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+RT-mutex subsystem with PI support
+----------------------------------
+
+RT-mutexes with priority inheritance are used to support PI-futexes,
+which enable pthread_mutex_t priority inheritance attributes
+(PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT). [See Documentation/pi-futex.txt for more details
+about PI-futexes.]
+
+This technology was developed in the -rt tree and streamlined for
+pthread_mutex support.
+
+Basic principles:
+-----------------
+
+RT-mutexes extend the semantics of simple mutexes by the priority
+inheritance protocol.
+
+A low priority owner of a rt-mutex inherits the priority of a higher
+priority waiter until the rt-mutex is released. If the temporarily
+boosted owner blocks on a rt-mutex itself it propagates the priority
+boosting to the owner of the other rt_mutex it gets blocked on. The
+priority boosting is immediately removed once the rt_mutex has been
+unlocked.
+
+This approach allows us to shorten the block of high-prio tasks on
+mutexes which protect shared resources. Priority inheritance is not a
+magic bullet for poorly designed applications, but it allows
+well-designed applications to use userspace locks in critical parts of
+an high priority thread, without losing determinism.
+
+The enqueueing of the waiters into the rtmutex waiter list is done in
+priority order. For same priorities FIFO order is chosen. For each
+rtmutex, only the top priority waiter is enqueued into the owner's
+priority waiters list. This list too queues in priority order. Whenever
+the top priority waiter of a task changes (for example it timed out or
+got a signal), the priority of the owner task is readjusted. [The
+priority enqueueing is handled by "plists", see include/linux/plist.h
+for more details.]
+
+RT-mutexes are optimized for fastpath operations and have no internal
+locking overhead when locking an uncontended mutex or unlocking a mutex
+without waiters. The optimized fastpath operations require cmpxchg
+support. [If that is not available then the rt-mutex internal spinlock
+is used]
+
+The state of the rt-mutex is tracked via the owner field of the rt-mutex
+structure:
+
+rt_mutex->owner holds the task_struct pointer of the owner. Bit 0 and 1
+are used to keep track of the "owner is pending" and "rtmutex has
+waiters" state.
+
+ owner bit1 bit0
+ NULL 0 0 mutex is free (fast acquire possible)
+ NULL 0 1 invalid state
+ NULL 1 0 Transitional state*
+ NULL 1 1 invalid state
+ taskpointer 0 0 mutex is held (fast release possible)
+ taskpointer 0 1 task is pending owner
+ taskpointer 1 0 mutex is held and has waiters
+ taskpointer 1 1 task is pending owner and mutex has waiters
+
+Pending-ownership handling is a performance optimization:
+pending-ownership is assigned to the first (highest priority) waiter of
+the mutex, when the mutex is released. The thread is woken up and once
+it starts executing it can acquire the mutex. Until the mutex is taken
+by it (bit 0 is cleared) a competing higher priority thread can "steal"
+the mutex which puts the woken up thread back on the waiters list.
+
+The pending-ownership optimization is especially important for the
+uninterrupted workflow of high-prio tasks which repeatedly
+takes/releases locks that have lower-prio waiters. Without this
+optimization the higher-prio thread would ping-pong to the lower-prio
+task [because at unlock time we always assign a new owner].
+
+(*) The "mutex has waiters" bit gets set to take the lock. If the lock
+doesn't already have an owner, this bit is quickly cleared if there are
+no waiters. So this is a transitional state to synchronize with looking
+at the owner field of the mutex and the mutex owner releasing the lock.