freebsd-dev/sys/kern/subr_gtaskqueue.c

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/*-
* Copyright (c) 2000 Doug Rabson
* Copyright (c) 2014 Jeff Roberson
* Copyright (c) 2016 Matthew Macy
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/bus.h>
#include <sys/cpuset.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/kthread.h>
#include <sys/libkern.h>
#include <sys/limits.h>
#include <sys/lock.h>
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/mutex.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/epoch.h>
#include <sys/sched.h>
#include <sys/smp.h>
#include <sys/gtaskqueue.h>
#include <sys/unistd.h>
#include <machine/stdarg.h>
static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_GTASKQUEUE, "gtaskqueue", "Group Task Queues");
static void gtaskqueue_thread_enqueue(void *);
static void gtaskqueue_thread_loop(void *arg);
static int task_is_running(struct gtaskqueue *queue, struct gtask *gtask);
static void gtaskqueue_drain_locked(struct gtaskqueue *queue, struct gtask *gtask);
TASKQGROUP_DEFINE(softirq, mp_ncpus, 1);
struct gtaskqueue_busy {
struct gtask *tb_running;
u_int tb_seq;
LIST_ENTRY(gtaskqueue_busy) tb_link;
};
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
typedef void (*gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn)(void *context);
struct gtaskqueue {
STAILQ_HEAD(, gtask) tq_queue;
LIST_HEAD(, gtaskqueue_busy) tq_active;
u_int tq_seq;
int tq_callouts;
struct mtx_padalign tq_mutex;
gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn tq_enqueue;
void *tq_context;
char *tq_name;
struct thread **tq_threads;
int tq_tcount;
int tq_spin;
int tq_flags;
taskqueue_callback_fn tq_callbacks[TASKQUEUE_NUM_CALLBACKS];
void *tq_cb_contexts[TASKQUEUE_NUM_CALLBACKS];
};
#define TQ_FLAGS_ACTIVE (1 << 0)
#define TQ_FLAGS_BLOCKED (1 << 1)
#define TQ_FLAGS_UNLOCKED_ENQUEUE (1 << 2)
#define DT_CALLOUT_ARMED (1 << 0)
#define TQ_LOCK(tq) \
do { \
if ((tq)->tq_spin) \
mtx_lock_spin(&(tq)->tq_mutex); \
else \
mtx_lock(&(tq)->tq_mutex); \
} while (0)
#define TQ_ASSERT_LOCKED(tq) mtx_assert(&(tq)->tq_mutex, MA_OWNED)
#define TQ_UNLOCK(tq) \
do { \
if ((tq)->tq_spin) \
mtx_unlock_spin(&(tq)->tq_mutex); \
else \
mtx_unlock(&(tq)->tq_mutex); \
} while (0)
#define TQ_ASSERT_UNLOCKED(tq) mtx_assert(&(tq)->tq_mutex, MA_NOTOWNED)
#ifdef INVARIANTS
static void
gtask_dump(struct gtask *gtask)
{
printf("gtask: %p ta_flags=%x ta_priority=%d ta_func=%p ta_context=%p\n",
gtask, gtask->ta_flags, gtask->ta_priority, gtask->ta_func, gtask->ta_context);
}
#endif
static __inline int
TQ_SLEEP(struct gtaskqueue *tq, void *p, const char *wm)
{
if (tq->tq_spin)
return (msleep_spin(p, (struct mtx *)&tq->tq_mutex, wm, 0));
return (msleep(p, &tq->tq_mutex, 0, wm, 0));
}
static struct gtaskqueue *
_gtaskqueue_create(const char *name, int mflags,
taskqueue_enqueue_fn enqueue, void *context,
int mtxflags, const char *mtxname __unused)
{
struct gtaskqueue *queue;
char *tq_name;
tq_name = malloc(TASKQUEUE_NAMELEN, M_GTASKQUEUE, mflags | M_ZERO);
if (!tq_name)
return (NULL);
snprintf(tq_name, TASKQUEUE_NAMELEN, "%s", (name) ? name : "taskqueue");
queue = malloc(sizeof(struct gtaskqueue), M_GTASKQUEUE, mflags | M_ZERO);
if (!queue) {
free(tq_name, M_GTASKQUEUE);
return (NULL);
}
STAILQ_INIT(&queue->tq_queue);
LIST_INIT(&queue->tq_active);
queue->tq_enqueue = enqueue;
queue->tq_context = context;
queue->tq_name = tq_name;
queue->tq_spin = (mtxflags & MTX_SPIN) != 0;
queue->tq_flags |= TQ_FLAGS_ACTIVE;
if (enqueue == gtaskqueue_thread_enqueue)
queue->tq_flags |= TQ_FLAGS_UNLOCKED_ENQUEUE;
mtx_init(&queue->tq_mutex, tq_name, NULL, mtxflags);
return (queue);
}
/*
* Signal a taskqueue thread to terminate.
