1 /* 2 * QEMU aio implementation 3 * 4 * Copyright IBM, Corp. 2008 5 * 6 * Authors: 7 * Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com> 8 * 9 * This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2. See 10 * the COPYING file in the top-level directory. 11 * 12 */ 13 14 #ifndef QEMU_AIO_H 15 #define QEMU_AIO_H 16 17 #ifdef CONFIG_LINUX_IO_URING 18 #include <liburing.h> 19 #endif 20 #include "qemu/coroutine-core.h" 21 #include "qemu/queue.h" 22 #include "qemu/event_notifier.h" 23 #include "qemu/lockcnt.h" 24 #include "qemu/thread.h" 25 #include "qemu/timer.h" 26 #include "block/graph-lock.h" 27 #include "hw/qdev-core.h" 28 29 30 typedef struct BlockAIOCB BlockAIOCB; 31 typedef void BlockCompletionFunc(void *opaque, int ret); 32 33 typedef struct AIOCBInfo { 34 void (*cancel_async)(BlockAIOCB *acb); 35 size_t aiocb_size; 36 } AIOCBInfo; 37 38 struct BlockAIOCB { 39 const AIOCBInfo *aiocb_info; 40 BlockDriverState *bs; 41 BlockCompletionFunc *cb; 42 void *opaque; 43 int refcnt; 44 }; 45 46 void *qemu_aio_get(const AIOCBInfo *aiocb_info, BlockDriverState *bs, 47 BlockCompletionFunc *cb, void *opaque); 48 void qemu_aio_unref(void *p); 49 void qemu_aio_ref(void *p); 50 51 typedef struct AioHandler AioHandler; 52 typedef QLIST_HEAD(, AioHandler) AioHandlerList; 53 typedef void QEMUBHFunc(void *opaque); 54 typedef bool AioPollFn(void *opaque); 55 typedef void IOHandler(void *opaque); 56 57 struct ThreadPoolAio; 58 struct LinuxAioState; 59 typedef struct LuringState LuringState; 60 61 /* Is polling disabled? */ 62 bool aio_poll_disabled(AioContext *ctx); 63 64 /* Callbacks for file descriptor monitoring implementations */ 65 typedef struct { 66 /* 67 * update: 68 * @ctx: the AioContext 69 * @old_node: the existing handler or NULL if this file descriptor is being 70 * monitored for the first time 71 * @new_node: the new handler or NULL if this file descriptor is being 72 * removed 73 * 74 * Add/remove/modify a monitored file descriptor. 75 * 76 * Called with ctx->list_lock acquired. 77 */ 78 void (*update)(AioContext *ctx, AioHandler *old_node, AioHandler *new_node); 79 80 /* 81 * wait: 82 * @ctx: the AioContext 83 * @ready_list: list for handlers that become ready 84 * @timeout: maximum duration to wait, in nanoseconds 85 * 86 * Wait for file descriptors to become ready and place them on ready_list. 87 * 88 * Called with ctx->list_lock incremented but not locked. 89 * 90 * Returns: number of ready file descriptors. 91 */ 92 int (*wait)(AioContext *ctx, AioHandlerList *ready_list, int64_t timeout); 93 94 /* 95 * need_wait: 96 * @ctx: the AioContext 97 * 98 * Tell aio_poll() when to stop userspace polling early because ->wait() 99 * has fds ready. 100 * 101 * File descriptor monitoring implementations that cannot poll fd readiness 102 * from userspace should use aio_poll_disabled() here. This ensures that 103 * file descriptors are not starved by handlers that frequently make 104 * progress via userspace polling. 105 * 106 * Returns: true if ->wait() should be called, false otherwise. 107 */ 108 bool (*need_wait)(AioContext *ctx); 109 } FDMonOps; 110 111 /* 112 * Each aio_bh_poll() call carves off a slice of the BH list, so that newly 113 * scheduled BHs are not processed until the next aio_bh_poll() call. All 114 * active aio_bh_poll() calls chain their slices together in a list, so that 115 * nested aio_bh_poll() calls process all scheduled bottom halves. 