On Mon, Oct 05, 2015 at 01:48:39PM +0300, Vlad Zolotarov wrote: > > > On 10/05/15 10:56, Greg KH wrote: > >On Mon, Oct 05, 2015 at 10:41:39AM +0300, Vlad Zolotarov wrote: > >>>>+struct msix_info { > >>>>+ int num_irqs; > >>>>+ struct msix_entry *table; > >>>>+ struct uio_msix_irq_ctx { > >>>>+ struct eventfd_ctx *trigger; /* MSI-x vector to eventfd */ > >>>Why are you using eventfd for msi vectors? What's the reason for > >>>needing this? > >>A small correction - for MSI-X vectors. There may be only one MSI vector per > >>PCI function and if it's used it would use the same interface as a legacy > >>INT#x interrupt uses at the moment. > >>So, for MSI-X case the reason is that there may be (in most cases there will > >>be) more than one interrupt vector. Thus, as I've explained in a PATCH1 > >>thread we need a way to indicated each of them separately. eventfd seems > >>like a good way of doing so. If u have better ideas, pls., share. > >You need to document what you are doing here, I don't see any > >explaination for using eventfd at all. > > > >And no, I don't know of any other solution as I don't know what you are > >trying to do here (hint, the changelog didn't document it...) > > > >>>You haven't documented how this api works at all, you are going to have > >>>to a lot more work to justify this, as this greatly increases the > >>>complexity of the user/kernel api in unknown ways. > >>I actually do documented it a bit. Pls., check PATCH3 out. > >That provided no information at all about how to use the api. > > > >If it did, you would see that your api is broken for 32/64bit kernels > >and will fall over into nasty pieces the first time you try to use it > >there, which means it hasn't been tested at all :( > > It has been tested of course ;) > I tested it only in 64 bit environment however where both kernel and user > space applications were compiled on the same machine with the same compiler > and it could be that "int" had the same number of bytes both in kernel and > in user space application. Therefore it worked perfectly - I patched DPDK to > use the new uio_pci_generic MSI-X API to test this and I have verified that > all 3 interrupt modes work: MSI-X with SR-IOV VF device in Amazon EC2 guest > and INT#x and MSI with a PF device on bare metal server. > > However I agree using uint32_t for "vec" and "fd" would be much more > correct.
I don't think file descriptors are __u32 on a 64bit arch, are they? And NEVER use the _t types in kernel code, the namespaces is all wrong and it is not applicable for us, sorry. thanks, greg k-h -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/