On 8/15/24 7:45 PM, Ming Lei wrote: > On Thu, Aug 15, 2024 at 07:24:16PM -0600, Jens Axboe wrote: >> On 8/15/24 5:44 PM, Ming Lei wrote: >>> On Thu, Aug 15, 2024 at 06:11:13PM +0100, Pavel Begunkov wrote: >>>> On 8/15/24 15:33, Jens Axboe wrote: >>>>> On 8/14/24 7:42 PM, Ming Lei wrote: >>>>>> On Wed, Aug 14, 2024 at 6:46?PM Pavel Begunkov <asml.silence@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Add ->uring_cmd callback for block device files and use it to implement >>>>>>> asynchronous discard. Normally, it first tries to execute the command >>>>>>> from non-blocking context, which we limit to a single bio because >>>>>>> otherwise one of sub-bios may need to wait for other bios, and we don't >>>>>>> want to deal with partial IO. If non-blocking attempt fails, we'll retry >>>>>>> it in a blocking context. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Suggested-by: Conrad Meyer <conradmeyer@xxxxxxxx> >>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Pavel Begunkov <asml.silence@xxxxxxxxx> >>>>>>> --- >>>>>>> block/blk.h | 1 + >>>>>>> block/fops.c | 2 + >>>>>>> block/ioctl.c | 94 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >>>>>>> include/uapi/linux/fs.h | 2 + >>>>>>> 4 files changed, 99 insertions(+) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> diff --git a/block/blk.h b/block/blk.h >>>>>>> index e180863f918b..5178c5ba6852 100644 >>>>>>> --- a/block/blk.h >>>>>>> +++ b/block/blk.h >>>>>>> @@ -571,6 +571,7 @@ blk_mode_t file_to_blk_mode(struct file *file); >>>>>>> int truncate_bdev_range(struct block_device *bdev, blk_mode_t mode, >>>>>>> loff_t lstart, loff_t lend); >>>>>>> long blkdev_ioctl(struct file *file, unsigned cmd, unsigned long arg); >>>>>>> +int blkdev_uring_cmd(struct io_uring_cmd *cmd, unsigned int issue_flags); >>>>>>> long compat_blkdev_ioctl(struct file *file, unsigned cmd, unsigned long arg); >>>>>>> >>>>>>> extern const struct address_space_operations def_blk_aops; >>>>>>> diff --git a/block/fops.c b/block/fops.c >>>>>>> index 9825c1713a49..8154b10b5abf 100644 >>>>>>> --- a/block/fops.c >>>>>>> +++ b/block/fops.c >>>>>>> @@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ >>>>>>> #include <linux/fs.h> >>>>>>> #include <linux/iomap.h> >>>>>>> #include <linux/module.h> >>>>>>> +#include <linux/io_uring/cmd.h> >>>>>>> #include "blk.h" >>>>>>> >>>>>>> static inline struct inode *bdev_file_inode(struct file *file) >>>>>>> @@ -873,6 +874,7 @@ const struct file_operations def_blk_fops = { >>>>>>> .splice_read = filemap_splice_read, >>>>>>> .splice_write = iter_file_splice_write, >>>>>>> .fallocate = blkdev_fallocate, >>>>>>> + .uring_cmd = blkdev_uring_cmd, >>>>>> >>>>>> Just be curious, we have IORING_OP_FALLOCATE already for sending >>>>>> discard to block device, why is .uring_cmd added for this purpose? >>>> >>>> Which is a good question, I haven't thought about it, but I tend to >>>> agree with Jens. Because vfs_fallocate is created synchronous >>>> IORING_OP_FALLOCATE is slow for anything but pretty large requests. >>>> Probably can be patched up, which would involve changing the >>>> fops->fallocate protot, but I'm not sure async there makes sense >>>> outside of bdev (?), and cmd approach is simpler, can be made >>>> somewhat more efficient (1 less layer in the way), and it's not >>>> really something completely new since we have it in ioctl. >>> >>> Yeah, we have ioctl(DISCARD), which acquires filemap_invalidate_lock, >>> same with blkdev_fallocate(). >>> >>> But this patch drops this exclusive lock, so it becomes async friendly, >>> but may cause stale page cache. However, if the lock is required, it can't >>> be efficient anymore and io-wq may be inevitable, :-) >> >> If you want to grab the lock, you can still opportunistically grab it. >> For (by far) the common case, you'll get it, and you can still do it >> inline. > > If the lock is grabbed in the whole cmd lifetime, it is basically one sync > interface cause there is at most one async discard cmd in-flight for each > device. Oh for sure, you could not do that anyway as you'd be holding a lock across the syscall boundary, which isn't allowed. > Meantime the handling has to move to io-wq for avoiding to block current > context, the interface becomes same with IORING_OP_FALLOCATE? I think the current truncate is overkill, we should be able to get by without. And no, I will not entertain an option that's "oh just punt it to io-wq". -- Jens Axboe