On 5/23/24 8:52 AM, yunlong xing wrote: > Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx> ?2024?5?23??? 21:04??? >> >> On 5/23/24 12:04 AM, yunlong xing wrote: >>> Bart Van Assche <bvanassche@xxxxxxx> ?2024?5?23??? 02:12??? >>>> >>>> On 5/22/24 10:57, Jens Axboe wrote: >>>>> On 5/22/24 11:38 AM, Bart Van Assche wrote: >>>>>> On 5/22/24 00:48, Yunlong Xing wrote: >>>>>>> @@ -1913,6 +1921,10 @@ static void loop_handle_cmd(struct loop_cmd *cmd) >>>>>>> set_active_memcg(old_memcg); >>>>>>> css_put(cmd_memcg_css); >>>>>>> } >>>>>>> + >>>>>>> + if (ori_ioprio != cmd_ioprio) >>>>>>> + set_task_ioprio(current, ori_ioprio); >>>>>>> + >>>>>>> failed: >>>>>>> /* complete non-aio request */ >>>>>>> if (!use_aio || ret) { >>>>>> >>>>>> Does adding this call in the hot path have a measurable performance impact? >>>>> >>>>> It's loop, I would not be concerned with overhead. But it does look pretty >>>>> bogus to modify the task ioprio from here. >>>> >>>> Hi Jens, >>>> >>>> Maybe Yunlong uses that call to pass the I/O priority to the I/O submitter? >>>> >>>> I think that it is easy to pass the I/O priority to the kiocb submitted by >>>> lo_rw_aio() without calling set_task_ioprio(). >>>> >>>> lo_read_simple() and lo_write_simple() however call vfs_iter_read() / >>>> vfs_iter_write(). This results in a call of do_iter_readv_writev() and >>>> init_sync_kiocb(). The latter function calls get_current_ioprio(). This is >>>> probably why the set_task_ioprio() call has been added? >>> >>> Yeah that's why I call set_task_ioprio. I want to the loop kwoker >>> task?submit I/O to the real disk device?can pass the iopriority of the >>> loop device request? both lo_rw_aio() and >>> lo_read_simple()/lo_write_simple(). >> >> And that's a totally backwards and suboptimal way to do it. The task >> priority is only used as a last resort lower down, if the IO itself >> hasn't been appropriately marked. >> >> Like I said, it's back to the drawing board on this patch, there's no >> way it's acceptable in its current form. >> >> -- >> Jens Axboe >> > Thanks for your advice. So, you can't accept pass the ioprio by > set_task_ioprio? Not sure how many times I'd have to state that, no. > If only the method of lo_rw_aio() counld you accept? I don't want to > submit this part of the modifications separately. I just want to know, > this is ok to you or not? Inheriting the kiocb ioprio from the request is the right approach, so yeah that part is fine. -- Jens Axboe