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Some os kernels use xchg instruction to implement the spinlock. And inside their implementation of acquire lock function, they usually disable interrupts before acquiring the lock using xchg instruction. So, can xchg instruction insure memory ordering? I mean can xchg instruction insure that disable interrupts will not be called after it?

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No XCHG instruction can't do that. At the XCHG instruction execution, the processor's LOCK signal is automatically asserted so we don't need the extra LOCK prefix to ensure that instruction is preformed atomically. The XCHG is always performed atomically! And there is no need to disable interrupts.

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  • The XCHG is always performed atomically. but only when an operand is memory, lock signal is implicit. of course, when all operands are register, no need of lock signal.
    – Vince
    Oct 29, 2013 at 8:54
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Yes. XCHG instruction can do that.

I get a better answer on why can MemoryBarrier be implemented as a call to xchg?.

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