*/
static void
gtaskqueue_terminate(struct thread **pp, struct gtaskqueue *tq)
{
while (tq->tq_tcount > 0 || tq->tq_callouts > 0) {
wakeup(tq);
TQ_SLEEP(tq, pp, "gtq_destroy");
}
}
static void __unused
gtaskqueue_free(struct gtaskqueue *queue)
{
TQ_LOCK(queue);
queue->tq_flags &= ~TQ_FLAGS_ACTIVE;
gtaskqueue_terminate(queue->tq_threads, queue);
KASSERT(LIST_EMPTY(&queue->tq_active), ("Tasks still running?"));
KASSERT(queue->tq_callouts == 0, ("Armed timeout tasks"));
mtx_destroy(&queue->tq_mutex);
free(queue->tq_threads, M_GTASKQUEUE);
free(queue->tq_name, M_GTASKQUEUE);
free(queue, M_GTASKQUEUE);
}
/*
* Wait for all to complete, then prevent it from being enqueued
*/
void
grouptask_block(struct grouptask *grouptask)
{
struct gtaskqueue *queue = grouptask->gt_taskqueue;
struct gtask *gtask = &grouptask->gt_task;
#ifdef INVARIANTS
if (queue == NULL) {
gtask_dump(gtask);
panic("queue == NULL");
}
#endif
TQ_LOCK(queue);
gtask->ta_flags |= TASK_NOENQUEUE;
gtaskqueue_drain_locked(queue, gtask);
TQ_UNLOCK(queue);
}
void
grouptask_unblock(struct grouptask *grouptask)
{
struct gtaskqueue *queue = grouptask->gt_taskqueue;
struct gtask *gtask = &grouptask->gt_task;
#ifdef INVARIANTS
if (queue == NULL) {
gtask_dump(gtask);
panic("queue == NULL");
}
#endif
TQ_LOCK(queue);
gtask->ta_flags &= ~TASK_NOENQUEUE;
TQ_UNLOCK(queue);
}
int
grouptaskqueue_enqueue(struct gtaskqueue *queue, struct gtask *gtask)
{
#ifdef INVARIANTS
if (queue == NULL) {
gtask_dump(gtask);
panic("queue == NULL");
}
#endif
TQ_LOCK(queue);
if (gtask->ta_flags & TASK_ENQUEUED) {
TQ_UNLOCK(queue);
return (0);
}
if (gtask->ta_flags & TASK_NOENQUEUE) {
TQ_UNLOCK(queue);
return (EAGAIN);
}
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&queue->tq_queue, gtask, ta_link);
gtask->ta_flags |= TASK_ENQUEUED;
TQ_UNLOCK(queue);
if ((queue->tq_flags & TQ_FLAGS_BLOCKED) == 0)
queue->tq_enqueue(queue->tq_context);
return (0);
}
static void
gtaskqueue_task_nop_fn(void *context)
{
}
/*
* Block until all currently queued tasks in this taskqueue
* have begun execution. Tasks queued during execution of
* this function are ignored.
*/
static void
gtaskqueue_drain_tq_queue(struct gtaskqueue *queue)
{
struct gtask t_barrier;
if (STAILQ_EMPTY(&queue->tq_queue))
return;
/*
* Enqueue our barrier after all current tasks, but with
* the highest priority so that newly queued tasks cannot
* pass it. Because of the high priority, we can not use
* taskqueue_enqueue_locked directly (which drops the lock
* anyway) so just insert it at tail while we have the
* queue lock.
*/
GTASK_INIT(&t_barrier, 0, USHRT_MAX, gtaskqueue_task_nop_fn, &t_barrier);
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&queue->tq_queue, &t_barrier, ta_link);
t_barrier.ta_flags |= TASK_ENQUEUED;
/*
* Once the barrier has executed, all previously queued tasks
* have completed or are currently executing.
*/
while (t_barrier.ta_flags & TASK_ENQUEUED)
TQ_SLEEP(queue, &t_barrier, "gtq_qdrain");
}
/*
* Block until all currently executing tasks for this taskqueue
* complete. Tasks that begin execution during the execution
* of this function are ignored.
