// Copyright (c) 2014 Marshall A. Greenblatt. Portions copyright (c) 2012
// Google Inc. All rights reserved.
//
// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
// met:
//
//    * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
//    * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
// copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
// in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
// distribution.
//    * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the name Chromium Embedded
// Framework nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse
// or promote products derived from this software without specific prior
// written permission.
//
// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
// "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
// A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
// OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
// DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
// THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

// For atomic operations on reference counts, see cef_atomic_ref_count.h.

// The routines exported by this module are subtle.  If you use them, even if
// you get the code right, it will depend on careful reasoning about atomicity
// and memory ordering; it will be less readable, and harder to maintain.  If
// you plan to use these routines, you should have a good reason, such as solid
// evidence that performance would otherwise suffer, or there being no
// alternative.  You should assume only properties explicitly guaranteed by the
// specifications in this file.  You are almost certainly _not_ writing code
// just for the x86; if you assume x86 semantics, x86 hardware bugs and
// implementations on other archtectures will cause your code to break.  If you
// do not know what you are doing, avoid these routines, and use a Mutex.
//
// It is incorrect to make direct assignments to/from an atomic variable.
// You should use one of the Load or Store routines.  The NoBarrier
// versions are provided when no barriers are needed:
//   NoBarrier_Store()
//   NoBarrier_Load()
// Although there are currently no compiler enforcement, you are encouraged
// to use these.
//

#ifndef CEF_INCLUDE_BASE_CEF_ATOMICOPS_H_
#define CEF_INCLUDE_BASE_CEF_ATOMICOPS_H_
#pragma once

#if defined(BASE_ATOMICOPS_H_)
// Do nothing if the Chromium header has already been included.
// This can happen in cases where Chromium code is used directly by the
// client application. When using Chromium code directly always include
// the Chromium header first to avoid type conflicts.
#elif defined(USING_CHROMIUM_INCLUDES)
// When building CEF include the Chromium header directly.
#include "base/atomicops.h"
#else  // !USING_CHROMIUM_INCLUDES
// The following is substantially similar to the Chromium implementation.
// If the Chromium implementation diverges the below implementation should be
// updated to match.

#include <stdint.h>

#include "include/base/cef_build.h"

#if defined(OS_WIN) && defined(ARCH_CPU_64_BITS)
// windows.h #defines this (only on x64). This causes problems because the
// public API also uses MemoryBarrier at the public name for this fence. So, on
// X64, undef it, and call its documented
// (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms684208.aspx)
// implementation directly.
#undef MemoryBarrier
#endif

namespace base {
namespace subtle {

typedef int32_t Atomic32;
#ifdef ARCH_CPU_64_BITS
// We need to be able to go between Atomic64 and AtomicWord implicitly.  This
// means Atomic64 and AtomicWord should be the same type on 64-bit.
#if defined(__ILP32__) || defined(OS_NACL)
// NaCl's intptr_t is not actually 64-bits on 64-bit!
// http://code.google.com/p/nativeclient/issues/detail?id=1162
typedef int64_t Atomic64;
#else
typedef intptr_t Atomic64;
#endif
#endif

// Use AtomicWord for a machine-sized pointer.  It will use the Atomic32 or
// Atomic64 routines below, depending on your architecture.
typedef intptr_t AtomicWord;

// Atomically execute:
//      result = *ptr;
//      if (*ptr == old_value)
//        *ptr = new_value;
//      return result;
//
// I.e., replace "*ptr" with "new_value" if "*ptr" used to be "old_value".
// Always return the old value of "*ptr"
//
// This routine implies no memory barriers.
Atomic32 NoBarrier_CompareAndSwap(volatile Atomic32* ptr,
                                  Atomic32 old_value,
                                  Atomic32 new_value);

// Atomically store new_value into *ptr, returning the previous value held in
// *ptr.  This routine implies no memory barriers.
Atomic32 NoBarrier_AtomicExchange(volatile Atomic32* ptr, Atomic32 new_value);

// Atomically increment *ptr by "increment".  Returns the new value of
// *ptr with the increment applied.  This routine implies no memory barriers.
Atomic32 NoBarrier_AtomicIncrement(volatile Atomic32* ptr, Atomic32 increment);

Atomic32 Barrier_AtomicIncrement(volatile Atomic32* ptr, Atomic32 increment);

