On 14/02/17 21:07, Tom Herbert wrote: > Off the top of my head... I'd say may we might be able to have a > minimally invasive interface with something like: > > XDP_RUN(hook, xdp, drv_xdp_handle_action) > > This replaces xdp_run and return codes are processed in the called > functions. Its a macro so that xdp_handle_action can be inlined. I don't see why callbacks are needed, since XDP programs (I assume) aren't supposed to block. This XDP_RUN ends up looking a lot like NF_HOOK, for no good reason that I can see (unlike NF hooks, we never do things like NF_QUEUE). > Batching could then be done in the backend XDP so that it would be > transparent to the driver. I also don't see how you can transparently batch and still allow the handler to be inlined - you'd have to stash a function pointer that you could call later when you decide to dispatch a batch of packets.
To me, the sensible interface (which makes the batching explicit to the driver, which I think is necessary) is to have an int (or maybe unsigned int, which is the return type of xdp_hookfn, I'm not sure which is intended) member in struct xdp_buff. Then the driver can call something like XDP_RUN_ARRAY(napi, xdp_array, array_len); which is semantically equivalent to unsigned int i; for (i = 0; i < array_len; i++) xdp_array[i].ret = xdp_hook_run(napi, xdp_array + i); except that it may run the hooks in 'row-major order'. No callbacks needed, the driver can just loop over xdp_array reading the .ret and applying the relevant action to each packet. This also has the advantage that the driver knows how many packets it might have to process in a single batch (i.e. NAPI_POLL_WEIGHT) and can allocate the array statically, whereas an XDP hook that tried to transparently be 'helpful' would have to guess and/or use kmalloc. -Ed