On 30/05/24 10:11AM, Bart Van Assche wrote:
On 5/30/24 00:16, Nitesh Shetty wrote:
+static inline bool blk_copy_offload_attempt_combine(struct request_queue *q,
+ struct bio *bio)
+{
+ struct blk_plug *plug = current->plug;
+ struct request *rq;
+
+ if (!plug || rq_list_empty(plug->mq_list))
+ return false;
+
+ rq_list_for_each(&plug->mq_list, rq) {
+ if (rq->q == q) {
+ if (!blk_copy_offload_combine(rq, bio))
+ return true;
+ break;
+ }
+
+ /*
+ * Only keep iterating plug list for combines if we have multiple
+ * queues
+ */
+ if (!plug->multiple_queues)
+ break;
+ }
+ return false;
+}
This new approach has the following two disadvantages:
* Without plug, REQ_OP_COPY_SRC and REQ_OP_COPY_DST are not combined. These two
operation types are the only operation types for which not using a plug causes
an I/O failure.
* A loop is required to combine the REQ_OP_COPY_SRC and REQ_OP_COPY_DST operations.
Please switch to the approach Hannes suggested, namely bio chaining. Chaining
REQ_OP_COPY_SRC and REQ_OP_COPY_DST bios before these are submitted eliminates the
two disadvantages mentioned above.
Bart, Hannes,
I see the following challenges with bio-chained approach.
1. partitioned device:
We need to add the code which iterates over all bios and adjusts
the sectors offsets.
2. dm/stacked device:
We need to make major changes in dm, such as allocating cloned
bios, IO splits, IO offset mappings. All of which need to
iterate over chained BIOs.
Overall with chained BIOs we need to add a special handling only for copy
to iterate over chained BIOs and do the same thing which is being done
for single BIO at present.
Or am I missing something here ?
Thank You,
Nitesh Shetty