Re: [PATCH 1/1] vfio-ccw: Enable transparent CCW IPL from DASD

From: Eric Farman
Date: Thu Apr 23 2020 - 16:25:46 EST




On 4/23/20 11:11 AM, Cornelia Huck wrote:
> On Thu, 23 Apr 2020 15:56:20 +0200
> Halil Pasic <pasic@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>> On Fri, 17 Apr 2020 14:29:39 -0400
>> Jared Rossi <jrossi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>>> Remove the explicit prefetch check when using vfio-ccw devices.
>>> This check is not needed as all Linux channel programs are intended
>>> to use prefetch and will be executed in the same way regardless.
>>
>> Hm. This is a guest thing or? So you basically say, it is OK to do
>> this, because you know that the guest is gonna be Linux and that it
>> the channel program is intended to use prefetch -- but the ORB supplied
>> by the guest that designates the channel program happens to state the
>> opposite.
>>
>> Or am I missing something?
>
> I see this as a kind of architecture compliance/ease of administration
> tradeoff, as we none of the guests we currently support uses something
> that breaks with prefetching outside of IPL (which has a different
> workaround).>
> One thing that still concerns me a bit is debuggability if a future
> guest indeed does want to dynamically rewrite a channel program: the

+1 for some debuggability, just in general

> guest thinks it instructed the device to not prefetch, and then
> suddenly things do not work as expected. We can log when a guest
> submits an orb without prefetch set, but we can't find out if the guest
> actually does something that relies on non-prefetch.

Without going too far down a non-prefetch rabbit-hole, can we use the
cpa_within_range logic to see if the address of the CCW being fetched
exists as the CDA of an earlier (non-TIC) CCW in the chain we're
processing, and tracing/logging/messaging something about a possible
conflict?

(Jared, you did some level of this tracing with our real/synthetic tests
some time ago. Any chance something of it could be polished and made
useful, without being overly heavy on the mainline path?)

>
> The only correct way to handle this would be to actually implement
> non-prefetch processing, where I would not really know where to even
> start -- and then we'd only have synthetic test cases, for now. None of
> the options are pleasant :(
>

And even if we knew where to start, it's quite a bit of effort for the
hypothetical. From conversations I've had with long-time I/O folks,
non-prefetch seems to be the significant minority these days, dating
back to older CKD devices (and associated connectivity) in practice.