qemu/posix-aio-compat.c

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/*
* QEMU posix-aio emulation
*
* Copyright IBM, Corp. 2008
*
* Authors:
* Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
*
* This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2. See
* the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
*
*/
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <pthread.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <time.h>
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
#include <signal.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
#include "sys-queue.h"
#include "osdep.h"
#include "qemu-common.h"
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
#include "block_int.h"
#include "block/raw-posix-aio.h"
struct qemu_paiocb {
BlockDriverAIOCB common;
int aio_fildes;
union {
struct iovec *aio_iov;
void *aio_ioctl_buf;
};
int aio_niov;
size_t aio_nbytes;
#define aio_ioctl_cmd aio_nbytes /* for QEMU_AIO_IOCTL */
int ev_signo;
off_t aio_offset;
TAILQ_ENTRY(qemu_paiocb) node;
int aio_type;
ssize_t ret;
int active;
struct qemu_paiocb *next;
};
typedef struct PosixAioState {
int rfd, wfd;
struct qemu_paiocb *first_aio;
} PosixAioState;
static pthread_mutex_t lock = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER;
static pthread_cond_t cond = PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER;
static pthread_t thread_id;
static pthread_attr_t attr;
static int max_threads = 64;
static int cur_threads = 0;
static int idle_threads = 0;
static TAILQ_HEAD(, qemu_paiocb) request_list;
#ifdef CONFIG_PREADV
static int preadv_present = 1;
#else
static int preadv_present = 0;
#endif
static void die2(int err, const char *what)
{
fprintf(stderr, "%s failed: %s\n", what, strerror(err));
abort();
}
static void die(const char *what)
{
die2(errno, what);
}
static void mutex_lock(pthread_mutex_t *mutex)
{
int ret = pthread_mutex_lock(mutex);
if (ret) die2(ret, "pthread_mutex_lock");
}
static void mutex_unlock(pthread_mutex_t *mutex)
{
int ret = pthread_mutex_unlock(mutex);
if (ret) die2(ret, "pthread_mutex_unlock");
}
static int cond_timedwait(pthread_cond_t *cond, pthread_mutex_t *mutex,
struct timespec *ts)
{
int ret = pthread_cond_timedwait(cond, mutex, ts);
if (ret && ret != ETIMEDOUT) die2(ret, "pthread_cond_timedwait");
return ret;
}
static void cond_signal(pthread_cond_t *cond)
{
int ret = pthread_cond_signal(cond);
if (ret) die2(ret, "pthread_cond_signal");
}
static void thread_create(pthread_t *thread, pthread_attr_t *attr,
void *(*start_routine)(void*), void *arg)
{
int ret = pthread_create(thread, attr, start_routine, arg);
if (ret) die2(ret, "pthread_create");
}
static size_t handle_aiocb_ioctl(struct qemu_paiocb *aiocb)
{
int ret;
ret = ioctl(aiocb->aio_fildes, aiocb->aio_ioctl_cmd, aiocb->aio_ioctl_buf);
if (ret == -1)
return -errno;
/*
* This looks weird, but the aio code only consideres a request
* successfull if it has written the number full number of bytes.
*
* Now we overload aio_nbytes as aio_ioctl_cmd for the ioctl command,
* so in fact we return the ioctl command here to make posix_aio_read()
* happy..
