Re: [PATCH V2 00/17] io_uring/ublk: add IORING_OP_FUSED_CMD

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On 3/8/23 16:17, Ming Lei wrote:
On Wed, Mar 08, 2023 at 02:46:48PM +0000, Pavel Begunkov wrote:
On 3/8/23 02:10, Ming Lei wrote:
On Tue, Mar 07, 2023 at 05:17:04PM +0000, Pavel Begunkov wrote:
On 3/7/23 15:37, Pavel Begunkov wrote:
On 3/7/23 14:15, Ming Lei wrote:
Hello,

Add IORING_OP_FUSED_CMD, it is one special URING_CMD, which has to
be SQE128. The 1st SQE(master) is one 64byte URING_CMD, and the 2nd
64byte SQE(slave) is another normal 64byte OP. For any OP which needs
to support slave OP, io_issue_defs[op].fused_slave needs to be set as 1,
and its ->issue() can retrieve/import buffer from master request's
fused_cmd_kbuf. The slave OP is actually submitted from kernel, part of
this idea is from Xiaoguang's ublk ebpf patchset, but this patchset
submits slave OP just like normal OP issued from userspace, that said,
SQE order is kept, and batching handling is done too.

   From a quick look through patches it all looks a bit complicated
and intrusive, all over generic hot paths. I think instead we
should be able to use registered buffer table as intermediary and
reuse splicing. Let me try it out

Here we go, isolated in a new opcode, and in the end should work
with any file supporting splice. It's a quick prototype, it's lacking
and there are many obvious fatal bugs. It also needs some optimisations,
improvements on how executed by io_uring and extra stuff like
memcpy ops and fixed buf recv/send. I'll clean it up.

I used a test below, it essentially does zc recv.

https://github.com/isilence/liburing/commit/81fe705739af7d9b77266f9aa901c1ada870739d

[...]
+int io_splice_from(struct io_kiocb *req, unsigned int issue_flags)
+{
+	struct io_splice_from *sp = io_kiocb_to_cmd(req, struct io_splice_from);
+	loff_t *ppos = (sp->off == -1) ? NULL : &sp->off;
+	struct io_mapped_ubuf *imu;
+	struct pipe_inode_info *pi;
+	struct io_ring_ctx *ctx;
+	unsigned int pipe_tail;
+	int ret, i, nr_pages;
+	u16 index;
+
+	if (!sp->file->f_op->splice_read)
+		return -ENOTSUPP;
+
+	pi = alloc_pipe_info();

The above should be replaced with direct pipe, otherwise every time
allocating one pipe inode really hurts performance.

We don't even need to alloc it dynanically, could be just
on stack. There is a long list of TODOs I can add, e.g.
polling support, retries, nowait, caching imu and so on.

[...]
Your patch looks like transferring pages ownership to io_uring fixed
buffer, but unfortunately it can't be done in this way. splice is
supposed for moving data, not transfer buffer ownership.

Borrowing rather than transferring. It's not obvious since it's
not implemented in the patch, but the buffer should be eventually
returned using the splice's ->release callback.

What is the splice's ->release() callback? Is pipe buffer's
release()? If yes, there is at least the following two problems:

Right

1) it requires the buffer to be saved(for calling its callback and use its private
data to return back the whole buffer) in the pipe until it is consumed, which becomes
one sync interface like splice syscall, and can't cross multiple io_uring OPs or
per-buffer pipe inode is needed

We don't mix data from different sources, it's reasonable to expect
that all buffers will have the same callback, then it'll be saved
in struct io_mapped_ubuf. That's sth should definitely be checked and
rejected if happens.

2) pipe buffer's get()/release() works on per-buffer/page level, but
we need to borrow the whole buffer, and the whole buffer could be used

Surely that can be improved.

by arbitrary number of OPs, such as one IO buffer needs to be used for
handling mirror or stripped targets, so when we know the buffer can be released?

There is a separate efficient lifetime semantic for io_uring's registered
buffers, which don't involve any get/put. It'll be freed according to it,
i.e. when the userspace asks it to be removed and there are no more
inflight requests.

And basically it can't be known by kernel, and only application knows
when to release it.

Anyway, please post the whole patch, otherwise it is hard to see
the whole picture, and devil is always in details, especially Linus
mentioned splice can't be used in this way.

Sure



https://lore.kernel.org/linux-block/CAJfpeguQ3xn2-6svkkVXJ88tiVfcDd-eKi1evzzfvu305fMoyw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/

1) pages are actually owned by device side(ublk, here: sp->file), but we want to
loan them to io_uring normal OPs.

2) after these pages are used by io_uring normal OPs, these pages have
been returned back to sp->file, and the notification has to be done
explicitly, because page is owned by sp->file of splice_read().

Right, see above, they're going to be returned back via ->release.

How?

I admit, I shouldn't have skipped it even for a quick POC. It'll save
->release() in struct io_mapped_ubuf and call it when the buffer is
freed from io_uring perspective, that is there are no more requests
using it and the user requested it to be removed.

3) pages RW direction has to limited strictly, and in case of ublk/fuse,
device pages can only be read or write which depends on user io request
direction.

Yes, I know, and directions will be needed anyway for DMA mappings and
different p2p cases in the future, but again a bunch of things is
omitted here.

Please don't omitted it and it is one fundamental security problem.

That's not interesting for a design concept with a huge warning.
io_import_fixed() already takes a dir argument, we just need to check
it against the buffer's one.


Also IMO it isn't good to add one buffer to ctx->user_bufs[] oneshot and
retrieve it oneshot, and it can be set via req->imu simply in one fused
command.

That's one of the points though. It's nice if not necessary (for a generic
feature) to be able to do multiple ops on the data. For instance, if we
have a memcpy request, we can link it to this splice / zc recv, memcpy
necessary headers to the userspace and let it decide how to proceed with
data.

I feel it could be one big problem for buffer borrowing to cross more than one
OPs, and when can the buffer be returned back?

Described above

memory copy can be done simply by device's read/write interface, please see
patch 15.

I don't think I understand how it looks in the userspace, maybe it's
only applicable to ublk? but it seems that the concept of having one op
producing a buffer and another consuming it don't go well with multi
use in general case, especially stretched in time.

E.g. you recv data, some of which is an application protocol header
that should be looked at by the user and the rest is data that might
be sent out somewhere else.

Am I wrong?

--
Pavel Begunkov



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