[dpdk-dev] [PATCH v3 00/20] vhost ABI/API refactoring

Panu Matilainen pmatilai at redhat.com
Thu Jun 30 11:05:19 CEST 2016


On 06/30/2016 10:57 AM, Yuanhan Liu wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 30, 2016 at 10:39:45AM +0300, Panu Matilainen wrote:
>> On 06/07/2016 06:51 AM, Yuanhan Liu wrote:
>>> v3: - adapted the new vhost ABI/API changes to tep_term example, to make
>>>      sure not break build at least.
>>>    - bumped the ABI version to 3
>>>
>>> NOTE: I created a branch at dpdk.org [0] for more conveinient testing:
>>>
>>>    [0]: git://dpdk.org/next/dpdk-next-virtio for-testing
>>>
>>>
>>> Every time we introduce a new feature to vhost, we are likely to break
>>> ABI. Moreover, some cleanups (such as the one from Ilya to remove vec_buf
>> >from vhost_virtqueue struct) also break ABI.
>>>
>>> This patch set is meant to resolve above issue ultimately, by hiding
>>> virtio_net structure (as well as few others) internaly, and export the
>>> virtio_net dev strut to applications by a number, vid, like the way
>>> kernel exposes an fd to user space.
>>>
>>> Back to the patch set, the first part of this set makes some changes to
>>> vhost example, vhost-pmd and vhost, bit by bit, to remove the dependence
>>> to "virtio_net" struct. And then do the final change to make the current
>>> APIs to adapt to using "vid".
>>>
>>> After that, "vrtio_net_device_ops" is the only left open struct that an
>>> application can acces, therefore, it's the only place that might introduce
>>> potential ABI breakage in future for extension. Hence, I made few more
>>> (5) space reservation, to make sure we will not break ABI for a long time,
>>> and hopefuly, forever.
>>
>> Been intending to say this for a while but seems I never actually got around
>> to do so:
>>
>> This is a really fine example of how to refactor an API against constant ABI
>> breakages, thank you Yuanhan!
>
> Panu, thanks!
>
>> Exported structs are one of the biggest
>> obstacles in keeping a stable ABI while adding new features, and while its
>> not always possible to hide everything to this extent, the damage (erm,
>> exposure) can usually be considerably limited by careful API design.
>
> Agreed.
>
>> Since the first and the foremost objection against doing this in the DPDK
>> context is always "but performance!", I'm curious as to what sort of numbers
>> you're getting with the new API vs the old one? I'm really hoping other
>> libraries would follow suit after seeing that its possible to provide a
>> future-proof API/ABI without sacrificing performance :)
>
> From my (limited) test, nope, I see no performance drop at all, not even a
> little.

Awesome!

With that, hopefully others will see the light and follow its example. 
If nothing else, they ought to get a bit envious when you can add 
features left and right without ever having to wait for API/ABI break 
periods etc ;)

	- Panu -

>
> 	--yliu
>



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