Re: [RFC] Unify KVM kernel-space and user-space code into a singleproject

From: Avi Kivity
Date: Thu Mar 18 2010 - 06:13:56 EST


On 03/18/2010 10:56 AM, Ingo Molnar wrote:
* Avi Kivity<avi@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On 03/17/2010 10:10 AM, Ingo Molnar wrote:
It's about who owns the user interface.

If qemu owns the user interface, than we can satisfy this in a very
simple way by adding a perf monitor command. If we have to support third
party tools, then it significantly complicates things.
Of course illogical modularization complicates things 'significantly'.
Who should own the user interface then?
If qemu was in tools/kvm/ then we wouldnt have such issues. A single patch (or
series of patches) could modify tools/kvm/, arch/x86/kvm/, virt/ and
tools/perf/.

We would have exactly the same issues, only they would be in a single repository. The only difference is that we could ignore potential alternatives to qemu, libvirt, and RHEV-M. But that's not how kernel ABIs are developed, we try to make them general, not suited to just one consumer that happens to be close to our heart.

Numerous times did we have patches to kernel/perf_event.c that fixed some
detail, also accompanied by a tools/perf/ patch fixing another detail. Having
a single 'culture of contribution' is a powerful way to develop.

In fact kvm started out in a single repo, and it certainly made it easy to bring it up in baby steps. But we've long outgrown that. Maybe the difference is that perf is still new and thus needs tight cooperation. If/when perf gains a real GUI, I doubt more than 1% of the patches will touch both kernel and userspace.

It turns out kernel developers can be pretty good user-space developers as
well and user-space developers can be pretty good kernel developers as well.
Some like to do both - as long as it's all within a single project.

Very childish of them. If someone wants to contribute to a userspace project, they can swallow their pride and send patches to a non-kernel mailing list and repository.

The moment any change (be it as trivial as fixing a GUI detail or as complex
as a new feature) involves two or more packages, development speed slows down
to a crawl - while the complexity of the change might be very low!

Why is that?

I the maintainers of all packages are cooperative and responsive, then the patches will get accepted quickly. If they aren't, development will be slow. It isn't any different from contributing to two unrelated kernel subsystems (which are in fact in different repositories until the next merge window).

Also, there's the harmful process that people start categorizing themselves
into 'I am a kernel developer' and 'I am a user space programmer' stereotypes,
which limits the scope of contributions artificially.

You're encouraging this with your proposal. You're basically using the glory of kernel development to attract people to userspace.

Fast forward to 2010. The kernel side of KVM is maximum goodness - by far
the worst-quality remaining aspects of KVM are precisely in areas that you
mention: 'if we have to support third party tools, then it significantly
complicates things'. You kept Qemu as an external 'third party' entity to
KVM, and KVM is clearly hurting from that - just see the recent KVM
usability thread for examples about suckage.
Any qemu usability problems are because developers (or their employers) are
not interested in fixing them, not because of the repository location. Most
kvm developer interest is in server-side deployment (even for desktop
guests), so there is limited effort in implementing a virtualbox-style GUI.
The same has been said of oprofile as well: 'it somewhat sucks because we are
too server centric', 'nobody is interested in good usability and oprofile is
fine for the enterprises'. Ironically, the same has been said of Xen usability
as well, up to the point KVM came around.

What was the core of the problem was a bad design and a split kernel-side
user-side tool landscape.

I can accept the bad design (not knowing any of the details), but how can the kernel/user split affect usability?

In fact i think saying that 'our developers only care about the server' is
borderline dishonest, when at the same time you are making it doubly sure (by
inaction) that it stays so: by leaving an artificial package wall between
kernel-side KVM and user-side KVM and not integrating the two technologies.

The wall is maybe four nanometers high. Please be serious. If someone wants to work on qemu usability all they have to do is to clone the repository and start sending patches to qemu-devel@. What's gained by putting it in the kernel repository? You're saving a minute's worth of clone, and that only for people who already happen to be kernel developers.

You'll never know what heights you could achieve if you leave that wall there
...

I truly don't know. What highly usable GUIs were developed in the kernel?

Furthermore, what should be realized is that bad usability hurts "server
features" just as much. Most of the day-to-day testing is done on the desktop
by desktop oriented testers/developers. _Not_ by enterprise shops - they tend
to see the code years down the line to begin with ...

Yes, a particular feature might be server oriented, but a good portion of our
testing is on the desktop and everyone is hurting from bad usability and this
puts limits on contribution efficiency.

I'm not saying that improved usability isn't a good thing, but time spent on improving the GUI is time not spent on the features that we really want.

Desktop oriented users also rarely test 16 vcpu guests with tons of RAM exercising 10Gb NICs and a SAN. Instead they care about graphics performance for 2vcpu/1GB guests.

As the patch posted in _this very thread demonstrates it_, it is doubly more
difficult to contribute a joint KVM+Qemu feature, because it's two separate
code bases, two contribution guidelines, two release schedules. While to the
user it really is just one and the same thing. It should be so for the
developer as well.

It's hard to contribute a patch that goes against the architecture of the system, where kvm deals with cpu virtualization, qemu (or theoretically another tool) manages a guest, and libvirt (or another tool) manages the host. You want a list of guests to be provided by qemu or the kernel, and that simply isn't how the system works.

Put in another way: KVM's current split design is making it easy to contribute
server features (because the kernel side is clean and cool), but also makes it
artificially hard to contribute desktop features: because the tooling side
(Qemu) is 'just another package', is separated by a package and maintenance
wall


Most server oriented patches in qemu/kvm have gone into qemu, not kvm (simply because it sees many more patches overall). It isn't hard to contribute to 'just another package', I have 1700 packages installed on my desktop and only one of them is a kernel.

Anyway your arguments apply equally well to gedit.

and is made somewhat uncool by a (as some KVM developers have pointed out
in this thread) quirky codebase.

The qemu codebase is in fact quirky, but cp won't solve it. Only long patchsets to qemu-devel@.

(the rest of your points are really a function of this fundamental
disagreement)

I disagree.

--
error compiling committee.c: too many arguments to function

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