*/
return aiocb->aio_nbytes;
}
#ifdef CONFIG_PREADV
static ssize_t
qemu_preadv(int fd, const struct iovec *iov, int nr_iov, off_t offset)
{
return preadv(fd, iov, nr_iov, offset);
}
static ssize_t
qemu_pwritev(int fd, const struct iovec *iov, int nr_iov, off_t offset)
{
return pwritev(fd, iov, nr_iov, offset);
}
#else
static ssize_t
qemu_preadv(int fd, const struct iovec *iov, int nr_iov, off_t offset)
{
return -ENOSYS;
}
static ssize_t
qemu_pwritev(int fd, const struct iovec *iov, int nr_iov, off_t offset)
{
return -ENOSYS;
}
#endif
static size_t handle_aiocb_rw_vector(struct qemu_paiocb *aiocb)
{
size_t offset = 0;
ssize_t len;
do {
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
if (aiocb->aio_type & QEMU_AIO_WRITE)
len = qemu_pwritev(aiocb->aio_fildes,
aiocb->aio_iov,
aiocb->aio_niov,
aiocb->aio_offset + offset);
else
len = qemu_preadv(aiocb->aio_fildes,
aiocb->aio_iov,
aiocb->aio_niov,
aiocb->aio_offset + offset);
} while (len == -1 && errno == EINTR);
if (len == -1)
return -errno;
return len;
}
static size_t handle_aiocb_rw_linear(struct qemu_paiocb *aiocb, char *buf)
{
size_t offset = 0;
size_t len;
while (offset < aiocb->aio_nbytes) {
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
if (aiocb->aio_type & QEMU_AIO_WRITE)
len = pwrite(aiocb->aio_fildes,
(const char *)buf + offset,
aiocb->aio_nbytes - offset,
aiocb->aio_offset + offset);
else
len = pread(aiocb->aio_fildes,
buf + offset,
aiocb->aio_nbytes - offset,
aiocb->aio_offset + offset);
if (len == -1 && errno == EINTR)
continue;
else if (len == -1) {
offset = -errno;
break;
} else if (len == 0)
break;
offset += len;
}
return offset;
}
static size_t handle_aiocb_rw(struct qemu_paiocb *aiocb)
{
size_t nbytes;
char *buf;
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
if (!(aiocb->aio_type & QEMU_AIO_MISALIGNED)) {
/*
* If there is just a single buffer, and it is properly aligned
* we can just use plain pread/pwrite without any problems.
*/
if (aiocb->aio_niov == 1)
return handle_aiocb_rw_linear(aiocb, aiocb->aio_iov->iov_base);
/*
* We have more than one iovec, and all are properly aligned.
*
* Try preadv/pwritev first and fall back to linearizing the
* buffer if it's not supported.
*/
if (preadv_present) {
nbytes = handle_aiocb_rw_vector(aiocb);
if (nbytes == aiocb->aio_nbytes)
return nbytes;
if (nbytes < 0 && nbytes != -ENOSYS)
return nbytes;
preadv_present = 0;
}
/*
* XXX(hch): short read/write. no easy way to handle the reminder
* using these interfaces. For now retry using plain
* pread/pwrite?
*/
}
/*
* Ok, we have to do it the hard way, copy all segments into
* a single aligned buffer.
*/
buf = qemu_memalign(512, aiocb->aio_nbytes);
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
if (aiocb->aio_type & QEMU_AIO_WRITE) {
char *p = buf;
int i;
for (i = 0; i < aiocb->aio_niov; ++i) {
memcpy(p, aiocb->aio_iov[i].iov_base, aiocb->aio_iov[i].iov_len);
p += aiocb->aio_iov[i].iov_len;
}
}
nbytes = handle_aiocb_rw_linear(aiocb, buf);
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
if (!(aiocb->aio_type & QEMU_AIO_WRITE)) {
char *p = buf;
size_t count = aiocb->aio_nbytes, copy;
int i;
for (i = 0; i < aiocb->aio_niov && count; ++i) {
copy = count;
if (copy > aiocb->aio_iov[i].iov_len)
copy = aiocb->aio_iov[i].iov_len;
memcpy(aiocb->aio_iov[i].iov_base, p, copy);
p += copy;
count -= copy;
}
}
qemu_vfree(buf);
return nbytes;
}
static void *aio_thread(void *unused)
{
pid_t pid;
sigset_t set;
pid = getpid();
/* block all signals */
if (sigfillset(&set)) die("sigfillset");
if (sigprocmask(SIG_BLOCK, &set, NULL)) die("sigprocmask");
while (1) {
struct qemu_paiocb *aiocb;
size_t ret = 0;
qemu_timeval tv;
struct timespec ts;
qemu_gettimeofday(&tv);
ts.tv_sec = tv.tv_sec + 10;
ts.tv_nsec = 0;
mutex_lock(&lock);
while (TAILQ_EMPTY(&request_list) &&
!(ret == ETIMEDOUT)) {
ret = cond_timedwait(&cond, &lock, &ts);
