Hello, On 05/31/2010 05:22 PM, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: > On Sun, May 30, 2010 at 10:24:01PM +0200, Tejun Heo wrote: >> Replace vhost_workqueue with per-vhost kthread. Other than callback >> argument change from struct work_struct * to struct vhost_poll *, >> there's no visible change to vhost_poll_*() interface. > > I would prefer a substructure vhost_work, even just to make > the code easier to review and compare to workqueue.c. Yeap, sure. >> The problem is that I have no idea how to test this. > > It's a 3 step process: ... > You should now be able to ping guest to host and back. > Use something like netperf to stress the connection. > Close qemu with kill -9 and unload module to test flushing code. Thanks for the instruction. I'll see if there's a way to do it without building qemu myself on opensuse. But please feel free to go ahead and test it. It might just work! :-) >> + if (poll) { >> + __set_current_state(TASK_RUNNING); >> + poll->fn(poll); >> + smp_wmb(); /* paired with rmb in vhost_poll_flush() */ >> + poll->done_seq = poll->queue_seq; >> + wake_up_all(&poll->done); > > This seems to add wakeups on data path, which uses spinlocks etc. > OTOH workqueue.c adds a special barrier entry which only does a > wakeup when needed. Right? Yeah, well, if it's a really hot path sure we can avoid wake_up_all() in most cases. Do you think that would be necessary? >> -void vhost_cleanup(void) >> -{ >> - destroy_workqueue(vhost_workqueue); > > I note that destroy_workqueue does a flush, kthread_stop > doesn't. Right? Sure we don't need to check nothing is in one of > the lists? Maybe add a BUG_ON? There were a bunch of flushes before kthread_stop() and they seemed to stop and flush everything. Aren't they enough? We can definitely add BUG_ON() after kthread_should_stop() check succeeds either way tho. Thanks. -- tejun -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kvm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html