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v6.2
  1/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
  2#ifndef _LINUX_CLOSURE_H
  3#define _LINUX_CLOSURE_H
  4
  5#include <linux/llist.h>
  6#include <linux/sched.h>
  7#include <linux/sched/task_stack.h>
  8#include <linux/workqueue.h>
  9
 10/*
 11 * Closure is perhaps the most overused and abused term in computer science, but
 12 * since I've been unable to come up with anything better you're stuck with it
 13 * again.
 14 *
 15 * What are closures?
 16 *
 17 * They embed a refcount. The basic idea is they count "things that are in
 18 * progress" - in flight bios, some other thread that's doing something else -
 19 * anything you might want to wait on.
 20 *
 21 * The refcount may be manipulated with closure_get() and closure_put().
 22 * closure_put() is where many of the interesting things happen, when it causes
 23 * the refcount to go to 0.
 24 *
 25 * Closures can be used to wait on things both synchronously and asynchronously,
 26 * and synchronous and asynchronous use can be mixed without restriction. To
 27 * wait synchronously, use closure_sync() - you will sleep until your closure's
 28 * refcount hits 1.
 29 *
 30 * To wait asynchronously, use
 31 *   continue_at(cl, next_function, workqueue);
 32 *
 33 * passing it, as you might expect, the function to run when nothing is pending
 34 * and the workqueue to run that function out of.
 35 *
 36 * continue_at() also, critically, requires a 'return' immediately following the
 37 * location where this macro is referenced, to return to the calling function.
 38 * There's good reason for this.
 39 *
 40 * To use safely closures asynchronously, they must always have a refcount while
 41 * they are running owned by the thread that is running them. Otherwise, suppose
 42 * you submit some bios and wish to have a function run when they all complete:
 43 *
 44 * foo_endio(struct bio *bio)
 45 * {
 46 *	closure_put(cl);
 47 * }
 48 *
 49 * closure_init(cl);
 50 *
 51 * do_stuff();
 52 * closure_get(cl);
 53 * bio1->bi_endio = foo_endio;
 54 * bio_submit(bio1);
 55 *
 56 * do_more_stuff();
 57 * closure_get(cl);
 58 * bio2->bi_endio = foo_endio;
 59 * bio_submit(bio2);
 60 *
 61 * continue_at(cl, complete_some_read, system_wq);
 62 *
 63 * If closure's refcount started at 0, complete_some_read() could run before the
 64 * second bio was submitted - which is almost always not what you want! More
 65 * importantly, it wouldn't be possible to say whether the original thread or
 66 * complete_some_read()'s thread owned the closure - and whatever state it was
 67 * associated with!
 68 *
 69 * So, closure_init() initializes a closure's refcount to 1 - and when a
 70 * closure_fn is run, the refcount will be reset to 1 first.
 71 *
 72 * Then, the rule is - if you got the refcount with closure_get(), release it
 73 * with closure_put() (i.e, in a bio->bi_endio function). If you have a refcount
 74 * on a closure because you called closure_init() or you were run out of a
 75 * closure - _always_ use continue_at(). Doing so consistently will help
 76 * eliminate an entire class of particularly pernicious races.
 77 *
 78 * Lastly, you might have a wait list dedicated to a specific event, and have no
 79 * need for specifying the condition - you just want to wait until someone runs
 80 * closure_wake_up() on the appropriate wait list. In that case, just use
 81 * closure_wait(). It will return either true or false, depending on whether the
 82 * closure was already on a wait list or not - a closure can only be on one wait
 83 * list at a time.
 84 *
 85 * Parents:
 86 *
 87 * closure_init() takes two arguments - it takes the closure to initialize, and
 88 * a (possibly null) parent.
 89 *
 90 * If parent is non null, the new closure will have a refcount for its lifetime;
 91 * a closure is considered to be "finished" when its refcount hits 0 and the
 92 * function to run is null. Hence
 93 *
 94 * continue_at(cl, NULL, NULL);
 95 *
 96 * returns up the (spaghetti) stack of closures, precisely like normal return
 97 * returns up the C stack. continue_at() with non null fn is better thought of
 98 * as doing a tail call.
