[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [PATCH net-next 0/4] shrink struct ubuf_info
On 9/27/22 18:56, Paolo Abeni wrote: On Tue, 2022-09-27 at 18:16 +0100, Pavel Begunkov wrote:On 9/27/22 15:28, Pavel Begunkov wrote:Hello Paolo, On 9/27/22 14:49, Paolo Abeni wrote:Hello, On Fri, 2022-09-23 at 17:39 +0100, Pavel Begunkov wrote:struct ubuf_info is large but not all fields are needed for all cases. We have limited space in io_uring for it and large ubuf_info prevents some struct embedding, even though we use only a subset of the fields. It's also not very clean trying to use this typeless extra space. Shrink struct ubuf_info to only necessary fields used in generic paths, namely ->callback, ->refcnt and ->flags, which take only 16 bytes. And make MSG_ZEROCOPY and some other users to embed it into a larger struct ubuf_info_msgzc mimicking the former ubuf_info. Note, xen/vhost may also have some cleaning on top by creating new structs containing ubuf_info but with proper types.That sounds a bit scaring to me. If I read correctly, every uarg user should check 'uarg->callback == msg_zerocopy_callback' before accessing any 'extend' fields.Providers of ubuf_info access those fields via callbacks and so already know the actual structure used. The net core, on the opposite, should keep it encapsulated and not touch them at all. The series lists all places where we use extended fields just on the merit of stripping the structure of those fields and successfully building it. The only user in net/ipv{4,6}/* is MSG_ZEROCOPY, which again uses callbacks. Sounds like the right direction for me. There is a couple of places where it might get type safer, i.e. adding types instead of void* in for struct tun_msg_ctl and getting rid of one macro hiding types in xen. But seems more like TODO for later.AFAICS the current code sometimes don't do the explicit test because the condition is somewhat implied, which in turn is quite hard to track. clearing uarg->zerocopy for the 'wrong' uarg was armless and undetected before this series, and after will trigger an oops..And now we don't have this field at all to access, considering that nobody blindly casts it.There is some noise due to uarg -> uarg_zc renaming which make the series harder to review. Have you considered instead keeping the old name and introducing a smaller 'struct ubuf_info_common'? the overall code should be mostly the same, but it will avoid the above mentioned noise.I don't think there will be less noise this way, but let me try and see if I can get rid of some churn.It doesn't look any better for me TL;DR; This series converts only 3 users: tap, xen and MSG_ZEROCOPY and doesn't touch core code. If we do ubuf_info_common though I'd need to convert lots of places in skbuff.c and multiple places across tcp/udp, which is much worse.Uhmm... I underlook the fact we must preserve the current accessors for the common fields. I guess something like the following could do (completely untested, hopefully should illustrate the idea): struct ubuf_info { struct_group_tagged(ubuf_info_common, common, void (*callback)(struct sk_buff *, struct ubuf_info *, bool zerocopy_success); refcount_t refcnt; u8 flags; ); union { struct { unsigned long desc; void *ctx; }; struct { u32 id; u16 len; u16 zerocopy:1; u32 bytelen; }; }; struct mmpin { struct user_struct *user; unsigned int num_pg; } mmp; }; Then you should be able to: - access ubuf_info->callback, - access the same field via ubuf_info->common.callback - declare variables as 'struct ubuf_info_commom' with appropriate contents. WDYT? Interesting, I didn't think about struct_group, this would let to split patches better and would limit non-core changes. But if the plan is to convert the core helpers to ubuf_info_common, than I think it's still messier than changing ubuf providers only. I can do the exercise, but I don't really see what is the goal. Let me ask this, if we forget for a second how diffs look, do you care about which pair is going to be in the end? ubuf_info_common/ubuf_info vs ubuf_info/ubuf_info_msgzc? Are there you concerned about naming or is there more to it? -- Pavel Begunkov
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