On 10/30/24 21:09, Keith Busch wrote:
On Wed, Oct 30, 2024 at 11:31:08PM +0530, Kanchan Joshi wrote:
diff --git a/include/uapi/linux/io_uring.h b/include/uapi/linux/io_uring.h
index 024745283783..48dcca125db3 100644
--- a/include/uapi/linux/io_uring.h
+++ b/include/uapi/linux/io_uring.h
@@ -105,6 +105,22 @@ struct io_uring_sqe {
*/
__u8 cmd[0];
};
+ /*
+ * If the ring is initialized with IORING_SETUP_SQE128, then
+ * this field is starting offset for 64 bytes of data. For meta io
+ * this contains 'struct io_uring_meta_pi'
+ */
+ __u8 big_sqe[0];
+};
I don't think zero sized arrays are good as a uapi regardless of
cmd[0] above, let's just do
sqe = get_sqe();
big_sqe = (void *)(sqe + 1)
with an appropriate helper.
+
+/* this is placed in SQE128 */
+struct io_uring_meta_pi {
+ __u16 pi_flags;
+ __u16 app_tag;
+ __u32 len;
+ __u64 addr;
+ __u64 seed;
+ __u64 rsvd[2];
};
On the previous version, I was more questioning if it aligns with what
I missed that discussion, let me know if I need to look it up
Pavel was trying to do here. I didn't quite get it, so I was more
confused than saying it should be this way now.
The point is, SQEs don't have nearly enough space to accommodate all
such optional features, especially when it's taking so much space and
not applicable to all reads but rather some specific use cases and
files. Consider that there might be more similar extensions and we might
even want to use them together.
1. SQE128 makes it big for all requests, intermixing with requests that
don't need additional space wastes space. SQE128 is fine to use but at
the same time we should be mindful about it and try to avoid enabling it
if feasible.
2. This API hard codes io_uring_meta_pi into the extended part of the
SQE. If we want to add another feature it'd need to go after the meta
struct. SQE256? And what if the user doesn't need PI but only the second
feature?
In short, the uAPI need to have a clear vision of how it can be used
with / extended to multiple optional features and not just PI.
One option I mentioned before is passing a user pointer to an array of
structures, each would will have the type specifying what kind of
feature / meta information it is, e.g. META_TYPE_PI. It's not a
complete solution but a base idea to extend upon. I separately
mentioned before, if copy_from_user is expensive we can optimise it
with pre-registering memory. I think Jens even tried something similar
with structures we pass as waiting parameters.
I didn't read through all iterations of the series, so if there is
some other approach described that ticks the boxes and flexible
enough, I'd be absolutely fine with it.
--
Pavel Begunkov