*/
static void
gtaskqueue_drain_tq_active(struct gtaskqueue *queue)
{
struct gtaskqueue_busy *tb;
u_int seq;
if (LIST_EMPTY(&queue->tq_active))
return;
/* Block taskq_terminate().*/
queue->tq_callouts++;
/* Wait for any active task with sequence from the past. */
seq = queue->tq_seq;
restart:
LIST_FOREACH(tb, &queue->tq_active, tb_link) {
if ((int)(tb->tb_seq - seq) <= 0) {
TQ_SLEEP(queue, tb->tb_running, "gtq_adrain");
goto restart;
}
}
/* Release taskqueue_terminate(). */
queue->tq_callouts--;
if ((queue->tq_flags & TQ_FLAGS_ACTIVE) == 0)
wakeup_one(queue->tq_threads);
}
void
gtaskqueue_block(struct gtaskqueue *queue)
{
TQ_LOCK(queue);
queue->tq_flags |= TQ_FLAGS_BLOCKED;
TQ_UNLOCK(queue);
}
void
gtaskqueue_unblock(struct gtaskqueue *queue)
{
TQ_LOCK(queue);
queue->tq_flags &= ~TQ_FLAGS_BLOCKED;
if (!STAILQ_EMPTY(&queue->tq_queue))
queue->tq_enqueue(queue->tq_context);
TQ_UNLOCK(queue);
}
static void
gtaskqueue_run_locked(struct gtaskqueue *queue)
{
struct epoch_tracker et;
struct gtaskqueue_busy tb;
struct gtask *gtask;
bool in_net_epoch;
KASSERT(queue != NULL, ("tq is NULL"));
TQ_ASSERT_LOCKED(queue);
tb.tb_running = NULL;
LIST_INSERT_HEAD(&queue->tq_active, &tb, tb_link);
in_net_epoch = false;
while ((gtask = STAILQ_FIRST(&queue->tq_queue)) != NULL) {
STAILQ_REMOVE_HEAD(&queue->tq_queue, ta_link);
gtask->ta_flags &= ~TASK_ENQUEUED;
tb.tb_running = gtask;
tb.tb_seq = ++queue->tq_seq;
TQ_UNLOCK(queue);
KASSERT(gtask->ta_func != NULL, ("task->ta_func is NULL"));
if (!in_net_epoch && TASK_IS_NET(gtask)) {
in_net_epoch = true;
NET_EPOCH_ENTER(et);
} else if (in_net_epoch && !TASK_IS_NET(gtask)) {
NET_EPOCH_EXIT(et);
in_net_epoch = false;
}
gtask->ta_func(gtask->ta_context);
TQ_LOCK(queue);
wakeup(gtask);
}
if (in_net_epoch)
NET_EPOCH_EXIT(et);
LIST_REMOVE(&tb, tb_link);
}
static int
task_is_running(struct gtaskqueue *queue, struct gtask *gtask)
{
struct gtaskqueue_busy *tb;
TQ_ASSERT_LOCKED(queue);
LIST_FOREACH(tb, &queue->tq_active, tb_link) {
if (tb->tb_running == gtask)
return (1);
}
return (0);
}
static int
gtaskqueue_cancel_locked(struct gtaskqueue *queue, struct gtask *gtask)
{
if (gtask->ta_flags & TASK_ENQUEUED)
STAILQ_REMOVE(&queue->tq_queue, gtask, gtask, ta_link);
gtask->ta_flags &= ~TASK_ENQUEUED;
return (task_is_running(queue, gtask) ? EBUSY : 0);
}
int
gtaskqueue_cancel(struct gtaskqueue *queue, struct gtask *gtask)
{
int error;
TQ_LOCK(queue);
error = gtaskqueue_cancel_locked(queue, gtask);
TQ_UNLOCK(queue);
return (error);
}
static void
gtaskqueue_drain_locked(struct gtaskqueue *queue, struct gtask *gtask)
{
while ((gtask->ta_flags & TASK_ENQUEUED) || task_is_running(queue, gtask))
TQ_SLEEP(queue, gtask, "gtq_drain");
}
void
gtaskqueue_drain(struct gtaskqueue *queue, struct gtask *gtask)
{
if (!queue->tq_spin)
WITNESS_WARN(WARN_GIANTOK | WARN_SLEEPOK, NULL, __func__);
TQ_LOCK(queue);
gtaskqueue_drain_locked(queue, gtask);
TQ_UNLOCK(queue);
}
void
gtaskqueue_drain_all(struct gtaskqueue *queue)
{
if (!queue->tq_spin)
WITNESS_WARN(WARN_GIANTOK | WARN_SLEEPOK, NULL, __func__);
TQ_LOCK(queue);
gtaskqueue_drain_tq_queue(queue);
gtaskqueue_drain_tq_active(queue);
TQ_UNLOCK(queue);
}
static int
_gtaskqueue_start_threads(struct gtaskqueue **tqp, int count, int pri,
cpuset_t *mask, const char *name, va_list ap)
{
char ktname[MAXCOMLEN + 1];
struct thread *td;
struct gtaskqueue *tq;
int i, error;
if (count <= 0)
return (EINVAL);
vsnprintf(ktname, sizeof(ktname), name, ap);
tq = *tqp;
tq->tq_threads = malloc(sizeof(struct thread *) * count, M_GTASKQUEUE,
M_NOWAIT | M_ZERO);
if (tq->tq_threads == NULL) {
printf("%s: no memory for %s threads\n", __func__, ktname);
return (ENOMEM);
}
for (i = 0; i < count; i++) {
if (count == 1)
error = kthread_add(gtaskqueue_thread_loop, tqp, NULL,
&tq->tq_threads[i], RFSTOPPED, 0, "%s", ktname);
else
error = kthread_add(gtaskqueue_thread_loop, tqp, NULL,
&tq->tq_threads[i], RFSTOPPED, 0,
"%s_%d", ktname, i);
if (error) {
/* should be ok to continue, taskqueue_free will dtrt */