 99 *
100 * All this implies that a closure should typically be embedded in a particular
101 * struct (which its refcount will normally control the lifetime of), and that
102 * struct can very much be thought of as a stack frame.
103 */
104
105struct closure;
106struct closure_syncer;
107typedef void (closure_fn) (struct closure *);
108extern struct dentry *bcache_debug;
109
110struct closure_waitlist {
111	struct llist_head	list;
112};
113
114enum closure_state {
115	/*
116	 * CLOSURE_WAITING: Set iff the closure is on a waitlist. Must be set by
117	 * the thread that owns the closure, and cleared by the thread that's
118	 * waking up the closure.
119	 *
120	 * The rest are for debugging and don't affect behaviour:
121	 *
122	 * CLOSURE_RUNNING: Set when a closure is running (i.e. by
123	 * closure_init() and when closure_put() runs then next function), and
124	 * must be cleared before remaining hits 0. Primarily to help guard
125	 * against incorrect usage and accidentally transferring references.
126	 * continue_at() and closure_return() clear it for you, if you're doing
127	 * something unusual you can use closure_set_dead() which also helps
128	 * annotate where references are being transferred.
129	 */
130
131	CLOSURE_BITS_START	= (1U << 26),
132	CLOSURE_DESTRUCTOR	= (1U << 26),
133	CLOSURE_WAITING		= (1U << 28),
134	CLOSURE_RUNNING		= (1U << 30),
135};
136
137#define CLOSURE_GUARD_MASK					\
138	((CLOSURE_DESTRUCTOR|CLOSURE_WAITING|CLOSURE_RUNNING) << 1)
139
140#define CLOSURE_REMAINING_MASK		(CLOSURE_BITS_START - 1)
141#define CLOSURE_REMAINING_INITIALIZER	(1|CLOSURE_RUNNING)
142
143struct closure {
144	union {
145		struct {
146			struct workqueue_struct *wq;
147			struct closure_syncer	*s;
148			struct llist_node	list;
149			closure_fn		*fn;
150		};
151		struct work_struct	work;
152	};
153
154	struct closure		*parent;
155
156	atomic_t		remaining;
157
158#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
159#define CLOSURE_MAGIC_DEAD	0xc054dead
160#define CLOSURE_MAGIC_ALIVE	0xc054a11e
161
162	unsigned int		magic;
163	struct list_head	all;
164	unsigned long		ip;
165	unsigned long		waiting_on;
166#endif
167};
168
169void closure_sub(struct closure *cl, int v);
170void closure_put(struct closure *cl);
171void __closure_wake_up(struct closure_waitlist *list);
172bool closure_wait(struct closure_waitlist *list, struct closure *cl);
173void __closure_sync(struct closure *cl);
174
175/**
176 * closure_sync - sleep until a closure a closure has nothing left to wait on
177 *
178 * Sleeps until the refcount hits 1 - the thread that's running the closure owns
179 * the last refcount.
