Re: [PATCH 2/2] vhost_net: a kernel-level virtio server

From: Arnd Bergmann
Date: Mon Aug 10 2009 - 18:16:36 EST


On Monday 10 August 2009 20:10:44 Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 10, 2009 at 09:51:18PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> > what is the difference between vhost_net_reset_owner(n)
> > and vhost_net_set_socket(n, -1)?
>
> set socket to -1 will only stop the device.
>
> reset owner will let another process take over the device.
> It also needs to reset all parameters to make it safe for that
> other process, so in particular the device is stopped.

ok

> I tried explaining this in the header vhost.h - does the comment
> there help, or do I need to clarify it?

No, I just didn't get there yet.

> I had the impression that if there's no compat_ioctl,
> unlocked_ioctl will get called automatically. No?

It will issue a kernel warning but not call unlocked_ioctl,
so you need either a compat_ioctl method or list the numbers
in fs/compat_ioctl.c, which I try to avoid.

> > Why do you need a kernel thread here? If the data transfer functions
> > all get called from a guest intercept, shouldn't you already be
> > in the right mm?
>
> several reasons :)
> - I get called under lock, so can't block
> - eventfd can be passed to another process, and I won't be in guest context at all
> - this also gets called outside guest context from socket poll
> - vcpu is blocked while it's doing i/o. it is better to free it up
> as all the packet copying might take a while

Ok.

> > I guess that this is where one could plug into macvlan directly, using
> > sock_alloc_send_skb/memcpy_fromiovec/dev_queue_xmit directly,
> > instead of filling a msghdr for each, if we want to combine this
> > with the work I did on that.
>
> quite possibly. Or one can just bind a raw socket to macvlan :)

Right, that works as well, but may get more complicated once we
try to add zero-copy or other optimizations.

Arnd <><
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