printf("%s: kthread_add(%s): error %d", __func__,
ktname, error);
tq->tq_threads[i] = NULL; /* paranoid */
} else
tq->tq_tcount++;
}
for (i = 0; i < count; i++) {
if (tq->tq_threads[i] == NULL)
continue;
td = tq->tq_threads[i];
if (mask) {
error = cpuset_setthread(td->td_tid, mask);
/*
* Failing to pin is rarely an actual fatal error;
* it'll just affect performance.
*/
if (error)
printf("%s: curthread=%llu: can't pin; "
"error=%d\n",
__func__,
(unsigned long long) td->td_tid,
error);
}
thread_lock(td);
sched_prio(td, pri);
sched_add(td, SRQ_BORING);
}
return (0);
}
static int
gtaskqueue_start_threads(struct gtaskqueue **tqp, int count, int pri,
const char *name, ...)
{
va_list ap;
int error;
va_start(ap, name);
error = _gtaskqueue_start_threads(tqp, count, pri, NULL, name, ap);
va_end(ap);
return (error);
}
static inline void
gtaskqueue_run_callback(struct gtaskqueue *tq,
enum taskqueue_callback_type cb_type)
{
taskqueue_callback_fn tq_callback;
TQ_ASSERT_UNLOCKED(tq);
tq_callback = tq->tq_callbacks[cb_type];
if (tq_callback != NULL)
tq_callback(tq->tq_cb_contexts[cb_type]);
}
static void
gtaskqueue_thread_loop(void *arg)
{
struct gtaskqueue **tqp, *tq;
Roll up iflib commits from github. This pulls in most of the work done by Matt Macy as well as other changes which he has accepted via pull request to his github repo at https://github.com/mattmacy/networking/ This should bring -CURRENT and the github repo into close enough sync to allow small feature branches rather than a large chain of interdependant patches being developed out of tree. The reset of the synchronization should be able to be completed on github by splitting the remaining changes that are not yet ready into short feature branches for later review as smaller commits. Here is a summary of changes included in this patch: 1) More checks when INVARIANTS are enabled for eariler problem detection 2) Group Task Queue cleanups - Fix use of duplicate shortdesc for gtaskqueue malloc type. Some interfaces such as memguard(9) use the short description to identify malloc types, so duplicates should be avoided. 3) Allow gtaskqueues to use ithreads in addition to taskqueues - In some cases, this can improve performance 4) Better logging when taskqgroup_attach*() fails to set interrupt affinity. 5) Do not start gtaskqueues until they're needed 6) Have mp_ring enqueue function enter the ABDICATED rather than BUSY state. This moves the TX to the gtaskq and allows processing to continue faster as well as make TX batching more likely. 7) Add an ift_txd_errata function to struct if_txrx. This allows drivers to inspect/modify mbufs before transmission. 8) Add a new IFLIB_NEED_ZERO_CSUM for drivers to indicate they need checksums zeroed for checksum offload to work. This avoids modifying packet data in the TX path when possible. 9) Use ithreads for iflib I/O instead of taskqueues 10) Clean up ioctl and support async ioctl functions 11) Prefetch two cachlines from each mbuf instead of one up to 128B. We often need to parse packet header info beyond 64B. 12) Fix potential memory corruption due to fence post error in bit_nclear() usage. 13) Improved hang detection and handling 14) If the packet is smaller than MTU, disable the TSO flags. This avoids extra packet parsing when not needed. 15) Move TCP header parsing inside the IS_TSO?() test. This avoids extra packet parsing when not needed. 16) Pass chains of mbufs that are not consumed by lro to if_input() rather call if_input() for each mbuf. 17) Re-arrange packet header loads to get as much work as possible done before a cache stall. 18) Lock the context when calling IFDI_ATTACH_PRE()/IFDI_ATTACH_POST()/ IFDI_DETACH(); 19) Attempt to distribute RX/TX tasks across cores more sensibly, especially when RX and TX share an interrupt. RX will attempt to take the first threads on a core, and TX will attempt to take successive threads. 