On Tue, Nov 29, 2022 at 11:01:41AM +0800, Kemeng Shi wrote: > In C language, When executing "if (expression1 && expression2)" and > expression1 return false, the expression2 may not be executed. > For "tg_within_bps_limit(tg, bio, bps_limit, &bps_wait) && > tg_within_iops_limit(tg, bio, iops_limit, &iops_wait))", if bps is > limited, tg_within_bps_limit will return false and > tg_within_iops_limit will not be called. So even bps and iops are > both limited, iops_wait will not be calculated and is always zero. > So wait time of iops is always ignored. > > Fix this by always calling tg_within_bps_limit and tg_within_iops_limit > to get wait time for both bps and iops. > > Observed that: > 1. Wait time in tg_within_iops_limit/tg_within_bps_limit need always > be stored as wait argument is always passed. > 2. wait time is stored to zero if iops/bps is limited otherwise non-zero > is stored. > Simpfy tg_within_iops_limit/tg_within_bps_limit by removing wait argument > and return wait time directly. Caller tg_may_dispatch checks if wait time > is zero to find if iops/bps is limited. > > Signed-off-by: Kemeng Shi <shikemeng@xxxxxxxxxx> Acked-by: Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx> -- tejun