Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

Where to use volatile? [duplicate]

I read about volatile keyword, but I don't know in what situations I should use it.

When the memory (variable) is getting updated and process is not aware of that?

In what cases should drivers use volatile variables?

like image 719
Pointer Avatar asked Sep 06 '10 06:09

Pointer


2 Answers

The most common case in my world is when you are programming microcontrollers that use memory-mapped I/O. The value in a register could change due to external digital inputs, but if you don't declare a variable as volatile, the compiler might optimize the code out completely and you'll be wondering why nothing works.

Matt suggested that I embellish on the statement regarding code getting "optimized out". Memory mapped I/O is accessed in code via pointers. When you want to check the state of a button, you will typically bitwise AND the value of the register with the bitmask for the button. If you don't specify volatile, the compiler will say, "hey, your code never actually changes the value of that pointer, so I'm going to just remove that statement where you've bitwise ANDed it, because the value is always the same!".

Hopefully this clears my statement up a bit. Thanks for the suggestion, Matt.

like image 131
Dave Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 08:10

Dave


As you've marked this with the linux-device-driver tag, some specific advice for coding within the Linux kernel is possibly in order.

In general, you shouldn't need to write volatile in your Linux kernel code. In the cases where volatile might be required, its use is wrapped in core kernel functions that you should call instead. For example, if you're doing memory-mapped I/O, then you should be using ioremap(), writel(), readl() etc.

like image 38
caf Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 07:10

caf