116 */ 117 typedef QSLIST_HEAD(, QEMUBH) BHList; 118 typedef struct BHListSlice BHListSlice; 119 struct BHListSlice { 120 BHList bh_list; 121 QSIMPLEQ_ENTRY(BHListSlice) next; 122 }; 123 124 typedef QSLIST_HEAD(, AioHandler) AioHandlerSList; 125 126 typedef struct AioPolledEvent { 127 int64_t ns; /* current polling time in nanoseconds */ 128 } AioPolledEvent; 129 130 struct AioContext { 131 GSource source; 132 133 /* Used by AioContext users to protect from multi-threaded access. */ 134 QemuRecMutex lock; 135 136 /* 137 * Keep track of readers and writers of the block layer graph. 138 * This is essential to avoid performing additions and removal 139 * of nodes and edges from block graph while some 140 * other thread is traversing it. 141 */ 142 BdrvGraphRWlock *bdrv_graph; 143 144 /* The list of registered AIO handlers. Protected by ctx->list_lock. */ 145 AioHandlerList aio_handlers; 146 147 /* The list of AIO handlers to be deleted. Protected by ctx->list_lock. */ 148 AioHandlerList deleted_aio_handlers; 149 150 /* Used to avoid unnecessary event_notifier_set calls in aio_notify; 151 * only written from the AioContext home thread, or under the BQL in 152 * the case of the main AioContext. However, it is read from any 153 * thread so it is still accessed with atomic primitives. 154 * 155 * If this field is 0, everything (file descriptors, bottom halves, 156 * timers) will be re-evaluated before the next blocking poll() or 157 * io_uring wait; therefore, the event_notifier_set call can be 158 * skipped. If it is non-zero, you may need to wake up a concurrent 159 * aio_poll or the glib main event loop, making event_notifier_set 160 * necessary. 161 * 162 * Bit 0 is reserved for GSource usage of the AioContext, and is 1 163 * between a call to aio_ctx_prepare and the next call to aio_ctx_check. 164 * Bits 1-31 simply count the number of active calls to aio_poll 165 * that are in the prepare or poll phase. 166 * 167 * The GSource and aio_poll must use a different mechanism because 168 * there is no certainty that a call to GSource's prepare callback 169 * (via g_main_context_prepare) is indeed followed by check and 170 * dispatch. It's not clear whether this would be a bug, but let's 171 * play safe and allow it---it will just cause extra calls to 172 * event_notifier_set until the next call to dispatch. 173 * 174 * Instead, the aio_poll calls include both the prepare and the 175 * dispatch phase, hence a simple counter is enough for them. 176 */ 177 uint32_t notify_me; 178 179 /* A lock to protect between QEMUBH and AioHandler adders and deleter, 180 * and to ensure that no callbacks are removed while we're walking and 181 * dispatching them. 182 */ 183 QemuLockCnt list_lock; 184 185 /* Bottom Halves pending aio_bh_poll() processing */ 186 BHList bh_list; 187 188 /* Chained BH list slices for each nested aio_bh_poll() call */ 189 QSIMPLEQ_HEAD(, BHListSlice) bh_slice_list; 190 191 /* Used by aio_notify. 192 * 193 * "notified" is used to avoid expensive event_notifier_test_and_clear 194 * calls. When it is clear, the EventNotifier is clear, or one thread 195 * is going to clear "notified" before processing more events. False 196 * positives are possible, i.e. "notified" could be set even though the 197 * EventNotifier is clear. 198 * 199 * Note that event_notifier_set *cannot* be optimized the same way. For 200 * more information on the problem that would result, see "#ifdef BUG2" 201 * in the docs/aio_notify_accept.promela formal model. 202 */ 203 bool notified; 204 EventNotifier notifier; 205 206 QSLIST_HEAD(, Coroutine) scheduled_coroutines; 207 QEMUBH *co_schedule_bh; 208 209 int thread_pool_min; 210 int thread_pool_max; 211 /* Thread pool for performing work and receiving completion callbacks. 