSH instruction;
- streaming stores (writes) executed with the non-temporal move instructions (MOVNTI, MOVNTQ, MOVNTDQ, MOVNTPS, and MOVNTPD); and
- string operations (see Section 8.2.4.1).
- Reads may be reordered with older writes to different locations but not with older writes to the same location.
- Reads or writes cannot be reordered with I/O instructions, locked instructions, or serializing instructions.
- Reads cannot pass earlier LFENCE and MFENCE instructions.
- Writes cannot pass earlier LFENCE, SFENCE, and MFENCE instructions.
- LFENCE instructions cannot pass earlier reads.
- SFENCE instructions cannot pass earlier writes.
- MFENCE instructions cannot pass earlier reads or writes.
From here, it follows that:
MFENCE
is a full memory fence for all operations on all memory types, whether non-temporal or not.
SFENCE
only prevents reordering of writes (in other terminology, it's a StoreStore barrier), and is only useful together with non-temporal stores and other instructions listed as exceptions.
LFENCE
prevents reordering of reads with subsequent reads and writes (i.e. it combines LoadLoad and LoadStore barriers). However, the first two bullets say that LoadLoad and LoadStore barriers are always in place, no exceptions. Therefore LFENCE
alone is useless for memory ordering.
To support the last claim, I looked at all places where LFENCE
is mentioned in all 3 volumes of Intel's manual, and found none which would say that LFENCE
is required for memory consistency. Even MOVNTDQA
- the only non-temporal load instruction so far - mentions MFENCE
but not LFENCE
.
Update: see answers on Why is (or isn't?) SFENCE + LFENCE equivalent to MFENCE? for correct answers to the guesswork below
Whether MFENCE
is equivalent to a "sum" of other two fences or not is a tricky question. At glance, among the three fence instructions only MFENCE
provides StoreLoad barrier, i.e. prevents reordering of reads with earlier writes. However the correct answer requires to know more than the above rules; namely, it's important that all fence instructions are ordered with respect to each other. This makes the SFENCE LFENCE
sequence more powerful than a mere union of individual effects: this sequence also prevents StoreLoad reordering (because loads cannot pass LFENCE
, which cannot pass SFENCE
, which cannot pass stores), and thus constitutes a full memory fence (but also see the note (*) below). Note however that order matters here, and the LFENCE SFENCE
sequence does not have the same synergy effect.
However, while one can say that MFENCE ~ SFENCE LFENCE
and LFENCE ~ NOP
, that does not mean MFENCE ~ SFENCE
. I deliberately use equivalence (~) and not equality (=) to stress that arithmetic rules do not apply here. The mutual effect of SFENCE
followed by LFENCE
makes the difference; even though loads are not reordered with each other, LFENCE
is required to prevent reordering of loads with SFENCE
.
(*) It still might be correct to say that MFENCE
is stronger than the combination of the other two fences. In particular, a note to CLFLUSH
instruction in the volume 2 of Intel's manual says that "CLFLUSH
is only ordered by the MFENCE
instruction. It is not guaranteed to be ordered by any other fencing or serializing instructions or by another CLFLUSH
instruction."
(Update, clflush
is now defined as strongly ordered (like a normal store, so you only need mfence
if you want to block later loads), but clflushopt
is weakly ordered, but can be fenced by sfence
.)