PCQ(9) Kernel Developer's Manual PCQ(9)

pcqproducer/consumer queue

#include <sys/pcq.h>

pcq_t *
pcq_create(size_t maxlen, km_flags_t kmflags);

void
pcq_destroy(pcq_t *pcq);

void *
pcq_get(pcq_t *pcq);

size_t
pcq_maxitems(pcq_t *pcq);

void *
pcq_peek(pcq_t *pcq);

bool
pcq_put(pcq_t *pcq, void *item);

The machine-independent pcq interface provides lockless producer/consumer queues. A queue (pcq_t) allows multiple writers (producers), but only a single reader (consumer). The consumer is expected to be protected by a lock that covers the structure that the pcq_t is embedded into (e.g., socket lock, ifnet hwlock). These queues operate in a first-in, first-out (FIFO) manner. The act of inserting or removing an item from a pcq_t does not modify the item in any way. pcq does not prevent an item from being inserted multiple times into a single pcq_t.

(maxlen, kmflags)
Create a queue that can store at most maxlen items at one time. kmflags should be either KM_SLEEP, if pcq_create() is allowed to sleep until resources are available, or KM_NOSLEEP if it should return NULL immediately, if resources are unavailable.
(pcq)
Free the resources held by pcq.
pcq_get(pcq)
Remove the next item to be consumed from the queue and return it. If the queue is empty, return NULL. The caller must prevent concurrent gets from occurring.
(pcq)
Return the maximum number of items that the queue can store at any one time.
pcq_peek(pcq)
Return the next item to be consumed from the queue but do not remove it from the queue. If the queue is empty, return NULL.
pcq_put(pcq, item)
Place an item at the end of the queue. If there is no room in the queue for the item, return false; otherwise, return true. The item must not have the value of NULL.

Any memory operations sequenced before pcq_put() of an item in one thread happen before all memory operations with data dependencies on the item returned by pcq_get() or pcq_peek() in another thread. For example:

int mumble;

/* producer */
mumble = 42;			// A
foo->x = 123;			// B
refcnt = foo->refcnt;		// C
pcq_put(pcq, foo);
KASSERT(refcnt == 0);

/* consumer */
foo = pcq_get(pcq);
if (foo == NULL)
	return;
atomic_inc_uint(&foo->refcnt);	// D
x = foo->x;			// E
if (x == 123)
	KASSERT(mumble == 42);	// F

In this example, memory operations B and C happen-before D and E. However, no ordering is guaranteed for A or F relative to any other memory operations, because the memory location of mumble is independent of the pointer foo returned by ().

If you must guarantee A happens before F, then on the consumer side, after () or (), you can call () to turn it into an acquire operation instead of a consume operation; () serves as the matching release operation. (This is a little dicey. Perhaps there should be separate () and () operations if this semantics is necessary.)

The pcq interface is implemented within the file sys/kern/subr_pcq.c.

atomic_ops(3), queue(3)

The pcq interface first appeared in NetBSD 6.0.

January 22, 2012 NetBSD 11.0