A simple example of compare-and-swap shown in actual C code (which calls into
assembly).
The code, in entirety, is shown here:
#include <stdio.h>
int global = 0;
char compare_and_swap(int *ptr, int old, int new) {
unsigned char ret;
// Note that sete sets a ’byte’ not the word
__asm__ __volatile__ (
" lock\n"
" cmpxchgl %2,%1\n"
" sete %0\n"
: "=q" (ret), "=m" (*ptr)
: "r" (new), "m" (*ptr), "a" (old)
: "memory");
return ret;
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
printf("before successful cas: %d\n", global);
int success = compare_and_swap(&global, 0, 100);
printf("after successful cas: %d (success: %d)\n", global, success);
printf("before failing cas: %d\n", global);
success = compare_and_swap(&global, 0, 200);
printf("after failing cas: %d (old: %d)\n", global, success);
return 0;
}
The first call to compare_and_swap()
succeeds because the old value is
correct; the second call does not because the old value is wrong.
To compile and run:
prompt> gcc -o compare-and-swap compare-and-swap.c -Wall
prompt> ./compare-and-swap