180 */
181static inline void closure_sync(struct closure *cl)
182{
183	if ((atomic_read(&cl->remaining) & CLOSURE_REMAINING_MASK) != 1)
184		__closure_sync(cl);
185}
186
187#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
188
189void closure_debug_init(void);
190void closure_debug_create(struct closure *cl);
191void closure_debug_destroy(struct closure *cl);
192
193#else
194
195static inline void closure_debug_init(void) {}
196static inline void closure_debug_create(struct closure *cl) {}
197static inline void closure_debug_destroy(struct closure *cl) {}
198
199#endif
200
201static inline void closure_set_ip(struct closure *cl)
202{
203#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
204	cl->ip = _THIS_IP_;
205#endif
206}
207
208static inline void closure_set_ret_ip(struct closure *cl)
209{
210#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
211	cl->ip = _RET_IP_;
212#endif
213}
214
215static inline void closure_set_waiting(struct closure *cl, unsigned long f)
216{
217#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
218	cl->waiting_on = f;
219#endif
220}
221
222static inline void closure_set_stopped(struct closure *cl)
223{
224	atomic_sub(CLOSURE_RUNNING, &cl->remaining);
225}
226
227static inline void set_closure_fn(struct closure *cl, closure_fn *fn,
228				  struct workqueue_struct *wq)
229{
230	closure_set_ip(cl);
231	cl->fn = fn;
232	cl->wq = wq;
233	/* between atomic_dec() in closure_put() */
234	smp_mb__before_atomic();
235}
236
237static inline void closure_queue(struct closure *cl)
238{
239	struct workqueue_struct *wq = cl->wq;
240	/**
241	 * Changes made to closure, work_struct, or a couple of other structs
242	 * may cause work.func not pointing to the right location.
243	 */
244	BUILD_BUG_ON(offsetof(struct closure, fn)
245		     != offsetof(struct work_struct, func));
246	if (wq) {
247		INIT_WORK(&cl->work, cl->work.func);
248		BUG_ON(!queue_work(wq, &cl->work));
249	} else
250		cl->fn(cl);
251}
252
253/**
254 * closure_get - increment a closure's refcount
255 */
256static inline void closure_get(struct closure *cl)
257{
258#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
259	BUG_ON((atomic_inc_return(&cl->remaining) &
260		CLOSURE_REMAINING_MASK) <= 1);
261#else
262	atomic_inc(&cl->remaining);
263#endif
264}
265
266/**
267 * closure_init - Initialize a closure, setting the refcount to 1
268 * @cl:		closure to initialize
269 * @parent:	parent of the new closure. cl will take a refcount on it for its
270 *		lifetime; may be NULL.
271 */
272static inline void closure_init(struct closure *cl, struct closure *parent)
273{
274	memset(cl, 0, sizeof(struct closure));
275	cl->parent = parent;
276	if (parent)
277		closure_get(parent);
278
279	atomic_set(&cl->remaining, CLOSURE_REMAINING_INITIALIZER);
280
281	closure_debug_create(cl);
282	closure_set_ip(cl);
283}
284
285static inline void closure_init_stack(struct closure *cl)
286{
287	memset(cl, 0, sizeof(struct closure));
288	atomic_set(&cl->remaining, CLOSURE_REMAINING_INITIALIZER);
289}
290
291/**
292 * closure_wake_up - wake up all closures on a wait list,
293 *		     with memory barrier
294 */
295static inline void closure_wake_up(struct closure_waitlist *list)
296{
297	/* Memory barrier for the wait list */
298	smp_mb();
299	__closure_wake_up(list);
300}
301
302/**
303 * continue_at - jump to another function with barrier
304 *
305 * After @cl is no longer waiting on anything (i.e. all outstanding refs have
306 * been dropped with closure_put()), it will resume execution at @fn running out
307 * of @wq (or, if @wq is NULL, @fn will be called by closure_put() directly).
308 *
309 * This is because after calling continue_at() you no longer have a ref on @cl,
310 * and whatever @cl owns may be freed out from under you - a running closure fn
311 * has a ref on its own closure which continue_at() drops.
312 *
313 * Note you are expected to immediately return after using this macro.
314 */
315#define continue_at(_cl, _fn, _wq)					\
316do {									\
317	set_closure_fn(_cl, _fn, _wq);					\
318	closure_sub(_cl, CLOSURE_RUNNING + 1);				\
319} while (0)
320
321/**
322 * closure_return - finish execution of a closure
323 *
324 * This is used to indicate that @cl is finished: when all outstanding refs on
325 * @cl have been dropped @cl's ref on its parent closure (as passed to
326 * closure_init()) will be dropped, if one was specified - thus this can be
327 * thought of as returning to the parent closure.
