Re: vhost: multiple worker support

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On Sat, Jun 05, 2021 at 05:40:17PM -0500, michael.christie@xxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> On 6/3/21 5:16 PM, Mike Christie wrote:
> > On 6/3/21 9:37 AM, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
> >> On Tue, May 25, 2021 at 01:05:51PM -0500, Mike Christie wrote:
> >>> The following patches apply over linus's tree or mst's vhost branch
> >>> and my cleanup patchset:
> >>>
> >>> https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/virtualization/2021-May/054354.html__;!!GqivPVa7Brio!P55eslnMW_iZkoTUZckwhnSw_9Z35JBScgtSYRh4CMFTRkSsWwKOYqY0huUfBfIPM8BV$ 
> >>>
> >>> These patches allow us to support multiple vhost workers per device. I
> >>> ended up just doing Stefan's original idea where userspace has the
> >>> kernel create a worker and we pass back the pid. This has the benefit
> >>> over the workqueue and userspace thread approach where we only have
> >>> one'ish code path in the kernel during setup to detect old tools. The
> >>> main IO paths and device/vq setup/teardown paths all use common code.
> >>>
> >>> The kernel patches here allow us to then do N workers device and also
> >>> share workers across devices.
> >>>
> >>> I've also included a patch for qemu so you can get an idea of how it
> >>> works. If we are ok with the kernel code then I'll break that up into
> >>> a patchset and send to qemu-devel.
> >>
> >> It seems risky to allow userspace process A to "share" a vhost worker
> >> thread with userspace process B based on a matching pid alone. Should
> >> they have ptrace_may_access() or similar?
> >>
> > 
> > I'm not sure. I already made it a little restrictive in this posting, but
> 
> Made a mistake here. In this posting I did not make it restrictive and
> I was allowing any old 2 processes to share. So we would need something
> like ptrace_may_access if go this route.
> 
> If we restrict sharing workers with the same owner, then I'm not sure if
> need anything.

Agreed.

Sharing between processes becomes most interesting when there is busy
polling (because it consumes CPU and we should consolidate polling onto
as few CPUs as possible). Without polling we can just share the threads
within a process.

Stefan

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: PGP signature


[Index of Archives]     [Linux SCSI]     [Kernel Newbies]     [Linux SCSI Target Infrastructure]     [Share Photos]     [IDE]     [Security]     [Git]     [Netfilter]     [Bugtraq]     [Yosemite News]     [MIPS Linux]     [ARM Linux]     [Linux Security]     [Linux RAID]     [Linux ATA RAID]     [Linux IIO]     [Device Mapper]

  Powered by Linux