On 12/8/23 12:22 PM, Mina Almasry wrote: > On Fri, Dec 8, 2023 at 9:48 AM David Ahern <dsahern@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> On 12/7/23 5:52 PM, Mina Almasry wrote: > ... >>> + >>> + xa_for_each(&binding->bound_rxq_list, xa_idx, rxq) { >>> + if (rxq->binding == binding) { >>> + /* We hold the rtnl_lock while binding/unbinding >>> + * dma-buf, so we can't race with another thread that >>> + * is also modifying this value. However, the driver >>> + * may read this config while it's creating its >>> + * rx-queues. WRITE_ONCE() here to match the >>> + * READ_ONCE() in the driver. >>> + */ >>> + WRITE_ONCE(rxq->binding, NULL); >>> + >>> + rxq_idx = get_netdev_rx_queue_index(rxq); >>> + >>> + netdev_restart_rx_queue(binding->dev, rxq_idx); >> >> Blindly restarting a queue when a dmabuf is heavy handed. If the dmabuf >> has no outstanding references (ie., no references in the RxQ), then no >> restart is needed. >> > > I think I need to stop the queue while binding to a dmabuf for the > sake of concurrency, no? I.e. the softirq thread may be delivering a > packet, and in parallel a separate thread holds rtnl_lock and tries to > bind the dma-buf. At that point the page_pool recreation will race > with the driver doing page_pool_alloc_page(). I don't think I can > insert a lock to handle this into the rx fast path, no? I think it depends on the details of how entries are added and removed from the pool. I am behind on the pp details at this point, so I do need to do some homework. > > Also, this sounds like it requires (lots of) more changes. The > page_pool + driver need to report how many pending references there > are (with locking so we don't race with incoming packets), and have > them reported via an ndo so that we can skip restarting the queue. > Implementing the changes in to a huge issue but handling the > concurrency may be a genuine blocker. Not sure it's worth the upside > of not restarting the single rx queue? It has to do with the usability of this overall solution. As I mentioned most ML use cases can (and will want to) use many memory allocations for receiving packets - e.g., allocations per message and receiving multiple messages per socket connection. > >>> + } >>> + } >>> + >>> + xa_erase(&netdev_dmabuf_bindings, binding->id); >>> + >>> + netdev_dmabuf_binding_put(binding); >>> +} >>> + >>> +int netdev_bind_dmabuf_to_queue(struct net_device *dev, u32 rxq_idx, >>> + struct netdev_dmabuf_binding *binding) >>> +{ >>> + struct netdev_rx_queue *rxq; >>> + u32 xa_idx; >>> + int err; >>> + >>> + rxq = __netif_get_rx_queue(dev, rxq_idx); >>> + >>> + if (rxq->binding) >>> + return -EEXIST; >>> + >>> + err = xa_alloc(&binding->bound_rxq_list, &xa_idx, rxq, xa_limit_32b, >>> + GFP_KERNEL); >>> + if (err) >>> + return err; >>> + >>> + /* We hold the rtnl_lock while binding/unbinding dma-buf, so we can't >>> + * race with another thread that is also modifying this value. However, >>> + * the driver may read this config while it's creating its * rx-queues. >>> + * WRITE_ONCE() here to match the READ_ONCE() in the driver. >>> + */ >>> + WRITE_ONCE(rxq->binding, binding); >>> + >>> + err = netdev_restart_rx_queue(dev, rxq_idx); >> >> Similarly, here binding a dmabuf to a queue. I was expecting the dmabuf >> binding to add entries to the page pool for the queue. > > To be honest, I think maybe there's a slight disconnect between how > you think the page_pool works, and my primitive understanding of how > it works. Today, I see a 1:1 mapping between rx-queue and page_pool in > the code. I don't see 1:many or many:1 mappings. I am not referring to 1:N or N:1 for page pool and queues. I am referring to entries within a single page pool for a single Rx queue. > > In theory mapping 1 rx-queue to n page_pools is trivial: the driver > can call page_pool_create() multiple times to generate n queues and > decide for incoming packets which one to use. > > However, mapping n rx-queues to 1 page_pool seems like a can of worms. > I see code in the page_pool that looks to me (and Willem) like it's > safe only because the page_pool is used from the same napi context. > with a n rx-queueue: 1 page_pool mapping, that is no longer true, no? > There is a tail end of issues to resolve to be able to map 1 page_pool > to n queues as I understand and even if resolved I'm not sure the > maintainers are interested in taking the code. > > So, per my humble understanding there is no such thing as "add entries > to the page pool for the (specific) queue", the page_pool is always > used by 1 queue. > > Note that even though this limitation exists, we still support binding > 1 dma-buf to multiple queues, because multiple page pools can use the > same netdev_dmabuf_binding. I should add that to the docs. > >> If the pool was >> previously empty, then maybe the queue needs to be "started" in the >> sense of creating with h/w or just pushing buffers into the queue and >> moving the pidx. >> >> > > I don't think it's enough to add buffers to the page_pool, no? The > existing buffers in the page_pool (host mem) must be purged. I think > maybe the queue needs to be stopped as well so that we don't race with > incoming packets and end up with skbs with devmem and non-devmem frags > (unless you're thinking it becomes a requirement to support that, I > think things are complicated as-is and it's a good simplification). > When we already purge the existing buffers & restart the queue, it's > little effort to migrate this to become in line with Jakub's queue-api > that he also wants to use for per-queue configuration & ndo_stop/open. >