Re: [PATCH V5 4/8] io_uring: support SQE group

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On 8/29/24 05:29, Ming Lei wrote:
...
+	if (WARN_ON_ONCE(lead->grp_refs <= 0))
+		return false;
+
+	req->flags &= ~REQ_F_SQE_GROUP;

I'm getting completely lost when and why it clears and sets
back REQ_F_SQE_GROUP and REQ_F_SQE_GROUP_LEADER. Is there any
rule?

My fault, it should have been documented somewhere.

REQ_F_SQE_GROUP is cleared when the request is completed, but it is
reused as flag for marking the last request in this group, so we can
free the group leader when observing the 'last' member request.

Maybe it'd be cleaner to use a second flag?

The only other difference about the two flags is that both are cleared
when the group leader becomes the last one in the group, then
this leader degenerates as normal request, which way can simplify
group leader freeing.


+	/*
+	 * Set linked leader as failed if any member is failed, so
+	 * the remained link chain can be terminated
+	 */
+	if (unlikely((req->flags & REQ_F_FAIL) &&
+		     ((lead->flags & IO_REQ_LINK_FLAGS) && lead->link)))
+		req_set_fail(lead);

if (req->flags & REQ_F_FAIL)
	req_set_fail(lead);

REQ_F_FAIL is not specific to links, if a request fails we need
to mark it as such.

It is for handling group failure.

The following condition

	((lead->flags & IO_REQ_LINK_FLAGS) && lead->link))

means that this group is in one link-chain.

If any member in this group is failed, we need to fail this group(lead),
then the remained requests in this chain can be failed.

Otherwise, it isn't necessary to fail group leader in case of any member
io failure.

What bad would happen if you do it like this?

if (req->flags & REQ_F_FAIL)
	req_set_fail(lead);

I'm asking because if you rely on some particular combination
of F_FAIL and F_LINK somewhere, it's likely wrong, but otherwise
we F_FAIL a larger set of requests, which should never be an
issue.

+	return !--lead->grp_refs;
+}
+
+static inline bool leader_is_the_last(struct io_kiocb *lead)
+{
+	return lead->grp_refs == 1 && (lead->flags & REQ_F_SQE_GROUP);
+}
+
+static void io_complete_group_member(struct io_kiocb *req)
+{
+	struct io_kiocb *lead = get_group_leader(req);
+
+	if (WARN_ON_ONCE(!(req->flags & REQ_F_SQE_GROUP)))
+		return;
+
+	/* member CQE needs to be posted first */
+	if (!(req->flags & REQ_F_CQE_SKIP))
+		io_req_commit_cqe(req->ctx, req);
+
+	if (__io_complete_group_member(req, lead)) {
+		/*
+		 * SQE_GROUP flag is kept for the last member, so the leader
+		 * can be retrieved & freed from this last member
+		 */
+		req->flags |= REQ_F_SQE_GROUP;

'req' is the last completed request, so mark it as the last one
by reusing REQ_F_SQE_GROUP, so we can free group leader in
io_free_batch_list() when observing the last flag.

But it should have been documented.

+		if (!(lead->flags & REQ_F_CQE_SKIP))
+			io_req_commit_cqe(lead->ctx, lead);
+	} else if (leader_is_the_last(lead)) {
+		/* leader will degenerate to plain req if it is the last */
+		lead->flags &= ~(REQ_F_SQE_GROUP | REQ_F_SQE_GROUP_LEADER);

What's this chunk is about?

The leader becomes the only request not completed in group, so it is
degenerated as normal one by clearing the two flags. This way simplifies
logic for completing group leader.

...
@@ -1388,11 +1501,33 @@ static void io_free_batch_list(struct io_ring_ctx *ctx,
   						    comp_list);
   		if (unlikely(req->flags & IO_REQ_CLEAN_SLOW_FLAGS)) {
+			if (req->flags & (REQ_F_SQE_GROUP |
+					  REQ_F_SQE_GROUP_LEADER)) {
+				struct io_kiocb *leader;
+
+				/* Leader is freed via the last member */
+				if (req_is_group_leader(req)) {
+					node = req->comp_list.next;
+					continue;
+				}
+
+				/*
+				 * Only the last member keeps GROUP flag,
+				 * free leader and this member together
+				 */
+				leader = get_group_leader(req);
+				leader->flags &= ~REQ_F_SQE_GROUP_LEADER;
+				req->flags &= ~REQ_F_SQE_GROUP;
+				wq_stack_add_head(&leader->comp_list,
+						  &req->comp_list);

That's quite hacky, but at least we can replace it with
task work if it gets in the way later on.

io_free_batch_list() is already called in task context, and it isn't
necessary to schedule one extra tw, which hurts perf more or less.

