On 4/11/23 9:27?AM, David Ahern wrote: > On 4/11/23 9:17 AM, Jens Axboe wrote: >> On 4/11/23 9:10?AM, David Ahern wrote: >>> On 4/11/23 8:41 AM, Jens Axboe wrote: >>>> On 4/11/23 8:36?AM, David Ahern wrote: >>>>> On 4/11/23 6:00 AM, Breno Leitao wrote: >>>>>> I am not sure if avoiding io_uring details in network code is possible. >>>>>> >>>>>> The "struct proto"->uring_cmd callback implementation (tcp_uring_cmd() >>>>>> in the TCP case) could be somewhere else, such as in the io_uring/ >>>>>> directory, but, I think it might be cleaner if these implementations are >>>>>> closer to function assignment (in the network subsystem). >>>>>> >>>>>> And this function (tcp_uring_cmd() for instance) is the one that I am >>>>>> planning to map io_uring CMDs to ioctls. Such as SOCKET_URING_OP_SIOCINQ >>>>>> -> SIOCINQ. >>>>>> >>>>>> Please let me know if you have any other idea in mind. >>>>> >>>>> I am not convinced that this io_uring_cmd is needed. This is one >>>>> in-kernel subsystem calling into another, and there are APIs for that. >>>>> All of this set is ioctl based and as Willem noted a little refactoring >>>>> separates the get_user/put_user out so that in-kernel can call can be >>>>> made with existing ops. >>>> >>>> How do you want to wire it up then? We can't use fops->unlocked_ioctl() >>>> obviously, and we already have ->uring_cmd() for this purpose. >>>> >>>> I do think the right thing to do is have a common helper that returns >>>> whatever value you want (or sets it), and split the ioctl parts into a >>>> wrapper around that that simply copies in/out as needed. Then >>>> ->uring_cmd() could call that, or you could some exported function that >>>> does supports that. >>>> >>>> This works for the basic cases, though I do suspect we'll want to go >>>> down the ->uring_cmd() at some point for more advanced cases or cases >>>> that cannot sanely be done in an ioctl fashion. >>>> >>> >>> My meta point is that there are uapis today to return this information >>> to applications (and I suspect this is just the start of more networking >>> changes - both data retrieval and adjusting settings). io_uring is >>> wanting to do this on behalf of the application without a syscall. That >>> makes io_uring yet another subsystem / component managing a socket. Any >>> change to the networking stack required by io_uring should be usable by >>> all other in-kernel socket owners or managers. ie., there is no reason >>> for io_uring specific code here. >> >> I think we are in violent agreement here, what I'm describing is exactly >> that - it'd make ioctl/{set,get}sockopt call into the same helpers that >> ->uring_cmd() would, with the only difference being that the former >> would need copy in/out and the latter would not. >> >> But let me just stress that for direct descriptors, we cannot currently >> call ioctl or set/getsockopt. This means we have to instantiate a >> regular descriptor first, do those things, then register it to never use >> the regular file descriptor again. That's wasteful, and this is what we >> want to enable (direct use of ioctl set/getsockopt WITHOUT a normal file >> descriptor). It's not just for "oh it'd be handy to also do this from >> io_uring" even if that would be a worthwhile goal in itself. >> > > Christoph's patch set a few years back that removed set_fs broke the > ability to do in-kernel ioctl and {s,g}setsockopt calls. I did not > follow that change; was it a deliberate intent to not allow these > in-kernel calls vs wanting to remove the set_fs? e.g., can we add a > kioctl variant for in-kernel use of the APIs? I think it'd be much better to cleanly split it out rather than try and hack around it. -- Jens Axboe