30

I was looking up the keyword volatile and what it's for, and the answer I got was pretty much:

It's used to prevent the compiler from optimizing away code.

There were some examples, such as when polling memory-mapped hardware: without volatile the polling loop would be removed as the compiler might recognize that the condition value is never changed. But since there only were one example or maybe two, it got me thinking: Are there other situations where we need to use volatile in terms of avoiding unwanted optimization? Are condition variables the only place where volatile is needed?

I imagine that optimization is compiler-specific and therefore is not specified in the C++ specification. Does that mean we have to go by gut feeling, saying Hm, I suspect my compiler will do away with this if I don't declare that variable as volatile or are there any clear rules to go by?

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    Is "don't use volatile" an acceptable rule? Because its a pretty good one. Not that volatile is never useful. It is, its just that, in general, if you aren't sure if you need it, you probably don't. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:12
  • @Dennis: +1, and commented as such in my answer. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:16
  • @DennisZickefoose "Is "don't use volatile" an acceptable rule?" I would say: do not use volatile unless some official standard, reference text or documentation tells you to do so.
    – curiousguy
    Oct 3, 2011 at 19:10
  • volatile is not needed for condition variables. condition variables has library support (Win32, pthread, boost, std...) and use full locking with mutex.
    – v.oddou
    Sep 2, 2014 at 1:43
  • Related: Why is volatile needed in C? Jun 19, 2023 at 15:01

8 Answers 8

28

Basically, volatile announces that a value might change behind your program's back. That prevents compilers from caching the value (in a CPU register) and from optimizing away accesses to that value when they seem unnecessary from the POV of your program.

What should trigger usage of volatile is when a value changes despite the fact that your program hasn't written to it, and when no other memory barriers (like mutexes as used for multi-threaded programs) are present.

2
  • While I think almost all answers to this question are more or less useful (and I would like to have bundled them all up in one to accept, hehe), I would say that this one sums it up.
    – gablin
    Sep 1, 2010 at 12:10
  • So under this model, two consecutive writes to a volatile can be collapsed into one, right? Because your description only covers optimizations that affects reads.
    – BeeOnRope
    Oct 28, 2017 at 23:02
25

The observable behavior of a C++ program is determined by read and writes to volatile variables, and any calls to input/output functions.

What this entails is that all reads and writes to volatile variables must happen in the order they appear in code, and they must happen. (If a compiler broke one of those rules, it would be breaking the as-if rule.)

That's all. It's used when you need to indicate that reading or writing a variable is to be seen as an observable effect. (Note, the "C++ and the Perils of Double-Checked Locking" article touches on this quite a bit.)


So to answer the title question, it prevents any optimization that might re-order the evaluation of volatile variables relative to other volatile variables.

That means a compiler that changes:

int x = 2;
volatile int y = 5;
x = 5;
y = 7;

To

int x = 5;
volatile int y = 5;
y = 7;

Is fine, since the value of x is not part of the observable behavior (it's not volatile). What wouldn't be fine is changing the assignment from 5 to an assignment to 7, because that write of 5 is an observable effect.

2
  • "volatile y" The implicit int rule does not exist in C++.
    – curiousguy
    Oct 3, 2011 at 18:49
  • @curiousguy: Indeed, an old typo.
    – GManNickG
    Oct 3, 2011 at 18:53
10

Condition variables are not where volatile is needed; strictly it is only needed in device drivers.

volatile guarantees that reads and writes to the object are not optimized away, or reordered with respect to another volatile. If you are busy-looping on a variable modified by another thread, it should be declared volatile. However, you shouldn't busy-loop. Because the language wasn't really designed for multithreading, this isn't very well supported. For example, the compiler may move a write to a non-volatile variable from after to before the loop, violating the lock. (For indefinite spinloops, this might only happen under C++0x.)

When you call a thread-library function, it acts as a memory fence, and the compiler will assume that any and all values have changed — essentially everything is volatile. This is either specified or tacitly implemented by any threading library to keep the wheels turning smoothly.

C++0x might not have this shortcoming, as it introduces formal multithreading semantics. I'm not really familiar with the changes, but for the sake of backward compatibility, it doesn't require to declare anything volatile that wasn't before.