212 * Has its own locking. 213 */ 214 struct ThreadPoolAio *thread_pool; 215 216 #ifdef CONFIG_LINUX_AIO 217 struct LinuxAioState *linux_aio; 218 #endif 219 #ifdef CONFIG_LINUX_IO_URING 220 LuringState *linux_io_uring; 221 222 /* State for file descriptor monitoring using Linux io_uring */ 223 struct io_uring fdmon_io_uring; 224 AioHandlerSList submit_list; 225 #endif 226 227 /* TimerLists for calling timers - one per clock type. Has its own 228 * locking. 229 */ 230 QEMUTimerListGroup tlg; 231 232 /* Number of AioHandlers without .io_poll() */ 233 int poll_disable_cnt; 234 235 /* Polling mode parameters */ 236 int64_t poll_max_ns; /* maximum polling time in nanoseconds */ 237 int64_t poll_grow; /* polling time growth factor */ 238 int64_t poll_shrink; /* polling time shrink factor */ 239 240 /* AIO engine parameters */ 241 int64_t aio_max_batch; /* maximum number of requests in a batch */ 242 243 /* 244 * List of handlers participating in userspace polling. Protected by 245 * ctx->list_lock. Iterated and modified mostly by the event loop thread 246 * from aio_poll() with ctx->list_lock incremented. aio_set_fd_handler() 247 * only touches the list to delete nodes if ctx->list_lock's count is zero. 248 */ 249 AioHandlerList poll_aio_handlers; 250 251 /* Are we in polling mode or monitoring file descriptors? */ 252 bool poll_started; 253 254 /* epoll(7) state used when built with CONFIG_EPOLL */ 255 int epollfd; 256 257 const FDMonOps *fdmon_ops; 258 }; 259 260 /** 261 * aio_context_new: Allocate a new AioContext. 262 * 263 * AioContext provide a mini event-loop that can be waited on synchronously. 264 * They also provide bottom halves, a service to execute a piece of code 265 * as soon as possible. 266 */ 267 AioContext *aio_context_new(Error **errp); 268 269 /** 270 * aio_context_ref: 271 * @ctx: The AioContext to operate on. 272 * 273 * Add a reference to an AioContext. 274 */ 275 void aio_context_ref(AioContext *ctx); 276 277 /** 278 * aio_context_unref: 279 * @ctx: The AioContext to operate on. 280 * 281 * Drop a reference to an AioContext. 282 */ 283 void aio_context_unref(AioContext *ctx); 284 285 /** 286 * aio_bh_schedule_oneshot_full: Allocate a new bottom half structure that will 287 * run only once and as soon as possible. 288 * 289 * @name: A human-readable identifier for debugging purposes. 290 */ 291 void aio_bh_schedule_oneshot_full(AioContext *ctx, QEMUBHFunc *cb, void *opaque, 292 const char *name); 293 294 /** 295 * aio_bh_schedule_oneshot: Allocate a new bottom half structure that will run 296 * only once and as soon as possible. 297 * 298 * A convenience wrapper for aio_bh_schedule_oneshot_full() that uses cb as the 299 * name string. 300 */ 301 #define aio_bh_schedule_oneshot(ctx, cb, opaque) \ 302 aio_bh_schedule_oneshot_full((ctx), (cb), (opaque), (stringify(cb))) 303 304 /** 305 * aio_bh_new_full: Allocate a new bottom half structure. 306 * 307 * Bottom halves are lightweight callbacks whose invocation is guaranteed 308 * to be wait-free, thread-safe and signal-safe. The #QEMUBH structure 309 * is opaque and must be allocated prior to its use. 310 * 311 * @name: A human-readable identifier for debugging purposes. 312 * @reentrancy_guard: A guard set when entering a cb to prevent 313 * device-reentrancy issues 314 */ 315 QEMUBH *aio_bh_new_full(AioContext *ctx, QEMUBHFunc *cb, void *opaque, 316 const char *name, MemReentrancyGuard *reentrancy_guard); 317 318 /** 319 * aio_bh_new: Allocate a new bottom half structure 320 * 321 * A convenience wrapper for aio_bh_new_full() that uses the cb as the name 322 * string. 