On 2020/12/07 16:46, javier.gonz@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
On 04.12.2020 23:40, Keith Busch wrote:
On Fri, Dec 04, 2020 at 11:25:12AM +0000, Damien Le Moal wrote:
On 2020/12/04 20:02, SelvaKumar S wrote:
This patchset tries to add support for TP4065a ("Simple Copy Command"),
v2020.05.04 ("Ratified")
The Specification can be found in following link.
https://nvmexpress.org/wp-content/uploads/NVM-Express-1.4-Ratified-TPs-1.zip
This is an RFC. Looking forward for any feedbacks or other alternate
designs for plumbing simple copy to IO stack.
Simple copy command is a copy offloading operation and is used to copy
multiple contiguous ranges (source_ranges) of LBA's to a single destination
LBA within the device reducing traffic between host and device.
This implementation accepts destination, no of sources and arrays of
source ranges from application and attach it as payload to the bio and
submits to the device.
Following limits are added to queue limits and are exposed in sysfs
to userspace
- *max_copy_sectors* limits the sum of all source_range length
- *max_copy_nr_ranges* limits the number of source ranges
- *max_copy_range_sectors* limit the maximum number of sectors
that can constitute a single source range.
Same comment as before. I think this is a good start, but for this to be really
useful to users and kernel components alike, this really needs copy emulation
for drives that do not have a native copy feature, similarly to what write zeros
handling for instance: if the drive does not have a copy command (simple copy
for NVMe or XCOPY for scsi), then the block layer should issue read/write
commands to seamlessly execute the copy. Otherwise, this will only serve a small
niche for users and will not be optimal for FS and DM drivers that could be
simplified with a generic block layer copy functionality.
This is my 10 cents though, others may differ about this.
Yes, I agree that copy emulation support should be included with the
hardware enabled solution.
Keith, Damien,
Can we do the block layer emulation with this patchset and then work in
follow-up patchses on (i) the FS interface with F2FS as a first user and
(ii) other HW accelerations such as XCOPY?
The initial patchset supporting NVMe simple copy and emulation copy, all under
an API that probably will be similar that of dm-kcopyd will cover all block
devices. Other hardware native support for copy functions such as scsi extended
copy can be added later under the hood without any API changes (or minimal changes).
I am not sure what you mean by "FS interface for F2FS": the block layer API for
this copy functionality will be what F2FS (and other FSes) will call. That is
the interface, no ?
For XCOPY, I believe we need to have a separate discussion as much works
is already done that we should align to.
I think Martin (added to this thread) and others have looked into it but I do
not think that anything made it into the kernel yet.