Re: [PATCH] [RFC] target/file: add support of direct and async I/O

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Hi Christoph,

Thank you for the review. All comments look reasonable. I will fix and
set a final version soon.

Pls, answer on one inline question.

On Fri, Mar 16, 2018 at 12:50:27AM -0700, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> > DIF (PI) emulation doesn't work when a target uses async I/O, because
> > DIF metadata is saved in a separate file, and it is another non-trivial
> > task how to synchronize writing in two files, so that a following read
> > operation always returns a consisten metadata for a specified block.
> 
> There literally is no way to do that, even without aio.  The file
> DIF implementation should probably regarded as an early bringup /
> prototype tool, not something really usable.
> 
> > +static void cmd_rw_aio_do_completion(struct target_core_file_cmd *cmd)
> > +{
> > +	if (!atomic_dec_and_test(&cmd->ref))
> > +		return;
> 
> There is no need for reference counting.  If the read_iter/write iter
> method returns -EIOCBQUEUED the completion callback needs to complete
> the I/O and free the structure, else the method caller.
> 
> > +	if (!(fd_dev->fbd_flags & FDBD_HAS_BUFFERED_IO_WCE))
> > +		aio_cmd->iocb.ki_flags |= IOCB_DIRECT;
> 
> aio without IOCB_DIRECT doesn't make any sense. But the WCE flag
> really has nothing to do with buffers vs direct I/O anyway.
> 
> > +	if (is_write)
> > +		ret = call_write_iter(file, &aio_cmd->iocb, &iter);
> > +	else
> > +		ret = call_read_iter(file, &aio_cmd->iocb, &iter);
> 
> Please call the methods directly instead of through the wrappers.

Do you mean to call file->f_op->write_iter(kio, iter) instead of
call_write_iter()? What is wrong with these wrappers?

Thanks,
Andrei

> 
> > +
> >  static int fd_do_rw(struct se_cmd *cmd, struct file *fd,
> >  		    u32 block_size, struct scatterlist *sgl,
> >  		    u32 sgl_nents, u32 data_length, int is_write)
> > @@ -536,6 +626,7 @@ fd_execute_rw(struct se_cmd *cmd, struct scatterlist *sgl, u32 sgl_nents,
> >  	struct file *pfile = fd_dev->fd_prot_file;
> >  	sense_reason_t rc;
> >  	int ret = 0;
> > +	int aio = fd_dev->fbd_flags & FDBD_HAS_ASYNC_IO;
> >  	/*
> >  	 * We are currently limited by the number of iovecs (2048) per
> >  	 * single vfs_[writev,readv] call.
> > @@ -550,7 +641,11 @@ fd_execute_rw(struct se_cmd *cmd, struct scatterlist *sgl, u32 sgl_nents,
> >  	 * Call vectorized fileio functions to map struct scatterlist
> >  	 * physical memory addresses to struct iovec virtual memory.
> >  	 */
> > -	if (data_direction == DMA_FROM_DEVICE) {
> > +	if (aio) {
> 
> fd_execute_rw shares basically no code with the aio case.  I'd rather
> have a very high level wrapper here:
> 
> static sense_reason_t
> fd_execute_rw(struct se_cmd *cmd, struct scatterlist *sgl, u32 sgl_nents,
> 		enum dma_data_direction data_direction)
> {
> 	if (FD_DEV(cmd->se_dev)->fbd_flags & FDBD_HAS_ASYNC_IO)
> 		return fd_execute_rw_aio(cmd, sgl, sgl_nents, dma_direction);
> 	return fd_execute_rw_buffered(cmd, sgl, sgl_nents, dma_direction);
> }
> 
> and keep the code separate.
> 



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