323 */ 324 #define aio_bh_new(ctx, cb, opaque) \ 325 aio_bh_new_full((ctx), (cb), (opaque), (stringify(cb)), NULL) 326 327 /** 328 * aio_bh_new_guarded: Allocate a new bottom half structure with a 329 * reentrancy_guard 330 * 331 * A convenience wrapper for aio_bh_new_full() that uses the cb as the name 332 * string. 333 */ 334 #define aio_bh_new_guarded(ctx, cb, opaque, guard) \ 335 aio_bh_new_full((ctx), (cb), (opaque), (stringify(cb)), guard) 336 337 /** 338 * aio_notify: Force processing of pending events. 339 * 340 * Similar to signaling a condition variable, aio_notify forces 341 * aio_poll to exit, so that the next call will re-examine pending events. 342 * The caller of aio_notify will usually call aio_poll again very soon, 343 * or go through another iteration of the GLib main loop. Hence, aio_notify 344 * also has the side effect of recalculating the sets of file descriptors 345 * that the main loop waits for. 346 * 347 * Calling aio_notify is rarely necessary, because for example scheduling 348 * a bottom half calls it already. 349 */ 350 void aio_notify(AioContext *ctx); 351 352 /** 353 * aio_notify_accept: Acknowledge receiving an aio_notify. 354 * 355 * aio_notify() uses an EventNotifier in order to wake up a sleeping 356 * aio_poll() or g_main_context_iteration(). Calls to aio_notify() are 357 * usually rare, but the AioContext has to clear the EventNotifier on 358 * every aio_poll() or g_main_context_iteration() in order to avoid 359 * busy waiting. This event_notifier_test_and_clear() cannot be done 360 * using the usual aio_context_set_event_notifier(), because it must 361 * be done before processing all events (file descriptors, bottom halves, 362 * timers). 363 * 364 * aio_notify_accept() is an optimized event_notifier_test_and_clear() 365 * that is specific to an AioContext's notifier; it is used internally 366 * to clear the EventNotifier only if aio_notify() had been called. 367 */ 368 void aio_notify_accept(AioContext *ctx); 369 370 /** 371 * aio_bh_call: Executes callback function of the specified BH. 372 */ 373 void aio_bh_call(QEMUBH *bh); 374 375 /** 376 * aio_bh_poll: Poll bottom halves for an AioContext. 377 * 378 * These are internal functions used by the QEMU main loop. 379 * And notice that multiple occurrences of aio_bh_poll cannot 380 * be called concurrently 381 */ 382 int aio_bh_poll(AioContext *ctx); 383 384 /** 385 * qemu_bh_schedule: Schedule a bottom half. 386 * 387 * Scheduling a bottom half interrupts the main loop and causes the 388 * execution of the callback that was passed to qemu_bh_new. 389 * 390 * Bottom halves that are scheduled from a bottom half handler are instantly 391 * invoked. This can create an infinite loop if a bottom half handler 392 * schedules itself. 393 * 394 * @bh: The bottom half to be scheduled. 395 */ 396 void qemu_bh_schedule(QEMUBH *bh); 397 398 /** 399 * qemu_bh_cancel: Cancel execution of a bottom half. 400 * 401 * Canceling execution of a bottom half undoes the effect of calls to 402 * qemu_bh_schedule without freeing its resources yet. While cancellation 403 * itself is also wait-free and thread-safe, it can of course race with the 404 * loop that executes bottom halves unless you are holding the iothread 405 * mutex. This makes it mostly useless if you are not holding the mutex. 406 * 407 * @bh: The bottom half to be canceled. 408 */ 409 void qemu_bh_cancel(QEMUBH *bh); 410 411 /** 412 *qemu_bh_delete: Cancel execution of a bottom half and free its resources. 