20) Allow iflib_softirq_alloc_generic() to request affinity to the same cpus an interrupt has affinity with. This allows TX queues to ensure they are serviced by the socket the device is on. 21) Add new iflib sysctls to net.iflib: - timer_int - interval at which to run per-queue timers in ticks - force_busdma 22) Add new per-device iflib sysctls to dev.X.Y.iflib - rx_budget allows tuning the batch size on the RX path - watchdog_events Count of watchdog events seen since load 23) Fix error where netmap_rxq_init() could get called before IFDI_INIT() 24) e1000: Fixed version of r323008: post-cold sleep instead of DELAY when waiting for firmware - After interrupts are enabled, convert all waits to sleeps - Eliminates e1000 software/firmware synchronization busy waits after startup 25) e1000: Remove special case for budget=1 in em_txrx.c - Premature optimization which may actually be incorrect with multi-segment packets 26) e1000: Split out TX interrupt rather than share an interrupt for RX and TX. - Allows better performance by keeping RX and TX paths separate 27) e1000: Separate igb from em code where suitable Much easier to understand separate functions and "if (is_igb)" than previous tests like "if (reg_icr & (E1000_ICR_RXSEQ | E1000_ICR_LSC))" #blamebruno Reviewed by: sbruno Approved by: sbruno (mentor) Sponsored by: Limelight Networks Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12235
2017-09-13 01:18:42 +00:00
tqp = arg;
tq = *tqp;
gtaskqueue_run_callback(tq, TASKQUEUE_CALLBACK_TYPE_INIT);
TQ_LOCK(tq);
Roll up iflib commits from github. This pulls in most of the work done by Matt Macy as well as other changes which he has accepted via pull request to his github repo at https://github.com/mattmacy/networking/ This should bring -CURRENT and the github repo into close enough sync to allow small feature branches rather than a large chain of interdependant patches being developed out of tree. The reset of the synchronization should be able to be completed on github by splitting the remaining changes that are not yet ready into short feature branches for later review as smaller commits. Here is a summary of changes included in this patch: 1) More checks when INVARIANTS are enabled for eariler problem detection 2) Group Task Queue cleanups - Fix use of duplicate shortdesc for gtaskqueue malloc type. Some interfaces such as memguard(9) use the short description to identify malloc types, so duplicates should be avoided. 3) Allow gtaskqueues to use ithreads in addition to taskqueues - In some cases, this can improve performance 4) Better logging when taskqgroup_attach*() fails to set interrupt affinity. 5) Do not start gtaskqueues until they're needed 6) Have mp_ring enqueue function enter the ABDICATED rather than BUSY state. This moves the TX to the gtaskq and allows processing to continue faster as well as make TX batching more likely. 7) Add an ift_txd_errata function to struct if_txrx. This allows drivers to inspect/modify mbufs before transmission. 8) Add a new IFLIB_NEED_ZERO_CSUM for drivers to indicate they need checksums zeroed for checksum offload to work. This avoids modifying packet data in the TX path when possible. 9) Use ithreads for iflib I/O instead of taskqueues 10) Clean up ioctl and support async ioctl functions 11) Prefetch two cachlines from each mbuf instead of one up to 128B. We often need to parse packet header info beyond 64B. 12) Fix potential memory corruption due to fence post error in bit_nclear() usage. 13) Improved hang detection and handling 14) If the packet is smaller than MTU, disable the TSO flags. This avoids extra packet parsing when not needed. 15) Move TCP header parsing inside the IS_TSO?() test. This avoids extra packet parsing when not needed. 16) Pass chains of mbufs that are not consumed by lro to if_input() rather call if_input() for each mbuf. 17) Re-arrange packet header loads to get as much work as possible done before a cache stall. 