// These following lower-level operations are typically useful only to people
// implementing higher-level synchronization operations like spinlocks,
// mutexes, and condition-variables.  They combine CompareAndSwap(), a load, or
// a store with appropriate memory-ordering instructions.  "Acquire" operations
// ensure that no later memory access can be reordered ahead of the operation.
// "Release" operations ensure that no previous memory access can be reordered
// after the operation.  "Barrier" operations have both "Acquire" and "Release"
// semantics.   A MemoryBarrier() has "Barrier" semantics, but does no memory
// access.
Atomic32 Acquire_CompareAndSwap(volatile Atomic32* ptr,
                                Atomic32 old_value,
                                Atomic32 new_value);
Atomic32 Release_CompareAndSwap(volatile Atomic32* ptr,
                                Atomic32 old_value,
                                Atomic32 new_value);

void MemoryBarrier();
void NoBarrier_Store(volatile Atomic32* ptr, Atomic32 value);
void Acquire_Store(volatile Atomic32* ptr, Atomic32 value);
void Release_Store(volatile Atomic32* ptr, Atomic32 value);

Atomic32 NoBarrier_Load(volatile const Atomic32* ptr);
Atomic32 Acquire_Load(volatile const Atomic32* ptr);
Atomic32 Release_Load(volatile const Atomic32* ptr);

// 64-bit atomic operations (only available on 64-bit processors).
#ifdef ARCH_CPU_64_BITS
Atomic64 NoBarrier_CompareAndSwap(volatile Atomic64* ptr,
                                  Atomic64 old_value,
                                  Atomic64 new_value);
Atomic64 NoBarrier_AtomicExchange(volatile Atomic64* ptr, Atomic64 new_value);
Atomic64 NoBarrier_AtomicIncrement(volatile Atomic64* ptr, Atomic64 increment);
Atomic64 Barrier_AtomicIncrement(volatile Atomic64* ptr, Atomic64 increment);

Atomic64 Acquire_CompareAndSwap(volatile Atomic64* ptr,
                                Atomic64 old_value,
                                Atomic64 new_value);
Atomic64 Release_CompareAndSwap(volatile Atomic64* ptr,
                                Atomic64 old_value,
                                Atomic64 new_value);
void NoBarrier_Store(volatile Atomic64* ptr, Atomic64 value);
void Acquire_Store(volatile Atomic64* ptr, Atomic64 value);
void Release_Store(volatile Atomic64* ptr, Atomic64 value);
Atomic64 NoBarrier_Load(volatile const Atomic64* ptr);
Atomic64 Acquire_Load(volatile const Atomic64* ptr);
Atomic64 Release_Load(volatile const Atomic64* ptr);
#endif  // ARCH_CPU_64_BITS

}  // namespace subtle
}  // namespace base

// Include our platform specific implementation.
#if defined(OS_WIN) && defined(COMPILER_MSVC) && defined(ARCH_CPU_X86_FAMILY)
#include "include/base/internal/cef_atomicops_x86_msvc.h"
#elif defined(OS_WIN) && (defined(__ARM_ARCH_ISA_A64) || defined(_M_ARM64))
#include "include/base/internal/cef_atomicops_arm64_msvc.h"
#elif defined(OS_MACOSX)
#include "include/base/internal/cef_atomicops_mac.h"
#elif defined(COMPILER_GCC) && defined(ARCH_CPU_X86_FAMILY)
#include "include/base/internal/cef_atomicops_x86_gcc.h"
#elif defined(COMPILER_GCC) && defined(__ARM_ARCH_ISA_A64)
#include "include/base/internal/cef_atomicops_arm64_gcc.h"
#elif defined(COMPILER_GCC) && defined(__ARM_ARCH)
#include "include/base/internal/cef_atomicops_arm_gcc.h"
#else
#error "Atomic operations are not supported on your platform"
#endif

// On some platforms we need additional declarations to make
// AtomicWord compatible with our other Atomic* types.
#if defined(OS_MACOSX) || defined(OS_OPENBSD)
#include "include/base/internal/cef_atomicops_atomicword_compat.h"
#endif

#endif  // !USING_CHROMIUM_INCLUDES

#endif  // CEF_INCLUDE_BASE_CEF_ATOMICOPS_H_