328 */
329#define closure_return(_cl)	continue_at((_cl), NULL, NULL)
330
331/**
332 * continue_at_nobarrier - jump to another function without barrier
333 *
334 * Causes @fn to be executed out of @cl, in @wq context (or called directly if
335 * @wq is NULL).
336 *
337 * The ref the caller of continue_at_nobarrier() had on @cl is now owned by @fn,
338 * thus it's not safe to touch anything protected by @cl after a
339 * continue_at_nobarrier().
340 */
341#define continue_at_nobarrier(_cl, _fn, _wq)				\
342do {									\
343	set_closure_fn(_cl, _fn, _wq);					\
344	closure_queue(_cl);						\
345} while (0)
346
347/**
348 * closure_return_with_destructor - finish execution of a closure,
349 *				    with destructor
350 *
351 * Works like closure_return(), except @destructor will be called when all
352 * outstanding refs on @cl have been dropped; @destructor may be used to safely
353 * free the memory occupied by @cl, and it is called with the ref on the parent
354 * closure still held - so @destructor could safely return an item to a
355 * freelist protected by @cl's parent.
356 */
357#define closure_return_with_destructor(_cl, _destructor)		\
358do {									\
359	set_closure_fn(_cl, _destructor, NULL);				\
360	closure_sub(_cl, CLOSURE_RUNNING - CLOSURE_DESTRUCTOR + 1);	\
361} while (0)
362
363/**
364 * closure_call - execute @fn out of a new, uninitialized closure
365 *
366 * Typically used when running out of one closure, and we want to run @fn
367 * asynchronously out of a new closure - @parent will then wait for @cl to
368 * finish.
369 */
370static inline void closure_call(struct closure *cl, closure_fn fn,
371				struct workqueue_struct *wq,
372				struct closure *parent)
373{
374	closure_init(cl, parent);
375	continue_at_nobarrier(cl, fn, wq);
376}
377
378#endif /* _LINUX_CLOSURE_H */
v5.14.15
  1/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
  2#ifndef _LINUX_CLOSURE_H
  3#define _LINUX_CLOSURE_H
  4
  5#include <linux/llist.h>
  6#include <linux/sched.h>
  7#include <linux/sched/task_stack.h>
  8#include <linux/workqueue.h>
  9
 10/*
 11 * Closure is perhaps the most overused and abused term in computer science, but
 12 * since I've been unable to come up with anything better you're stuck with it
 13 * again.
 14 *
 15 * What are closures?
 16 *
 17 * They embed a refcount. The basic idea is they count "things that are in
 18 * progress" - in flight bios, some other thread that's doing something else -
 19 * anything you might want to wait on.
 20 *
 21 * The refcount may be manipulated with closure_get() and closure_put().
 22 * closure_put() is where many of the interesting things happen, when it causes
 23 * the refcount to go to 0.
 24 *
 25 * Closures can be used to wait on things both synchronously and asynchronously,
 26 * and synchronous and asynchronous use can be mixed without restriction. To
 27 * wait synchronously, use closure_sync() - you will sleep until your closure's
 28 * refcount hits 1.
 29 *
 30 * To wait asynchronously, use
 31 *   continue_at(cl, next_function, workqueue);
 32 *
 33 * passing it, as you might expect, the function to run when nothing is pending
 34 * and the workqueue to run that function out of.
 35 *
 36 * continue_at() also, critically, requires a 'return' immediately following the
 37 * location where this macro is referenced, to return to the calling function.
 38 * There's good reason for this.
