Here is the typical way to use a condition variable:
// The reader(s)
lock(some_mutex);
if(protected_by_mutex_var != desired_value)
some_condition.wait(some_mutex);
unlock(some_mutex);
// The writer
lock(some_mutex);
protected_by_mutex_var = desired_value;
unlock(some_mutex);
some_condition.notify_all();
But if protected_by_mutex_var is set atomically by say, a compare-and-swap instruction, does the mutex serve any purpose (other than that pthreads and other APIs require you to pass in a mutex)? Is it protecting state used to implement the condition? If not, is it safe then to do this?:
// The writer
atomic_set(protected_by_mutex_var, desired_value);
some_condition.notify_all();
With the writer never directly interacting with the reader's mutex? Note that the 'protected_by_mutex_var' name is no longer really appropriate (it's not mutex protected anymore). If so, is it even necessary that different readers use the same mutex?
Imagine the following scenario:
This situation sees Thread 1 waiting for a notify that may never come. Because the statements acting on the condition are not part of the variable read / atomic set, this presents a race condition.
Using the mutex effectively makes these actions inseparable (assuming all accesses to the variable behave properly and lock the mutex.)