On 2/3/19 7:56 PM, Al Viro wrote: > On Wed, Jan 30, 2019 at 02:29:05AM +0100, Jann Horn wrote: >> On Tue, Jan 29, 2019 at 8:27 PM Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> We normally have to fget/fput for each IO we do on a file. Even with >>> the batching we do, the cost of the atomic inc/dec of the file usage >>> count adds up. >>> >>> This adds IORING_REGISTER_FILES, and IORING_UNREGISTER_FILES opcodes >>> for the io_uring_register(2) system call. The arguments passed in must >>> be an array of __s32 holding file descriptors, and nr_args should hold >>> the number of file descriptors the application wishes to pin for the >>> duration of the io_uring context (or until IORING_UNREGISTER_FILES is >>> called). >>> >>> When used, the application must set IOSQE_FIXED_FILE in the sqe->flags >>> member. Then, instead of setting sqe->fd to the real fd, it sets sqe->fd >>> to the index in the array passed in to IORING_REGISTER_FILES. >>> >>> Files are automatically unregistered when the io_uring context is >>> torn down. An application need only unregister if it wishes to >>> register a new set of fds. >> >> Crazy idea: >> >> Taking a step back, at a high level, basically this patch creates sort >> of the same difference that you get when you compare the following >> scenarios for normal multithreaded I/O in userspace: > >> This kinda makes me wonder whether this is really something that >> should be implemented specifically for the io_uring API, or whether it >> would make sense to somehow handle part of this in the generic VFS >> code and give the user the ability to prepare a new files_struct that >> can then be transferred to the worker thread, or something like >> that... I'm not sure whether there's a particularly clean way to do >> that though. > > Using files_struct for that opens a can of worms you really don't > want to touch. > > Consider the following scenario with any variant of this interface: > * create io_uring fd. > * send an SCM_RIGHTS with that fd to AF_UNIX socket. > * add the descriptor of that AF_UNIX socket to your fd > * close AF_UNIX fd, close io_uring fd. > Voila - you've got a shiny leak. No ->release() is called for > anyone (and you really don't want to do that on ->flush(), because > otherwise a library helper doing e.g. system("/bin/date") will tear > down all the io_uring in your process). The socket is held by > the reference you've stashed into io_uring (whichever way you do > that). io_uring is held by the reference you've stashed into > SCM_RIGHTS datagram in queue of the socket. > > No matter what, you need net/unix/garbage.c to be aware of that stuff. > And getting files_struct lifetime mixed into that would be beyond > any reason. > > The only reason for doing that as a descriptor table would be > avoiding the cost of fget() in whatever uses it, right? Since Right, the only purpose of this patch is to avoid doing fget/fput for each IO. > those are *not* the normal syscalls (and fdget() really should not > be used anywhere other than the very top of syscall's call chain - > that's another reason why tossing file_struct around like that > is insane) and since the benefit is all due to the fact that it's > *NOT* shared, *NOT* modified in parallel, etc., allowing us to > treat file references as stable... why the hell use the descriptor > tables at all? This one is not a regular system call, since we don't do fget, then IO, then fput. We hang on to it. But for the non-registered case, it's very much just like a regular read/write system call, where we fget to do IO on it, then fput when we are done. > All you need is an array of struct file *, explicitly populated. > With net/unix/garbage.c aware of such beasts. Guess what? We > do have such an object already. The one net/unix/garbage.c is > working with. SCM_RIGHTS datagrams, that is. > > IOW, can't we give those io_uring descriptors associated struct > unix_sock? No socket descriptors, no struct socket (probably), > just the AF_UNIX-specific part thereof. Then teach > unix_inflight()/unix_notinflight() about getting unix_sock out > of these guys (incidentally, both would seem to benefit from > _not_ touching unix_gc_lock in case when there's no unix_sock > attached to file we are dealing with - I might be missing > something very subtle about barriers there, but it doesn't > look likely). That might be workable, though I'm not sure we currently have helpers to just explicitly create a unix_sock by itself. Not familiar with the networking bits at all, I'll take a look. > And make that (i.e. registering the descriptors) mandatory. I don't want to make it mandatory, that's very inflexible for managing tons of files. The registration is useful for specific cases where we have high frequency of operations on a set of files. Besides, it'd make the use of the API cumbersome as well for the basic case of just wanting to do async IO. > Hell, combine that with creating io_uring fd, if we really > care about the syscall count. Benefits: We don't care about syscall count for setup as much. If you're doing registration of a file set, you're expected to do a LOT of IO to those files. Hence having an extra one for setup is not a concern. My concern is just making it mandatory to do registration, I don't think that's a workable alternative. > * no file_struct refcount wanking > * no fget()/fput() (conditional, at that) from kernel > threads > * no CLOEXEC-dependent anything; just the teardown > on the final fput(), whichever way it comes. > * no fun with duelling garbage collectors. The fget/fput from a kernel thread can be solved by just hanging on to the struct file * when we punt the IO. Right now we don't, which is a little silly, that should be changed. Getting rid of the files_struct{} is doable. -- Jens Axboe