Another way is to store these leaders into one temp list, and
call io_free_batch_list() for this temp list one more time.

What I'm saying, it's fine to leave it as is for now. In the
future if it becomes a problem for ome reason or another, we can
do it the task_work like way.

...
@@ -2101,6 +2251,62 @@ static int io_init_req(struct io_ring_ctx *ctx, struct io_kiocb *req,
   	return def->prep(req, sqe);
   }
+static struct io_kiocb *io_group_sqe(struct io_submit_link *group,
+				     struct io_kiocb *req)
+{
+	/*
+	 * Group chain is similar with link chain: starts with 1st sqe with
+	 * REQ_F_SQE_GROUP, and ends with the 1st sqe without REQ_F_SQE_GROUP
+	 */
+	if (group->head) {
+		struct io_kiocb *lead = group->head;
+
+		/* members can't be in link chain, can't be drained */
+		if (req->flags & (IO_REQ_LINK_FLAGS | REQ_F_IO_DRAIN))
+			req_fail_link_node(lead, -EINVAL);

That should fail the entire link (if any) as well.

Good catch, here we should fail link head by following the logic
in io_submit_fail_init().


I have even more doubts we even want to mix links and groups. Apart

Wrt. ublk, group provides zero copy, and the ublk io(group) is generic
IO, sometime IO_LINK is really needed & helpful, such as in ublk-nbd,
send(tcp) requests need to be linked & zc. And we shouldn't limit IO_LINK
for generic io_uring IO.

from nuances as such, which would be quite hard to track, the semantics
of IOSQE_CQE_SKIP_SUCCESS is unclear.

IO group just follows every normal request.

It tries to mimic but groups don't and essentially can't do it the
same way, at least in some aspects. E.g. IOSQE_CQE_SKIP_SUCCESS
usually means that all following will be silenced. What if a
member is CQE_SKIP, should it stop the leader from posting a CQE?
And whatever the answer is, it'll be different from the link's
behaviour.

Regardless, let's forbid IOSQE_CQE_SKIP_SUCCESS and linked timeouts
for groups, that can be discussed afterwards.

1) fail in linked chain
- follows IO_LINK's behavior since io_fail_links() covers io group

2) otherwise
- just respect IOSQE_CQE_SKIP_SUCCESS

And also it doen't work with IORING_OP_LINK_TIMEOUT.

REQ_F_LINK_TIMEOUT can work on whole group(or group leader) only, and I
will document it in V6.

It would still be troublesome. When a linked timeout fires it searches
for the request it's attached to and cancels it, however, group leaders
that queued up their members are discoverable. But let's say you can find
them in some way, then the only sensbile thing to do is cancel members,
which should be doable by checking req->grp_leader, but might be easier
to leave it to follow up patches.


+
+		lead->grp_refs += 1;
+		group->last->grp_link = req;
+		group->last = req;
+
+		if (req->flags & REQ_F_SQE_GROUP)
+			return NULL;
+
+		req->grp_link = NULL;
+		req->flags |= REQ_F_SQE_GROUP;
+		group->head = NULL;
+		if (lead->flags & REQ_F_FAIL) {
+			io_queue_sqe_fallback(lead);

Let's say the group was in the middle of a link, it'll
complete that group and continue with assembling / executing
the link when it should've failed it and honoured the
request order.

OK, here we can simply remove the above two lines, and link submit
state can handle this failure in link chain.

If you just delete then nobody would check for REQ_F_FAIL and
fail the request. Assuming you'd also set the fail flag to the
link head when appropriate, how about deleting these two line
and do like below? (can be further prettified)


bool io_group_assembling()
{
	return state->group.head || (req->flags & REQ_F_SQE_GROUP);
}
bool io_link_assembling()
{
	return state->link.head || (req->flags & IO_REQ_LINK_FLAGS);
}

static inline int io_submit_sqe()
{
	...
	if (unlikely(io_link_assembling(state, req) ||
				 io_group_assembling(state, req) ||
				 req->flags & REQ_F_FAIL)) {
		if (io_group_assembling(state, req)) {
			req = io_group_sqe(&state->group, req);
			if (!req)
				return 0;
		}
		if (io_link_assembling(state, req)) {
			req = io_link_sqe(&state->link, req);
			if (!req)
				return 0;
		}
		if (req->flags & REQ_F_FAIL) {
			io_queue_sqe_fallback(req);
			return 0;
		}
	}
	io_queue_sqe(req);
	return 0;
}


--
Pavel Begunkov




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