413 * 414 * Deleting a bottom half frees the memory that was allocated for it by 415 * qemu_bh_new. It also implies canceling the bottom half if it was 416 * scheduled. 417 * This func is async. The bottom half will do the delete action at the finial 418 * end. 419 * 420 * @bh: The bottom half to be deleted. 421 */ 422 void qemu_bh_delete(QEMUBH *bh); 423 424 /* Return whether there are any pending callbacks from the GSource 425 * attached to the AioContext, before g_poll is invoked. 426 * 427 * This is used internally in the implementation of the GSource. 428 */ 429 bool aio_prepare(AioContext *ctx); 430 431 /* Return whether there are any pending callbacks from the GSource 432 * attached to the AioContext, after g_poll is invoked. 433 * 434 * This is used internally in the implementation of the GSource. 435 */ 436 bool aio_pending(AioContext *ctx); 437 438 /* Dispatch any pending callbacks from the GSource attached to the AioContext. 439 * 440 * This is used internally in the implementation of the GSource. 441 */ 442 void aio_dispatch(AioContext *ctx); 443 444 /* Progress in completing AIO work to occur. This can issue new pending 445 * aio as a result of executing I/O completion or bh callbacks. 446 * 447 * Return whether any progress was made by executing AIO or bottom half 448 * handlers. If @blocking == true, this should always be true except 449 * if someone called aio_notify. 450 * 451 * If there are no pending bottom halves, but there are pending AIO 452 * operations, it may not be possible to make any progress without 453 * blocking. If @blocking is true, this function will wait until one 454 * or more AIO events have completed, to ensure something has moved 455 * before returning. 456 */ 457 bool no_coroutine_fn aio_poll(AioContext *ctx, bool blocking); 458 459 /* Register a file descriptor and associated callbacks. Behaves very similarly 460 * to qemu_set_fd_handler. Unlike qemu_set_fd_handler, these callbacks will 461 * be invoked when using aio_poll(). 462 * 463 * Code that invokes AIO completion functions should rely on this function 464 * instead of qemu_set_fd_handler[2]. 465 */ 466 void aio_set_fd_handler(AioContext *ctx, 467 int fd, 468 IOHandler *io_read, 469 IOHandler *io_write, 470 AioPollFn *io_poll, 471 IOHandler *io_poll_ready, 472 void *opaque); 473 474 /* Register an event notifier and associated callbacks. Behaves very similarly 475 * to event_notifier_set_handler. Unlike event_notifier_set_handler, these callbacks 476 * will be invoked when using aio_poll(). 477 * 478 * Code that invokes AIO completion functions should rely on this function 479 * instead of event_notifier_set_handler. 480 */ 481 void aio_set_event_notifier(AioContext *ctx, 482 EventNotifier *notifier, 483 EventNotifierHandler *io_read, 484 AioPollFn *io_poll, 485 EventNotifierHandler *io_poll_ready); 486 487 /* 488 * Set polling begin/end callbacks for an event notifier that has already been 489 * registered with aio_set_event_notifier. Do nothing if the event notifier is 490 * not registered. 491 * 492 * Note that if the io_poll_end() callback (or the entire notifier) is removed 493 * during polling, it will not be called, so an io_poll_begin() is not 494 * necessarily always followed by an io_poll_end(). 495 */ 496 void aio_set_event_notifier_poll(AioContext *ctx, 497 EventNotifier *notifier, 498 EventNotifierHandler *io_poll_begin, 499 EventNotifierHandler *io_poll_end); 500 501 /* Return a GSource that lets the main loop poll the file descriptors attached 502 * to this AioContext. 