Re: [PATCH RFC 4/4] xen-block: introduce a new request type to unmapgrants
From: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
Date: Tue Jul 09 2013 - 14:34:26 EST
On Tue, Jul 09, 2013 at 06:37:58PM +0200, Roger Pau Monné wrote:
> On 08/07/13 21:41, Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk wrote:
> > On Mon, Jul 08, 2013 at 03:03:27PM +0200, Roger Pau Monne wrote:
> >> Right now blkfront has no way to unmap grant refs, if using persistent
> >> grants once a grant is used blkfront cannot assure if blkback will
> >> have this grant mapped or not. To solve this problem, a new request
> >> type (BLKIF_OP_UNMAP) that allows requesting blkback to unmap certain
> >> grants is introduced.
> >
> > I don't think this is the right way of doing it. It is a new operation
> > (BLKIF_OP_UNMAP) that has nothing to do with READ/WRITE. All it is
> > is just some way for the frontend to say: unmap this grant if you can.
> >
> > As such I would think a better mechanism would be to have a new
> > grant mechanism that can say: 'I am done with this grant you can
> > remove it' - that is called to the hypervisor. The hypervisor
> > can then figure out whether it is free or not and lazily delete it.
> > (And the guest would be notified when it is freed).
>
> I would prefer not to involve the hypervisor in persistent grants, this
> is something between the frontends and the backends. The hypervisor
> already provides the basic operations (map/unmap), IMHO there's no need
> to add more logic to the hypervisor itself.
>
> I agree that it would be better to have a generic way to request a
> backend to unmap certain grants, but so far this seems like the best
> solution.
Lets concentrate on a generic way that any frontend/backend can use.
Please keep in mind that the indirect descriptors could be implemented by
using mapped grants if a backend or frontend wanted to do it.
This all is tied in the 'feature-persistent-grant' and as that could be
implemented in a similar fashion on netfront (perhaps by only doing it
for one of the rings - the TX ring, or is it RX?).
>
> >
> > I would presume that this problem would also exist with netback/netfront
> > if it started using persisten grants, right?
>
> I'm not sure of that, it depends on the number of persistent grants
> netfront/netback use, in the block case we need this operation because
> of indirect descriptors, but netfront/netback might not suffer from this
> problem if the maximum number of grants they use is relatively small.
256 is the default amount of grants one ring can have. Since there is
a RX and TX ring that means we can have around 512 for one VIF.
I presume that with the multi-queue (not yet implemented) this can expand
to be 512 * vCPU.
>
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