 39 *
 40 * To use safely closures asynchronously, they must always have a refcount while
 41 * they are running owned by the thread that is running them. Otherwise, suppose
 42 * you submit some bios and wish to have a function run when they all complete:
 43 *
 44 * foo_endio(struct bio *bio)
 45 * {
 46 *	closure_put(cl);
 47 * }
 48 *
 49 * closure_init(cl);
 50 *
 51 * do_stuff();
 52 * closure_get(cl);
 53 * bio1->bi_endio = foo_endio;
 54 * bio_submit(bio1);
 55 *
 56 * do_more_stuff();
 57 * closure_get(cl);
 58 * bio2->bi_endio = foo_endio;
 59 * bio_submit(bio2);
 60 *
 61 * continue_at(cl, complete_some_read, system_wq);
 62 *
 63 * If closure's refcount started at 0, complete_some_read() could run before the
 64 * second bio was submitted - which is almost always not what you want! More
 65 * importantly, it wouldn't be possible to say whether the original thread or
 66 * complete_some_read()'s thread owned the closure - and whatever state it was
 67 * associated with!
 68 *
 69 * So, closure_init() initializes a closure's refcount to 1 - and when a
 70 * closure_fn is run, the refcount will be reset to 1 first.
 71 *
 72 * Then, the rule is - if you got the refcount with closure_get(), release it
 73 * with closure_put() (i.e, in a bio->bi_endio function). If you have a refcount
 74 * on a closure because you called closure_init() or you were run out of a
 75 * closure - _always_ use continue_at(). Doing so consistently will help
 76 * eliminate an entire class of particularly pernicious races.
 77 *
 78 * Lastly, you might have a wait list dedicated to a specific event, and have no
 79 * need for specifying the condition - you just want to wait until someone runs
 80 * closure_wake_up() on the appropriate wait list. In that case, just use
 81 * closure_wait(). It will return either true or false, depending on whether the
 82 * closure was already on a wait list or not - a closure can only be on one wait
 83 * list at a time.
 84 *
 85 * Parents:
 86 *
 87 * closure_init() takes two arguments - it takes the closure to initialize, and
 88 * a (possibly null) parent.
 89 *
 90 * If parent is non null, the new closure will have a refcount for its lifetime;
 91 * a closure is considered to be "finished" when its refcount hits 0 and the
 92 * function to run is null. Hence
 93 *
 94 * continue_at(cl, NULL, NULL);
 95 *
 96 * returns up the (spaghetti) stack of closures, precisely like normal return
 97 * returns up the C stack. continue_at() with non null fn is better thought of
 98 * as doing a tail call.
 99 *
100 * All this implies that a closure should typically be embedded in a particular
101 * struct (which its refcount will normally control the lifetime of), and that
102 * struct can very much be thought of as a stack frame.
103 */
104
105struct closure;
106struct closure_syncer;
107typedef void (closure_fn) (struct closure *);
108extern struct dentry *bcache_debug;
109
110struct closure_waitlist {
111	struct llist_head	list;
112};
113
114enum closure_state {
115	/*
116	 * CLOSURE_WAITING: Set iff the closure is on a waitlist. Must be set by
117	 * the thread that owns the closure, and cleared by the thread that's
118	 * waking up the closure.
119	 *
120	 * The rest are for debugging and don't affect behaviour:
121	 *
122	 * CLOSURE_RUNNING: Set when a closure is running (i.e. by
123	 * closure_init() and when closure_put() runs then next function), and
124	 * must be cleared before remaining hits 0. Primarily to help guard
125	 * against incorrect usage and accidentally transferring references.
126	 * continue_at() and closure_return() clear it for you, if you're doing
127	 * something unusual you can use closure_set_dead() which also helps
128	 * annotate where references are being transferred.
