Currently if a user enqueue a work item using schedule_delayed_work() the
used wq is "system_wq" (per-cpu wq) while queue_delayed_work() use
WORK_CPU_UNBOUND (used when a cpu is not specified). The same applies to
schedule_work() that is using system_wq and queue_work(), that makes use
again of WORK_CPU_UNBOUND.
This lack of consistentcy cannot be addressed without refactoring the API.
system_wq is a per-CPU worqueue, yet nothing in its name tells about that
CPU affinity constraint, which is very often not required by users. Make
it clear by adding a system_percpu_wq.
queue_work() / queue_delayed_work() mod_delayed_work() will now use the
new per-cpu wq: whether the user still stick on the old name a warn will
be printed along a wq redirect to the new one.
This patch add the new system_percpu_wq except for mm, fs and net
subsystem, whom are handled in separated patches.
The old wq will be kept for a few release cylces.
Suggested-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Marco Crivellari <marco.crivellari@suse.com>
---
rust/kernel/workqueue.rs | 6 +++---
1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
diff --git a/rust/kernel/workqueue.rs b/rust/kernel/workqueue.rs
index 8ca813d68a1a..6f508c3e37e4 100644
--- a/rust/kernel/workqueue.rs
+++ b/rust/kernel/workqueue.rs
@@ -633,15 +633,15 @@ unsafe fn __enqueue<F>(self, queue_work_on: F) -> Self::EnqueueOutput
}
}
-/// Returns the system work queue (`system_wq`).
+/// Returns the system work queue (`system_percpu_wq`).
///
/// It is the one used by `schedule[_delayed]_work[_on]()`. Multi-CPU multi-threaded. There are
/// users which expect relatively short queue flush time.
///
/// Callers shouldn't queue work items which can run for too long.
pub fn system() -> &'static Queue {
- // SAFETY: `system_wq` is a C global, always available.
- unsafe { Queue::from_raw(bindings::system_wq) }
+ // SAFETY: `system_percpu_wq` is a C global, always available.
+ unsafe { Queue::from_raw(bindings::system_percpu_wq) }
}
/// Returns the system high-priority work queue (`system_highpri_wq`).
--
2.51.0