On 2013-08-13 15:45, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote: > On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 09:56:17AM +0200, Jan Kiszka wrote: >> in the attempt to use Alex' ppoll-based timer rework for decoupled, >> real-time capable timer device models I'm now scratching my head over >> the aio_poll interface. I'm looking at dataplane/virtio-blk.c, just finding >> >> static void *data_plane_thread(void *opaque) >> { >> VirtIOBlockDataPlane *s = opaque; >> >> do { >> aio_poll(s->ctx, true); >> } while (!s->stopping || s->num_reqs > 0); >> return NULL; >> } >> >> wondering where the locking is. Or doesn't this use need any at all? Are >> all data structures that this thread accesses exclusively used by it, or >> are they all accessed in a lock-less way? > > Most of the data structures in dataplane upstream are not shared. > Virtio, virtio-blk, and Linux AIO raw file I/O are duplicated for > dataplane and do not rely on QEMU infrastructure. > > I've been working on undoing this duplication over the past months but > upstream QEMU still mostly does not share data structures and therefore > does not need much synchronization. For the crude synchronization that > we do need we simply start/stop the dataplane thread. > >> Our iothread mainloop more or less open-codes aio_poll and is, thus, >> able to drop its lock before falling asleep while still holding it >> during event dispatching. Obviously, I need the same when processing >> timer lists of an AioContext, protecting them against concurrent >> modifications over VCPUs or other threads. So I'm thinking of adding a >> block notification callback to aio_poll, to be called before/after >> qemu_poll_ns so that any locks can be dropped / reacquired as needed. Or >> am I missing some magic interface / pattern? > > Upstream dataplane does not use timers, so the code there cannot serve > as an example. > > If you combine Alex Bligh, Ping Fan, and my latest timer series, you get > support for QEMUTimer in AioContexts where qemu_timer_mod_ns() and > qemu_timer_del() are thread-safe. vm_clock (without icount) and > rt_clock are thread-safe clock sources.
To which series of yours and Ping Fan are you referring? [1] and [2]? > > This should make timers usable in another thread for clock device > emulation if only your iothread uses the AioContext and its timers > (besides the thread-safe mod/del interfaces). As argued in the other thread, I don't think we need (and want) locking in the timer subsystem, rather push this to its users. But I'll look again at your patches, if they are also usable. > > The details depend on your device, do you have a git repo I can look at > to understand your device model? Pushed my hacks here: git://git.kiszka.org/qemu.git queues/rt.new3 Jan [1] http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.emulators.qemu/227590 [2] http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.emulators.qemu/226369 -- Siemens AG, Corporate Technology, CT RTC ITP SES-DE Corporate Competence Center Embedded Linux