503 */ 504 GSource *aio_get_g_source(AioContext *ctx); 505 506 /* Return the ThreadPoolAio bound to this AioContext */ 507 struct ThreadPoolAio *aio_get_thread_pool(AioContext *ctx); 508 509 /* Setup the LinuxAioState bound to this AioContext */ 510 struct LinuxAioState *aio_setup_linux_aio(AioContext *ctx, Error **errp); 511 512 /* Return the LinuxAioState bound to this AioContext */ 513 struct LinuxAioState *aio_get_linux_aio(AioContext *ctx); 514 515 /* Setup the LuringState bound to this AioContext */ 516 LuringState *aio_setup_linux_io_uring(AioContext *ctx, Error **errp); 517 518 /* Return the LuringState bound to this AioContext */ 519 LuringState *aio_get_linux_io_uring(AioContext *ctx); 520 /** 521 * aio_timer_new_with_attrs: 522 * @ctx: the aio context 523 * @type: the clock type 524 * @scale: the scale 525 * @attributes: 0, or one to multiple OR'ed QEMU_TIMER_ATTR_<id> values 526 * to assign 527 * @cb: the callback to call on timer expiry 528 * @opaque: the opaque pointer to pass to the callback 529 * 530 * Allocate a new timer (with attributes) attached to the context @ctx. 531 * The function is responsible for memory allocation. 532 * 533 * The preferred interface is aio_timer_init or aio_timer_init_with_attrs. 534 * Use that unless you really need dynamic memory allocation. 535 * 536 * Returns: a pointer to the new timer 537 */ 538 static inline QEMUTimer *aio_timer_new_with_attrs(AioContext *ctx, 539 QEMUClockType type, 540 int scale, int attributes, 541 QEMUTimerCB *cb, void *opaque) 542 { 543 return timer_new_full(&ctx->tlg, type, scale, attributes, cb, opaque); 544 } 545 546 /** 547 * aio_timer_new: 548 * @ctx: the aio context 549 * @type: the clock type 550 * @scale: the scale 551 * @cb: the callback to call on timer expiry 552 * @opaque: the opaque pointer to pass to the callback 553 * 554 * Allocate a new timer attached to the context @ctx. 555 * See aio_timer_new_with_attrs for details. 556 * 557 * Returns: a pointer to the new timer 558 */ 559 static inline QEMUTimer *aio_timer_new(AioContext *ctx, QEMUClockType type, 560 int scale, 561 QEMUTimerCB *cb, void *opaque) 562 { 563 return timer_new_full(&ctx->tlg, type, scale, 0, cb, opaque); 564 } 565 566 /** 567 * aio_timer_init_with_attrs: 568 * @ctx: the aio context 569 * @ts: the timer 570 * @type: the clock type 571 * @scale: the scale 572 * @attributes: 0, or one to multiple OR'ed QEMU_TIMER_ATTR_<id> values 573 * to assign 574 * @cb: the callback to call on timer expiry 575 * @opaque: the opaque pointer to pass to the callback 576 * 577 * Initialise a new timer (with attributes) attached to the context @ctx. 578 * The caller is responsible for memory allocation. 579 */ 580 static inline void aio_timer_init_with_attrs(AioContext *ctx, 581 QEMUTimer *ts, QEMUClockType type, 582 int scale, int attributes, 583 QEMUTimerCB *cb, void *opaque) 584 { 585 timer_init_full(ts, &ctx->tlg, type, scale, attributes, cb, opaque); 586 } 587 588 /** 589 * aio_timer_init: 590 * @ctx: the aio context 591 * @ts: the timer 592 * @type: the clock type 593 * @scale: the scale 594 * @cb: the callback to call on timer expiry 595 * @opaque: the opaque pointer to pass to the callback 596 * 597 * Initialise a new timer attached to the context @ctx. 598 * See aio_timer_init_with_attrs for details. 599 */ 600 static inline void aio_timer_init(AioContext *ctx, 601 QEMUTimer *ts, QEMUClockType type, 602 int scale, 603 QEMUTimerCB *cb, void *opaque) 604 { 605 timer_init_full(ts, &ctx->tlg, type, scale, 0, cb, opaque); 606 } 607 608 /** 609 * aio_compute_timeout: 610 * @ctx: the aio context 611 * 612 * Compute the timeout that a blocking aio_poll should use. 613 */ 614 int64_t aio_compute_timeout(AioContext *ctx); 615 616 /** 617 * aio_co_schedule: 618 * @ctx: the aio context 619 * @co: the coroutine 620 * 621 * Start a coroutine on a remote AioContext. 