Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 11:41:23PM -0800, Darrick J. Wong wrote: >> Provide VFS helpers for handling O_SYNC AIO DIO writes. Filesystems wanting to >> use the helpers have to pass DIO_SYNC_WRITES to __blockdev_direct_IO. If the >> filesystem doesn't provide its own direct IO end_io handler, the generic code >> will take care of issuing the flush. Otherwise, the filesystem's custom end_io >> handler is passed struct dio_sync_io_work pointer as 'private' argument, and it >> must call generic_dio_end_io() to finish the AIO DIO. The generic code then >> takes care to call generic_write_sync() from a workqueue context when AIO DIO >> is complete. >> >> Since all filesystems using blockdev_direct_IO() need O_SYNC aio dio handling >> and the generic suffices for them, make blockdev_direct_IO() pass the new >> DIO_SYNC_WRITES flag. > > I'd like to use this as a vehicle to revisit how dio completions work. I don't like the sound of that. ;-) It sounds like this bugfix may get further delayed by the desire for unrelated code cleanup. > Now that the generic code has a reason to defer aio completions to a > workqueue can we maybe take the whole offload to a workqueue code into > the direct-io code instead of reimplementing it in ext4 and xfs? On the surface, I don't see a problem with that. > From a simplicity point of view I'd love to do it unconditionally, but I > also remember that this was causing performance regressions on important > workload. So maybe we just need a flag in the dio structure, with a way > that the get_blocks callback can communicate that it's needed. Yeah, adding context switches to the normal io completion path is a non-starter. > For the specific case of O_(D)SYNC aio this would allos allow to call > ->fsync from generic code instead of the filesystems having to > reimplement this. This is the only reason I'd even consider such a cleanup for this series. Alas, I don't find it compelling enough to do the work. >> + if (dio->sync_work) >> + private = dio->sync_work; >> + else >> + private = dio->private; >> + >> dio->end_io(dio->iocb, offset, transferred, >> - dio->private, ret, is_async); >> + private, ret, is_async); > > Eww. I'd be much happier to add a new argument than having two > different members passed as the private argument. OK. > Maybe it's even time to bite the bullet and make struct dio public > and pass that to the end_io argument as well as generic_dio_end_io. But I don't agree with that. Really, nothing needs to know about the struct dio outside of fs/direct-io.c. >> + /* No IO submitted? Skip syncing... */ >> + if (!dio->result && dio->sync_work) { >> + kfree(dio->sync_work); >> + dio->sync_work = NULL; >> + } >> + generic_dio_end_io(dio->iocb, offset, transferred, >> + dio->sync_work, ret, is_async); > > > Any reason the check above isn't done inside of generic_dio_end_io? Jan? It does seem as though it might make more sense to do the check in generic_dio_end_io. >> +static noinline int dio_create_flush_wq(struct super_block *sb) >> +{ >> + struct workqueue_struct *wq = >> + alloc_workqueue("dio-sync", WQ_UNBOUND, 1); >> + >> + if (!wq) >> + return -ENOMEM; >> + /* >> + * Atomically put workqueue in place. Release our one in case someone >> + * else won the race and attached workqueue to superblock. >> + */ >> + if (cmpxchg(&sb->s_dio_flush_wq, NULL, wq)) >> + destroy_workqueue(wq); >> + return 0; > > Eww. Workqueues are cheap, just create it on bootup instead of this > uglyness. Also I don't really see any reason to make it per-fs instead > of global. I would prefer to keep it per-fs. Consider the possibility for sync work on your database device being backed up behind sync work for your root file system. So, given my preference to keep it per-fs, would you rather the workqueues get created at mount time? Cheers, Jeff -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html