18) Lock the context when calling IFDI_ATTACH_PRE()/IFDI_ATTACH_POST()/ IFDI_DETACH(); 19) Attempt to distribute RX/TX tasks across cores more sensibly, especially when RX and TX share an interrupt. RX will attempt to take the first threads on a core, and TX will attempt to take successive threads. 20) Allow iflib_softirq_alloc_generic() to request affinity to the same cpus an interrupt has affinity with. This allows TX queues to ensure they are serviced by the socket the device is on. 21) Add new iflib sysctls to net.iflib: - timer_int - interval at which to run per-queue timers in ticks - force_busdma 22) Add new per-device iflib sysctls to dev.X.Y.iflib - rx_budget allows tuning the batch size on the RX path - watchdog_events Count of watchdog events seen since load 23) Fix error where netmap_rxq_init() could get called before IFDI_INIT() 24) e1000: Fixed version of r323008: post-cold sleep instead of DELAY when waiting for firmware - After interrupts are enabled, convert all waits to sleeps - Eliminates e1000 software/firmware synchronization busy waits after startup 25) e1000: Remove special case for budget=1 in em_txrx.c - Premature optimization which may actually be incorrect with multi-segment packets 26) e1000: Split out TX interrupt rather than share an interrupt for RX and TX. - Allows better performance by keeping RX and TX paths separate 27) e1000: Separate igb from em code where suitable Much easier to understand separate functions and "if (is_igb)" than previous tests like "if (reg_icr & (E1000_ICR_RXSEQ | E1000_ICR_LSC))" #blamebruno Reviewed by: sbruno Approved by: sbruno (mentor) Sponsored by: Limelight Networks Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12235
2017-09-13 01:18:42 +00:00
while ((tq->tq_flags & TQ_FLAGS_ACTIVE) != 0) {
/* XXX ? */
gtaskqueue_run_locked(tq);
/*
* Because taskqueue_run() can drop tq_mutex, we need to
* check if the TQ_FLAGS_ACTIVE flag wasn't removed in the
* meantime, which means we missed a wakeup.
*/
if ((tq->tq_flags & TQ_FLAGS_ACTIVE) == 0)
break;
TQ_SLEEP(tq, tq, "-");
}
gtaskqueue_run_locked(tq);
/*
* This thread is on its way out, so just drop the lock temporarily
* in order to call the shutdown callback. This allows the callback
* to look at the taskqueue, even just before it dies.
*/
TQ_UNLOCK(tq);
gtaskqueue_run_callback(tq, TASKQUEUE_CALLBACK_TYPE_SHUTDOWN);
TQ_LOCK(tq);
/* rendezvous with thread that asked us to terminate */
tq->tq_tcount--;
wakeup_one(tq->tq_threads);
TQ_UNLOCK(tq);
kthread_exit();
}
static void
gtaskqueue_thread_enqueue(void *context)
{
struct gtaskqueue **tqp, *tq;
tqp = context;
tq = *tqp;
wakeup_any(tq);
}
static struct gtaskqueue *
gtaskqueue_create_fast(const char *name, int mflags,
taskqueue_enqueue_fn enqueue, void *context)
{
return _gtaskqueue_create(name, mflags, enqueue, context,
MTX_SPIN, "fast_taskqueue");
}
struct taskqgroup_cpu {
LIST_HEAD(, grouptask) tgc_tasks;
struct gtaskqueue *tgc_taskq;
int tgc_cnt;
int tgc_cpu;
};
struct taskqgroup {
struct taskqgroup_cpu tqg_queue[MAXCPU];
struct mtx tqg_lock;
const char * tqg_name;
int tqg_cnt;
};
struct taskq_bind_task {
struct gtask bt_task;
int bt_cpuid;
};
static void
taskqgroup_cpu_create(struct taskqgroup *qgroup, int idx, int cpu)
{
struct taskqgroup_cpu *qcpu;
qcpu = &qgroup->tqg_queue[idx];
LIST_INIT(&qcpu->tgc_tasks);
qcpu->tgc_taskq = gtaskqueue_create_fast(NULL, M_WAITOK,
taskqueue_thread_enqueue, &qcpu->tgc_taskq);
gtaskqueue_start_threads(&qcpu->tgc_taskq, 1, PI_SOFT,
"%s_%d", qgroup->tqg_name, idx);
qcpu->tgc_cpu = cpu;
}
/*
* Find the taskq with least # of tasks that doesn't currently have any
* other queues from the uniq identifier.
*/
static int
taskqgroup_find(struct taskqgroup *qgroup, void *uniq)
{
struct grouptask *n;
int i, idx, mincnt;
int strict;
mtx_assert(&qgroup->tqg_lock, MA_OWNED);
KASSERT(qgroup->tqg_cnt != 0,
("qgroup %s has no queues", qgroup->tqg_name));
/*
* Two passes: first scan for a queue with the least tasks that
* does not already service this uniq id. If that fails simply find
* the queue with the least total tasks.
