per file descriptor device callbacks ?

Konstantin Belousov kostikbel at gmail.com
Tue Aug 28 17:26:27 UTC 2012


On Tue, Aug 28, 2012 at 12:40:29PM -0400, John Baldwin wrote:
> On Tuesday, August 28, 2012 11:50:25 am Luigi Rizzo wrote:
> > On Mon, Aug 27, 2012 at 12:27:54PM -0400, John Baldwin wrote:
> > > On Monday, August 27, 2012 3:55:47 am Andriy Gapon wrote:
> > > > on 27/08/2012 10:34 Luigi Rizzo said the following:
> > > > > This requires to track calls to open/ioctl/poll/mmap/close.
> > > > > The difficulty i have is with mmap() and close(), because FreeBSD
> > > > > seems to handle these calls per-cdev rather than per-file-descriptor
> > > > > (for instance, no 'struct file' argument is available in mmap(), and
> > > > > the d_close method is only called on the last close() on the device).
> > > > 
> > > > devfs_set_cdevpriv(9), etc
> > > 
> > > mmap() is still problematic, but if you have the freedom to create your
> > > own VM objects, then d_mmap_single() can let you handle that fairly
> > > easily.
> > 
> > Would dev_clone(9) be a better way to do what i need ?
> > 
> > This way the struct cdev would be unique per file descriptor,
> > could be used as a key on the page fault callbacks
> > (i still do not have callbacks on dev_pager_ctor/dtor though).
> 
> dev_clone() is rather gross and a lot harder to use than
> devfs_set_cdevpriv().  If you are fine with the inherent problems
> of the device pager (you can't ever make mappings go away), you can
> just assign each client a unique offset into your shared object's
> memory space.  However, if you are exporting shared memory buffers,
> then a better model might be to let your clients use
> shm_open(SHM_ANON) to create buffers, then pass them into your driver
> via an ioctl() and use shm_map() to map them into the kernel.

Well, there is a new OBJT_MGTDEVICE pager, which together with
d_mmap_single() allows to have even per-mapping data. i915kms uses it.
You do not need cdevpriv for the per-mapping data.

Also, MGTDEVICE does track the mappings of the pages, so you can clean
up on device destruction.

Normal callbacks of the device pager allows to execute ctr/dtr methods
at the time of mapping creation and tear down.
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