* jack.chen (zhun...@gmail.com) wrote: > Thanks,But my question is how the fd belonging to qemu can be used in > another process such as DPDK?is fd just effective within one process? > for example ,if process A open file a.txt,and it gets one fd。the fd > can only be used in process A ,can it be used in process B?
Both processes can use the fd - but it needs a trick. Unix sockets can pass fd's between processes - so you pass the fd down the socket and it's received on the destination - the number the fd gets is different on the two processes, but ti still represents the same underlying fd on the same file. Follow the call to vhost_user_write in vhost_user_set_mem_table you see it takes the 'fds' array, that eventually gets passed over the unix socket. Dave > 2018-02-01 17:51 GMT+08:00 Dr. David Alan Gilbert <dgilb...@redhat.com>: > > * jack.chen (zhun...@gmail.com) wrote: > >> thanks,but I really can not understand how the fd works,can someone > >> explain it or give me some reference material?? > > > > Probably the man page for the mmap system call, or an introduction to > > linux/unix syscalls. Just remember that any shared memory will be > > 'backed' by a file (or something that works like a file), and if it's a > > file, when you open it you get a file descriptor. Once you have that fd > > you can map it somewhere else. > > > > Dave > > > >> > >> 2018-02-01 1:31 GMT+08:00 Dr. David Alan Gilbert <dgilb...@redhat.com>: > >> > * jack.chen (zhun...@gmail.com) wrote: > >> >> hello,I am confused when I read vhost-user source code in qemu.I know > >> >> vhost-user app shared memory with qemu by mmap,but why it can use fd > >> >> which > >> >> is belong to qemu? > >> >> relative code: > >> >> qemu code in function vhost_user_set_mem_table > >> >> fd = memory_region_get_fd(mr); > >> >> if (fd > 0) { > >> >> msg.payload.memory.regions[fd_num].userspace_addr = > >> >> reg->userspace_addr; > >> >> msg.payload.memory.regions[fd_num].memory_size = > >> >> reg->memory_size; > >> >> msg.payload.memory.regions[fd_num].guest_phys_addr = > >> >> reg->guest_phys_addr; > >> >> msg.payload.memory.regions[fd_num].mmap_offset = offset; > >> >> assert(fd_num < VHOST_MEMORY_MAX_NREGIONS); > >> >> fds[fd_num++] = fd; > >> >> } > >> >> > >> >> …… > >> >> DPDK code in vhost_user_set_mem_table > >> >> > >> >> mmap_addr = mmap(NULL, mmap_size, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, > >> >> MAP_SHARED | MAP_POPULATE, fd, 0); > >> >> …… > >> >> > >> >> thanks a lot! > >> > > >> > Because that's how the dpdk/vhost-user binary knows what to mmap; > >> > each fd corresponds to the backing file of the memory area that's being > >> > shared. This way the dpdk/vhost doesn't need to open those files itself > >> > or try and match the exact memory configuration of qemu; QEMU just gives > >> > it the exact thing it needs to mmap - which is just the fd and offsets. > >> > > >> > Dave > >> > > >> > -- > >> > Dr. David Alan Gilbert / dgilb...@redhat.com / Manchester, UK > > -- > > Dr. David Alan Gilbert / dgilb...@redhat.com / Manchester, UK -- Dr. David Alan Gilbert / dgilb...@redhat.com / Manchester, UK