On 11/5/24 1:25 AM, Cindy Lu wrote:
>  static struct vhost_worker *vhost_worker_create(struct vhost_dev *dev)
>  {
>       struct vhost_worker *worker;
> -     struct vhost_task *vtsk;
> +     struct vhost_task *vtsk = NULL;
> +     struct task_struct *task = NULL;
>       char name[TASK_COMM_LEN];
>       int ret;
>       u32 id;
>  
> +     /* Allocate resources for the worker */
>       worker = kzalloc(sizeof(*worker), GFP_KERNEL_ACCOUNT);
>       if (!worker)
>               return NULL;
>  
> +     worker->fn = kzalloc(sizeof(struct vhost_task_fn), GFP_KERNEL_ACCOUNT);
> +     if (!worker->fn) {
> +             kfree(worker);
> +             return NULL;
> +     }

Why dynamically allocate this?

You could probably even just kill the vhost_task_fn struct since we just
have to the 2 callouts.

> +
>       worker->dev = dev;
>       snprintf(name, sizeof(name), "vhost-%d", current->pid);
>  
> -     vtsk = vhost_task_create(vhost_run_work_list, vhost_worker_killed,
> -                              worker, name);
> -     if (!vtsk)
> -             goto free_worker;
> -
>       mutex_init(&worker->mutex);
>       init_llist_head(&worker->work_list);
>       worker->kcov_handle = kcov_common_handle();
> -     worker->vtsk = vtsk;
>  
> -     vhost_task_start(vtsk);
> +     if (dev->inherit_owner) {
> +             /* Create and start a vhost task */

Maybe instead of this comment and the one below write something about
what inherit_owner means. We can see from the code we are creating a
vhost/kthread, but it's not really obvious why. Something like:

/*
 * If inherit_owner is true we use vhost_tasks to create
 * the worker so all settings/limits like cgroups, NPROC,
 * scheduler, etc are inherited from the owner. If false,
 * we use kthreads and only attach to the same cgroups
 * as the owner for compat with older kernels.
 */



> +             vtsk = vhost_task_create(vhost_run_work_list,
> +                                      vhost_worker_killed, worker, name);
> +             if (!vtsk)
> +                     goto free_worker;
> +
> +             worker->vtsk = vtsk;
> +             worker->fn->wakeup = vhost_task_wakeup_fn;
> +             worker->fn->stop = vhost_task_stop_fn;
> +
> +             vhost_task_start(vtsk);
> +     } else {
> +             /* Create and start a kernel thread */
> +             task = kthread_create(vhost_run_work_kthread_list, worker,
> +                                   "vhost-%d", current->pid);
> +             if (IS_ERR(task)) {
> +                     ret = PTR_ERR(task);
> +                     goto free_worker;
> +             }
> +             worker->task = task;
> +             worker->fn->wakeup = vhost_kthread_wakeup_fn;
> +             worker->fn->stop = vhost_kthread_stop_fn;
> +
> +             wake_up_process(task);
> +             /* Attach to the vhost cgroup */

You don't need this comment do you? The function name tells us the same
info.

> +             ret = vhost_attach_cgroups(dev);

I don't think this works. Patch 3/9 did:

+       xa_for_each(&dev->worker_xa, i, worker) {
+               ret = vhost_worker_cgroups_kthread(worker);

but we don't add the worker to the xa until below.

You also want to just call vhost_worker_cgroups_kthread above, because
you only want to add the one task and not loop over all of them.

I would then also maybe rename vhost_worker_cgroups_kthread to something
like vhost_attach_task_to_cgroups.



> +             if (ret)
> +                     goto stop_worker;
> +     }
>  
>       ret = xa_alloc(&dev->worker_xa, &id, worker, xa_limit_32b, GFP_KERNEL);
>       if (ret < 0)
>               goto stop_worker;
>       worker->id = id;
> -
>       return worker;
> -
>  stop_worker:
> -     vhost_task_stop(vtsk);
> +     worker->fn->stop(dev->inherit_owner ? (void *)vtsk : (void *)task);

I don't think you need to cast since the function takes a void pointer.
Same comment for the other patches like 6/9 where you are calling the
callout and casting.

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