}
if (TAILQ_EMPTY(&request_list))
break;
aiocb = TAILQ_FIRST(&request_list);
TAILQ_REMOVE(&request_list, aiocb, node);
aiocb->active = 1;
idle_threads--;
mutex_unlock(&lock);
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
switch (aiocb->aio_type & QEMU_AIO_TYPE_MASK) {
case QEMU_AIO_READ:
case QEMU_AIO_WRITE:
ret = handle_aiocb_rw(aiocb);
break;
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
case QEMU_AIO_IOCTL:
ret = handle_aiocb_ioctl(aiocb);
break;
default:
fprintf(stderr, "invalid aio request (0x%x)\n", aiocb->aio_type);
ret = -EINVAL;
break;
}
mutex_lock(&lock);
aiocb->ret = ret;
idle_threads++;
mutex_unlock(&lock);
if (kill(pid, aiocb->ev_signo)) die("kill failed");
}
idle_threads--;
cur_threads--;
mutex_unlock(&lock);
return NULL;
}
static void spawn_thread(void)
{
cur_threads++;
idle_threads++;
thread_create(&thread_id, &attr, aio_thread, NULL);
}
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
static void qemu_paio_submit(struct qemu_paiocb *aiocb)
{
aiocb->ret = -EINPROGRESS;
aiocb->active = 0;
mutex_lock(&lock);
if (idle_threads == 0 && cur_threads < max_threads)
spawn_thread();
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&request_list, aiocb, node);
mutex_unlock(&lock);
cond_signal(&cond);
}
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
static ssize_t qemu_paio_return(struct qemu_paiocb *aiocb)
{
ssize_t ret;
mutex_lock(&lock);
ret = aiocb->ret;
mutex_unlock(&lock);
return ret;
}
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
static int qemu_paio_error(struct qemu_paiocb *aiocb)
{
ssize_t ret = qemu_paio_return(aiocb);
if (ret < 0)
ret = -ret;
else
ret = 0;
return ret;
}
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
static void posix_aio_read(void *opaque)
{
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
PosixAioState *s = opaque;
struct qemu_paiocb *acb, **pacb;
int ret;
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
ssize_t len;
/* read all bytes from signal pipe */
for (;;) {
char bytes[16];
len = read(s->rfd, bytes, sizeof(bytes));
if (len == -1 && errno == EINTR)
continue; /* try again */
if (len == sizeof(bytes))
continue; /* more to read */
break;
}
for(;;) {
pacb = &s->first_aio;
for(;;) {
acb = *pacb;
if (!acb)
goto the_end;
ret = qemu_paio_error(acb);
if (ret == ECANCELED) {
/* remove the request */
*pacb = acb->next;
qemu_aio_release(acb);
} else if (ret != EINPROGRESS) {
/* end of aio */
if (ret == 0) {
ret = qemu_paio_return(acb);
if (ret == acb->aio_nbytes)
ret = 0;
else
ret = -EINVAL;
} else {
ret = -ret;
}
/* remove the request */
*pacb = acb->next;
/* call the callback */
acb->common.cb(acb->common.opaque, ret);
qemu_aio_release(acb);
break;
} else {
pacb = &acb->next;
}
}
}
the_end: ;
}
static int posix_aio_flush(void *opaque)
{
PosixAioState *s = opaque;
return !!s->first_aio;
}
static PosixAioState *posix_aio_state;
static void aio_signal_handler(int signum)
{
if (posix_aio_state) {
char byte = 0;
write(posix_aio_state->wfd, &byte, sizeof(byte));
}
qemu_service_io();
}
static void paio_remove(struct qemu_paiocb *acb)
{
struct qemu_paiocb **pacb;
/* remove the callback from the queue */
pacb = &posix_aio_state->first_aio;
for(;;) {
if (*pacb == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "paio_remove: aio request not found!\n");
break;
} else if (*pacb == acb) {
*pacb = acb->next;
qemu_aio_release(acb);
break;
}
pacb = &(*pacb)->next;
}
}
static void paio_cancel(BlockDriverAIOCB *blockacb)
{
struct qemu_paiocb *acb = (struct qemu_paiocb *)blockacb;
int active = 0;
mutex_lock(&lock);
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
if (!acb->active) {
TAILQ_REMOVE(&request_list, acb, node);
acb->ret = -ECANCELED;
} else if (acb->ret == -EINPROGRESS) {
active = 1;
}
mutex_unlock(&lock);
