[PATCH v3 1/1] nvme: multipath: Implemented new iopolicy "queue-depth"

John Meneghini jmeneghi at redhat.com
Tue May 21 06:58:31 PDT 2024


On 5/21/24 02:46, Hannes Reinecke wrote:
> On 5/20/24 22:20, John Meneghini wrote:
>> From: "Ewan D. Milne" <emilne at redhat.com>
>>
...
>> Tested-by: Marco Patalano <mpatalan at redhat.com>
>> Reviewed-by: Randy Jennings <randyj at redhat.com>

I need to fix this. Randy doesn't have a redhat.com email address... Cut an paste error :-(

>> Tested-by: Jyoti Rani <jani at purestorage.com>
>> 
...
>> +void nvme_subsys_iopolicy_update(struct nvme_subsystem *subsys, int iopolicy)
>> +{
>> +    struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl;
>> +    int old_iopolicy = READ_ONCE(subsys->iopolicy);
>> +
>> +    WRITE_ONCE(subsys->iopolicy, iopolicy);
>> +
>> +    mutex_lock(&nvme_subsystems_lock);
>> +    list_for_each_entry(ctrl, &subsys->ctrls, subsys_entry) {
>> +        atomic_set(&ctrl->nr_active, 0);
>> +        nvme_mpath_clear_ctrl_paths(ctrl);
> 
> You always reset the variables here, even if specified iopolicy is
> the same than the currently active one.
> I'd rather check if the iopolicy is different before changing the settings.

Yes, Keith pointed this out too.  This is actually a feature not a bug.  In situations were we want to "reset" the nr_active 
counters on all controllers the user can simply set the queue-depth iopolicy a second time.  I don't expect users to do this 
very often... they shouldn't be changing IO policies back and forth too much... but the ability to "reset" the nr_active 
counters during testing has been very helpful and important to do.  So I'd like to keep this.  Moreover, this is NOT the 
performance path. I don't see the point in making performance optimizations in a code path that is run once a year.

/John




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