On Fri, 26 Jan 2024, Chuck Lever wrote: > On Thu, Jan 25, 2024 at 05:42:41AM -0500, Jeff Layton wrote: > > Long ago, file locks used to hang off of a singly-linked list in struct > > inode. Because of this, when leases were added, they were added to the > > same list and so they had to be tracked using the same sort of > > structure. > > > > Several years ago, we added struct file_lock_context, which allowed us > > to use separate lists to track different types of file locks. Given > > that, leases no longer need to be tracked using struct file_lock. > > > > That said, a lot of the underlying infrastructure _is_ the same between > > file leases and locks, so we can't completely separate everything. > > > > This patchset first splits a group of fields used by both file locks and > > leases into a new struct file_lock_core, that is then embedded in struct > > file_lock. Coccinelle was then used to convert a lot of the callers to > > deal with the move, with the remaining 25% or so converted by hand. > > > > It then converts several internal functions in fs/locks.c to work > > with struct file_lock_core. Lastly, struct file_lock is split into > > struct file_lock and file_lease, and the lease-related APIs converted to > > take struct file_lease. > > > > After the first few patches (which I left split up for easier review), > > the set should be bisectable. I'll plan to squash the first few > > together to make sure the resulting set is bisectable before merge. > > > > Finally, I left the coccinelle scripts I used in tree. I had heard it > > was preferable to merge those along with the patches that they > > generate, but I wasn't sure where they go. I can either move those to a > > more appropriate location or we can just drop that commit if it's not > > needed. > > > > Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx> > > v2 looks nicer. > > I would add a few list handling primitives, as I see enough > instances of list_for_each_entry, list_for_each_entry_safe, > list_first_entry, and list_first_entry_or_null on fl_core.flc_list > to make it worth having those. > > Also, there doesn't seem to be benefit for API consumers to have to > understand the internal structure of struct file_lock/lease to reach > into fl_core. Having accessor functions for common fields like > fl_type and fl_flags could be cleaner. I'm not a big fan of accessor functions. They don't *look* like normal field access, so a casual reader has to go find out what the function does, just to find the it doesn't really do anything. But neither am I a fan have requiring filesystems to use "fl_core.flc_foo". As you say, reaching into fl_core isn't ideal. It would be nice if we could make fl_core and anonymous structure, but that really requires -fplan9-extensions which Linus is on-record as not liking. Unless... How horrible would it be to use union { struct file_lock_core flc_core; struct file_lock_core; }; I think that only requires -fms-extensions, which Linus was less negative towards. That would allow access to the members of file_lock_core without the "flc_core." prefix, but would still allow getting the address of 'flc_core'. Maybe it's too ugly. While fl_type and fl_flags are most common, fl_pid, fl_owner, fl_file and even fl_wait are also used. Having accessor functions for all of those would be too much I think. Maybe higher-level functions which meet the real need of the filesystem might be a useful approach: locks_wakeup(lock) locks_wait_interruptible(lock, condition) locks_posix_init(lock, type, pid, ...) ?? locks_is_unlock() - fl_type is compared with F_UNLCK 22 times. While those are probably a good idea, through don't really help much with reducing the need for accessor functions. I don't suppose we could just leave the #defines in place? Probably not a good idea. Maybe spell "fl_core" as "c"? lk->c.flc_flags ??? And I wonder if we could have a new fl_flag for 'FOREIGN' locks rather than encoding that flag in the sign of the pid. That seems a bit ... clunky? NeilBrown