Thread

  1. Re: [PATCH] Add native windows on arm64 support

    Dave Cramer <davecramer@postgres.rocks> — 2024-09-24T20:01:30Z

    On Tue, 24 Sept 2024 at 14:31, Dave Cramer <davecramer@postgres.rocks>
    wrote:
    
    >
    >
    > On Tue, 13 Feb 2024 at 16:28, Dave Cramer <davecramer@postgres.rocks>
    > wrote:
    >
    >>
    >>
    >>
    >> On Tue, 13 Feb 2024 at 12:52, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote:
    >>
    >>> Hi,
    >>>
    >>> On 2024-02-13 12:49:33 -0500, Dave Cramer wrote:
    >>> > > I think I might have been on to something - if my human emulation of
    >>> a
    >>> > > preprocessor isn't wrong, we'd end up with
    >>> > >
    >>> > > #define S_UNLOCK(lock)  \
    >>> > >         do { _ReadWriteBarrier(); (*(lock)) = 0; } while (0)
    >>> > >
    >>> > > on msvc + arm. And that's entirely insufficient -
    >>> _ReadWriteBarrier() just
    >>> > > limits *compiler* level reordering, not CPU level reordering.  I
    >>> think it's
    >>> > > even insufficient on x86[-64], but it's definitely insufficient on
    >>> arm.
    >>> > >
    >>> > In fact ReadWriteBarrier has been deprecated _ReadWriteBarrier |
    >>> Microsoft
    >>> > Learn
    >>> > <
    >>> https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/intrinsics/readwritebarrier?view=msvc-170
    >>> >
    >>>
    >>> I'd just ignore that, that's just pushing towards more modern stuff
    >>> that's
    >>> more applicable to C++ than C.
    >>>
    >>>
    >>> > I did try using atomic_thread_fence as per atomic_thread_fence -
    >>> > cppreference.com
    >>> > <https://en.cppreference.com/w/c/atomic/atomic_thread_fence>
    >>>
    >>> The semantics of atomic_thread_fence are, uh, very odd.  I'd just use
    >>> MemoryBarrier().
    >>>
    >>> #define S_UNLOCK(lock)  \
    >>     do { MemoryBarrier(); (*(lock)) = 0; } while (0)
    >>
    >> #endif
    >>
    >> Has no effect.
    >>
    >> I have no idea if that is what you meant that I should do ?
    >>
    >> Dave
    >>
    >
    >
    > Revisiting this:
    >
    > Andrew, can you explain the difference between ninja test (which passes)
    > and what the build farm does. The buildfarm crashes.
    >
    
    I have a dmp file with a stack trace if anyone is interested
    
    Dave
    
    >
    > Dave
    >