*/
for (idx = -1, mincnt = INT_MAX, strict = 1; mincnt == INT_MAX;
strict = 0) {
for (i = 0; i < qgroup->tqg_cnt; i++) {
if (qgroup->tqg_queue[i].tgc_cnt > mincnt)
continue;
if (strict) {
LIST_FOREACH(n, &qgroup->tqg_queue[i].tgc_tasks,
gt_list)
if (n->gt_uniq == uniq)
break;
if (n != NULL)
continue;
}
mincnt = qgroup->tqg_queue[i].tgc_cnt;
idx = i;
}
}
if (idx == -1)
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
panic("%s: failed to pick a qid.", __func__);
return (idx);
}
void
taskqgroup_attach(struct taskqgroup *qgroup, struct grouptask *gtask,
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
void *uniq, device_t dev, struct resource *irq, const char *name)
{
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
int cpu, qid, error;
KASSERT(qgroup->tqg_cnt > 0,
("qgroup %s has no queues", qgroup->tqg_name));
gtask->gt_uniq = uniq;
snprintf(gtask->gt_name, GROUPTASK_NAMELEN, "%s", name ? name : "grouptask");
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
gtask->gt_dev = dev;
gtask->gt_irq = irq;
gtask->gt_cpu = -1;
mtx_lock(&qgroup->tqg_lock);
qid = taskqgroup_find(qgroup, uniq);
qgroup->tqg_queue[qid].tgc_cnt++;
LIST_INSERT_HEAD(&qgroup->tqg_queue[qid].tgc_tasks, gtask, gt_list);
gtask->gt_taskqueue = qgroup->tqg_queue[qid].tgc_taskq;
if (dev != NULL && irq != NULL) {
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
cpu = qgroup->tqg_queue[qid].tgc_cpu;
gtask->gt_cpu = cpu;
mtx_unlock(&qgroup->tqg_lock);
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
error = bus_bind_intr(dev, irq, cpu);
if (error)
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
printf("%s: binding interrupt failed for %s: %d\n",
__func__, gtask->gt_name, error);
} else
mtx_unlock(&qgroup->tqg_lock);
}
int
taskqgroup_attach_cpu(struct taskqgroup *qgroup, struct grouptask *gtask,
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
void *uniq, int cpu, device_t dev, struct resource *irq, const char *name)
{
int i, qid, error;
gtask->gt_uniq = uniq;
snprintf(gtask->gt_name, GROUPTASK_NAMELEN, "%s", name ? name : "grouptask");
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
gtask->gt_dev = dev;
gtask->gt_irq = irq;
gtask->gt_cpu = cpu;
mtx_lock(&qgroup->tqg_lock);
for (i = 0, qid = -1; i < qgroup->tqg_cnt; i++)
if (qgroup->tqg_queue[i].tgc_cpu == cpu) {
qid = i;
break;
}
if (qid == -1) {
mtx_unlock(&qgroup->tqg_lock);
printf("%s: qid not found for %s cpu=%d\n", __func__, gtask->gt_name, cpu);
return (EINVAL);
}
qgroup->tqg_queue[qid].tgc_cnt++;
LIST_INSERT_HEAD(&qgroup->tqg_queue[qid].tgc_tasks, gtask, gt_list);
gtask->gt_taskqueue = qgroup->tqg_queue[qid].tgc_taskq;
cpu = qgroup->tqg_queue[qid].tgc_cpu;
mtx_unlock(&qgroup->tqg_lock);
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
if (dev != NULL && irq != NULL) {
error = bus_bind_intr(dev, irq, cpu);
if (error)
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
printf("%s: binding interrupt failed for %s: %d\n",
__func__, gtask->gt_name, error);
}
return (0);
}
void
taskqgroup_detach(struct taskqgroup *qgroup, struct grouptask *gtask)
{
int i;
grouptask_block(gtask);
mtx_lock(&qgroup->tqg_lock);
for (i = 0; i < qgroup->tqg_cnt; i++)
if (qgroup->tqg_queue[i].tgc_taskq == gtask->gt_taskqueue)
break;
if (i == qgroup->tqg_cnt)
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
panic("%s: task %s not in group", __func__, gtask->gt_name);
qgroup->tqg_queue[i].tgc_cnt--;
LIST_REMOVE(gtask, gt_list);
mtx_unlock(&qgroup->tqg_lock);
gtask->gt_taskqueue = NULL;
gtask->gt_task.ta_flags &= ~TASK_NOENQUEUE;
}
static void
taskqgroup_binder(void *ctx)
{
struct taskq_bind_task *gtask;
cpuset_t mask;
int error;
gtask = ctx;
CPU_ZERO(&mask);
CPU_SET(gtask->bt_cpuid, &mask);
error = cpuset_setthread(curthread->td_tid, &mask);
thread_lock(curthread);
sched_bind(curthread, gtask->bt_cpuid);
thread_unlock(curthread);
if (error)
