On Sat, Sep 18, 2021 at 2:26 PM Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 9/18/21 2:13 PM, Victor Stewart wrote: > > On Sat, Sep 18, 2021 at 3:41 PM Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> On 9/18/21 7:41 AM, Victor Stewart wrote: > >>> just auto updated from 5.13.16 to 5.13.17, and suddenly my fixed > >>> file registrations fail with EOPNOTSUPP using liburing 2.0. > >>> > >>> static inline struct io_uring ring; > >>> static inline int *socketfds; > >>> > >>> // ... > >>> > >>> void enableFD(int fd) > >>> { > >>> int result = io_uring_register_files_update(&ring, fd, > >>> &(socketfds[fd] = fd), 1); > >>> printf("enableFD, result = %d\n", result); > >>> } > >>> > >>> maybe this is due to the below and related work that > >>> occurred at the end of 5.13 and liburing got out of sync? > >>> > >>> https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/992da01aa932b432ef8dc3885fa76415b5dbe43f#diff-79ffab63f24ef28eec3badbc8769e2a23e0475ab1fbe390207269ece944a0824 > >>> > >>> and can't use liburing 2.1 because of the api changes since 5.13. > >> > >> That's very strange, the -EOPNOTSUPP should only be possible if you > >> are not passing in the ring fd for the register syscall. You should > >> be able to mix and match liburing versions just fine, the only exception > >> is sometimes between releases (of both liburing and the kernel) where we > >> have the liberty to change the API of something that was added before > >> release. > >> > >> Can you do an strace of it and attach? > > > > oh ya the EOPNOTSUPP was my bug introduced trying to debug. > > > > here's the real bug... > > > > io_uring_register(13, IORING_REGISTER_FILES, [-1, -1, -1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, > > 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, > > -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, > > -1, ...], 32768) = -1 EMFILE (Too many open files) > > > > 32,768 is 1U << 15 aka IORING_MAX_FIXED_FILES, but i tried > > 16,000 just to try and same issue. > > > > maybe you're not allowed to have pre-filled (aka non negative 1) > > entries upon the initial io_uring_register_files call anymore? > > > > this was working until the 5.13.16 -> 5.13.17 transition. > > Ah yes that makes more sense. You need to up RLIMIT_NOFILE, the > registered files are under that protection now too. This is also why it > was brought back to stable. A bit annoying, but it was needed for the > direct file support to have some sanity there. > > So use rlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE,...) from the app or ulimit -n to bump the > limit. BTW, this could be incorporated into io_uring_register_files and io_uring_register_files_tags(), might not be a bad idea in general. Just have it check rlim.rlim_cur for RLIMIT_NOFILE, and if it's smaller than 'nr_files', then bump it. That'd hide it nicely, instead of throwing a failure. -- Jens Axboe