622 * 623 * The coroutine must not be entered by anyone else while aio_co_schedule() 624 * is active. In addition the coroutine must have yielded unless ctx 625 * is the context in which the coroutine is running (i.e. the value of 626 * qemu_get_current_aio_context() from the coroutine itself). 627 */ 628 void aio_co_schedule(AioContext *ctx, Coroutine *co); 629 630 /** 631 * aio_co_reschedule_self: 632 * @new_ctx: the new context 633 * 634 * Move the currently running coroutine to new_ctx. If the coroutine is already 635 * running in new_ctx, do nothing. 636 * 637 * Note that this function cannot reschedule from iohandler_ctx to 638 * qemu_aio_context. 639 */ 640 void coroutine_fn aio_co_reschedule_self(AioContext *new_ctx); 641 642 /** 643 * aio_co_wake: 644 * @co: the coroutine 645 * 646 * Restart a coroutine on the AioContext where it was running last, thus 647 * preventing coroutines from jumping from one context to another when they 648 * go to sleep. 649 * 650 * aio_co_wake may be executed either in coroutine or non-coroutine 651 * context. The coroutine must not be entered by anyone else while 652 * aio_co_wake() is active. 653 */ 654 void aio_co_wake(Coroutine *co); 655 656 /** 657 * aio_co_enter: 658 * @ctx: the context to run the coroutine 659 * @co: the coroutine to run 660 * 661 * Enter a coroutine in the specified AioContext. 662 */ 663 void aio_co_enter(AioContext *ctx, Coroutine *co); 664 665 /** 666 * Return the AioContext whose event loop runs in the current thread. 667 * 668 * If called from an IOThread this will be the IOThread's AioContext. If 669 * called from the main thread or with the "big QEMU lock" taken it 670 * will be the main loop AioContext. 671 * 672 * Note that the return value is never the main loop's iohandler_ctx and the 673 * return value is the main loop AioContext instead. 674 */ 675 AioContext *qemu_get_current_aio_context(void); 676 677 void qemu_set_current_aio_context(AioContext *ctx); 678 679 /** 680 * aio_context_setup: 681 * @ctx: the aio context 682 * 683 * Initialize the aio context. 684 */ 685 void aio_context_setup(AioContext *ctx); 686 687 /** 688 * aio_context_destroy: 689 * @ctx: the aio context 690 * 691 * Destroy the aio context. 692 */ 693 void aio_context_destroy(AioContext *ctx); 694 695 /* Used internally, do not call outside AioContext code */ 696 void aio_context_use_g_source(AioContext *ctx); 697 698 /** 699 * aio_context_set_poll_params: 700 * @ctx: the aio context 701 * @max_ns: how long to busy poll for, in nanoseconds 702 * @grow: polling time growth factor 703 * @shrink: polling time shrink factor 704 * 705 * Poll mode can be disabled by setting poll_max_ns to 0. 706 */ 707 void aio_context_set_poll_params(AioContext *ctx, int64_t max_ns, 708 int64_t grow, int64_t shrink, 709 Error **errp); 710 711 /** 712 * aio_context_set_aio_params: 713 * @ctx: the aio context 714 * @max_batch: maximum number of requests in a batch, 0 means that the 715 * engine will use its default 716 */ 717 void aio_context_set_aio_params(AioContext *ctx, int64_t max_batch); 718 719 /** 720 * aio_context_set_thread_pool_params: 721 * @ctx: the aio context 722 * @min: min number of threads to have readily available in the thread pool 723 * @min: max number of threads the thread pool can contain 724 */ 725 void aio_context_set_thread_pool_params(AioContext *ctx, int64_t min, 726 int64_t max, Error **errp); 727 #endif 728