On 08.10.19 11:15, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote: > 08.10.2019 12:03, Max Reitz wrote: >> On 07.10.19 19:10, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote: >>> 07.10.2019 18:27, Max Reitz wrote: >>>> On 03.10.19 19:15, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote: >>>>> Currently total allocation for parallel requests to block-copy instance >>>>> is unlimited. Let's limit it to 128 MiB. >>>>> >>>>> For now block-copy is used only in backup, so actually we limit total >>>>> allocation for backup job. >>>>> >>>>> Signed-off-by: Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy >>>>> --- >>>>> include/block/block-copy.h | 3 +++ >>>>> block/block-copy.c | 5 +++++ >>>>> 2 files changed, 8 insertions(+) >>>>> >>>>> diff --git a/include/block/block-copy.h b/include/block/block-copy.h >>>>> index e2e135ff1b..bb666e7068 100644 >>>>> --- a/include/block/block-copy.h >>>>> +++ b/include/block/block-copy.h >>>>> @@ -16,6 +16,7 @@ >>>>> #define BLOCK_COPY_H >>>>> >>>>> #include "block/block.h" >>>>> +#include "qemu/co-shared-amount.h" >>>>> >>>>> typedef struct BlockCopyInFlightReq { >>>>> int64_t start_byte; >>>>> @@ -69,6 +70,8 @@ typedef struct BlockCopyState { >>>>> */ >>>>> ProgressResetCallbackFunc progress_reset_callback; >>>>> void *progress_opaque; >>>>> + >>>>> + QemuCoSharedAmount *mem; >>>>> } BlockCopyState; >>>>> >>>>> BlockCopyState *block_copy_state_new(BdrvChild *source, BdrvChild *target, >>>>> diff --git a/block/block-copy.c b/block/block-copy.c >>>>> index cc49d2345d..e700c20d0f 100644 >>>>> --- a/block/block-copy.c >>>>> +++ b/block/block-copy.c >>>>> @@ -21,6 +21,7 @@ >>>>> #include "qemu/units.h" >>>>> >>>>> #define BLOCK_COPY_MAX_COPY_RANGE (16 * MiB) >>>>> +#define BLOCK_COPY_MAX_MEM (128 * MiB) >>>>> >>>>> static void coroutine_fn block_copy_wait_inflight_reqs(BlockCopyState *s, >>>>> int64_t start, >>>>> @@ -64,6 +65,7 @@ void block_copy_state_free(BlockCopyState *s) >>>>> } >>>>> >>>>> bdrv_release_dirty_bitmap(s->source->bs, s->copy_bitmap); >>>>> + qemu_co_shared_amount_free(s->mem); >>>>> g_free(s); >>>>> } >>>>> >>>>> @@ -95,6 +97,7 @@ BlockCopyState *block_copy_state_new(BdrvChild *source, BdrvChild *target, >>>>> .cluster_size = cluster_size, >>>>> .len = bdrv_dirty_bitmap_size(copy_bitmap), >>>>> .write_flags = write_flags, >>>>> + .mem = qemu_co_shared_amount_new(BLOCK_COPY_MAX_MEM), >>>>> }; >>>>> >>>>> s->copy_range_size = QEMU_ALIGN_DOWN(max_transfer, cluster_size), >>>>> @@ -316,7 +319,9 @@ int coroutine_fn block_copy(BlockCopyState *s, >>>>> >>>>> bdrv_reset_dirty_bitmap(s->copy_bitmap, start, chunk_end - start); >>>>> >>>>> + qemu_co_get_amount(s->mem, chunk_end - start); >>>> >>>> Now that I see it like this, maybe the name is too short. This sounds >>>> like it was trying to get some amount of coroutines. >>>> >>>> Would “qemu_co_get_from_shared_amount” be too long? (Something like >>>> qemu_co_sham_alloc() would be funny, but maybe not. :-) Or maybe >>>> exactly because it”s funny.) >>>> >>> >>> hmm sham may be interpreted as shared memory, not only like shame.. >> >> “sham” is also a word by itself. :-) > > Hmm didn't know, me go to google translate. OK, sham looks a lot nicer than shame) > >> >>> And if we call it _alloc, the opposite should be _free, but how to >>> distinguish it from freeing the whole object? Hmm, use create/destroy for >>> the whole object maybe. >>> >>> May be, drop "qemu_" ? It's not very informative. Or may be drop "co_"?. >>> >>> I don't like shaming my shared amount :) >> >> It’s worse calling it all a sham. >> >>> May be, we should imagine, what are we allocating? May be balls? >>> >>> struct BallAllocator >>> >>> ball_allocator_create >>> ball_allocator_destroy >>> >>> co_try_alloc_balls >>> co_alloc_balls >>> co_free_balls >>> >>> Or bars? Or which thing may be used for funny naming and to not intersect >>> with existing concepts like memory? >> >> I love it (thanks for making my morning), but I fear it may be >> interpreted as risqué. >> >> Maybe just shres for shared resource? So alloc_from_shres? >> > > OK for me. But.. How to name _free function than? > > struct SharedResource > > shres_create > shres_destroy > > co_try_alloc_from_shres > co_alloc_from_shres > co_free_??? > > co_free_res_alloced_from_shres ? :) > > or > > co_try_get_from_shres > co_get_from_shres > co_put_to_shres Sounds good to me. Max