Hi Pavel, >>>>> here're patches which fix linking of send[msg]()/recv[msg]() calls >>>>> and make sure io_uring_enter() never generate a SIGPIPE. >>> >>> 1/2 breaks userspace. >> >> Can you explain that a bit please, how could some application ever >> have a useful use of IOSQE_IO_LINK with these socket calls? > > Packet delivery of variable size, i.e. recv(max_size). Byte stream > that consumes whatever you've got and links something (e.g. notification > delivery, or poll). Not sure about netlink, but maybe. Or some > "create a file via send" crap, or some made-up custom protocols Ok, then we need a flag or a new opcode to provide that behavior? For recv() and recvmsg() MSG_WAITALL might be usable. It's not defined in 'man 2 sendmsg', but should we use it anyway for IORING_OP_SEND[MSG] in order to activate the short send check as the low level sock_sendmsg() call seem to ignore unused flags, which seems to be the reason for the following logic in tcp_sendmsg_locked: if (flags & MSG_ZEROCOPY && size && sock_flag(sk, SOCK_ZEROCOPY)) { You need to set SOCK_ZEROCOPY in the socket in order to give a meaning to MSG_ZEROCOPY. Should I prepare an add-on patch to make the short send/recv logic depend on MSG_WAITALL? I'm cc'ing netdev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx in order to more feedback of MSG_WAITALL can be passed to sendmsg without fear to trigger -EINVAL. The example for io_sendmsg() would look like this: --- a/fs/io_uring.c +++ b/fs/io_uring.c @@ -4383,7 +4383,7 @@ static int io_sendmsg(struct io_kiocb *req, unsigned int issue_flags) struct io_async_msghdr iomsg, *kmsg; struct socket *sock; unsigned flags; - int expected_ret; + int min_ret = 0; int ret; sock = sock_from_file(req->file); @@ -4404,9 +4404,11 @@ static int io_sendmsg(struct io_kiocb *req, unsigned int issue_flags) else if (issue_flags & IO_URING_F_NONBLOCK) flags |= MSG_DONTWAIT; - expected_ret = iov_iter_count(&kmsg->msg.msg_iter); - if (unlikely(expected_ret == MAX_RW_COUNT)) - expected_ret += 1; + if (flags & MSG_WAITALL) { + min_ret = iov_iter_count(&kmsg->msg.msg_iter); + if (unlikely(min_ret == MAX_RW_COUNT)) + min_ret += 1; + } ret = __sys_sendmsg_sock(sock, &kmsg->msg, flags); if ((issue_flags & IO_URING_F_NONBLOCK) && ret == -EAGAIN) return io_setup_async_msg(req, kmsg); @@ -4417,7 +4419,7 @@ static int io_sendmsg(struct io_kiocb *req, unsigned int issue_flags) if (kmsg->free_iov) kfree(kmsg->free_iov); req->flags &= ~REQ_F_NEED_CLEANUP; - if (ret != expected_ret) + if (ret < min_ret) req_set_fail_links(req); __io_req_complete(req, issue_flags, ret, 0); return 0; Which means the default of min_ret = 0 would result in: if (ret < 0) req_set_fail_links(req); again... >>> Sounds like 2/2 might too, does it? >> >> Do you think any application really expects to get a SIGPIPE >> when calling io_uring_enter()? > > If it was about what I think I would remove lots of old garbage :) > I doubt it wasn't working well before, e.g. because of iowq, but > who knows Yes, it was inconsistent before and now it's reliable. metze