Make fallback implementation of pg_memory_barrier() work.

The fallback implementation involves acquiring and releasing a spinlock
variable that is otherwise unreferenced --- not even to the extent of
initializing it.  This accidentally fails to fail on platforms where
spinlocks should be initialized to zeroes, but elsewhere it results in
a "stuck spinlock" failure during startup.

I griped about this last July, and put in a hack that worked for gcc
on HPPA, but didn't get around to fixing the general case.  Per the
discussion back then, the best thing to do seems to be to initialize
dummy_spinlock in main.c.
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2014-05-17 18:29:46 -04:00
parent c1907f0cc4
commit 44cd47c1d4
1 changed files with 8 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -37,6 +37,8 @@
#include "bootstrap/bootstrap.h"
#include "common/username.h"
#include "postmaster/postmaster.h"
#include "storage/barrier.h"
#include "storage/spin.h"
#include "tcop/tcopprot.h"
#include "utils/help_config.h"
#include "utils/memutils.h"
@ -288,6 +290,12 @@ startup_hacks(const char *progname)
SetErrorMode(SEM_FAILCRITICALERRORS | SEM_NOGPFAULTERRORBOX);
}
#endif /* WIN32 */
/*
* Initialize dummy_spinlock, in case we are on a platform where we have
* to use the fallback implementation of pg_memory_barrier().
*/
SpinLockInit(&dummy_spinlock);
}