On 28.02.2017 16:44, Sebastian Lackner wrote:
On 28.02.2017 15:14, Jacek Caban wrote:
On 28.02.2017 14:40, Sebastian Lackner wrote:
On 28.02.2017 14:03, Jacek Caban wrote:
As long as we transfer result over server socket, we don't have control in server over when iosb and result buffer are filled, so we need a signal from client when we can signal async completion (signal event/object, queue completion). I sent a patch that was more inline with how we do that for calls where I/O is implemented on client side [1], but Alexandre preferred that to be in server [2]. Having that in server is not only cleaner, but also gives us more control, like in which case to fill iosb or signal event. It will also make it possible to implement other solution (bellow).
I assume Alexandre was mainly referring to the event / APC stuff. I assume he also would be fine with a code path to return the result immediately when available. This could for example be done by marking the async object as "in progress" to avoid queing unnecessary APCs. If a real result is available at the end of the call, it could be transferred right away. This would also help to fix the problem with "immediate returns" below.
What about the problem of client having to signal server when it received and processed the data? When would you set the event in that case? We can transfer data immediately, but we still need to know when we can set event / queue APC. Currently we know that we can do that when APC_ASYNC_IO returns.
Well, there are also situations where it would be relatively easy to avoid the roundtrip. We could return immediately at least when no events, APCs or completions are involved, right? Since this is the most common situation it might still be worth the effort.
If event is not passed, we still need to signal object itself. Thinking about it some more, I guess we could just signal object it before returning for non-overlapped operations returning immediately. It wouldn't be exactly right, but it can't be used for synchronization reliably in this case anyway.
Another thing is that we currently don't know if there is user APC until APC_ASYNC_IO returns, but that can be fixed.
Since it's just an optimization, can we process with the patch itself first? I'm happy to optimize that, but I find it hard to agree that an optimization should block inclusion of patches targeted at correctness.
Also please note that we need to distinguish "immediate returns" and "async returns" to properly implement FileIoCompletionNotificationInformation. This especially means that waiting internally is not an option.
It's easy to distinguish and still have internal waits. I can't point the right solution without looking deeper at FileIoCompletionNotificationInformation, but just as an example, you could do:
if (iosb->status != STATUS_PENDING) mark_async_as_immediate_result();
inside request handlers just after calling fd ops. Then you'd have all the info you need inside async object. Am I missing something?
With the currently proposed solution this would not work. The fd ops already call async_terminate -> async_set_result -> add_async_completion -> add_completion, but depending on the completion flags this should not be done if it is an immediate result. There is no way to know if its supposed to be an "immediate return" inside of the async_*() helpers, and checking afterwards is too late (unless we introduce a flag to block async objects from doing actions right away). Did you have a different idea how it should be implemented?
In cases covered by my patch, async_terminate doesn't call async_set_result, but queues APC instead, so that's not a problem.
More generally speaking, if we had a code path like you described, the solution I proposed would still work, just reverse the logic. Mark all created asyncs as immediate returns, and change it to async where appropriate, something like:
if (iosb->status == STATUS_PENDING) mark_async_as_async_result();
in read/write/ioctl/flush should do. register_async request could do that unconditionally.
For flush we are currently not using any callback, so marking it in the handler would be too late. Thats also something we could fix of course - Nevertheless, as you can see it already gets pretty complicated. ;) If its possible to simplify this somehow, that would certainly be an improvement.
I think you misunderstood me somehow. I can only guess what you mean, since current flush() implementation queue async or return no wait handle - they never call async_terminate() from what I can tell. Even if they did, it would work with what I proposed: flush handler creates async - it's marked as returning immediately flush calls async_terminate() - due to above, async_terminate is aware that it's an immediate result flush op returns to request handler, which finds that there was an immediate return, so does not mark async as returning asynchronously.
I'm not sure what you expect me to improve in this regards. This is about hypothetical solution to a problem that's not strictly related to this patch. And I don't think it's that complicated ;)
Cheers, Jacek