b3221d6a53
RDMA_MSGP type calls insert a zero pad in the middle of the RPC message to align the RPC request's data payload to the server's alignment preferences. A server can then "page flip" the payload into place to avoid a data copy in certain circumstances. However: 1. The client has to have a priori knowledge of the server's preferred alignment 2. Requests eligible for RDMA_MSGP are requests that are small enough to have been sent inline, and convey a data payload at the _end_ of the RPC message Today 1. is done with a sysctl, and is a global setting that is copied during mount. Linux does not support CCP to query the server's preferences (RFC 5666, Section 6). A small-ish NFSv3 WRITE might use RDMA_MSGP, but no NFSv4 compound fits bullet 2. Thus the Linux client currently leaves RDMA_MSGP disabled. The Linux server handles RDMA_MSGP, but does not use any special page flipping, so it confers no benefit. Clean up the marshaling code by removing the logic that constructs RDMA_MSGP type calls. This also reduces the maximum send iovec size from four to just two elements. /proc/sys/sunrpc/rdma_inline_write_padding is a kernel API, and thus is left in place. Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Tested-by: Devesh Sharma <devesh.sharma@avagotech.com> Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com> |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
auth_gss | ||
xprtrdma | ||
addr.c | ||
auth_generic.c | ||
auth_null.c | ||
auth_unix.c | ||
auth.c | ||
backchannel_rqst.c | ||
cache.c | ||
clnt.c | ||
debugfs.c | ||
Kconfig | ||
Makefile | ||
netns.h | ||
rpc_pipe.c | ||
rpcb_clnt.c | ||
sched.c | ||
socklib.c | ||
stats.c | ||
sunrpc_syms.c | ||
sunrpc.h | ||
svc_xprt.c | ||
svc.c | ||
svcauth_unix.c | ||
svcauth.c | ||
svcsock.c | ||
sysctl.c | ||
timer.c | ||
xdr.c | ||
xprt.c | ||
xprtsock.c |