Re: [PATCH RFC v2 00/19] fuse: fuse-over-io-uring

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On Wed, 12 Jun 2024 at 15:33, Bernd Schubert <bschubert@xxxxxxx> wrote:

> I didn't do that yet, as we are going to use the ring buffer for requests,
> i.e. the ring buffer immediately gets all the data from network, there is
> no copy. Even if the ring buffer would get data from local disk - there
> is no need to use a separate application buffer anymore. And with that
> there is just no extra copy

Let's just tackle this shared request buffer, as it seems to be a
central part of your design.

You say the shared buffer is used to immediately get the data from the
network (or various other sources), which is completely viable.

And then the kernel will do the copy from the shared buffer.  Single copy, fine.

But if the buffer wasn't shared?  What would be the difference?
Single copy also.

Why is the shared buffer better?  I mean it may even be worse due to
cache aliasing issues on certain architectures.  copy_to_user() /
copy_from_user() are pretty darn efficient.

Why is it better to have that buffer managed by kernel?  Being locked
in memory (being unswappable) is probably a disadvantage as well.  And
if locking is required, it can be done on the user buffer.

And there are all the setup and teardown complexities...

Note: the ring buffer used by io_uring is different.  It literally
allows communication without invoking any system calls in certain
cases.  That shared buffer doesn't add anything like that.  At least I
don't see what it actually adds.

Hmm?

Thanks,
Miklos




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