Re: [PATCH] osdblk: a Linux block device for OSD objects

From: Boaz Harrosh
Date: Sun Apr 05 2009 - 06:24:45 EST


On 04/03/2009 12:38 PM, Jeff Garzik wrote:
> Boaz Harrosh wrote:
>> I have taken that to my heart and will submit patches for that, next week.
>> Including a complimentary patch to this driver. These changes are only
>> intended for 2.6.31 though.
>
> Consolidation of common code should occur after osdblk is in one of:
> open-osd.git, scsi-misc.git, or linux-2.6.git.
>
> That way, the code movement can be consolidated into a single changeset,
> touching exofs, osdblk and libosd all at the same time...
> -exofs code
> -osdblk code
> +libosd code
>
>

Yes my plan exactly. I'll do it on my linux-open-osd tree and push it
through the exofs branch in the next Kernel (2.6.31)

>> I also want to add a small utility that can manage objects, create, size,
>> remove, and mount as a complimentary wrapper for this driver is "osdblk"
>> a good name for such utility?
>
> osdblk intentionally maintains -zero- metadata on its own. Therefore,
> this utility you propose can be completely generic. You could call it
> "osdobjutil", because it need not be tied to the osdblk driver.
>
> The osdblk driver needs the following from the utility:
>
> - create object of specified size
>
> - delete object
>
> and optionally:
> - resize object to new size
>

In that case then I have on Q, an "osd" application that will support
the full osd API set through command line, like:
usage: osd create|remove|read|write|append|flush... \
--obj=par_id,obj_id \
[--set_attr=page_no,attr_no,set_attr_file] \
[--get_attr=page_no,attr_no,set_attr_file] \
[--file=in_out_file] \
...

I intend to fully support any functionality available by the library.
the osd_ktests should be duplicatable in bash

> There is no need for a mount operation, because this is handled through
> class_osdblk_add()
>
>
<snip>
>>> +static void osdblk_osd_complete(struct osd_request *or, void *private)
>>> +{
>>> + struct osdblk_request *orq = private;
>>> + struct osd_sense_info osi;
>>> + int ret = osd_req_decode_sense(or, &osi);
>>> +
>>> + if (ret)
>>> + ret = -EIO;
>>> +
>>> + osd_end_request(or);
>>> + osdblk_end_request(orq->osdev, orq, ret);
>> should be reversed, very bad things will happen otherwise
>>
>> + osdblk_end_request(orq->osdev, orq, ret);
>> + osd_end_request(or);
>
> Perhaps you are confusing two different 'struct request' in use?
>
> - struct request, passed to osdblk for execution
> - struct request, used by libosd to pass commands
>
> The object lifetime of the struct request stored in 'orq' is longer than
> the lifetime of the osd_request:
>
> 1) block layer passes 'rq' to osdblk
> 2) osdblk creates new 'or', passes 'or' to libosd
> 3) libosd calls osdblk completion function
> 4) osdblk completes 'or'
> 5) osdblk completes 'rq'
>
> As you can see, the object lifetime of 'or' is entirely within 'rq'.
>
>

Yes I was confused exactly as you described, thanks grate stuff.

>
>
>> What can I say, great stuff.
>>
>> OSD is a very clean API, that makes whole subsystems look trivial.
>
> I appreciate it, thanks for the review.
>
> Jeff

Thank you Jeff for doing this
Boaz
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