On Mon, Jun 3, 2024 at 7:52 AM Pavel Begunkov <asml.silence@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 6/3/24 15:17, Mina Almasry wrote: > > On Fri, May 31, 2024 at 10:35 PM Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> On Thu, May 30, 2024 at 08:16:01PM +0000, Mina Almasry wrote: > >>> I'm unsure if the discussion has been resolved yet. Sending the series > >>> anyway to get reviews/feedback on the (unrelated) rest of the series. > >> > >> As far as I'm concerned it is not. I've not seen any convincing > >> argument for more than page/folio allocator including larger order / > >> huge page and dmabuf. > >> > > > > Thanks Christoph, this particular patch series adds dmabuf, so I > > assume no objection there. I assume the objection is that you want the > > generic, extensible hooks removed. > > > > To be honest, I don't think the hooks are an integral part of the > > design, and at this point I think we've argued for them enough. I > > think we can easily achieve the same thing with just raw if statements > > in a couple of places. We can always add the hooks if and only if we > > actually justify many memory providers. > > > > Any objections to me removing the hooks and directing to memory > > allocations via simple if statements? Something like (very rough > > draft, doesn't compile): > > The question for Christoph is what exactly is the objection here? Why we > would not be using well defined ops when we know there will be more > users? Repeating what I said in the last thread, for io_uring it's used > to implement the flow of buffers from userspace to the kernel, the ABI, > which is orthogonal to the issue of what memory type it is and how it > came there. And even if you mandate unnecessary dmabuf condoms for user > memory in one form or another IMHO for no clear reason, the callbacks > (or yet another if-else) would still be needed. > > Sure, Mina can drop and hard code devmem path to easy the pain for > him and delay the discussion, but then shortly after I will be > re-sending same shit. You don't need to re-send the same ops again, right? You can add io uring support without ops. Something like: diff --git a/net/core/page_pool.c b/net/core/page_pool.c index 92be1aaf18ccc..2cc986455bce6 100644 --- a/net/core/page_pool.c +++ b/net/core/page_pool.c @@ -557,8 +557,8 @@ netmem_ref page_pool_alloc_netmem(struct page_pool *pool, gfp_t gfp) return netmem; /* Slow-path: cache empty, do real allocation */ - if (static_branch_unlikely(&page_pool_mem_providers) && pool->mp_ops) - netmem = pool->mp_ops->alloc_pages(pool, gfp); + if (unlikely(page_pool_is_dmabuf(pool))) + netmem = mp_dmabuf_devmem_alloc_pages(): + else if (unlikely(page_pool_is_iouring(pool))) + netmem = mp_io_uring_alloc_pages(): else netmem = __page_pool_alloc_pages_slow(pool, gfp); return netmem; So IMO, the ops themselves, which Christoph is repeatedly nacking, are not that important. I humbly think the energy should be spent convincing maintainers of the use case of io uring memory, not the ops. The ops are a cosmetic change to the code, and can be added later. Christoph is nacking the ops because it gives people too much rope [1]. But if you disagree and think the ops themselves are important for a reason I missed, I'm happy waiting until agreement is reached here. Sorry, just voicing my 2 cents. [1] https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/ZjjHUh1eINPg1wkn@xxxxxxxxxxxxx/ -- Thanks, Mina