/* * Copyright 2014 Google Inc. * * Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be * found in the LICENSE file. */ #ifndef SkDynamicAnnotations_DEFINED #define SkDynamicAnnotations_DEFINED // This file contains macros used to send out-of-band signals to dynamic instrumentation systems, // namely thread sanitizer. This is a cut-down version of the full dynamic_annotations library with // only the features used by Skia. // We check the same define to know to enable the annotations, but prefix all our macros with SK_. #if DYNAMIC_ANNOTATIONS_ENABLED extern "C" { // TSAN provides these hooks. void AnnotateIgnoreReadsBegin(const char* file, int line); void AnnotateIgnoreReadsEnd(const char* file, int line); } // extern "C" // SK_ANNOTATE_UNPROTECTED_READ can wrap any variable read to tell TSAN to ignore that it appears to // be a racy read. This should be used only when we can make an external guarantee that though this // particular read is racy, it is being used as part of a mechanism which is thread safe. Examples: // - the first check in double-checked locking; // - checking if a ref count is equal to 1. // Note that in both these cases, we must still add terrifyingly subtle memory barriers to provide // that overall thread safety guarantee. Using this macro to shut TSAN up without providing such an // external guarantee is pretty much never correct. template inline T SK_ANNOTATE_UNPROTECTED_READ(const volatile T& x) { AnnotateIgnoreReadsBegin(__FILE__, __LINE__); T read = x; AnnotateIgnoreReadsEnd(__FILE__, __LINE__); return read; } #else // !DYNAMIC_ANNOTATIONS_ENABLED #define SK_ANNOTATE_UNPROTECTED_READ(x) (x) #endif #endif//SkDynamicAnnotations_DEFINED