Re: [PATCH RFC v1 0/3] Introduce vfio-pci-core subsystem

From: Alex Williamson
Date: Sun Jan 31 2021 - 23:37:49 EST


On Sun, 31 Jan 2021 20:46:40 +0200
Max Gurtovoy <mgurtovoy@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On 1/28/2021 11:02 PM, Alex Williamson wrote:
> > On Thu, 28 Jan 2021 17:29:30 +0100
> > Cornelia Huck <cohuck@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> >> On Tue, 26 Jan 2021 15:27:43 +0200
> >> Max Gurtovoy <mgurtovoy@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>> On 1/26/2021 5:34 AM, Alex Williamson wrote:
> >>>> On Mon, 25 Jan 2021 20:45:22 -0400
> >>>> Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>> On Mon, Jan 25, 2021 at 04:31:51PM -0700, Alex Williamson wrote:
> >>>>>> extensions potentially break vendor drivers, etc. We're only even hand
> >>>>>> waving that existing device specific support could be farmed out to new
> >>>>>> device specific drivers without even going to the effort to prove that.
> >>>>> This is a RFC, not a complete patch series. The RFC is to get feedback
> >>>>> on the general design before everyone comits alot of resources and
> >>>>> positions get dug in.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Do you really think the existing device specific support would be a
> >>>>> problem to lift? It already looks pretty clean with the
> >>>>> vfio_pci_regops, looks easy enough to lift to the parent.
> >>>>>
> >>>>>> So far the TODOs rather mask the dirty little secrets of the
> >>>>>> extension rather than showing how a vendor derived driver needs to
> >>>>>> root around in struct vfio_pci_device to do something useful, so
> >>>>>> probably porting actual device specific support rather than further
> >>>>>> hand waving would be more helpful.
> >>>>> It would be helpful to get actual feedback on the high level design -
> >>>>> someting like this was already tried in May and didn't go anywhere -
> >>>>> are you surprised that we are reluctant to commit alot of resources
> >>>>> doing a complete job just to have it go nowhere again?
> >>>> That's not really what I'm getting from your feedback, indicating
> >>>> vfio-pci is essentially done, the mlx stub driver should be enough to
> >>>> see the direction, and additional concerns can be handled with TODO
> >>>> comments. Sorry if this is not construed as actual feedback, I think
> >>>> both Connie and I are making an effort to understand this and being
> >>>> hampered by lack of a clear api or a vendor driver that's anything more
> >>>> than vfio-pci plus an aux bus interface. Thanks,
> >>> I think I got the main idea and I'll try to summarize it:
> >>>
> >>> The separation to vfio-pci.ko and vfio-pci-core.ko is acceptable, and we
> >>> do need it to be able to create vendor-vfio-pci.ko driver in the future
> >>> to include vendor special souse inside.
> >> One other thing I'd like to bring up: What needs to be done in
> >> userspace? Does a userspace driver like QEMU need changes to actually
> >> exploit this? Does management software like libvirt need to be involved
> >> in decision making, or does it just need to provide the knobs to make
> >> the driver configurable?
> > I'm still pretty nervous about the userspace aspect of this as well.
> > QEMU and other actual vfio drivers are probably the least affected,
> > at least for QEMU, it'll happily open any device that has a pointer to
> > an IOMMU group that's reflected as a vfio group device. Tools like
> > libvirt, on the other hand, actually do driver binding and we need to
> > consider how they make driver decisions. Jason suggested that the
> > vfio-pci driver ought to be only spec compliant behavior, which sounds
> > like some deprecation process of splitting out the IGD, NVLink, zpci,
> > etc. features into sub-drivers and eventually removing that device
> > specific support from vfio-pci. Would we expect libvirt to know, "this
> > is an 8086 graphics device, try to bind it to vfio-pci-igd" or "uname
> > -m says we're running on s390, try to bind it to vfio-zpci"? Maybe we
> > expect derived drivers to only bind to devices they recognize, so
> > libvirt could blindly try a whole chain of drivers, ending in vfio-pci.
> > Obviously if we have competing drivers that support the same device in
> > different ways, that quickly falls apart.
>
> I think we can leave common arch specific stuff, such as s390 (IIUC) in
> the core driver. And only create vfio_pci drivers for
> vendor/device/subvendor specific stuff.

So on one hand you're telling us that the design principles here can be
applied to various other device/platform specific support, but on the
other you're saying, but don't do that...

> Also, the competing drivers issue can also happen today, right ? after
> adding new_id to vfio_pci I don't know how linux will behave if we'll
> plug new device with same id to the system. which driver will probe it ?

new_id is non-deterministic, that's why we have driver_override.

> I don't really afraid of competing drivers since we can ask from vendor
> vfio pci_drivers to add vendor_id, device_id, subsystem_vendor and
> subsystem_device so we won't have this problem. I don't think that there
> will be 2 drivers that drive the same device with these 4 ids.
>
> Userspace tool can have a map of ids to drivers and bind the device to
> the right vfio-pci vendor driver if it has one. if not, bind to vfio_pci.ko.

As I've outlined, the support is not really per device, there might be
a preferred default driver for the platform, ex. s390.

> > Libvirt could also expand its available driver models for the user to
> > specify a variant, I'd support that for overriding a choice that libvirt
> > might make otherwise, but forcing the user to know this information is
> > just passing the buck.
>
> We can add a code to libvirt as mentioned above.

That's rather the question here, what is that algorithm by which a
userspace tool such as libvirt would determine the optimal driver for a
device?

> > Some derived drivers could probably actually include device IDs rather
> > than only relying on dynamic ids, but then we get into the problem that
> > we're competing with native host driver for a device. The aux bus
> > example here is essentially the least troublesome variation since it
> > works in conjunction with the native host driver rather than replacing
> > it. Thanks,
>
> same competition after we add new_id to vfio_pci, right ?

new_id is already superseded by driver_override to avoid the ambiguity,
but to which driver does a userspace tool like libvirt define as the
ultimate target driver for a device and how?

> A pointer to needed additions to libvirt will be awsome (or any other hint).
>
> I'll send the V2 soon and then move to libvirt.

The libvirt driver for a device likely needs to accept vfio variants
and allow users to specify a variant, but the real question is how
libvirt makes an educated guess which variant to use initially, which I
don't really have any good ideas to resolve. Thanks,

Alex