On Thu, Jan 07, 2021 at 08:15:41AM -0500, Mikulas Patocka wrote:
> I'd like to ask about this piece of code in __kernel_read:
>       if (unlikely(!file->f_op->read_iter || file->f_op->read))
>               return warn_unsupported...
> and __kernel_write:
>       if (unlikely(!file->f_op->write_iter || file->f_op->write))
>               return warn_unsupported...
> 
> - It exits with an error if both read_iter and read or write_iter and 
> write are present.
> 
> I found out that on NVFS, reading a file with the read method has 10% 
> better performance than the read_iter method. The benchmark just reads the 
> same 4k page over and over again - and the cost of creating and parsing 
> the kiocb and iov_iter structures is just that high.

Which part of it is so expensive?  Is it worth, eg adding an iov_iter
type that points to a single buffer instead of a single-member iov?

+++ b/include/linux/uio.h
@@ -19,6 +19,7 @@ struct kvec {
 
 enum iter_type {
        /* iter types */
+       ITER_UBUF = 2,
        ITER_IOVEC = 4,
        ITER_KVEC = 8,
        ITER_BVEC = 16,
@@ -36,6 +36,7 @@ struct iov_iter {
        size_t iov_offset;
        size_t count;
        union {
+               void __user *buf;
                const struct iovec *iov;
                const struct kvec *kvec;
                const struct bio_vec *bvec;

and then doing all the appropriate changes to make that work.

Reply via email to