Re: [PATCH RFC] Introduce uniptr_t as a generic "universal" pointer

From: Takashi Iwai
Date: Wed Aug 09 2023 - 14:08:35 EST


On Wed, 09 Aug 2023 19:01:50 +0200,
Linus Torvalds wrote:
>
> On Wed, 9 Aug 2023 at 09:05, Takashi Iwai <tiwai@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > OTOH, it simplifies the code well for us; as of now, we have two
> > callbacks for copying PCM memory from/to the device, distinct for
> > kernel and user pointers. It's basically either copy_from_user() or
> > memcpy() of the given size depending on the caller. The sockptr_t or
> > its variant would allow us to unify those to a single callback.
>
> I didn't see the follow-up patches that use this, but...
>
> > (And yeah, iov_iter is there, but it's definitely overkill for the
> > purpose.)
>
> You can actually use a "simplified form" of iov_iter, and it's not all that bad.
>
> If the actual copying operation is just a memcpy, you're all set: just
> do copy_to/from_iter(), and it's a really nice interface, and you
> don't have to carry "ptr+size" things around.
>
> And we now have a simple way to generate simple iov_iter's, so
> *creating* the iter is trivial too:
>
> struct iov_iter iter;
> int ret = import_ubuf(ITER_SRC/DEST, uptr, len, &iter);
>
> if (unlikely(ret < 0))
> return ret;
>
> and you're all done. You can now pass '&iter' around, and it has a
> nice user pointer and a range in it, and copying that thing is easy.
>
> Perhaps somewhat strangely (*) we don't have the same for a simple
> kernel buffer, but adding that wouldn't be hard. You either end up
> using a 'kvec', or we could even add something like ITER_KBUF if it
> really matters.
>
> Right now the kernel buffer init is a *bit* more involved than the
> above ubuf case:
>
> struct iov_iter iter;
> struct kvec kvec = { kptr, len};
>
> iov_iter_kvec(&iter, ITER_SRC/DEST, &kvec, 1, len);
>
> and that's maybe a *bit* annoying, but we could maybe simplify this
> with some helper macros even without ITER_KBUF.
>
> So yes, iov_iter does have some abstraction overhead, but it really
> isn't that bad. And it *does* allow you to do a lot of things, and can
> actually simplify the users quite a bit, exactly because it allows you
> to just pass that single iter pointer around, and you automatically
> have not just the user/kernel distinction, you have the buffer size,
> and you have a lot of helper functions to use it.
>
> I really think that if you want a user-or-kernel buffer interface, you
> should use these things.
>
> Please? At least look into it.

All sounds convincing, I'll take a look tomorrow. Thanks!


Takashi

>
> Linus
>
> (*) Well, not so strange - we've just never needed it.
>