raw-posix: refactor AIO support Currently the raw-posix.c code contains a lot of knowledge about the asynchronous I/O scheme that is mostly implemented in posix-aio-compat.c. All this code does not really belong here and is getting a bit in the way of implementing native AIO on Linux. So instead move all the guts of the AIO implementation into posix-aio-compat.c (which might need a better name, btw). There's now a very small interface between the AIO providers and raw-posix.c: - an init routine is called from raw_open_common to return an AIO context for this drive. An AIO implementation may either re-use one context for all drives, or use a different one for each as the Linux native AIO support will do. - an submit routine is called from the aio_reav/writev methods to submit an AIO request There are no indirect calls involved in this interface as we need to decide which one to call manually. We will only call the Linux AIO native init function if we were requested to by vl.c, and we will only call the native submit function if we are asked to and the request is properly aligned. That's also the reason why the alignment check actually does the inverse move and now goes into raw-posix.c. The old posix-aio-compat.h headers is removed now that most of it's content is private to posix-aio-compat.c, and instead we add a new block/raw-posix-aio.h headers is created containing only the tiny interface between raw-posix.c and the AIO implementation. Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
2009-08-20 18:58:19 +04:00
if (active) {
/* fail safe: if the aio could not be canceled, we wait for
it */
while (qemu_paio_error(acb) == EINPROGRESS)
;
}
paio_remove(acb);
}
static AIOPool raw_aio_pool = {
.aiocb_size = sizeof(struct qemu_paiocb),
.cancel = paio_cancel,
};
BlockDriverAIOCB *paio_submit(BlockDriverState *bs, void *aio_ctx, int fd,
int64_t sector_num, QEMUIOVector *qiov, int nb_sectors,
BlockDriverCompletionFunc *cb, void *opaque, int type)
{
struct qemu_paiocb *acb;
acb = qemu_aio_get(&raw_aio_pool, bs, cb, opaque);
if (!acb)
return NULL;
acb->aio_type = type;
acb->aio_fildes = fd;
acb->ev_signo = SIGUSR2;
acb->aio_iov = qiov->iov;
acb->aio_niov = qiov->niov;
acb->aio_nbytes = nb_sectors * 512;
acb->aio_offset = sector_num * 512;
acb->next = posix_aio_state->first_aio;
posix_aio_state->first_aio = acb;
qemu_paio_submit(acb);
return &acb->common;
}
BlockDriverAIOCB *paio_ioctl(BlockDriverState *bs, int fd,
unsigned long int req, void *buf,
BlockDriverCompletionFunc *cb, void *opaque)
{
struct qemu_paiocb *acb;
acb = qemu_aio_get(&raw_aio_pool, bs, cb, opaque);
if (!acb)
return NULL;
acb->aio_type = QEMU_AIO_IOCTL;
acb->aio_fildes = fd;
acb->ev_signo = SIGUSR2;
acb->aio_offset = 0;
acb->aio_ioctl_buf = buf;
acb->aio_ioctl_cmd = req;
acb->next = posix_aio_state->first_aio;
posix_aio_state->first_aio = acb;
qemu_paio_submit(acb);
return &acb->common;
}
void *paio_init(void)
{
struct sigaction act;
PosixAioState *s;
int fds[2];
int ret;
if (posix_aio_state)
return posix_aio_state;
s = qemu_malloc(sizeof(PosixAioState));
sigfillset(&act.sa_mask);
act.sa_flags = 0; /* do not restart syscalls to interrupt select() */
act.sa_handler = aio_signal_handler;
sigaction(SIGUSR2, &act, NULL);
s->first_aio = NULL;
if (pipe(fds) == -1) {
fprintf(stderr, "failed to create pipe\n");
return NULL;
}
s->rfd = fds[0];
s->wfd = fds[1];
fcntl(s->rfd, F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK);
fcntl(s->wfd, F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK);
qemu_aio_set_fd_handler(s->rfd, posix_aio_read, NULL, posix_aio_flush, s);
ret = pthread_attr_init(&attr);
if (ret)
die2(ret, "pthread_attr_init");
ret = pthread_attr_setdetachstate(&attr, PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED);
if (ret)
die2(ret, "pthread_attr_setdetachstate");
TAILQ_INIT(&request_list);
posix_aio_state = s;
return posix_aio_state;
}