[PATCH 00/40] Staging: hv: Driver cleanup

KY Srinivasan kys at microsoft.com
Fri Jul 1 00:19:38 UTC 2011



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Stephen Hemminger [mailto:shemminger at vyatta.com]
> Sent: Thursday, June 30, 2011 7:48 PM
> To: KY Srinivasan
> Cc: Christoph Hellwig; devel at linuxdriverproject.org; gregkh at suse.de; linux-
> kernel at vger.kernel.org; virtualization at lists.osdl.org
> Subject: Re: [PATCH 00/40] Staging: hv: Driver cleanup
> 
> On Thu, 30 Jun 2011 23:32:34 +0000
> KY Srinivasan <kys at microsoft.com> wrote:
> 
> >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: Christoph Hellwig [mailto:hch at infradead.org]
> > > Sent: Thursday, June 30, 2011 3:34 PM
> > > To: KY Srinivasan
> > > Cc: gregkh at suse.de; linux-kernel at vger.kernel.org;
> > > devel at linuxdriverproject.org; virtualization at lists.osdl.org
> > > Subject: Re: [PATCH 00/40] Staging: hv: Driver cleanup
> > >
> > > On Wed, Jun 29, 2011 at 07:38:21AM -0700, K. Y. Srinivasan wrote:
> > > > Further cleanup of the hv drivers:
> > > >
> > > > 	1) Cleanup the reference counting mess for both stor and net devices.
> > >
> > > I really don't understand the need for reference counting on the storage
> > > side, especially now that you only have a SCSI driver.  The SCSI
> > > midlayer does proper counting on it's objects (Scsi_Host, scsi_device,
> > > scsi_cmnd), so you'll get that for free given that SCSI drivers just
> > > piggyback on the midlayer lifetime rules.
> > >
> > > For now your patches should probably go in as-is, but mid-term you
> > > should be able to completely remove that code on the storage side.
> > >
> >
> > Greg,
> >
> > I am thinking of  going back to my original implementation where I had one scsi
> host
> > per IDE device. This will certainly simply the code. Let me know what you think.
> If you
> > agree with this approach, please drop this patch-set, I will send you a new set
> of patches.
> 
> I think there ref counting on network devices is also unneeded
> as long as the unregister logic handles RCU correctly. The network layer
> calls the driver unregister routine after all packets are gone.
On the networking side, what about incoming packets that may be racing
with the device destruction. The current ref counting scheme deals with
that case.

Regards,

K. Y



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