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    "Local variables are not allowed to be volatile at all, although some compilers may support it and you can choose to access a local exclusively by volatile *" -> I have seen local volatile variables, in wait loops for embedded systems and soon. Can you please provide a Standard's reference for that? Also be aware that if you have a int object, but merely access it by an int volatile& (or by dereferencing a int volatile*), this is not regarded as a volatile read/write, so the compiler may optimize it away. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:46
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    Note that the famous C++ and the Perils of Double-Checked Locking uses casts to int volatile& all over the place, and uses one particular quote of the C++03 Standard that reads "The observable behavior of the abstract machine is its sequence of reads and writes to volatile data and calls to library I/O functions". Aug 30, 2010 at 22:57
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    It interprets that such that actually the access path volatileness is enough to make an access observable, but C++03 also said "The least requirements on a conforming implementation are: [..] At sequence points, volatile objects are stable in the sense that previous evaluations are complete and subsequent evaluations have not yet occurred.". Note that this text is clear that only access to volatile objects and not the access path alone determine whether the access is observable behavior or not. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:59
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    Finally, C++0x is the most clear and just says "Access to volatile objects are evaluated strictly according to the rules of the abstract machine.". It does not try to define the observable behavior multiple times anymore, thanks to DR #612. So trying to add observable behavior by using hideous casts actually doesn't work. Aug 30, 2010 at 23:02
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    @Johannes: It depends how you define "last-stored value." By definition, the value something contains is the last stored into it… and vice versa. So, if called functions are allowed to store values into the caller's frame (presumably so), your example is valid (with or without volatile). However, it's a bit more of a stretch that other threads, the OS, or external devices should be allowed to modify a object — such would render the paragraph meaningless. (Maybe, with its circular logic, it is.) The point, anyway, is that it applies to all locals regardless of volatile qualification. Sep 6, 2010 at 21:49
4

Remember that the "as if rule" means that the compiler can, and should, do whatever it wants, as long as the behaviour as seen from outside the program as a whole is the same. In particular, while a variable conceptually names an area in memory, there is no reason why it actually should be in memory.

It could be in a register:

Its value could be calculated away, e.g. in:

int x = 2;
int y = x + 7;
return y + 1;

Need not have an x and y at all, but could just be replaced with:

return 10;

And another example, is that any code that doesn't affect state from the outside could be removed entirely. E.g. if you zeroise sensitive data, the compiler can see this as a wasted exercise ("why are you writing to what won't be read?") and remove it. volatile can be used to stop that happening.

volatile can be thought of as meaning "the state of this variable must be considered part of the outwardly visible state, and not messed with". Optimisations that would use it other than literally following the source code are not allowed.

(A note C#. A lot I've seen of late on volatile suggests that people are reading about C++ volatile and applying it to C#, and reading about it in C# and applying it to C++. Really though, volatile behaves so differently between the two as to not be useful to consider them related).

9
  • +1, it is important to think on the memory model and the visible state of the program. The compiler could even discard the volatile qualifier if it can determine that the variable will not affect the visible behavior. Consider an auto variable declared volatile in a function that does not call any other function. The compiler can determine that the variable cannot be polled outside of the thread and may decide to apply any optimization it wishes. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:35
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    @David : Reads from and writes to volatiles are part of the visible behavior of a C++ program, by definition. The optimizer works under the "as-if" rule which allows transformations if they leave the visible behavior unchanged. Therefore, optimizations may not remove reads and writes of volatile objects.
    – MSalters
    Aug 31, 2010 at 7:36
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    @MSalters, David is right, if an automatic variable is volatile but doesn't have its address passed to a non-automatic volatile pointer or potentially become involved in a long-jump or otherwise accessed outside of "normal" functional access, then there is no way for it to be observed from the outside, as there is no way for anything outside to know what to observe. In this case it could be decided that it isn't really volatile, and its volatility ignored.
    – Jon Hanna
    Aug 31, 2010 at 9:04
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    @MSalters: I have failed to locate the quote, but I am quite sure that it was a remark from Herb Sutter in the last few months, mentioning that a compiler that could prove that a volatile variable that could be proved not to be visible from another context --i.e. the address is in the stack and it can be proven that it is not passed to other functions and as such cannot be queried from other contexts-- could be proven not to be part of the visible behavior of the program and a conforming compiler could discard the volatile qualifier. Aug 31, 2010 at 9:19
  • @MSalters:... but without a proper quote, take this with a pinch of salt, as I might have misinterpreted the comment in the beginning. Aug 31, 2010 at 9:20
3

Volatile doesn't try to keep data to a cpu register (100's of times faster than memory). It has to read it from memory every time it is used.

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    volatile doesn't exclude the value from L1 cache, which costs only a few cycles to access. It is associated with other mechanisms that do, though. Device registers will always be volatile, and will often be even slower than DRAM. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:23
  • @Potatoswatter Isn't the L1 cache is controlled by hardware? I wasn't aware that software could affect anything in there. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:29
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    @Potatoswatter: While it is true that there is no real need for a volatile variable to make it all the way to real memory (might depend on the architecture), the fact is that it can have an impact much greater than a few cycles. If the variable is in the same cache line than any variable in use by other CPU, each operation on the volatile variable will trigger cache synchronization to the other CPUs and that can be costly both in the volatile itself and the non-volatile vars in the same cache line. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:29
  • @Byron: Hardware configuration settings are set by software. The OS can call up the MMU and turn off caching for given pages. There might even be a user-space facility to let any program do so. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:41
  • @David: Yes, but that also applies to non-volatile variables that didn't happen to be subject to optimization. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:42
1

One way to think about a volatile variable is to imagine that it's a virtual property; writes and even reads may do things compiler can't know about. The actual generated code for a writing/reading a volatile variable is simply a memory write or read(*), but the compiler has to regard the code as opaque; it can't make any assumptions under which it might be superfluous. The issue isn't merely with making sure that the compiled code notices that something has caused a variable to change. On some systems, even memory reads can "do" things.