Make taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) work across architectures So far, intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) take a single int for identifying a device interrupt. This approach doesn't work on all architectures supported, as a single int isn't sufficient to globally specify a device interrupt. In particular, with multiple interrupt controllers in one system as found on e. g. arm and arm64 machines, an interrupt number as returned by rman_get_start(9) may be only unique relative to the bus and, thus, interrupt controller, a certain device hangs off from. In turn, this makes taskqgroup_attach{,_cpu}(9) and - internal to the gtaskqueue implementation - taskqgroup_attach_deferred{,_cpu}() not work across architectures. Yet in turn, iflib(4) as gtaskqueue consumer so far doesn't fit architectures where interrupt numbers aren't globally unique. However, at least for intr_setaffinity(..., CPU_WHICH_IRQ, ...) as employed by the gtaskqueue implementation to bind an interrupt to a particular CPU, using bus_bind_intr(9) instead is equivalent from a functional point of view, with bus_bind_intr(9) taking the device and interrupt resource arguments required for uniquely specifying a device interrupt. Thus, change the gtaskqueue implementation to employ bus_bind_intr(9) instead and intr_{g,s}etaffinity(9) to take the device and interrupt resource arguments required respectively. This change also moves struct grouptask from <sys/_task.h> to <sys/gtaskqueue.h> and wraps struct gtask along with the gtask_fn_t typedef into #ifdef _KERNEL as userland likes to include <sys/_task.h> or indirectly drags it in - for better or worse also with _KERNEL defined -, which with device_t and struct resource dependencies otherwise is no longer as easily possible now. The userland inclusion problem probably can be improved a bit by introducing a _WANT_TASK (as well as a _WANT_MOUNT) akin to the existing _WANT_PRISON etc., which is orthogonal to this change, though, and likely needs an exp-run. While at it: - Change the gt_cpu member in the grouptask structure to be of type int as used elswhere for specifying CPUs (an int16_t may be too narrow sooner or later), - move the gtaskqueue_enqueue_fn typedef from <sys/gtaskqueue.h> to the gtaskqueue implementation as it's only used and needed there, - change the GTASK_INIT macro to use "gtask" rather than "task" as argument given that it actually operates on a struct gtask rather than a struct task, and - let subr_gtaskqueue.c consistently use __func__ to print functions names. Reported by: mmel Reviewed by: mmel Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19139
2019-02-12 21:23:59 +00:00
printf("%s: binding curthread failed: %d\n", __func__, error);
free(gtask, M_DEVBUF);
}
void
taskqgroup_bind(struct taskqgroup *qgroup)
{
struct taskq_bind_task *gtask;
int i;
/*
* Bind taskqueue threads to specific CPUs, if they have been assigned
* one.
*/
if (qgroup->tqg_cnt == 1)
return;
for (i = 0; i < qgroup->tqg_cnt; i++) {
gtask = malloc(sizeof(*gtask), M_DEVBUF, M_WAITOK);
GTASK_INIT(&gtask->bt_task, 0, 0, taskqgroup_binder, gtask);
gtask->bt_cpuid = qgroup->tqg_queue[i].tgc_cpu;
grouptaskqueue_enqueue(qgroup->tqg_queue[i].tgc_taskq,
&gtask->bt_task);
}
}
struct taskqgroup *
taskqgroup_create(const char *name, int cnt, int stride)
{
struct taskqgroup *qgroup;
int cpu, i, j;
qgroup = malloc(sizeof(*qgroup), M_GTASKQUEUE, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
mtx_init(&qgroup->tqg_lock, "taskqgroup", NULL, MTX_DEF);
qgroup->tqg_name = name;
qgroup->tqg_cnt = cnt;
for (cpu = i = 0; i < cnt; i++) {
taskqgroup_cpu_create(qgroup, i, cpu);
for (j = 0; j < stride; j++)
cpu = CPU_NEXT(cpu);
}
return (qgroup);
}
void
taskqgroup_destroy(struct taskqgroup *qgroup)
{
}
void
taskqgroup_drain_all(struct taskqgroup *tqg)
{
struct gtaskqueue *q;
for (int i = 0; i < mp_ncpus; i++) {
q = tqg->tqg_queue[i].tgc_taskq;
if (q == NULL)
continue;
gtaskqueue_drain_all(q);
}
}