Re: [RFCv3 00/21] TCM Core and TCM_Loop patches for v2.6.37

From: Nicholas A. Bellinger
Date: Mon Nov 08 2010 - 16:15:54 EST


On Mon, 2010-11-08 at 09:33 -0500, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> Hi Nick,
>
> I promised you and James to get back to a throughout review for more
> than just the backends. It's still in progress, but here is what I
> think is most important:
>
> - Sort of the the namepspace for both the file names and function
> names. I think you reluctantly agreed to do that a while ago anyway,
> but I think it's time to bite the bullet now. Please agree on a
> common prefix for both function names and modules. I think the
> target name in the directory structure is the best one, but I really
> don't care too much. The transport_ prefix used in some code is
> really misleading, and the se_ in other isn't too helpful either.

Fair enough. So for the sake on continuity I am happy to rename
functions that are available externally to frontends with a target_*()
prefix and primary data structures to a tcm_* prefix.

> - make sure backends, frontends and core/ code under drivers/target/
> are properly separated

So at this point only the backend code still lives in drivers/target,
while everything related to frontends resides in
drivers/target/$TCM_MODNAME. Now moving IBLOCK, FILEIO, PSCSI and
RAMDISK .c and .h files into drivers/target/backend/ to resolve this
item..

> - clean up the exported - both as in EXPORT_SYMBOL and simply global
> functions. There's a lot of things that should be static or not
> exported to modules but is right now. The scripts/namespace.pl
> script in the kernel tree is a great helper for that.

<nod> I will follow up with an audit of this code, most of which is
coming from target_core_transport.c

> - Similarly the headers could use some re-arrangement. I've been
> trying to make sense of what each header does but couldn't find it.
> In the optimal world you'd have one header for the front-end API,
> one of the back-end API and one or more for common structures
> and defintions. All with a comment explaining what they are there
> for.
>

Yes, the documentation that I have been promising will help clear this
up. target_core_transport.h contains the struct se_subsystem_api that
is used for backend code, and target_core_fabric_ops.h contains the
struct target_core_fabric_ops used by frontend drivers. There is still
a handful of other includes required for frontend drivers, but I did
spend time on this recently to clean up what is made available in
include/target.

--nab

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