Maya Erez wrote: > On Thu, Nov 10, 2011 Maya Erez wrote: > > S, Venkatraman <svenkatr@xxxxxx> wrote: > >> On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 7:23 AM, Seungwon Jeon <tgih.jun@xxxxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > >> >> > +static u8 mmc_blk_chk_packable(struct mmc_queue *mq, struct > >> request *req) > > The function prepares the checkable list and not only checks if packing is > possible, therefore I think its name should change to reflect its real > action I labored at naming. Isn't it proper? :) Do you have any recommendation? group_pack_req? > > >> >> > + if (!(md->flags & MMC_BLK_CMD23) && > >> >> > + !card->ext_csd.packed_event_en) > >> >> > + goto no_packed; > > Having the condition with a && can lead to cases where CMD23 is not > supported and we send packed commands. Therfore the condition should be > changed to || or be splitted to 2 separate checks. > Also, according to the standard the generic error flag in > PACKED_COMMAND_STATUS is set in case of any error and having > PACKED_EVENT_EN is only optional. Therefore, I don't think that setting > the packed_event_en should be a mandatory condition for using packed > coammnds. ... cases where CMD23 is not supported and we send packed commands? Packed command must not be allowed in such a case. It works only with predefined mode which is essential fator. And spec doesn't mentioned PACKED_EVENT_EN must be set. So Packed command can be sent regardless PACKED_EVENT_EN, but it's not complete without reporting of error. Then host driver may suffer error recovery. Why packed command is used without error reporting? > > >> >> > + if (mmc_req_rel_wr(cur) && > >> >> > + (md->flags & MMC_BLK_REL_WR) && > >> >> > + !en_rel_wr) { > >> >> > + goto no_packed; > >> >> > + } > > Can you please explain this condition and its purpose? > In the case where reliable write is request but enhanced reliable write is not supported, write access must be partial according to reliable write sector count. Because even a single request can be split, packed command is not allowed in this case. > >> >> > + phys_segments += next->nr_phys_segments; > >> >> > + if (phys_segments > max_phys_segs) { > >> >> > + blk_requeue_request(q, next); > >> >> > + break; > >> >> > + } > >> >> I mentioned this before - if the next request is not packable and > >> requeued, > >> >> blk_fetch_request will retrieve it again and this while loop will > never terminate. > >> >> > >> > If next request is not packable, it is requeued and 'break' > terminates > >> this loop. > >> > So it not infinite. > >> Right !! But that doesn't help finding the commands that are packable. > Ideally, you'd need to pack all neighbouring requests into one packed > command. > >> The way CFQ works, it is not necessary that the fetch would return all > outstanding > >> requests that are packable (unless you invoke a forced dispatch) It > would be good to see some numbers on the number of pack hits / > misses > >> that > >> you would encounter with this logic, on a typical usecase. > > Is it considered only for CFQ scheduler? How about other I/O scheduler? > If all requests are drained from scheduler queue forcedly, > > the number of candidate to be packed can be increased. > > However we may lose the unique CFQ's strength and MMC D/D may take the > CFQ's duty. > > Basically, this patch accommodates the origin order requests from I/O > scheduler. > > > > In order to better utilize the packed commands feature and achieve the > best performance improvements I think that the command packing should be > done in the block layer, according to the scheduler policy. > That is, the scheduler should be aware of the capability of the device to > receive a request list and its constrains (such as maximum number of > requests, max number of sectors etc) and use this information as a factor > to its algorithm. > This way you keep the decision making in the hands of the scheduler while > the MMC layer will only have to send this list as a packed command. > Yes, it would be another interesting approach. Command packing you mentioned means gathering request among same direction(read/write)? Currently I/O scheduler may know device constrains which MMC driver informs with the exception of order information for packed command. But I think the dependency of I/O scheduler may be able to come up. How can MMC layer treat packed command with I/O scheduler which doesn't support this? > >> >> > + if (rqc) > >> >> > + reqs = mmc_blk_chk_packable(mq, rqc); > > It would be best to keep all the calls to blk_fetch_request in the same > location. Therefore, I suggest to move the call to mmc_blk_chk_packable to > mmc/card/queue.c after the first request is fetched. At the first time, I considered that way. I'll do more, if possible. > > >> >> > cmd_abort: > >> >> > - spin_lock_irq(&md->lock); > >> >> > - while (ret) > >> >> > - ret = __blk_end_request(req, -EIO, > >> blk_rq_cur_bytes(req)); > >> >> > - spin_unlock_irq(&md->lock); > >> >> > + if (mq_rq->packed_cmd != MMC_PACKED_NONE) { > > This should be the case for MMC_PACKED_NONE. Right, I missed it. > > >> >> > + spin_lock_irq(&md->lock); > >> >> > + while (ret) > >> >> > + ret = __blk_end_request(req, -EIO, > >> blk_rq_cur_bytes(req)); > > Do we need the while or should it be an if? In other cases where > __blk_end_request is called there is no such while. This part is not only the new but also origin code which is moved in this patch. Maybe...,'If' case is used for a whole of remained bytes and 'while' case is used for partial report of remained bytes. Thank you for review. Best regards, Seugwon Jeon. > > Thanks, > Maya Erez > Consultant for Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. > Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum > > > > > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-mmc" in > the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-samsung-soc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html