129	 */
130
131	CLOSURE_BITS_START	= (1U << 26),
132	CLOSURE_DESTRUCTOR	= (1U << 26),
133	CLOSURE_WAITING		= (1U << 28),
134	CLOSURE_RUNNING		= (1U << 30),
135};
136
137#define CLOSURE_GUARD_MASK					\
138	((CLOSURE_DESTRUCTOR|CLOSURE_WAITING|CLOSURE_RUNNING) << 1)
139
140#define CLOSURE_REMAINING_MASK		(CLOSURE_BITS_START - 1)
141#define CLOSURE_REMAINING_INITIALIZER	(1|CLOSURE_RUNNING)
142
143struct closure {
144	union {
145		struct {
146			struct workqueue_struct *wq;
147			struct closure_syncer	*s;
148			struct llist_node	list;
149			closure_fn		*fn;
150		};
151		struct work_struct	work;
152	};
153
154	struct closure		*parent;
155
156	atomic_t		remaining;
157
158#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
159#define CLOSURE_MAGIC_DEAD	0xc054dead
160#define CLOSURE_MAGIC_ALIVE	0xc054a11e
161
162	unsigned int		magic;
163	struct list_head	all;
164	unsigned long		ip;
165	unsigned long		waiting_on;
166#endif
167};
168
169void closure_sub(struct closure *cl, int v);
170void closure_put(struct closure *cl);
171void __closure_wake_up(struct closure_waitlist *list);
172bool closure_wait(struct closure_waitlist *list, struct closure *cl);
173void __closure_sync(struct closure *cl);
174
175/**
176 * closure_sync - sleep until a closure a closure has nothing left to wait on
177 *
178 * Sleeps until the refcount hits 1 - the thread that's running the closure owns
179 * the last refcount.
180 */
181static inline void closure_sync(struct closure *cl)
182{
183	if ((atomic_read(&cl->remaining) & CLOSURE_REMAINING_MASK) != 1)
184		__closure_sync(cl);
185}
186
187#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
188
189void closure_debug_init(void);
190void closure_debug_create(struct closure *cl);
191void closure_debug_destroy(struct closure *cl);
192
193#else
194
195static inline void closure_debug_init(void) {}
196static inline void closure_debug_create(struct closure *cl) {}
197static inline void closure_debug_destroy(struct closure *cl) {}
198
199#endif
200
201static inline void closure_set_ip(struct closure *cl)
202{
203#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
204	cl->ip = _THIS_IP_;
205#endif
206}
207
208static inline void closure_set_ret_ip(struct closure *cl)
209{
210#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
211	cl->ip = _RET_IP_;
212#endif
213}
214
215static inline void closure_set_waiting(struct closure *cl, unsigned long f)
216{
217#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
218	cl->waiting_on = f;
219#endif
220}
221
222static inline void closure_set_stopped(struct closure *cl)
223{
224	atomic_sub(CLOSURE_RUNNING, &cl->remaining);
225}
226
227static inline void set_closure_fn(struct closure *cl, closure_fn *fn,
228				  struct workqueue_struct *wq)
229{
230	closure_set_ip(cl);
231	cl->fn = fn;
232	cl->wq = wq;
233	/* between atomic_dec() in closure_put() */
234	smp_mb__before_atomic();
235}
236
237static inline void closure_queue(struct closure *cl)
238{
239	struct workqueue_struct *wq = cl->wq;
240	/**
241	 * Changes made to closure, work_struct, or a couple of other structs
242	 * may cause work.func not pointing to the right location.
243	 */
244	BUILD_BUG_ON(offsetof(struct closure, fn)
245		     != offsetof(struct work_struct, func));
246	if (wq) {
247		INIT_WORK(&cl->work, cl->work.func);
248		BUG_ON(!queue_work(wq, &cl->work));
249	} else
250		cl->fn(cl);
251}
252
253/**
254 * closure_get - increment a closure's refcount
255 */
256static inline void closure_get(struct closure *cl)
257{
258#ifdef CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG
259	BUG_ON((atomic_inc_return(&cl->remaining) &
260		CLOSURE_REMAINING_MASK) <= 1);
261#else
262	atomic_inc(&cl->remaining);
263#endif
264}
265
266/**
267 * closure_init - Initialize a closure, setting the refcount to 1
268 * @cl:		closure to initialize
269 * @parent:	parent of the new closure. cl will take a refcount on it for its
270 *		lifetime; may be NULL.
