On Fri, Jan 19, 2018 at 06:17:51PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote: > 19/01/2018 16:27, Neil Horman: > > On Fri, Jan 19, 2018 at 03:13:47PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote: > > > 19/01/2018 14:30, Neil Horman: > > > > So it seems like the real point of contention that we need to settle > > > > here is, > > > > what codifies an 'owner'. Must it be a specific execution context, or > > > > can we > > > > define any arbitrary section of code as being an owner? I would agrue > > > > against > > > > the latter. > > > > > > This is the first thing explained in the cover letter: > > > "2. The port usage synchronization will be managed by the port owner." > > > There is no intent to manage the threads synchronization for a given port. > > > It is the responsibility of the owner (a code object) to configure its > > > port via only one thread. > > > It is consistent with not trying to manage threads synchronization > > > for Rx/Tx on a given queue. > > > > > > > > Yes, in his cover letter, and I contend that notion is an invalid design > > point. > > By codifying an area of code as an 'owner', rather than an execution > > context, > > you're defining the notion of heirarchy, not ownership. That is to say, > > you want to codify the notion that there are top level ports that the > > application might see, and some of those top level ports are parents to > > subordinate ports, which only the parent port should access directly. If > > thats > > all you want to encode, there are far easier ways to do it: > > > > struct rte_eth_shared_data { > > < existing bits > > > struct rte_eth_port_list { > > struct rte_eth_port_list *children; > > struct rte_eth_port_list *parent; > > }; > > }; > > > > > > Build an api around a structure like that, so that the parent/child > > relationship > > is globally clear, and this would be much easier, especially if you want to > > continue asserting that the notion of synchronization/exclusion is an > > exercise > > left to the application. > > Not only Neil. > An owner can be something else than a port. > An owner can be an app process (multi-processes). > An owner can be a library. > The intent is really to solve the generic problem of which code > is managing a port. > I don't see how this precludes any part of what you just said. Define the rte_eth_port_list externally to the shared_data struct and allow any object you want to allocate it, then anything you want to control a heirarchy of ports can do so without issue, and the structure is far more clear than an opaque id that carries subtle semantic ordering with it.
Neil