On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 11:24 PM Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 7/30/20 11:51 AM, Kanchan Joshi wrote: > > On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 11:10 PM Pavel Begunkov <asml.silence@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> On 30/07/2020 20:16, Jens Axboe wrote: > >>> On 7/30/20 10:26 AM, Pavel Begunkov wrote: > >>>> On 30/07/2020 19:13, Jens Axboe wrote: > >>>>> On 7/30/20 10:08 AM, Pavel Begunkov wrote: > >>>>>> On 27/07/2020 23:34, Jens Axboe wrote: > >>>>>>> On 7/27/20 1:16 PM, Kanchan Joshi wrote: > >>>>>>>> On Fri, Jul 24, 2020 at 10:00 PM Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> On 7/24/20 9:49 AM, Kanchan Joshi wrote: > >>>>>>>>>> diff --git a/fs/io_uring.c b/fs/io_uring.c > >>>>>>>>>> index 7809ab2..6510cf5 100644 > >>>>>>>>>> --- a/fs/io_uring.c > >>>>>>>>>> +++ b/fs/io_uring.c > >>>>>>>>>> @@ -1284,8 +1301,15 @@ static void __io_cqring_fill_event(struct io_kiocb *req, long res, long cflags) > >>>>>>>>>> cqe = io_get_cqring(ctx); > >>>>>>>>>> if (likely(cqe)) { > >>>>>>>>>> WRITE_ONCE(cqe->user_data, req->user_data); > >>>>>>>>>> - WRITE_ONCE(cqe->res, res); > >>>>>>>>>> - WRITE_ONCE(cqe->flags, cflags); > >>>>>>>>>> + if (unlikely(req->flags & REQ_F_ZONE_APPEND)) { > >>>>>>>>>> + if (likely(res > 0)) > >>>>>>>>>> + WRITE_ONCE(cqe->res64, req->rw.append_offset); > >>>>>>>>>> + else > >>>>>>>>>> + WRITE_ONCE(cqe->res64, res); > >>>>>>>>>> + } else { > >>>>>>>>>> + WRITE_ONCE(cqe->res, res); > >>>>>>>>>> + WRITE_ONCE(cqe->flags, cflags); > >>>>>>>>>> + } > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> This would be nice to keep out of the fast path, if possible. > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> I was thinking of keeping a function-pointer (in io_kiocb) during > >>>>>>>> submission. That would have avoided this check......but argument count > >>>>>>>> differs, so it did not add up. > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> But that'd grow the io_kiocb just for this use case, which is arguably > >>>>>>> even worse. Unless you can keep it in the per-request private data, > >>>>>>> but there's no more room there for the regular read/write side. > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>> diff --git a/include/uapi/linux/io_uring.h b/include/uapi/linux/io_uring.h > >>>>>>>>>> index 92c2269..2580d93 100644 > >>>>>>>>>> --- a/include/uapi/linux/io_uring.h > >>>>>>>>>> +++ b/include/uapi/linux/io_uring.h > >>>>>>>>>> @@ -156,8 +156,13 @@ enum { > >>>>>>>>>> */ > >>>>>>>>>> struct io_uring_cqe { > >>>>>>>>>> __u64 user_data; /* sqe->data submission passed back */ > >>>>>>>>>> - __s32 res; /* result code for this event */ > >>>>>>>>>> - __u32 flags; > >>>>>>>>>> + union { > >>>>>>>>>> + struct { > >>>>>>>>>> + __s32 res; /* result code for this event */ > >>>>>>>>>> + __u32 flags; > >>>>>>>>>> + }; > >>>>>>>>>> + __s64 res64; /* appending offset for zone append */ > >>>>>>>>>> + }; > >>>>>>>>>> }; > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> Is this a compatible change, both for now but also going forward? You > >>>>>>>>> could randomly have IORING_CQE_F_BUFFER set, or any other future flags. > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> Sorry, I didn't quite understand the concern. CQE_F_BUFFER is not > >>>>>>>> used/set for write currently, so it looked compatible at this point. > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> Not worried about that, since we won't ever use that for writes. But it > >>>>>>> is a potential headache down the line for other flags, if they apply to > >>>>>>> normal writes. > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> Yes, no room for future flags for this operation. > >>>>>>>> Do you see any other way to enable this support in io-uring? > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> Honestly I think the only viable option is as we discussed previously, > >>>>>>> pass in a pointer to a 64-bit type where we can copy the additional > >>>>>>> completion information to. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> TBH, I hate the idea of such overhead/latency at times when SSDs can > >>>>>> serve writes in less than 10ms. Any chance you measured how long does it > >>>>> > >>>>> 10us? :-) > >>>> > >>>> Hah, 10us indeed :) > >>>> > >>>>> > >>>>>> take to drag through task_work? > >>>>> > >>>>> A 64-bit value copy is really not a lot of overhead... But yes, we'd > >>>>> need to push the completion through task_work at that point, as we can't > >>>>> do it from the completion side. That's not a lot of overhead, and most > >>>>> notably, it's overhead that only affects this particular type. > >>>>> > >>>>> That's not a bad starting point, and something that can always be > >>>>> optimized later if need be. But I seriously doubt it'd be anything to > >>>>> worry about. > >>>> > >>>> I probably need to look myself how it's really scheduled, but if you don't > >>>> mind, here is a quick question: if we do work_add(task) when the task is > >>>> running in the userspace, wouldn't the work execution wait until the next > >>>> syscall/allotted time ends up? > >>> > >>> It'll get the task to enter the kernel, just like signal delivery. The only > >>> tricky part is really if we have a dependency waiting in the kernel, like > >>> the recent eventfd fix. > >> > >> I see, thanks for sorting this out! > > > > Few more doubts about this (please mark me wrong if that is the case): > > > > - Task-work makes me feel like N completions waiting to be served by > > single task. > > Currently completions keep arriving and CQEs would be updated with > > result, but the user-space (submitter task) would not be poked. > > > > - Completion-code will set the task-work. But post that it cannot go > > immediately to its regular business of picking cqe and updating > > res/flags, as we cannot afford user-space to see the cqe before the > > pointer update. So it seems completion-code needs to spawn another > > work which will allocate/update cqe after waiting for pointer-update > > from task-work? > > The task work would post the completion CQE for the request after > writing the offset. Got it, thank you for making it simple. Overall if I try to put the tradeoffs of moving to indirect-offset (compared to current scheme)– Upside: - cqe res/flags would be intact, avoids future-headaches as you mentioned - short-write cases do not have to be failed in lower-layers (as cqe->res is there to report bytes-copied) Downside: - We may not be able to use RWF_APPEND, and need exposing a new type/flag (RWF_INDIRECT_OFFSET etc.) user-space. Not sure if this sounds outrageous, but is it OK to have uring-only flag which can be combined with RWF_APPEND? - Expensive compared to sending results in cqe itself. But I agree that this may not be major, and only for one type of write. -- Joshi