271 */
272static inline void closure_init(struct closure *cl, struct closure *parent)
273{
274	memset(cl, 0, sizeof(struct closure));
275	cl->parent = parent;
276	if (parent)
277		closure_get(parent);
278
279	atomic_set(&cl->remaining, CLOSURE_REMAINING_INITIALIZER);
280
281	closure_debug_create(cl);
282	closure_set_ip(cl);
283}
284
285static inline void closure_init_stack(struct closure *cl)
286{
287	memset(cl, 0, sizeof(struct closure));
288	atomic_set(&cl->remaining, CLOSURE_REMAINING_INITIALIZER);
289}
290
291/**
292 * closure_wake_up - wake up all closures on a wait list,
293 *		     with memory barrier
294 */
295static inline void closure_wake_up(struct closure_waitlist *list)
296{
297	/* Memory barrier for the wait list */
298	smp_mb();
299	__closure_wake_up(list);
300}
301
302/**
303 * continue_at - jump to another function with barrier
304 *
305 * After @cl is no longer waiting on anything (i.e. all outstanding refs have
306 * been dropped with closure_put()), it will resume execution at @fn running out
307 * of @wq (or, if @wq is NULL, @fn will be called by closure_put() directly).
308 *
309 * This is because after calling continue_at() you no longer have a ref on @cl,
310 * and whatever @cl owns may be freed out from under you - a running closure fn
311 * has a ref on its own closure which continue_at() drops.
312 *
313 * Note you are expected to immediately return after using this macro.
314 */
315#define continue_at(_cl, _fn, _wq)					\
316do {									\
317	set_closure_fn(_cl, _fn, _wq);					\
318	closure_sub(_cl, CLOSURE_RUNNING + 1);				\
319} while (0)
320
321/**
322 * closure_return - finish execution of a closure
323 *
324 * This is used to indicate that @cl is finished: when all outstanding refs on
325 * @cl have been dropped @cl's ref on its parent closure (as passed to
326 * closure_init()) will be dropped, if one was specified - thus this can be
327 * thought of as returning to the parent closure.
328 */
329#define closure_return(_cl)	continue_at((_cl), NULL, NULL)
330
331/**
332 * continue_at_nobarrier - jump to another function without barrier
333 *
334 * Causes @fn to be executed out of @cl, in @wq context (or called directly if
335 * @wq is NULL).
336 *
337 * The ref the caller of continue_at_nobarrier() had on @cl is now owned by @fn,
338 * thus it's not safe to touch anything protected by @cl after a
339 * continue_at_nobarrier().
340 */
341#define continue_at_nobarrier(_cl, _fn, _wq)				\
342do {									\
343	set_closure_fn(_cl, _fn, _wq);					\
344	closure_queue(_cl);						\
345} while (0)
346
347/**
348 * closure_return_with_destructor - finish execution of a closure,
349 *				    with destructor
350 *
351 * Works like closure_return(), except @destructor will be called when all
352 * outstanding refs on @cl have been dropped; @destructor may be used to safely
353 * free the memory occupied by @cl, and it is called with the ref on the parent
354 * closure still held - so @destructor could safely return an item to a
355 * freelist protected by @cl's parent.
356 */
357#define closure_return_with_destructor(_cl, _destructor)		\
358do {									\
359	set_closure_fn(_cl, _destructor, NULL);				\
360	closure_sub(_cl, CLOSURE_RUNNING - CLOSURE_DESTRUCTOR + 1);	\
361} while (0)
362
363/**
364 * closure_call - execute @fn out of a new, uninitialized closure
365 *
366 * Typically used when running out of one closure, and we want to run @fn
367 * asynchronously out of a new closure - @parent will then wait for @cl to
368 * finish.
369 */
370static inline void closure_call(struct closure *cl, closure_fn fn,
371				struct workqueue_struct *wq,
372				struct closure *parent)
373{
374	closure_init(cl, parent);
375	continue_at_nobarrier(cl, fn, wq);
376}
377
378#endif /* _LINUX_CLOSURE_H */