문제

volatile seems to be a never ending question of every one. I thought I knew everything about it, but then I encountered this:

So, I have a piece of memory shared between threads and I defined it like this:

volatile type *name;

If it makes you feel better, you can imagine type is just an int.

This means I have a pointer (that is not volatile) to some data that are volatile. So, for example when it comes to optimizing, the compiler can cache the value of name but not name[0]. Am I right?

So, now I am vfreeing this pointer (it's in a Linux kernel module) and it tells me that vfree expects const void * while I am passing it volatile type *.

I understand how it can be dangerous to pass a volatile type * as a type * because in that function, the values of name[i] could be cached (as a result of optimization) which is not desirable.

I don't understand why though, vfree expects me to send it a pointer necessarily to non-volatile data. Is there something I am missing there? Or is it just the guys who wrote vfree not thinking about this situation?

I assume me simply casting my pointer to void * would not cause any harm, is that right?

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해결책 2

My conclusion was that just casting the pointer to void * would not cause a problem and the fact that free and vfree don't directly accept pointers to volatile data is just something that was overlooked.

다른 팁

The vfree function (and every sane deallocation function in general) does not care about your actual data (be it volatile or not). It just expects a (valid) pointer (think: passing the pointer as a long value in a CPU register).

Based on that value, the function will:

  1. call the SLAB/SLUB to free the memory
  2. remove the memory mapping

So yes, casting to a void * will not cause any harm at runtime.

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