(*) On some compilers, volatile variables may be added to, subtracted from, incremented, decremented, etc. as distinct operations. It's probably useful for a compiler to compile:

  volatilevar++;

as

  inc [_volatilevar]

since the latter form may be atomic on many microprocessors (though not on modern multi-core PCs). It's important to note, however, that if the statement were:

  volatilevar2 = (volatilevar1++);

the correct code would not be:

  mov ax,[_volatilevar1] ; Reads it once
  inc [_volatilevar]     ; Reads it again (oops)
  mov [_volatilevar2],ax

nor

  mov ax,[_volatilevar1]
  mov [_volatilevar2],ax ; Writes in wrong sequence
  inc ax
  mov [_volatilevar1],ax

but rather

  mov ax,[_volatilevar1]
  mov bx,ax
  inc ax
  mov [_volatilevar1],ax
  mov [_volatilevar2],bx

Writing the source code differently would allow the generation of more efficient (and possibly safer) code. If 'volatilevar1' didn't mind being read twice and 'volatilevar2' didn't mind being written before volatilevar1, then splitting the statement into

  volatilevar2 = volatilevar1;
  volatilevar1++;

would allow for faster, and possibly safer, code.

2
  • Sorry, but I can't find a justification for your order claim about volatilevar2 = (volatilevar1++);. There is only a single sequence point, at the ;. Therefore the order in which the writes happens is not guaranteed.
    – MSalters
    Aug 31, 2010 at 7:32
  • @MSalters: You may be right on that point, in which case the third variation would be acceptable. On the other hand, the fastest version, which uses inc [_volatilevar1], is certainly not acceptable despite the fact that there are cases where it would be less trouble-prone than the longer versions.
    – supercat
    Aug 31, 2010 at 13:41
0

Unless you are on an embedded system, or you are writing hardware drivers where memory mapping is used as the means of communication, you should never ever ever be using volatile

Consider:

int main()
{
    volatile int SomeHardwareMemory; //This is a platform specific INT location. 
    for(int idx=0; idx < 56; ++idx)
    {
        printf("%d", SomeHardwareMemory);
    }
}

Has to produce code like:

loadIntoRegister3 56
loadIntoRegister2 "%d"
loopTop:
loadIntoRegister1 <<SOMEHARDWAREMEMORY>
pushRegister2
pushRegister1
call printf
decrementRegister3
ifRegister3LessThan 56 goto loopTop

whereas without volatile it could be:

loadIntoRegister3 56
loadIntoRegister2 "%d"
loadIntoRegister1 <<SOMEHARDWAREMEMORY>
loopTop:
pushRegister2
pushRegister1
call printf
decrementRegister3
ifRegister3LessThan 56 goto loopTop

The assumption about volatile is that the memory location of the variable may be changed. You are forcing the compiler to load the actual value from memory each time the variable is used; and you tell the compiler that reuse of that value in a register is not allowed.

0
0

usually compiler assumes that a program is single threaded, therefore it has complete knowledge of what's happening with variable values. a smart compiler can then prove that the program can be transformed into another program with equivalent semantics but better performance. for example

x = y+y+y+y+y;

can be transformed to

x = y*5;

however, if a variable can be changed outside the thread, compiler doesn't have a complete knowledge of what's going on by simply examining this piece of code. it can no longer make optimizations like above. (edit: it probably can in this case; we need more sophisticated examples)

by default, for performance optimization, single thread access is assumed. this assumption is usually true. unless programmer explicitly instruct otherwise with the volatile keyword.

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    I'm not c++ expert. in java, the volatile y must be fetched 5 times. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:17
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    @Billy: I agree the answer is a bit unclear, but to clarify: If y is volatile, then changing x = y + y into x = 2 * y is not okay. But changing y = 2 + 2 to y = 4 is fine.
    – GManNickG
    Aug 30, 2010 at 22:19
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    @Billy ONeal: If the code reads a volatile variable five times, the variable must be read five times precisely. A statement: "a=(b && volatilevar);" may not be written as "a = (volatilevar & -!!b);" even if the latter form would otherwise be faster (since there's no branching), since the latter form reads volatilevar even when b is false.
    – supercat
    Aug 30, 2010 at 22:36
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    The volatile keyword was not added to the language to take multithreading into account. Even if the meaning is somewhat similar, the intention is accessing hardware components through memory addresses. volatile means that the value of the variable can change outside of the program --not just the thread, but the whole program-- or even that the read can have side effects outside of what the program does --i.e. imagine a hardware counter that increments on each read. Aug 30, 2010 at 22:52
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    To elaborate on @curiousguy's comment, coalescing 5 reads of y into a single read is totally allowed if y is a regular int. It's still allowed if the reads are atomic, because 5 consecutive reads with nothing interleaved in between them is a valid execution of a multithreaded program. But it's not allowed if the reads are volatile, because volatile reads might have observable side effects that the compiler has to preserve. Oct 20, 2022 at 22:09

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